Anti-establishment the MC5 ironically get into the establishment with Rock & Roll Hall Fame invite
Before there was the Clash, Nirvana or Rage Against the Machine there was the MC5
Before there was the Clash, Nirvana or Rage Against the Machine there was the MC5.
āThe MC5 was playing punk rock music before there was a name for it,ā says Tom Morello, a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame guitarist for bands like Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave.
āThey built the lattice on which bands like The Stooges, The Ramones, The Clash, the Sex Pistols, Rage Against the Machine and System of a Down ply their trade.ā
The MC5 ā short for Motor City Five ā are getting into the Rock Hall this year, only months after the deaths of the two last original members, drummer Dennis āMachine Gunā Thompson and guitarist and singer Wayne Kramer.
The Detroit-based MC5 are part of the class of ā24 that includes Peter Frampton,Foreigner,Cher,Mary J. Blige, A Tribe Called Quest, Kool & The Gang, Ozzy Osbourne, Dave Matthews Band, the late Jimmy Buffett, Dionne Warwick, Alexis Korner, the late John Mayall and Big Mama Thornton. The induction ceremony is Saturday in Cleveland.
The band ā which also included Fred āSonicā Smith on guitars, Rob Tyner on vocals, Michael Davis on bass ā had little commercial success and put out just three albums, but its legacy endured, both for its sound and for its fusing of music to political action. During the chaos of the 1968 Democratic National Convention, only the MC5 showed up to play.
āThe reason why they deserve to be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is not because of the depth or breadth of their catalog. Itās because of their influence. Without them, there is no punk rock music,ā says Morello. āThey're on the Mount Rushmore of founders of this particular brand of music.ā
āKick Out the Jamsā was their most famous song ā with the lyrics "Put that mic in my hand/And let me kick out the jam" and āLet me be who I am/And let me kick out the jams." A live album of the same name reached the top 40 in 1969, their highest-charting release. They also released the studio albums āBack in the USAā and āHigh Timeā before breaking up at the end of 1972.
In quiet honor of the MC5, Rage Against the Machine would nickname their band's fastest song āMC5" when they were recording albums. For months, that's what āSleep Now in the Fireā from the album āThe Battle of Los Angelesā was called.
Grammy Award-winning producer Don Was grew up in Detroit and vividly remembers catching MC5 live, calling what he heard āa tsunami of sound.ā
āTo me, they unleashed a power. You could taste the music and see it. It was never really captured on any recordings. It was a big, monolithic wall of distortion and groove.ā
Morello and Was are among several musicians appearing on a new MC5 album, āHeavy Lifting,ā which comes out this month and includes songs by Kramer and Thompson. Slash, Vernon Reid and William DuVall of Alice in Chains also contributed.
āThe idea, as Wayne described to me, was to make one last great MC5 record that would distill the spirit that the band had decades before but was also a product of where those influences lead,ā says Morello. āI put everything I had into it. Iām like, āLetās make one more really, really great MC5 record.āā
Thereās also a new book, āMC5: An Oral Biography of Rockās Most Revolutionary Bandā by music journalists Brad Tolinski, Jaan Uhelszki and Ben Edmonds. It includes stories from Iggy and the Stooges, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, promoter Bill Graham, John Lennon and the Jefferson Airplane.
Morello, who on the nominating committee at the Rock Hall, says he's been pushing for the inclusion of the MC5 for years and recent changes in the Cleveland-based organization has led to more fan favorites, like Rush, Kiss, Judas Priest ā and now MC5.
āThe Rock & Roll Hall of Fame tells a story. It canāt tell every story, but it tells a story. I think that story is becoming broader and more reflective of rock fandom than in the past when it might have been a more delicately curated situation.ā
Kramer, who spent years in prison on drug charges, later established Jail Guitar Doors U.S.A., a nonprofit that donates musical instruments to inmates and offers songwriting workshops in prisons. He helped people get sober, find jobs for former inmates, build music careers for at-risk youth and was always up to back a progressive cause.
Was says Kramer went from believing that a revolution was coming in the 1960s to realizing it might fail but still trying to make life better for people.
āWayne Kramer was the best man Iāve ever known,ā says Morello, who will help induct the MC5 on Saturday. āHe possessed a one-of-a-kind mixture of deep wisdom and profound compassion with beautiful empathy and tenacious conviction.ā