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Wayne Kramer, Influential MC5 Co-Founder And Guitarist, Dies At 75

Wayne Kramer, the co-founding guitarist and composer of Detroit’s punk band MC5, whose social activism carried on throughout his lengthy solo career, died on Friday at 75. The news was confirmed on Kramer’s and MC5’s official Instagram with the phrase “Wayne S. Kramer ‘PEACE BE WITH YOU’ April 30, 1948 – February 2, 2024. No cause of death was disclosed at this time.

The only thing angrier than Kramer’s left-wing socio-political radicalism was his gruff guitar sound, a powerful feedback-fueled noise with a gutsy swagger that made every track of his – from his famed, first days with MC5 and “Kick Out the Jams” to his searing solo works such as “Adult World” – ring and sting.

Wayne Kramer, Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello, long an acolyte of Kramer’s rangy guitar sound, told The Mirror UK, “Brother Wayne Kramer was the best man I’ve ever known. He possessed a one-of-a-kind mixture of deep wisdom and profound compassion, beautiful empathy and tenacious conviction.

His band the MC5 basically invented punk rock music… Wayne came through personal trials of fire with drugs and jail time and emerged a transformed soul who went on to save countless lives through his tireless acts of service.

Wayne Kramer, Influential MC5 Co-Founder And Guitarist, Dies At 75

Wayne Kramer

Wayne Kramer, He and his incredible wife Margaret founded @jailguitardoorsusa which founds music programs in prisons as life changing effective rehabilitation. I’ve played with Wayne in prisons and watched him transform lives, he was just unbelievable … The countless lives he’s touch, healed, helped and saved will continue his spirit and legacy. He was like a non-Tom Joad. Whenever and wherever any of us kick out the jams, Brother Wayne will be right there with us.”

Born April 30, 1948 in Detroit, Michigan, Kramer was but a teenager when he commenced a friendship with guitarist Fred “Sonic” Smith in 1963. Fans of the blues, R and B and the revved-up surf sounds of Dick Dale and The Ventures, Kramer formed the garage band the Bounty Hunters before he and Smith – along with vocalist Rob Tyner, bassist Pat Burrows, and drummer Bob Gaspar – became The Motor City Five in late 1964.

Wayne Kramer, Using Lincoln Park, Mich. as their launching pad, the MC5 as they eventually came to be known, began to test the waters of distortion and heavy feedback in its songwriting and live sets. By 1965, the MC5 replaced Burrows and Gaspar with the much heavier-sounding bassist Michael Davis and drummer Dennis Thompson, and by 1966, took on the regular gig at Detroit’s Grande Ballroom.

From there, they happened onto John Sinclair, a radical political writer and White Panther Party leader nicknamed the “King of the Hippies” for his founding Trans Love Energies and its blend of underground events and manifestos. By 1967, Sinclair became the MC5’s manager, made them the official house band of the White Panthers, and fueled their radical politics.

Wayne Kramer, Discovered by Elektra Records A&R executive Danny Fields during Chicago’s Democratic National Convention, the MC5 recorded its debut album, “Kick Out the Jams,” live at the Grande Ballroom on October 30 and 31, 1968.

Though the initial reaction was enthusiastic, Tyner’s scream of “Kick out the jams, motherfuckers!” on the album’s title track kept their 1969 debut out of major department stores until Elektra issued a censored version of their debut against the band’s wishes.

Wayne Kramer, Forever banned from the radio and besieged by government agencies for its socio-political militancy by 1972, the original group split, leaving Kramer to become, in his own words, a “small-time Detroit criminal.”

Wayne Kramer

In 1975, after forming R&B band Radiation, with Melvin Davis, Kramer was convicted of selling drugs to undercover federal agents, and was sentenced to four years in prison.

Wayne Kramer, The Clash paid tribute to Kramer on their “Jail Guitar Doors” with the lyrics “Let me tell you about Wayne and his deals of cocaine, A little more every day, Holding for a friend till the band do well, Then the DEA locked him away.”

Incarcerated at F.M.C. Lexington, Kramer became friends with legendary trumpeter Red Rodney, and played together in the prison band, Street Sounds. No sooner out of jail in 1979, Kramer began doing session work in Detroit, joining Was (Not Was) on its first, eponymously-titled album and tour.

Wayne Kramer, Kramer also teamed with one-time New York Dolls guitarist Johnny Thunders in the band Gang War in 1979, and produced a handful of punk acts during his time in New York City such as GG Allin and the Liars. By 1980, Kramer became the toast of NYC underground clubs such as the Pyramid where he performed excerpts of his R&B musical, “The Last Words of Dutch Schultz,” that he had written with British author Mick Farren – all while working as a carpenter in New York under the guise of “Mattiello of Manhattan”.

Kramer also began a stellar solo career in 1991 with “Death Tongue,” but truly made his mark when he got to the Epitaph label, and works such as “The Hard Stuff, (1995), “Dangerous Madness” (1996) the beloved “Citizen Wayne” (1997) and the live record “LLMF (LLMF (Live Like A Mutherfucker).”

Wayne Kramer, Along with staying socially active throughout the 2000s, in 2001, Kramer and his manager-wife Margaret Saadi Kramer began the MuscleTone label where he released his 2002 solo album, “Adult World.”

Kramer also became famous for his side-job, scoring for film and television with credits in the Will Ferrell comedies “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” and “Step Brothers,” the theme song for Fox Sports Network’s “5-4-3-2-1, Spotlight,” and HBO’s “Eastbound & Down.”

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