One of the most influential bands of the 60's era. Constantly overlooked. The Who refused to play with them because whenever they did they blew the Who off the stage. Should of been in the RnR Hall of Fame years ago but are ignored. They invented the "Garage Rock" sound. Were influential in being an early Punk style band.
Well, probably overlooked because they were politically active and against the Establishment unlike many other overrated bands out there. Probably nobody wanted to have anything to do with bands that enhanced the fight against injustice, unjust laws, oppression, over-richness, etc etc etc.
BS. The MC5 loved the Who and took a lot of ideas and inspiration from them. As well as The Stones, Them, Troggs, Kinks, Yardbirds. Music isn't a battle. And the guys who worked the genre the MC5 worked were kindred spirits and predecssors.
I am 70, and remember the night at the Grande Ballroom, watching the original band play. It was life changing, and they are still my favourite band all these years later. Classic Detroit rock, like everything else Detroit in those days, the best of the best. Muscle cars, the Grande, Saunders, the Plum Pit, the Rhinocerous, Galligans, the list goes on.
"The tour was a disaster. Dates canceled one after the other. The two weeks of Italian dates canceled. Everybody was angry and dis appointed in us. And onstage, we sucked. There were no rehearsals, sO we had to comne up with material that we could play that every body might already know. Singing MC5 songs was almost com pletely out of the question. Neither Fred nor I had ever attempted to sing these songs, and had no idea how to go about it. We didn't actually even know the lyrics to some of them. The material we plaved was simple three-or four-chord vamps with extended solos. We just tried as best we could to play for the contracted amount of time, to ensure we'd get paid. The performances had almost nothing to do with the MC5. We were a terrible representation of our former powerful stage show. Fred and I would have long talks in our hotel room, in which we tried to envision a future band with new plavers. We put on a brave face, but it was over. Hope is a great breaktast, but a lousy dinner. " Wayne Kramer "The hard Stuff" / chapter "The Last Leg"
Just found this despite my 30-year devotion to the cause and adoration of the detroit rock scene. Apologies for being Limey, who never got to see this shit live, but when I die, if I go to the right place. I'm sure these guys,The Stooges and the Flamin Grovies, and many others will be live and playing constantly. Thanks for this.
Muito legal esses improvisos da banda,ao vivo.Mostra técnica,talento e feeling.Hoje em dia,muitos grupos não tem nada disso,e emsmo assim,infelizmente,fazem sucesso!
Sonic was an essential part of MC5. Underrated and underexposed until the near end, he was a major ingredient. Yes, he definitely makes LET IT ROCK very, very good.
A long way from Tartar Field. But interesting interplay between Wayne and Fred. Part Spinal Tap, part psych rock, part train wreck, part cool and nasty. A real blender. Thanks all for the back stories on this, which provided the proper lens. Keep kickin'.
i got to tell ya brothers and sisters saw em in an city 68 at the foxy lady. then north of flint in 69 sherwood forrest. then in a little bar in flint there were the men the legands of rock themself's. brorher wayne and john sinclair (holder of the holy grail). what fanatasic prople. its amazing when you met heros and they are many times nicer than u could hope for. then at the majestic in detroit whwn the last 3 got back together. maaaaaannnn, they were playing kick out the jam's. and i keep fleeing myself raise above the floor. un-fucking real! but let's get to the pt' its 2017 and i want to hear some revolution out there. i'm i the only one who's sick of this police state. i've heard bout freedom and liberty for 65 fucking years in this country. god damnit i like to see just a little piece of it before i die it must be buried with hoffa. "fuck the pigs" STAY ALIVE WITH THE 5
I beg to differ with a lot of comments here and say that the version of ‘let it rock’ near the end is one of the finest moments in rock n roll history..check out other uploads of same version (better sound)..phenomenal playing by Smith!
i agree great band especially with Rob Tyner on lead vocals. I think i have most of their records. Been into them since a kid in my early teens back in about 1970/71 ish.
@@macjam9090 Totally agree. Fan from the start. Let all the others talk. I sold lp's from Sunset Boulevard to Europe in the seventies and eighties. Bands like the MC5, the Stooges, NY Dolls, Patti Smith were hot! I don't know what other people are talking about, but in many different important shops, bands like these were the main thing.
@@jimiplayscobo5877 Great. I've seen Iggy Pop in Europe. Always a fan of The Stooges, MC5. Later New Wave. Have seen a lot of bands live, but I missed some of them. Unfortunately.
Really sad that the MC5 had to go out like this...Ive been reading Waynes auto-bio & he said the last couple of configurations of the band were really quite embarrassing & didnt do their legacy any justice.
I was there, I was disapointed, Rob was not there, I payed lots of money, 25 marks if I remember, my whole month 's incomig . Still, I WAS THERE AND SAW HURRIGANES feat. Kari Kuuva supporting them.
Cheesy Rickenbackers? WTF? I guess George Harrison, John Lennon, Pete Townshend, Roger McGuinn, John Fogerty, John Kay, Mike Campbell, Paul Weller, Peter Buck, The Smithereens, Guy Picciotto, etc., are chicken feed?
Tyner's absence just saps their spirit... but I can't blame them for trying to forge on. Compare this video with the videos from the same tour, before Tyner split (Beat Club, Paris, etc), and notice the difference in the energy level! But Kramer and Sonic were still kick ass guitarists here. I read an old Rolling Stone story the other day, written just before this European tour... and they all had the sense that this was their last chance of making it or breaking it. The story deals with their rift with John Sinclair, and his bullshit political and social community, which MC5 basically funded with their concerts and records. Once they broke away from Sinclair, their "fans" in Detroit/Ann Arbor turned on them, and considered them sell outs. Ironic, considering that it was their relationship with Sinclair that probably kept them from the stardom they deserved!
@@TheDogofWinter The MC5 taking on Elektra Records and the "Fuck Hudsons" news ad did them in. That was what got them banned from the airwaves and lost them their recording contract that would have got them nationwide gigs, publicity and the mainstream fame that eluded them. Splitting from Sinclair was a local thing and had no major impact on them. They were young, naive and believed that righteousness was on their side. It wasn't.
@@kotjmf1968 lil bit a both but you got a point there. Damn a Hudsons in the sense of "who cares about this store as long as we still are on elektra" type thing. Except had they been more famous I still wouldn'ta liked em as much, like when the gym douchebags all know who they were when a couple hits come on radio, like lifting better when purple haze would cone on etc
klmullins65…the bullshit political crap was the White Panther Party. A group formed to back the black panthers, both groups killed by the FBI. The same FBI responsible for crushing the tea party and the trump conservatives. The same FBI heartily embraced by the new social democrats in Washington.
@@Dixler683 since the NFTs are sold out and you don't get to pick which one you pay for anyway I went ahead and printed out which one I wanted, the one where he's an astronaut with Joe Biden sunglasses. I'll mail 99 bucks worth of gold or somethin
Too bad that the MC5 magic is simply not here... This proves that without a proper drummer to provide the basic energy behind a band, the sound does not takes off. Dennis Thompson was the key to MC5's power !
@@hadrosaurus I think the vital missing ingredient here is Tyner, though Thompson's absence is very noticeable too...but Tyner had the raw energy and the charisma that made him a great front man. Kramer and Sonic had alot of charisma too, but it wasn't the "front man" kind.
@@klmullins65 Yup, Tyner makes the difference, he was a lead singer, neither of them really are for more than a song or two, still rocks but it's definitely missing Tyner.
Sadly, this is the last gasp of the MC5. This is one of the, if not -the- last show of the MC5, which was at that point reduced to Fred Smith and Wayne Kramer as the only original members... The band fell apart during that last tour of Europe. The rhythm section has no clue about MC5 music, and it shows. A great document on the death of a great band, if only we had more actual MC5 footage of that quality...
Man,they sound grate .I can't believe ,they was not capable to move on. That could only be because thiere was no good management for them.It's great live.Imagine in the studio.shame..Love is the key...
Yea !;!;!!; There was a band called death from Detroit in the late 60;s they actually hit on the rock / punk sound before the Ramones. Check it out. Talk to ya.
No doubt Rob Tyner is missed along with his swag, but this is a lot better than I was led to believe from how history tells it. MC5 or 4 or 2 or now 50 can do no wrong!
i must admit, if i came thinking i was going to see the 68' mc5, i probably would have been disapointed. ramblin rose lacked the energy. when i got over this isn't the original band, i must admit i like these different versions of the songs. a bit of a punk edge, feel some early floyd and maybe quicksilver too. i like both bands. tarter field is a favorite when i want to go, but i really like this also. thanks for sharing!
Drummer looks like Sam Gopal. I know it's not, but he reminds me of him. Great alternate version of Looking at You. Contrast this with the original single, not John Landau abortion, and I like the feel of this. Too bad they did not go farther with this. I grew up in Detroit in 60's & 70's and caught Wayne every time he played in Detroit, also Fred when he backed Iggy with what was Sonic's Rendezvous Band. SRB was a big Ann Arbor MI draw when Fred was living in St. Clair Shores w Patty Smith & children. On a further note, Patty Smith would later cover Gloria and Hometown Rival Bob Seger would cover Let It Rock to great success on his Live Bullet album. Interested in a Detroit offspring of scene that spawned MC5 and Stooges? Check out band called Death from Detroit, not the death metal death the proto punk Death. In the mid 1970's there was a saying on Detroit FM radio " If you think the Rolling Stones are the best band live, you've never seen the MC5".
Cool story. I’m 57 living in SCS. Trying to find all the MC5 I can on TH-cam. Living everything I see. Wayne’s guitar lessons are cool too. What a great guy
'looking at you' is a shadow of it's former self. why they aren't tearing the roof right off the joint is puzzling. it's like watching a movie and realizing half way thru that it's never gonna make sense and turn into a good/great film. anyone familiar w/ the studio track would agree. this was lame. full of possibilities, but even the crowd barely applauds them. that tune is supposed to be riveting! w/ or w/ out the late great Rob Tyner(alive at the time), it's when he doesn't sing (during the breaks), that these 2 should come alive!
Man, this is hard to watch... it's so friggin BAD... but so friggin GOOD at the same time considering the circumstances. You gotta give them a lot of credit. Without Tyner and Thompson, Kramer and Smith know they're up the creek without a paddle. You can tell from the glances going between them that they're wondering if the gig's gonna fly.... or crash and burn like a torched bag of dogshit dropped off a ten story building.
"The tour was a disaster. Dates canceled one after the other. The two weeks of Italian dates canceled. Everybody was angry and dis appointed in us. And onstage, we sucked. There were no rehearsals, sO we had to comne up with material that we could play that every body might already know. Singing MC5 songs was almost com pletely out of the question. Neither Fred nor I had ever attempted to sing these songs, and had no idea how to go about it. We didn't actually even know the lyrics to some of them. The material we plaved was simple three-or four-chord vamps with extended solos. We just tried as best we could to play for the contracted amount of time, to ensure we'd get paid. The performances had almost nothing to do with the MC5. We were a terrible representation of our former powerful stage show. Fred and I would have long talks in our hotel room, in which we tried to envision a future band with new plavers. We put on a brave face, but it was over. Hope is a great breaktast, but a lousy dinner. " Wyne Kramer "The hard Stuff" / chapter "The Last Leg"
Piece of vinyl of a late MC5 gig from '72 that's titled 'DO IT'. Amazing gig tho' sound is not perfect but there are songs on it I've never heard on any other MC5 product, both original and covers. The energy and riffing etc, are as close to their first record as you'll hear. Try n find it cos real fans will not be disappointed at all I promise yz! Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa people
Seriously ?.....It's fucking hard to critisize these two legends, but this sounds tired....which ofcourse is no wonder with the amounts of high grade smack going round....Just going through the motions momma....
Yes it's a shame that they probably were struggling hard with that and being on the road for what must have seemed like forever. Still love my boyhood guitar heroes
As they say, "Bloody awful". Whatever this is, it ain't the MC5. Maybe the MC2 plus a hired drummer and bass player. I'd give them an E for effort but the magic is gone here.
The way the riff gets like an empty hearted slow key too it as they just...start, ”I Want You” from silence there, and it is so damn hard and far as it wanders away like the pain from a lost life. That they are right within, Sonic and Kramer, 1972, in Finland. In front of what seems to be as far from Detroit or Ann Harbour as you can ever get. I am sad on the song choices and screwed zooming. But this bleeds and there is a story to be told, on what was to happen and what had been going on the past years of these icons as they will write City Slang, and team up as Sonics Rendesvouz Band, or, use JD and coke to end up in jail for a long time. A time Wayne now has surpassed his old partner Sonic with, since of the loss of Fred ”Sonic” Smith in late 1994. This is not at all the best mc5 lineup or gig, in a classical way. But how they perform it and under the circumstances that are Hollywood stuff plots, it is a huge document of a short frame of time that also saw the last great acts of the Detroit era end or form. As the industri looked elsewhere, we had SRB. And. I could go on. You know what I mean or not. // Fundraise Scott morgan btw, check it out
Poetic analysis! The word "document" caught my attention. In spite of all the complaints about this recording, it truly IS a document. It captured a particular time for the band; thus, it tells a story. And I'm happy to hear it told. And, by the way, I know what you mean...
Wayne Kramer and Fred Sonic Smith. R.I.P
One of the most influential bands of the 60's era. Constantly overlooked. The Who refused to play with them because whenever they did they blew the Who off the stage. Should of been in the RnR Hall of Fame years ago but are ignored. They invented the "Garage Rock" sound. Were influential in being an early Punk style band.
Speak the truth
The who? Lol. Pop bands bones get buried in the dirt beneath the feet busy kickin jams the fuck out. Goddamn!
Well, probably overlooked because they were politically active and against the Establishment unlike many other overrated bands out there. Probably nobody wanted to have anything to do with bands that enhanced the fight against injustice, unjust laws, oppression, over-richness, etc etc etc.
Testify!
BS. The MC5 loved the Who and took a lot of ideas and inspiration from them. As well as The Stones, Them, Troggs, Kinks, Yardbirds.
Music isn't a battle. And the guys who worked the genre the MC5 worked were kindred spirits and predecssors.
I am 70, and remember the night at the Grande Ballroom, watching the original band play. It was life changing, and they are still my favourite band all these years later. Classic Detroit rock, like everything else Detroit in those days, the best of the best. Muscle cars, the Grande, Saunders, the Plum Pit, the Rhinocerous, Galligans, the list goes on.
I'm 71, Right on Brother !! The Best time's of my life... GREAT MEMORIES!!!
strohs beer vernors coneys
"The tour was a disaster. Dates canceled one after the other. The two weeks of Italian dates canceled. Everybody was angry and dis appointed in us. And onstage, we sucked. There were no rehearsals, sO we had to comne up with material that we could play that every body might already know. Singing MC5 songs was almost com pletely out of the question. Neither Fred nor I had ever attempted to sing these songs, and had no idea how to go about it. We didn't actually even know the lyrics to some of them. The material we plaved was simple three-or four-chord vamps with extended solos. We just tried as best we could to play for the contracted amount of time, to ensure we'd get paid. The performances had almost nothing to do with the MC5. We were a terrible representation of our former powerful stage show. Fred and I would have long talks in our hotel room, in which we tried to envision a future band with new plavers. We put on a brave face, but it was over. Hope is a great breaktast, but a lousy dinner. "
Wayne Kramer "The hard Stuff" / chapter "The Last Leg"
Very interesting. England was the last of the MC5. Maybe the Aylesbury gig.
You are too modest. This is a great heavy sound for the times.
Man 1970 Wayne state was epic
@@nicmartDID ANYONE FILM IT?
@@gamoonbat This sounds lethargic and phoned in. Took them half an hour to do three songs. Not the MC5 of old by a long shot.
Not sure what everybody's complaining about here. Seems O.K. to me. Plus, just having this film from a half century ago at all is amazing in itself.
The mc5 were the very first punk rock group the were awesome and way ahead of there time.
Im sorry but that belongs to the stooges
@@Andrew-h4w2u. Way to step in bro. Iggy Pop is the godfather of punk rock and everyone else is battling for second place in the pecking order of punk
MC5 formed when I was 4 years old. And I am still listening to them!
Just found this despite my 30-year devotion to the cause and adoration of the detroit rock scene. Apologies for being Limey, who never got to see this shit live, but when I die, if I go to the right place. I'm sure these guys,The Stooges and the Flamin Grovies, and many others will be live and playing constantly. Thanks for this.
Did you have St Andrews or Royal Oak???
RIGHT ON BROTHER!!!
The dude on drums is havin a ball with Fred and Wayne! ✊✊✊✊
Muito legal esses improvisos da banda,ao vivo.Mostra técnica,talento e feeling.Hoje em dia,muitos grupos não tem nada disso,e emsmo assim,infelizmente,fazem sucesso!
Last song "Let It Rock" with Fred singing is awesome - best version of this tune EVER!!!
Were the cameramen drunk?
A hint of what was to come in Fred's SRB. He digs deep into the guitar ...
45:00 Fred was seemingly third choice for vocals with MC5 but I thought he had the best voice for gritty rock.
Sonic was an essential part of MC5. Underrated and underexposed until the near end, he was a major ingredient. Yes, he definitely makes LET IT ROCK very, very good.
@@kotjmf1968 Played in F major, that had to be strange
A long way from Tartar Field. But interesting interplay between Wayne and Fred. Part Spinal Tap, part psych rock, part train wreck, part cool and nasty. A real blender. Thanks all for the back stories on this, which provided the proper lens. Keep kickin'.
Tartar Field is some great stuff!
I thought for sure this was a cover of 'Wild Thing' as soon as I heard the chords. can't get enough of the MC5.
Thank you for this.
R.I.P. Wayne Kramer.
Ah, the more innocent days of when people were asked to applaud for the road manager and they complied!!
Kramer is in pain singing I want you rock on Kramer !! Great contribution to rock n roll
Thanks for uploading! I never knew these recordings existed. Despite being on the decline, they still rocked.
The MC5 would rock on life support. Shit.
i got to tell ya brothers and sisters saw em in an city 68 at the foxy lady. then north of flint in 69 sherwood forrest. then in a little bar in flint there were the men the legands of rock themself's. brorher wayne and john sinclair (holder of the holy grail). what fanatasic prople. its amazing when you met heros and they are many times nicer than u could hope for. then at the majestic in detroit whwn the last 3 got back together. maaaaaannnn, they were playing kick out the jam's. and i keep fleeing myself raise above the floor. un-fucking real! but let's get to the pt' its 2017 and i want to hear some revolution out there. i'm i the only one who's sick of this police state. i've heard bout freedom and liberty for 65 fucking years in this country. god damnit i like to see just a little piece of it before i die it must be buried with hoffa. "fuck the pigs" STAY ALIVE WITH THE 5
Sherwood Forest ! That place was magical .
well said
That drummer kicked fucking ass.
ritche dahma
I would pay money just for a recording of these two men tuning...
That would be a bad idea.
You mean great idea.
Sonic has a great voice ..
I beg to differ with a lot of comments here and say that the version of ‘let it rock’ near the end is one of the finest moments in rock n roll history..check out other uploads of same version (better sound)..phenomenal playing by Smith!
i agree great band especially with Rob Tyner on lead vocals. I think i have most of their records. Been into them since a kid in my early teens back in about 1970/71 ish.
Thanks for your interest these guys are bad-assed always have been
@@macjam9090 Totally agree. Fan from the start. Let all the others talk. I sold lp's from Sunset Boulevard to Europe in the seventies and eighties. Bands like the MC5, the Stooges, NY Dolls, Patti Smith were hot! I don't know what other people are talking about, but in many different important shops, bands like these were the main thing.
@@LenQuerido The Stooges played my high school in Windsor Ontario Canada in 1970 :-) Peace
@@jimiplayscobo5877 Great. I've seen Iggy Pop in Europe. Always a fan of The Stooges, MC5. Later New Wave. Have seen a lot of bands live, but I missed some of them. Unfortunately.
How they do I Want You is out of this world. Thats surreal.
I am diggin this!!!!
Two smokin' hot guitar players here.
and ...Sonic Smith kills that Chuck Berry number with swagger!
thanks
This what soul and guitar skills give you.A masteroiece from a master chef. Played it almost as well as Chuck himself let it rock
These guys rocked
Really sad that the MC5 had to go out like this...Ive been reading Waynes auto-bio & he said the last couple of configurations of the band were really quite embarrassing & didnt do their legacy any justice.
E= MC5 🔥🇺🇸✌❤🙂
Good soundtrack!! And video. Too bad it’s so dark. Thanks!
I was there, I was disapointed, Rob was not there, I payed lots of money, 25 marks if I remember, my whole month 's incomig . Still, I WAS THERE AND SAW HURRIGANES feat. Kari Kuuva supporting them.
"On bass, Derek Smalls. He wrote this."
Wrote what?
Guy looked like Roger Glover ('Deep Purple').
Jazz Odyssey....
Dudes were junked up .....One of the GOAT pure rock and roll bands EVER
Merci!
great tx for upload
ma bravo za upload
phenomenal
The MC5 were like 🍕. Even when they sucked they were great
Damn that rickenbacker twelve string sounds great
6 string Rickenbacker
@@revwahfair 450/12 strung as a 6 and loaded with humbuckers
@@chikolocallo correct!
His Mosrite sounded better - for his style of playing, anyway.
Thanks for uploading really
Thr second song is equal to Wild Thing from The Troggs,played by Jimi Hendrix alive.Great riff!
POWER TO THE PEOPLE! !!!!!!!
Wayne is on the top of his game
Chuck Berry was like "Damn...I wish I could do it that good!"
That’s utter nonsense.
Zahvaljujem se! Samo napred care!!!
The end of the end
Fred "Sonic" Smith, the only guitar player who can make those cheesy Rickenbacker guitars sound like a monster.
Cheesy Rickenbackers? WTF?
I guess George Harrison, John Lennon, Pete Townshend, Roger McGuinn, John Fogerty, John Kay, Mike Campbell, Paul Weller, Peter Buck, The Smithereens, Guy Picciotto, etc., are chicken feed?
Rick 450-12 strung as a six nodded with Gibson humbuckers.
Listen to Gloria 19:50 into the video. And then listen to Patti's live versions of the song. No wonder they were married....;-)
on sent bien que l'energie n'est plus la !
Love that S#!T,Should have been the 1st band inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.Not that means anything to me.The MC5 mean something to me
Tyner's absence just saps their spirit... but I can't blame them for trying to forge on. Compare this video with the videos from the same tour, before Tyner split (Beat Club, Paris, etc), and notice the difference in the energy level! But Kramer and Sonic were still kick ass guitarists here.
I read an old Rolling Stone story the other day, written just before this European tour... and they all had the sense that this was their last chance of making it or breaking it. The story deals with their rift with John Sinclair, and his bullshit political and social community, which MC5 basically funded with their concerts and records. Once they broke away from Sinclair, their "fans" in Detroit/Ann Arbor turned on them, and considered them sell outs. Ironic, considering that it was their relationship with Sinclair that probably kept them from the stardom they deserved!
Interesting.
@@TheDogofWinter The MC5 taking on Elektra Records and the "Fuck Hudsons" news ad did them in. That was what got them banned from the airwaves and lost them their recording contract that would have got them nationwide gigs, publicity and the mainstream fame that eluded them.
Splitting from Sinclair was a local thing and had no major impact on them. They were young, naive and believed that righteousness was on their side. It wasn't.
@@kotjmf1968 lil bit a both but you got a point there. Damn a Hudsons in the sense of "who cares about this store as long as we still are on elektra" type thing. Except had they been more famous I still wouldn'ta liked em as much, like when the gym douchebags all know who they were when a couple hits come on radio, like lifting better when purple haze would cone on etc
klmullins65…the bullshit political crap was the White Panther Party. A group formed to back the black panthers, both groups killed by the FBI. The same FBI responsible for crushing the tea party and the trump conservatives. The same FBI heartily embraced by the new social democrats in Washington.
@@Dixler683 since the NFTs are sold out and you don't get to pick which one you pay for anyway I went ahead and printed out which one I wanted, the one where he's an astronaut with Joe Biden sunglasses. I'll mail 99 bucks worth of gold or somethin
Too bad that the MC5 magic is simply not here...
This proves that without a proper drummer to provide the basic energy behind a band, the sound does not takes off. Dennis Thompson was the key to MC5's power !
@@hadrosaurus I think the vital missing ingredient here is Tyner, though Thompson's absence is very noticeable too...but Tyner had the raw energy and the charisma that made him a great front man. Kramer and Sonic had alot of charisma too, but it wasn't the "front man" kind.
@@klmullins65 Yup, Tyner makes the difference, he was a lead singer, neither of them really are for more than a song or two, still rocks but it's definitely missing Tyner.
@@G8GT364CI Stop bitching the pair of you. Would you rather this post didn't exist?
@@TheClemcaster can't argue with that
Theres nothing wrong with the drummer. Played with Lou Reed and others. Not having Tyner was the main problem.
Sadly, this is the last gasp of the MC5. This is one of the, if not -the- last show of the MC5, which was at that point reduced to Fred Smith and Wayne Kramer as the only original members... The band fell apart during that last tour of Europe. The rhythm section has no clue about MC5 music, and it shows. A great document on the death of a great band, if only we had more actual MC5 footage of that quality...
the drummer seems to be into it
He's like a cross between Animal of the muppets and Mick Fleetwood!
He's down. His eyes are rolling back into his head
Agreed!
@@robMrRob with a little Cheech mixed in there!
❤👍📀🏆🇧🇾thenks. B.T.O. - отдыхает!!
Man,they sound grate .I can't believe ,they was not capable to move on. That could only be because thiere was no good management for them.It's great live.Imagine in the studio.shame..Love is the key...
Believe it or not it wasn't really because of bad management.
legendary
I would be proud of this work MC5.It’s Hollywood Casablanca stuff.
Yea !;!;!!; There was a band called death from Detroit in the late 60;s they actually hit on the rock / punk sound before the Ramones. Check it out. Talk to ya.
They were wasted and at the end of the road...sad.
Only 516 people know about this video... Wow... Guess its our secret y'all... Mc2 were jamming there asses off
now it is clear why the Finnish people love the black metal sound.
Wild Things
Haha what's up with the camera at certain parts where it's focused on nothing?
I think they were going for a psychedelic effect
he was high on acid like the band
You have a problem with nothing? Read either Heidegger or Sartre and you'll see why I ask.
Wayne singin' some Reggae on "Looking at You."
these guy's invented rock music.........f**k yeah........
yes
No doubt Rob Tyner is missed along with his swag, but this is a lot better than I was led to believe from how history tells it. MC5 or 4 or 2 or now 50 can do no wrong!
It's lethargic and very dumbed down. They're playing slow 3-chord songs and extending them to 10 minutes to kill time.
wow
In a True Testimonial Wayne talks about how bad he performed when there was only him and Sonic left. But this show is absolutely cracking! 💜
If I hadn't been shooting heroin at the start of this tour I would have been shooting it by the time I got this far.
Song list for the show...anyone?
did the band break up prior to this gig? where was Rob and Machine Gun ?
❤️❤️💕🎀🎀💞💞🌹🌷🌺🌷
RIP
Jeezusss
Done to fulfil a contract - Still sounds good considering, Kramer's guitar work is about as good as rock guitar gets...
This guy is horrid. Out of tune.
Brian Wurch I’m sure you’re used to listening to auto tune bands
So is Freds
@@xxcelr8rspure punk, not all of us want to listen to pink floyd.
Still better than Taylor Swift.
i must admit, if i came thinking i was going to see the 68' mc5, i probably would have been disapointed. ramblin rose lacked the energy. when i got over this isn't the original band, i must admit i like these different versions of the songs. a bit of a punk edge, feel some early floyd and maybe quicksilver too. i like both bands. tarter field is a favorite when i want to go, but i really like this also. thanks for sharing!
Drummer looks like Sam Gopal. I know it's not, but he reminds me of him. Great alternate version of Looking at You. Contrast this with the original single, not John Landau abortion, and I like the feel of this. Too bad they did not go farther with this. I grew up in Detroit in 60's & 70's and caught Wayne every time he played in Detroit, also Fred when he backed Iggy with what was Sonic's Rendezvous Band. SRB was a big Ann Arbor MI draw when Fred was living in St. Clair Shores w Patty Smith & children. On a further note, Patty Smith would later cover Gloria and Hometown Rival Bob Seger would cover Let It Rock to great success on his Live Bullet album. Interested in a Detroit offspring of scene that spawned MC5 and Stooges? Check out band called Death from Detroit, not the death metal death the proto punk Death. In the mid 1970's there was a saying on Detroit FM radio " If you think the Rolling Stones are the best band live, you've never seen the MC5".
Yes, Death were AMAZING! Too bad that success--or ANY recognition at all--totally eluded them.
Cool story. I’m 57 living in SCS. Trying to find all the MC5 I can on TH-cam. Living everything I see. Wayne’s guitar lessons are cool too. What a great guy
'looking at you' is a shadow of it's former self. why they aren't tearing the roof right off the joint is puzzling. it's like watching a movie and realizing half way thru that it's never gonna make sense and turn into a good/great film. anyone familiar w/ the studio track would agree. this was lame. full of possibilities, but even the crowd barely applauds them. that tune is supposed to be riveting! w/ or w/ out the late great Rob Tyner(alive at the time), it's when he doesn't sing (during the breaks), that these 2 should come alive!
Who is the drummer please ? I love his groove and energy.
Richie Dahrma was the drummer here.
It's spelled Dharma, he was the drummer on walk on the wild side.
Both were doing what they do best; playing guitar at loud volume :-) But, obviously Tyner is missing here...
This must have been filmed by the drummer's dad
Man, this is hard to watch... it's so friggin BAD... but so friggin GOOD at the same time considering the circumstances.
You gotta give them a lot of credit. Without Tyner and Thompson, Kramer and Smith know they're up the creek without a paddle. You can tell from the glances going between them that they're wondering if the gig's gonna fly.... or crash and burn like a torched bag of dogshit dropped off a ten story building.
That is exactly the case. They knew that they were not going to live up to their past reputation. I must have been horrific for them.
"The tour was a disaster. Dates canceled one after the other. The two weeks of Italian dates canceled. Everybody was angry and dis appointed in us. And onstage, we sucked. There were no rehearsals, sO we had to comne up with material that we could play that every body might already know. Singing MC5 songs was almost com pletely out of the question. Neither Fred nor I had ever attempted to sing these songs, and had no idea how to go about it. We didn't actually even know the lyrics to some of them. The material we plaved was simple three-or four-chord vamps with extended solos. We just tried as best we could to play for the contracted amount of time, to ensure we'd get paid. The performances had almost nothing to do with the MC5. We were a terrible representation of our former powerful stage show. Fred and I would have long talks in our hotel room, in which we tried to envision a future band with new plavers. We put on a brave face, but it was over. Hope is a great breaktast, but a lousy dinner. "
Wyne Kramer "The hard Stuff" / chapter "The Last Leg"
@@alain.preudhomme damn that last line is fucking heavy. gonna sit on that one for a while.
Merry Christmas a day before Thanksgiving.Someone tell me they didn’t invent grunge 20 years before grunge happy as fuck
Piece of vinyl of a late MC5 gig from '72 that's titled 'DO IT'. Amazing gig tho' sound is not perfect but there are songs on it I've never heard on any other MC5 product, both original and covers. The energy and riffing etc, are as close to their first record as you'll hear. Try n find it cos real fans will not be disappointed at all I promise yz! Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa people
That was 1978, Rob Tyner's band billed as the MC5, no other MC5 band members were involved. Rob Guillespie was lead guitar on that one.
The post says part 1. Is there a part 2?
Don't worry brother,I've found it.
Seriously ?.....It's fucking hard to critisize these two legends, but this sounds tired....which ofcourse is no wonder with the amounts of high grade smack going round....Just going through the motions momma....
Hard to play without your singer.
No, it is hard to sing without a singer...
Yes it's a shame that they probably were struggling hard with that and being on the road for what must have seemed like forever. Still love my boyhood guitar heroes
Who's singing Gloria!
Most MC5 songs are too slow. Seems they are fed up playing them.
Some of these bands are worth their weight in uranium.
this looks like it was recorded in my garage with my grandmas camera
It WAS 50 years ago...
Why are these guys not in the rock hall of fame.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
As they say, "Bloody awful". Whatever this is, it ain't the MC5. Maybe the MC2 plus a hired drummer and bass player. I'd give them an E for effort but the magic is gone here.
Punk bands biggest influence
I hope the camera men didn’t pay to learn how to camera. If they did, they should probably ask for a refund.
The way the riff gets like an empty hearted slow key too it as they just...start, ”I Want You” from silence there, and it is so damn hard and far as it wanders away like the pain from a lost life. That they are right within, Sonic and Kramer, 1972, in Finland. In front of what seems to be as far from Detroit or Ann Harbour as you can ever get. I am sad on the song choices and screwed zooming. But this bleeds and there is a story to be told, on what was to happen and what had been going on the past years of these icons as they will write City Slang, and team up as Sonics Rendesvouz Band, or, use JD and coke to end up in jail for a long time. A time Wayne now has surpassed his old partner Sonic with, since of the loss of Fred ”Sonic” Smith in late 1994. This is not at all the best mc5 lineup or gig, in a classical way. But how they perform it and under the circumstances that are Hollywood stuff plots, it is a huge document of a short frame of time that also saw the last great acts of the Detroit era end or form. As the industri looked elsewhere, we had SRB. And. I could go on. You know what I mean or not. // Fundraise Scott morgan btw, check it out
I saw SRB close to 50 Times. Best unsigned & Live Band of the 70's.
Poetic analysis! The word "document" caught my attention. In spite of all the complaints about this recording, it truly IS a document. It captured a particular time for the band; thus, it tells a story. And I'm happy to hear it told.
And, by the way, I know what you mean...
wtf kinda intro was that ,,