MC5

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    Brothers, it's time to testify and I want to know, are you ready to testify? I give you a testimonial: THE MC5!
    "KICK OUT THE JAMS, MOTHERFUCKERS!"
    MC5, "Kick Out the Jams".

    The MC5 were a highly influential rock band from Detroit (their name meaning "Motor City 5"), active between 1964-1972. They're known for being one of the leading proto-punk bands (alongside Velvet Underground and The Stooges--incidentally from Ann Arbor, which isn't far from Detroit--among others) that helped inspire the Punk Rock movement.

    Oh, and they were also one of the first bands to put out a song with the word "fuck" in it uncensored - the first ones who actually did it were Jefferson Airplane back in '68, but nobody seems to remember that. MC5 were the second.

    The band's members were:

    • Rob Tyner - vocals
    • Wayne Kramer - guitar, backing vocals
    • Fred "Sonic" Smith - guitar, backing vocals
    • Michael Davis - bass
    • Dennis Thompson - drums

    The band had a short career, releasing only three albums before breaking up. However, these albums proved to be enormously influential. Boasting Kramer and Smith's furious guitar playing, Tyner's strong vocals and the solid support of the Davis-Thompson rhythm section, the sheer energy and fury of the band combined with the undoubtedly Epic Riffs they wrote and their "back-to-basics" rock 'n roll sound became a key influence on Punk Rock. While their debut album Kick Out the Jams (MOTHERFUCKERS) is one of the most highly acclaimed live albums ever made, their other albums Back in the USA and High Time aren't anything to sneeze at either.

    While everybody loves MC5's volatile proto-punk sound, nobody is really rushing to emulate their far-left politics and affiliation with radical groups such as The White Panther Party (through their manager John Sinclair). To be fair, even they didn't last more than a year in their extreme political affiliation and had a falling out with Sinclair.

    Discography:

    • Kick Out the Jams (1969) - Live Album
    • Back in the USA (1970)
    • High Time (1971)
    MC5 provides examples of the following tropes:
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