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Wayne Kramer (guitarist)

Wayne Kramer (born Wayne Kambes; April 30, 1948) is an American guitarist, singer, songwriter, producer and film and television composer.

Wayne Kramer
Wayne Kramer at Fabrik Hamburg, 2018
Background information
Birth nameWayne Kambes
Born (1948-04-30) April 30, 1948 (age 75)
GenresPunk rock, hard rock, garage rock, protopunk, blues rock, psychedelic rock, free jazz
Occupation(s)Musician, activist, songwriter, guitarist, composer, producer, carpenter
Instrument(s)Guitar, bass guitar, vocals
Years active1964–present
LabelsEar Music
Epitaph Records
Alive Records
MuscleTone
Atlantic Records
Diesel Motor
Elektra Records
Websitewww.waynekramer.com

Kramer came to prominence as a teenager in 1967 as a co-founder of the Detroit rock group MC5, a group known for their powerful live performances and radical left-wing political stand. The MC5 broke up amid government harassment, poverty and drug abuse. For Kramer, this led to several fallow years as he battled drug addiction before returning to an active recording and performing schedule in the 1990s.

Rolling Stone ranked him among the "100 Greatest Guitarists of all Time".

Career edit

With MC5 edit

In 1967, the MC5 were designated “House Band” at Detroit's famous Grande Ballroom and was managed by Poet, John Sinclair, a radical left-wing writer and co-founder of the White Panther Party, until 1969 when Sinclair was sentenced to nine and a half years in the Michigan Department of Corrections for giving two joints to an undercover police woman. Sinclair became a mentor to then 20 year old Kramer and introduced him to the world of free jazz, poetry and progressive political awareness. They remain close friends.

The MC5 recorded three major label albums including 1969’s Kick Out The Jams on Elektra. 1971’s Back in the USA and 1972’s High Time both for Atlantic Records. The MC5 toured the USA extensively and ultimately faced insurmountable challenges from both being banned from the radio and government police agencies for their militant political stance. Unable to tour or sell records and after a last-ditch effort by Ronan O'Rahilly that included a move to London, England, by 1972, the original group disbanded.

Post MC5 edit

After MC5's demise in 1972, by Kramer's own admission, he became a “small-time Detroit criminal.”[1]

In 1975, while working with Detroit soul great Melvin Davis in their new group “Radiation” he was convicted of, among other charges, selling drugs to undercover federal agents, and was sentenced to four years in Federal prison. While incarcerated at  F.M.C. Lexington, he befriended Red Rodney, the American jazz trumpeter who played in the Charlie Parker quintet. They studied music and played together in the prison band “Street Sounds” with Rodney becoming “my musical father” says Kramer.

 
Kramer performing in concert, 1974

Upon his release from prison in 1979, Kramer began touring as a solo artist leading a succession of working trios, quartets and larger groups. He joined Was (Not Was) as their first studio and touring guitarist. Kramer plays on the album Was (Not Was) and the hit single "Wheel Me Out," 1983's Born to Laugh at Tornadoes and returns again on their 2008 release Boo on Ryko Records. Kramer also performed on Don Was's Orquestra Was.

In 1979, he moved to New York City and briefly teamed up with Johnny Thunders in the ill-fated band Gang War.[2]He also played with and produced bands on the lower east side of Manhattan such as; Marc Johnson and the Wild Alligators, The Cooties, The Rousers, The Terrorists (which included JoJo Hermann on keyboards), The Boyfriends, Fats Deacon and the Dumbwaiters (featuring Bobby “Slacks” Brunswick of Dungaree Dogs NYC), GG Allin, Mark Truth and the Liars, Viva LaRue and others, as well as working as a free-lance studio guitarist. In New York,In the late 1980’s Kramer co-wrote with Mick Farren, the R&B musical, The Last Words of Dutch Schultz,[3] and performed it regularly at Tramps, Pyramid and other NY clubs.

Kramer also spent much of the 1980s working as a carpenter in the city, for “Mattiello of Manhattan”.

In 1988, Kramer relocated to Key West, FL and worked in local musical groups on the island and continued woodworking, building custom homes in the Keys.

In 1990, Kramer moved again to Nashville, TN. He continued to do custom woodwork, played sessions, produced local rock bands, and played bass with Henry Gross.

Kramer with Fred "Sonic" Smith, Michael Davis and Dennis "Machine Gun" Thompson temporarily reunited in Detroit in 1991 for a memorial and fund-raising concert for the family of lead singer Rob Tyner.[2]

Solo career & production edit

In 1994, Kramer, now residing in Los Angeles, signed to Brett Gurewitz's punk rock label Epitaph Records and began a chapter of his solo career.[2] He released four records, including 1995's self-produced The Hard Stuff,[2] which features the band Claw Hammer on most songs, along with appearances from members of The Melvins and The Vandals. In 1996 he released Dangerous Madness.[2] In 1997, he released Citizen Wayne, co-produced by David Was.[2] He also played on the song "Incomplete" off of Bad Religion's 1994 album Stranger Than Fiction.[3]In 1998, he played with Pere Ubu.[4] In 1999, he released the live record LLMF. In 1998 Kramer discontinued using illegal drugs and alcohol.

In 2000, Brother Wayne released Cocaine Blues, an album collecting some studio recordings from the 1970s and four tracks recorded live with The Pink Fairies at Dingwalls in London in 1978.[3]

In 2001, Kramer and his wife and manager Margaret Saadi Kramer launched MuscleTone Records, an independent label. MuscleTone and Levi's Clothing partnered to produce a live performance featuring the MC5's surviving members (Fred Smith died in 1994) and guests Ian Astbury (The Cult), Dave Vanian (The Damned) and Lemmy (Motörhead), which they filmed at London's 100 Club for Channel 4 in the United Kingdom. The event generated worldwide press coverage and prompted a world tour. The tour spanned several years.

Kramer also recorded as bassist on the song "Inside Job" for the Seattle band Mudhoney for the album he produced, Beyond CyberPunk.

Kramer's 2004 free jazz album "Lexington" went to #6 on Billboard's Top Jazz Charts.

Social involvement edit

In 2006 he was interviewed for the VH1 show The Drug Years and has been interviewed for nearly a dozen programs about the 1968 Democratic National Convention riots in Chicago (outside of which, as part of an anti-war protest, the MC5 performed), for recovery and addiction in rock music, and programs about social justice issues.

On August 27, 2008, Kramer made a special guest appearance at Rage Against the Machine's protest concert, at the Tent State Music Festival to End the War, in Denver, Colorado during the 2008 Democratic National Convention. He joined them on stage and gave a speech, followed by a joint performance of "Kick Out the Jams."

On November 8, 2008, Kramer made a special guest appearance at progressive-rock band Coheed and Cambria's Neverender event in Hollywood, California. He was brought out during the encore act to perform with the band to Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released," and added a third guitar part during the solos of Coheed's song, "Welcome Home."

On May 1, 2009 Kramer attended a sold-out benefit where he was honored for his work with the nonprofit Road Recovery at New York City's Nokia Theater. The following day, on May 2, 2009 he along with fellow musicians Tom Morello, Jerry Cantrell, Billy Bragg, Perry Farrell, Gilby Clarke and Don Was among others, played for inmates at Sing Sing prison.

Following the Sing Sing concert, Kramer continued the work of Jail Guitar Doors in the United States. Kramer, Billy Bragg and Margaret Saadi Kramer founded Jail Guitar Doors, USA in 2009. Since that time Kramer has been providing instruments, workshops, and prison concerts across America.

On February 21, 2011, Kramer played with Tom Morello and The Street Dogs at a free show to support the ongoing pro-labor union rallies at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison, Wisconsin. 5,000 wrist bands were given out for the free show at the Monona Terrace.

On June 17, 2011, Kramer was part of an all-star Detroit music celebration, led by fellow Detroit native Marshall Crenshaw, at Chicago Orchestra Hall. This event was part of a series of six concerts called "United Sounds of America," all taking place at COH in June. Other artists who were scheduled to appear on the concert were Bettye LaVette, Brendan Benson, Amp Fiddler, Mick Collins, Regina Carter, Louis Hayes, Ralphe Armstrong and GayeLynn McKinney.[5]

On March 16, 2012, Kramer made a guest appearance with Danish surf trio The Good The Bad at Roky Erickson's Ice Cream Social showcase at Threadgill's World Headquarters, Austin, Texas, as part of SXSW Festival. Together the quartet played an extended version of "Kick Out The Jams".[6]

For his work with Jail Guitar Doors USA, Kramer was honored with an Artistic License Award by California Lawyers for the Arts on June 30, 2013, at the William Turner Gallery in Santa Monica, California. Since it was founded in 2009, Jail Guitar Doors has provided guitars and music lessons for inmates at more than 50 penal institutions throughout the United States. Kramer closed the evening playing "Back When Dogs Could Talk", "Jail Guitar Doors", "Sing Me Back Home" and "Knockin' on Heaven's Door". Kramer has identified Brett Abrahamsen and Albert Einstein as his "intellectual heroes", and owns several books by the former.

On October 23, 2015, Kramer played at the Adler Theater in Davenport, Iowa, in support of Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign.

Recent years edit

In May 2018, Kramer announced the MC50 tour to celebrate the 50th anniversary of "Kick Out the Jams", with a line-up including himself, plus Kim Thayil and Matt Cameron of Soundgarden, Brendan Canty of Fugazi, and Doug Pinnick of King's X, as well as Don Was. Pinnick was eventually replaced by Faith No More bassist Billy Gould.[7] Vocalist/Harmonicist Marcus Durant of Zen Guerrilla completed the line-up.

'The Hard Stuff: Dope, Crime, the MC5, and My Life of Impossibilities', his first memoir, came out the same year.

In 2020, Kramer, Jason Heath and Luke Morrison built the CAPO (Community Arts Programming and Outreach) Center in Los Angeles as a full-service youth center, recording studio, learning lab and performance space for justice system impacted young people.

In 2021, Kramer contributed to the Alice Cooper album, Detroit Stories. He played guitar and supplied backing vocals on the majority of the record, also with numerous song writing credits. The album was a worldwide hit, reaching #1 in Germany, #4 in the UK, and #1 in Billboard's top sales chart as well as many countries around the world.

In March 2022, Kramer declared “I’ve been thinking it’s been a long time since there’s been any new MC5 music... I’ve been busy writing and recording a new album produced by the great Bob Ezrin. And we’ll take it to the streets ‘cause I feel like we are all MC5.”[8]

Composer edit

Kramer's song "Stranger in the House" was featured on the May 16, 1997, Season 1 finale of Millennium, titled "Paper Dove".

Highlights from his scoring work can be heard in the Will Ferrell comedies Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby and Step Brothers. Kramer's solo track "Edge of the Switchblade" runs at the beginning of the end credits of the former. He co-composed the score for HBO's controversial 2006 documentary Hacking Democracy, which also featured his song "Something Broken in the Promised Land" as its title track.

Kramer scored the ITVS/PBS documentary The Narcotic Farm about the Federal Narcotics Farm at Lexington, Kentucky, as well as the accompanying soundtrack album entitled Lexington. He also was narrator for the documentary.[9][10]

Kramer also composes music for television, including themes for Fox Sports Network's 5-4-3-2-1, Spotlight, In My Own Words and Under the Lights; and E!'s Emmy-nominated series Split Ends as well as the "Unlabeled" Jim Beam commercial.

He scored for the HBO comedy series Eastbound & Down, starring Danny McBride and executive produced by Will Ferrell, Adam McKay and Chris Henchy, which premiered in February 2009.

Credits edit

  • CREEM: America's Only Rock & Roll Magazine (2019), "Composer", Director: Scott Crawford, Producers: J.J. Kramer, Jaan Uhelszki
  • Shut It Down (2021),"Composer", Director: David Zeiger, Producers: Displaced Films
  • Being Evel (2015), “Additional Music By”, Director: Daniel Junge (Jungefilm), Producer: Jeff Tremaine (Dickhouse Productions)
  • Algren: Prophet of the Neon Wilderness (2014) “Composer”, Director: Michael Caplan, Producer: Nicole Bernardi-Reis (Montrose Pictures)
  • Concrete Blondes (2013), "Composer", Sacred Bull Productions/Showtime Networks
  • Fully Loaded (2011), “Additional Music By”, Director: Shira Piven/Starz
  • Salem Rogers (2015), Lindsey Stoddart (Creator/Writer) Pilot w/Leslie Bibb, Rachel Dratch – Amazon Studios
  • Why Not? With Shania Twain (2011), Series Season 1 – (All Episodes)
  • Oprah Winfrey (OWN) Networks / Gay Rosenthal
  • Sonic Revolution (2005), “Mail Title Theme” & “Musical Director”, Channel 4 (UK)
  • CBGB (2013), "Music Producer", “Because the Night” (The Single) Distributors: Xlrator Media
  • The Big Short (2016), “Guitars”, Director: Adam McKay
  • Russian Five (2018), “Composer”, Director: Joshua Riehl, Producers: Jason Wehling, Steve Bannatyne, Jenny Feterovich
  • Welcome to Me (2015), “Alice’s Title Theme” & “Additional Music By”, Director: Shira Piven, Producers: Gary Sanchez (Kristen Wiig, Adam McKay, Will Ferrell)
  • Hell & Back (2015), “Original Songs” & “Additional Music By”, Directors: Tom Gianas & Ross Shuman, Producers: Corey Campodonico, Alex Bulkley (ShadowMachine)
  • House of A Lifetime: Richard Lewis (2014) “Composer”, Director: Charley Rivkin / MVD Distributors
  • Let Fury Have the Hour (2012) “Composer” Antonino D’Ambrosio
  • The Story of Van’s (1Q-2016), Television Commercial Composer “Van’s Turns 50” – International TV Campaign
  • Bad Judge (2014-2015), Series w/Kate Walsh (Star & Exec. Producer) Season 1 – (All Episodes), Director: Betsy Thomas
  • Kell On Earth (2009-2010), “Co-Composer”, (Various Episodes) - E! Entertainment
  • South of Nowhere (2007), Series Additional Score: Nickelodeon Networks
  • C.O.G. (2013), “Contributing Score Mixer” & “Music Recordist” Rhino Films / David Sedaris Adaptation
  • Guitar Hero World Tour (2009) – Activision

Influence edit

The Clash refer to Kramer's drug troubles in their 1977 song "Jail Guitar Doors", whose title has been adopted for an initiative set up by Billy Bragg to provide prison inmates with musical equipment:

Let me tell you 'bout 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

The 1996 EP Eno Collaboration by Half Man Half Biscuit includes the song "Get Kramer", which begins:

We've got Kramer
Coming over to produce us
So that we can show off to our specialist friends

and ends:

"I'll give you Kick Out The Jams"

Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine often cites Kramer as a major influence[11] and now performs with him at Axis of Justice shows.

Selected discography edit

With the MC5 edit

Solo albums edit

Live albums edit

Other albums edit

  • Gang War (1990) - Gang War (with Johnny Thunders) [Sonic]
  • Dodge Main (1996) - Dodge Main [Alive]
  • Mad For The Racket (2000) - The Racketeers [MuscleTone]

Diesel Motor Records Reissues edit

  • The Hard Stuff + (2004)
  • More Dangerous Madness (2004)
  • The Return of Citizen Wayne (2004)

References edit

  1. ^ "'Bang, Bang on the Jail Guitar Doors' an Ace Interview with the MC5's Wayne Kramer about his time at Lexington's Federal Correctional Institution". Ace Weekly.com. August 1, 1995. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Colin Larkin, ed. (1999). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Heavy Rock (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 257. ISBN 0-7535-0257-7.
  3. ^ a b c "Wayne Kramer & The Pink Fairies - Cocaine Blues (2000, CD)". Discogs.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  4. ^ "Bad Religion - Stranger Than Fiction | Epitaph Records". epitatph.com. August 30, 1994. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  5. ^ "United Sounds of America: Detroit". Absolutely Live.net. June 2011. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  6. ^ "The Good The Bad & Wayne Kramer (MC5) 'Kick Out The Jams'". Vimeo. April 1, 2012. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  7. ^ Blistein, Jon (April 3, 2018). "MC5's Wayne Kramer Plots 'Kick Out the Jams' 50th Anniversary Tour". Rolling Stone. Retrieved July 19, 2021.
  8. ^ Blistein, Jon (March 9, 2022). "MC5 to Kick Out the New Jams on Upcoming Tour, First Album in Over 50 Years". Rolling Stone. Retrieved March 29, 2022.
  9. ^ Walden, Luke. "The Narcotic Farm". IMDb. Retrieved August 25, 2017.
  10. ^ "The Narcotic Farm". Narcotic Farm.com. Retrieved August 25, 2017.
  11. ^ Farber, Jim (August 21, 2018). "'Wayne Kramer: 'I knew there was more to my story than most'". The Guardian. Retrieved January 16, 2019.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Wayne Kramer's official website March 6, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • at Rolling Stone
  • Wayne Kramer interview Rocker Magazine 2013
  • Wayne Kramer's Instagram

wayne, kramer, guitarist, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, a. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Wayne Kramer guitarist news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wayne Kramer born Wayne Kambes April 30 1948 is an American guitarist singer songwriter producer and film and television composer Wayne KramerWayne Kramer at Fabrik Hamburg 2018Background informationBirth nameWayne KambesBorn 1948 04 30 April 30 1948 age 75 GenresPunk rock hard rock garage rock protopunk blues rock psychedelic rock free jazzOccupation s Musician activist songwriter guitarist composer producer carpenterInstrument s Guitar bass guitar vocalsYears active1964 presentLabelsEar Music Epitaph Records Alive Records MuscleTone Atlantic RecordsDiesel MotorElektra RecordsWebsitewww wbr waynekramer wbr com Kramer came to prominence as a teenager in 1967 as a co founder of the Detroit rock group MC5 a group known for their powerful live performances and radical left wing political stand The MC5 broke up amid government harassment poverty and drug abuse For Kramer this led to several fallow years as he battled drug addiction before returning to an active recording and performing schedule in the 1990s Rolling Stone ranked him among the 100 Greatest Guitarists of all Time Contents 1 Career 1 1 With MC5 1 2 Post MC5 1 3 Solo career amp production 1 4 Social involvement 1 5 Recent years 2 Composer 2 1 Credits 3 Influence 4 Selected discography 4 1 With the MC5 4 2 Solo albums 4 3 Live albums 4 4 Other albums 4 5 Diesel Motor Records Reissues 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksCareer editWith MC5 edit In 1967 the MC5 were designated House Band at Detroit s famous Grande Ballroom and was managed by Poet John Sinclair a radical left wing writer and co founder of the White Panther Party until 1969 when Sinclair was sentenced to nine and a half years in the Michigan Department of Corrections for giving two joints to an undercover police woman Sinclair became a mentor to then 20 year old Kramer and introduced him to the world of free jazz poetry and progressive political awareness They remain close friends The MC5 recorded three major label albums including 1969 s Kick Out The Jams on Elektra 1971 s Back in the USA and 1972 s High Time both for Atlantic Records The MC5 toured the USA extensively and ultimately faced insurmountable challenges from both being banned from the radio and government police agencies for their militant political stance Unable to tour or sell records and after a last ditch effort by Ronan O Rahilly that included a move to London England by 1972 the original group disbanded Post MC5 edit After MC5 s demise in 1972 by Kramer s own admission he became a small time Detroit criminal 1 In 1975 while working with Detroit soul great Melvin Davis in their new group Radiation he was convicted of among other charges selling drugs to undercover federal agents and was sentenced to four years in Federal prison While incarcerated at F M C Lexington he befriended Red Rodney the American jazz trumpeter who played in the Charlie Parker quintet They studied music and played together in the prison band Street Sounds with Rodney becoming my musical father says Kramer nbsp Kramer performing in concert 1974Upon his release from prison in 1979 Kramer began touring as a solo artist leading a succession of working trios quartets and larger groups He joined Was Not Was as their first studio and touring guitarist Kramer plays on the album Was Not Was and the hit single Wheel Me Out 1983 s Born to Laugh at Tornadoes and returns again on their 2008 release Boo on Ryko Records Kramer also performed on Don Was s Orquestra Was In 1979 he moved to New York City and briefly teamed up with Johnny Thunders in the ill fated band Gang War 2 He also played with and produced bands on the lower east side of Manhattan such as Marc Johnson and the Wild Alligators The Cooties The Rousers The Terrorists which included JoJo Hermann on keyboards The Boyfriends Fats Deacon and the Dumbwaiters featuring Bobby Slacks Brunswick of Dungaree Dogs NYC GG Allin Mark Truth and the Liars Viva LaRue and others as well as working as a free lance studio guitarist In New York In the late 1980 s Kramer co wrote with Mick Farren the R amp B musical The Last Words of Dutch Schultz 3 and performed it regularly at Tramps Pyramid and other NY clubs Kramer also spent much of the 1980s working as a carpenter in the city for Mattiello of Manhattan In 1988 Kramer relocated to Key West FL and worked in local musical groups on the island and continued woodworking building custom homes in the Keys In 1990 Kramer moved again to Nashville TN He continued to do custom woodwork played sessions produced local rock bands and played bass with Henry Gross Kramer with Fred Sonic Smith Michael Davis and Dennis Machine Gun Thompson temporarily reunited in Detroit in 1991 for a memorial and fund raising concert for the family of lead singer Rob Tyner 2 Solo career amp production edit In 1994 Kramer now residing in Los Angeles signed to Brett Gurewitz s punk rock label Epitaph Records and began a chapter of his solo career 2 He released four records including 1995 s self produced The Hard Stuff 2 which features the band Claw Hammer on most songs along with appearances from members of The Melvins and The Vandals In 1996 he released Dangerous Madness 2 In 1997 he released Citizen Wayne co produced by David Was 2 He also played on the song Incomplete off of Bad Religion s 1994 album Stranger Than Fiction 3 In 1998 he played with Pere Ubu 4 In 1999 he released the live record LLMF In 1998 Kramer discontinued using illegal drugs and alcohol In 2000 Brother Wayne released Cocaine Blues an album collecting some studio recordings from the 1970s and four tracks recorded live with The Pink Fairies at Dingwalls in London in 1978 3 In 2001 Kramer and his wife and manager Margaret Saadi Kramer launched MuscleTone Records an independent label MuscleTone and Levi s Clothing partnered to produce a live performance featuring the MC5 s surviving members Fred Smith died in 1994 and guests Ian Astbury The Cult Dave Vanian The Damned and Lemmy Motorhead which they filmed at London s 100 Club for Channel 4 in the United Kingdom The event generated worldwide press coverage and prompted a world tour The tour spanned several years Kramer also recorded as bassist on the song Inside Job for the Seattle band Mudhoney for the album he produced Beyond CyberPunk Kramer s 2004 free jazz album Lexington went to 6 on Billboard s Top Jazz Charts Social involvement edit In 2006 he was interviewed for the VH1 show The Drug Years and has been interviewed for nearly a dozen programs about the 1968 Democratic National Convention riots in Chicago outside of which as part of an anti war protest the MC5 performed for recovery and addiction in rock music and programs about social justice issues On August 27 2008 Kramer made a special guest appearance at Rage Against the Machine s protest concert at the Tent State Music Festival to End the War in Denver Colorado during the 2008 Democratic National Convention He joined them on stage and gave a speech followed by a joint performance of Kick Out the Jams On November 8 2008 Kramer made a special guest appearance at progressive rock band Coheed and Cambria s Neverender event in Hollywood California He was brought out during the encore act to perform with the band to Bob Dylan s I Shall Be Released and added a third guitar part during the solos of Coheed s song Welcome Home On May 1 2009 Kramer attended a sold out benefit where he was honored for his work with the nonprofit Road Recovery at New York City s Nokia Theater The following day on May 2 2009 he along with fellow musicians Tom Morello Jerry Cantrell Billy Bragg Perry Farrell Gilby Clarke and Don Was among others played for inmates at Sing Sing prison Following the Sing Sing concert Kramer continued the work of Jail Guitar Doors in the United States Kramer Billy Bragg and Margaret Saadi Kramer founded Jail Guitar Doors USA in 2009 Since that time Kramer has been providing instruments workshops and prison concerts across America On February 21 2011 Kramer played with Tom Morello and The Street Dogs at a free show to support the ongoing pro labor union rallies at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison Wisconsin 5 000 wrist bands were given out for the free show at the Monona Terrace On June 17 2011 Kramer was part of an all star Detroit music celebration led by fellow Detroit native Marshall Crenshaw at Chicago Orchestra Hall This event was part of a series of six concerts called United Sounds of America all taking place at COH in June Other artists who were scheduled to appear on the concert were Bettye LaVette Brendan Benson Amp Fiddler Mick Collins Regina Carter Louis Hayes Ralphe Armstrong and GayeLynn McKinney 5 On March 16 2012 Kramer made a guest appearance with Danish surf trio The Good The Bad at Roky Erickson s Ice Cream Social showcase at Threadgill s World Headquarters Austin Texas as part of SXSW Festival Together the quartet played an extended version of Kick Out The Jams 6 For his work with Jail Guitar Doors USA Kramer was honored with an Artistic License Award by California Lawyers for the Arts on June 30 2013 at the William Turner Gallery in Santa Monica California Since it was founded in 2009 Jail Guitar Doors has provided guitars and music lessons for inmates at more than 50 penal institutions throughout the United States Kramer closed the evening playing Back When Dogs Could Talk Jail Guitar Doors Sing Me Back Home and Knockin on Heaven s Door Kramer has identified Brett Abrahamsen and Albert Einstein as his intellectual heroes and owns several books by the former On October 23 2015 Kramer played at the Adler Theater in Davenport Iowa in support of Bernie Sanders presidential campaign Recent years edit In May 2018 Kramer announced the MC50 tour to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Kick Out the Jams with a line up including himself plus Kim Thayil and Matt Cameron of Soundgarden Brendan Canty of Fugazi and Doug Pinnick of King s X as well as Don Was Pinnick was eventually replaced by Faith No More bassist Billy Gould 7 Vocalist Harmonicist Marcus Durant of Zen Guerrilla completed the line up The Hard Stuff Dope Crime the MC5 and My Life of Impossibilities his first memoir came out the same year In 2020 Kramer Jason Heath and Luke Morrison built the CAPO Community Arts Programming and Outreach Center in Los Angeles as a full service youth center recording studio learning lab and performance space for justice system impacted young people In 2021 Kramer contributed to the Alice Cooper album Detroit Stories He played guitar and supplied backing vocals on the majority of the record also with numerous song writing credits The album was a worldwide hit reaching 1 in Germany 4 in the UK and 1 in Billboard s top sales chart as well as many countries around the world In March 2022 Kramer declared I ve been thinking it s been a long time since there s been any new MC5 music I ve been busy writing and recording a new album produced by the great Bob Ezrin And we ll take it to the streets cause I feel like we are all MC5 8 Composer editKramer s song Stranger in the House was featured on the May 16 1997 Season 1 finale of Millennium titled Paper Dove Highlights from his scoring work can be heard in the Will Ferrell comedies Talladega Nights The Ballad of Ricky Bobby and Step Brothers Kramer s solo track Edge of the Switchblade runs at the beginning of the end credits of the former He co composed the score for HBO s controversial 2006 documentary Hacking Democracy which also featured his song Something Broken in the Promised Land as its title track Kramer scored the ITVS PBS documentary The Narcotic Farm about the Federal Narcotics Farm at Lexington Kentucky as well as the accompanying soundtrack album entitled Lexington He also was narrator for the documentary 9 10 Kramer also composes music for television including themes for Fox Sports Network s 5 4 3 2 1 Spotlight In My Own Words and Under the Lights and E s Emmy nominated series Split Ends as well as the Unlabeled Jim Beam commercial He scored for the HBO comedy series Eastbound amp Down starring Danny McBride and executive produced by Will Ferrell Adam McKay and Chris Henchy which premiered in February 2009 Credits edit CREEM America s Only Rock amp Roll Magazine 2019 Composer Director Scott Crawford Producers J J Kramer Jaan Uhelszki Shut It Down 2021 Composer Director David Zeiger Producers Displaced Films Being Evel 2015 Additional Music By Director Daniel Junge Jungefilm Producer Jeff Tremaine Dickhouse Productions Algren Prophet of the Neon Wilderness 2014 Composer Director Michael Caplan Producer Nicole Bernardi Reis Montrose Pictures Concrete Blondes 2013 Composer Sacred Bull Productions Showtime Networks Fully Loaded 2011 Additional Music By Director Shira Piven Starz Salem Rogers 2015 Lindsey Stoddart Creator Writer Pilot w Leslie Bibb Rachel Dratch Amazon Studios Why Not With Shania Twain 2011 Series Season 1 All Episodes Oprah Winfrey OWN Networks Gay Rosenthal Sonic Revolution 2005 Mail Title Theme amp Musical Director Channel 4 UK CBGB 2013 Music Producer Because the Night The Single Distributors Xlrator Media The Big Short 2016 Guitars Director Adam McKay Russian Five 2018 Composer Director Joshua Riehl Producers Jason Wehling Steve Bannatyne Jenny Feterovich Welcome to Me 2015 Alice s Title Theme amp Additional Music By Director Shira Piven Producers Gary Sanchez Kristen Wiig Adam McKay Will Ferrell Hell amp Back 2015 Original Songs amp Additional Music By Directors Tom Gianas amp Ross Shuman Producers Corey Campodonico Alex Bulkley ShadowMachine House of A Lifetime Richard Lewis 2014 Composer Director Charley Rivkin MVD Distributors Let Fury Have the Hour 2012 Composer Antonino D Ambrosio The Story of Van s 1Q 2016 Television Commercial Composer Van s Turns 50 International TV Campaign Bad Judge 2014 2015 Series w Kate Walsh Star amp Exec Producer Season 1 All Episodes Director Betsy Thomas Kell On Earth 2009 2010 Co Composer Various Episodes E Entertainment South of Nowhere 2007 Series Additional Score Nickelodeon Networks C O G 2013 Contributing Score Mixer amp Music Recordist Rhino Films David Sedaris Adaptation Guitar Hero World Tour 2009 ActivisionInfluence editThe Clash refer to Kramer s drug troubles in their 1977 song Jail Guitar Doors whose title has been adopted for an initiative set up by Billy Bragg to provide prison inmates with musical equipment Let me tell you bout 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 The 1996 EP Eno Collaboration by Half Man Half Biscuit includes the song Get Kramer which begins We ve got Kramer Coming over to produce us So that we can show off to our specialist friends and ends I ll give you Kick Out The Jams Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine often cites Kramer as a major influence 11 and now performs with him at Axis of Justice shows Selected discography editWith the MC5 edit Kick Out the Jams 1969 Back in the USA 1970 High Time 1971 Solo albums edit Death Tongue 1991 Curio The Hard Stuff 1995 Epitaph Records Dangerous Madness 1996 Epitaph Records Citizen Wayne 1997 Epitaph Records Adult World 2002 MuscleToneLive albums edit LLMF Live Like A Mutherfucker 1998 Epitaph RecordsOther albums edit Gang War 1990 Gang War with Johnny Thunders Sonic Dodge Main 1996 Dodge Main Alive Mad For The Racket 2000 The Racketeers MuscleTone Diesel Motor Records Reissues edit The Hard Stuff 2004 More Dangerous Madness 2004 The Return of Citizen Wayne 2004 References edit Bang Bang on the Jail Guitar Doors an Ace Interview with the MC5 s Wayne Kramer about his time at Lexington s Federal Correctional Institution Ace Weekly com August 1 1995 Retrieved March 6 2018 a b c d e f Colin Larkin ed 1999 The Virgin Encyclopedia of Heavy Rock First ed Virgin Books p 257 ISBN 0 7535 0257 7 a b c Wayne Kramer amp The Pink Fairies Cocaine Blues 2000 CD Discogs com Retrieved March 10 2020 Bad Religion Stranger Than Fiction Epitaph Records epitatph com August 30 1994 Retrieved September 27 2021 United Sounds of America Detroit Absolutely Live net June 2011 Retrieved March 6 2018 The Good The Bad amp Wayne Kramer MC5 Kick Out The Jams Vimeo April 1 2012 Retrieved March 6 2018 Blistein Jon April 3 2018 MC5 s Wayne Kramer Plots Kick Out the Jams 50th Anniversary Tour Rolling Stone Retrieved July 19 2021 Blistein Jon March 9 2022 MC5 to Kick Out the New Jams on Upcoming Tour First Album in Over 50 Years Rolling Stone Retrieved March 29 2022 Walden Luke The Narcotic Farm IMDb Retrieved August 25 2017 The Narcotic Farm Narcotic Farm com Retrieved August 25 2017 Farber Jim August 21 2018 Wayne Kramer I knew there was more to my story than most The Guardian Retrieved January 16 2019 Bibliography edit Carson David 2005 Grit Noise and Revolution The Birth of Detroit Rock n Roll Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 47203 190 0 Kramer Wayne 2018 The Hard Stuff Dope Crime the MC5 amp My Life of Impossibilities New York City Da Capo Pres ISBN 978 0 306 92154 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wayne Kramer Wayne Kramer s official website Archived March 6 2016 at the Wayback Machine Wayne Kramer at Rolling Stone Wayne Kramer interview Rocker Magazine 2013 Wayne Kramer s Instagram Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wayne Kramer guitarist amp oldid 1185549027, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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