There is a moment captured here, in this riotous live performance of "Kick Out the Jams," in Detroit in 1970, where you can feel the universe shift. It’s that split second when Wayne Kramer’s guitar rips through the thick, sweaty air, an opening salvo that begs—no, demands—that the world sit up and listen. The MC5 weren’t just a band; they were a live wire, an electric storm just waiting for someone to touch it. Kramer, that manic shaman of the six-string, grabs the lightning bolt, unleashing it on a crowd too wild and frenzied to even comprehend the sheer force of what was happening. It’s primal. It’s overwhelming. And it’s still dangerous, decades later.
There’s a reason "Kick Out the Jams" is considered one of the most iconic rock songs ever recorded. Not because it’s slick or polished, but because it’s an anthem of pure fury and fire. The MC5’s sonic assault is so raw, so audacious, that it nearly dares you to even try to keep your body still. Their music is a war cry, a battle with the forces of mediocrity, the sonic equivalent of a Molotov cocktail thrown right in the face of convention. The MC5 aren’t merely performing—they are unleashing.
Wayne Kramer’s guitar, like a Promethean spark, is the very catalyst that ignites punk rock long before its time. What he does with a few blistering chords is nothing short of revolutionary. He’s the architect of chaos, laying the foundation for a cultural shift that would define rebellion in rock. His strings scream, bend, and twist like a soul caught between worlds, a soul that would never be content to stay in the same place, and neither would we.
And then there’s the audience—the pure embodiment of sweat-soaked wonder and frantic energy. Two-thirds of the crowd is with them, practically breathing the electricity in the room, a single organism that pulses along with the band. They are no longer spectators; they are part of the music. But then there’s the other third, lost and confused, almost as if the sonic force unleashed is beyond their comprehension. They’re caught in a maelstrom they don’t fully understand, unsure of what they’re witnessing, but still unwilling to look away. In those minutes, the MC5 transform the audience into more than just witnesses; they’re co-conspirators, even if some of them haven’t quite figured out what the revolution sounds like yet.
The MC5 have been imitated countless times, but never duplicated. That magic, that madness, can’t be replicated. They were a moment in time, a force of nature, and the echoes of their power still rumble through the veins of rock ‘n’ roll, reverberating through the speakers with the same frenetic energy. It’s not nostalgia, it’s far more. And even years after Wayne kicked the mortal coil to rock the worlds beyond—“Kick Out The Jams” is a force that still cuts deep here on the Earthly plane.
So here’s the invitation: sink into it. Let it wash over you. Let that primal energy of "Kick Out the Jams" take you somewhere frantic and transcendent. Feel the rush. Don’t just hear the music—live it. There’s no distance between you and that sound.
And if you happen to make art—whether it’s with a guitar, a paintbrush, a camera, a pen or your own beautiful hands—let this song be a catalyst. If you’ve ever thought, “I can’t do this,” “I can’t create that,” or “I can’t go that far,” let this be the fire that burns away those doubts. This is the sound of Prometheus kicking the door down, lighting the fuse, and saying, “Go, make something explode.” He’s talking to you and he’s passing the torch. You know what you should do about it? Kick out the jams, motherfucker!