MC5 Release First Album in 53 Years!

In Advance Of The Legendary Detroit Punk Rock Pioneers’ Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction This Weekend

ABOVE: MC5 founding member Wayne Kramer
Photo: Jim Newberry

earMUSIC has released the first new music from MC5 in 53 years (following 1971’s High Time) with the album Heavy Lifting.

The posthumous album is out now, a day ahead of the band’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction by fellow icon, Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello, who declared to Associated Press: “The idea, as Wayne described to me, was to make one last great MC5 record that would distil the spirit that the band had decades before but was also a product of where those influences lead. I put everything I had into it. I’m like, ‘Let’s make one more really, really great MC5 record.’”

Led by founding member Wayne Kramer and recorded with iconic producer Bob Ezrin (Lou Reed, Alice Cooper, Kiss), Heavy Lifting features original MC5 drummer Dennis ‘Machine Gun’ Thompson on two tracks along with special guests including Slash, Tom Morello, William DuVall (Alice in Chains), Vernon Reid (Living Colour), Don Was, and Tim McIlrath (Rise Against), in addition to members of Kramer’s MC5 touring band, Vicki Randle

(Aretha Franklin), Stevie Salas (Parliament Funkadelic, Rod Stewart), Abe Laboriel Jr. (Paul McCartney), Winston Watson Jr. (Bob Dylan), Joe Berry (M83), and Oakland-based singer Brad Brooks.

Prolific for five decades, Kramer was the last remaining active member of MC5, writing 12 of the album’s 13 songs in collaborations with Tom Morello, Tim McIlrath, Bob Ezrin, Jill Sobule, and Brad Brooks.

Kamer passed away suddenly in February, followed by the death of drummer Dennis ‘Machine Gun’ Thompson in May. This is Thompson’s final studio recording, playing on the tracks “Can’t Be Found” and “Blind Eye.”

CREEM Magazine co-founder Jaan Uhelszki recorded the final interview with Kramer, remembering the incendiary innovators of punk and protest rock, who inspired The Clash, Ramones, Rage Against The Machine, The White Stripes, Slash and countless others, where he explained the ethos behind the continuation of the MC5: “I think the MC5 lives on because of the purity of the spirit,” Kramer explained to Uhelszki two weeks before he passed away in February 2024. “The MC5 was about…principles of self-determination, of freedom of expression, of freedom of religion, of equality, of justice – those are principles we felt were worth fighting for. Sure, we wanted to be a popular rock band, but we did things by principles. I think that’s something that transcends a rock and roll band. We were charged with constantly disrupting everything we came into contact with. This was part of the tactics of the day, of carrying the message.”

Bob Ezrin, in talking about Heavy Lifting said “What I really heard in the songs was a spirit of rebellion, challenging social norms, and staring down American values. I told Wayne, ‘It sounds like an MC5 record to me!’”Album cover “Heavy Lifting”

Heavy Lifting Tracklisting (CD/LP):
Heavy Lifting (feat. Tom Morello)
Barbarians At The Gate
Change, No Change
The Edge Of The Switchblade (feat. William Duvall & Slash)
Black Boots (feat. Tim McIIrath)
I Am The Fun (The Phoney)
Twenty-Five Miles
Because Of Your Car
Boys Who Play With Matches
Blind Eye (feat. Dennis Thompson)
Can’t Be Found (feat. Vernon Reid & Dennis Thompson)
Blessed Release
Hit It Hard (feat. Joe Berry)

Additional Tracklisting (2CD/2LP):
Ramblin’ Rose
Kick Out The Jams
Come Together
Motor City Is Burning
Borderline
Gotta Keep Movin’
Future/Now
Poison
Shakin’ Street
Sister Anne

HEAVY LIFTING is out now
CD, Vinyl and digital download in addition to bonus 2CD and bonus 2LP
https://mc5.lnk.to/heavyliftingPR

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