Posts Tagged ‘Rob Tyner’

Lo-Fi Mojo: Gang War

Lo-Fi Mojo

When Detroit proto-punk rockers the MC5 broke up in 1972, the five original band members went their separate ways. Bassist Michael Davis left first – he went on to form Destroy All Monsters with ex-Stooge Ron Asheton. Drummer Dennis “Machine Gun” Thompson attempted a handful of unsuccessful solo ventures. Singer Rob Tyner made some post-MC5 progress, as a producer, songwriter, bandleader and photographer, before his untimely death in 1991.

Guitarist Fred “Sonic” Smith formed the excellent Sonic’s Rendezvous Band, a Detroit rawk supergroup of sorts, featuring Scott Morgan of the Rationals, Gary Rasmussen of the Up! and Scott Asheton of the Stooges. Unfortunately, SRB only released one “official” single in the late ’70s, though UK label Easy Action released an excellent six-disc box set of live and studio material that fans of high-energy ’70s rock will love. “Sonic” Smith met and married singer Patti Smith (coincidentally they had the same last name), retired from music to raise a family, and died tragically in 1994.

Gang War, featuring Johnny Thunders and Wayne Kramer

MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer went to prison, after getting caught selling coke to an undercover federal agent. Upon release after a couple years in the joint, Kramer formed a short partnership with ex-New York Doll and ex-Heartbreaker Johnny Thunders called Gang War.

Two ’70s rock and drug casualties do not a lasting group make, and Gang War was no exception. They had about a year in ‘em, they didn’t release any official recordings, they barely cut some demo material in the studio. But over the years, some documentation of several live sets have been unearthed, one of the best being the Gang War! import on the UK Jungle-Freud label (why is it the Brits who are always unearthing this stuff?), taken from a couple of shows recorded live in Toronto and Boston in 1980. (more…)

Lo-Fi Mojo: Rob Tyner Band, “Tutti Frutti”

After the MC5 fizzled out in a drug-addled puff of bad karma smoke–long before legions of music fans could make heads or tails of them, let alone put them in the rock pantheon, which they later did–the band’s members scattered to the four winds. Lead singer Rob Tyner re-emerged with a band briefly called “The New MC5,” a name with which he wasn’t very comfortable.

Soon rechristened The Rob Tyner Band, the group played here and there a few times, including a couple Detroit-area gigs captured on the hopelessly obscure but well-worth-the-chase Rock And Roll People. Just like MC5’s seminal “Kick Out The Jams,” these tracks a rough, live, and loaded with the same high-octane rock blast–and although they don’t have the same fire and brimstone of the Five’s double-barreled guitar attack that featured Wayne Kramer and Fred “Sonic” Smith, they are classics in their own right. Here’s the Rob Tyner band’s cover of “Tutti Frutti.” Do not play this song anywhere near an open flame; it’s pretty combustible stuff.