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Search resuls for: "Wayne Kramer"


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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The tributes that poured in following Wayne Kramer's death last week came from musicians praising the MC5 guitarist's contributions to rock music, as well as from prison reform advocates who extolled his legacy of bringing music to incarcerated people. “Working with inmates was cathartic for him because music had saved his life when he was inside,” Heath said this week. Kramer eventually delivered testimony before a joint committee on the arts, along with actor Tim Robbins and others. “Wayne just gave this moving speech about how important it was to have music and arts in prisons,” said Bowers, who's now a mentor at the William James Association Prison Arts Project. The state provided $1 million in 2014, and the prison arts budget has since been increased to $8 million, he said.
Persons: Wayne Kramer's, Kramer, Tom Morello, Wayne, ” Kramer, Morello, Slash, Perry Farrell, Jason Heath, ” Heath, Larry Brewster, , Elida Ledesma, , Joseph Jimenez, ” Jimenez, " Jimenez, ” Jack Bowers, Tim Robbins, “ Wayne, Bowers, who's, William James, Heath, they're, they’re, they’ve, He's Organizations: ANGELES, Mojo, University of San, for Healing, Justice Network, Community Arts, Outreach Center, William, William James Association Prison Arts, Outreach Locations: California, Michigan, University of San Francisco, Hollywood, lockups
NEW YORK (AP) — Wayne Kramer, the co-founder of the protopunk Detroit band the MC5 that thrashed out such hardcore anthems as “Kick Out the Jams” and influenced everyone from the Clash to Rage Against the Machine, has died at age 75. Kramer died Friday at Cedars-Sinai hospital in Los Angeles, according to Jason Heath, a close friend and executive director of Kramer's nonprofit Jail Guitar Doors. "Brother Wayne Kramer was the best man I’ve ever known," Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello wrote on Instagram Friday. The MC5 was more radical politically than most of its peers, and otherwise louder and more daring. Kramer would lead various incarnations of the MC5 over the following decades, and perform with Was (Not Was) among other groups.
Persons: — Wayne Kramer, Kramer, Jason Heath, Heath, Fred “, ” Smith, Rob Tyner, Michael Davis, Dennis “, ” Thompson, White Panther, John Sinclair, Brother Wayne Kramer, Tom Morello, , Thompson, Smith, , Wayne, Margaret Saadi, Francis Organizations: Motor City, Marxism, White Panthers, Convention, USA, Locations: Detroit, Los Angeles, Chicago
Wayne Kramer, whose explosive guitar playing with the influential Detroit band the MC5 in the late 1960s and early 1970s helped to set the template for punk rock, died on Friday. The death was confirmed in a post on his official Instagram account, which said the cause was pancreatic cancer. It did not say where he died. The MC5 (short for Motor City Five) formed in Lincoln Park, Mich., in 1965. Mr. Kramer and Fred (Sonic) Smith teamed to provide the twin-guitar attack that was at the heart of the band’s sound, and the centerpiece of its notoriously loud and frenetic live performances.
Persons: Wayne Kramer, Kramer, Fred, Smith Organizations: Motor Locations: Detroit, Lincoln Park, Mich
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