Dennis âMachine Gunâ Thompson, MC5 Drummer and Last Surviving Band Member, Dies at 75
Dennis âMachine Gunâ Thompson, the longtime drummer of the iconic Detroit proto-punk band MC5 who earned his nickname due to his rapidfire drum style and its militant rat-tat-tat sound, has died, the Detroit Free Press reports. Thompson, according to the report, was rehabilitating from an April heart attack. He was 75 years old.
Thompson joined MC5 in 1965, barely two years after guitarist Wayne Kramer and bassist Fred âSonicâ Smith co-founded the group to pursue their love of R&B, blues, and garage rock with guitarist Billy Vargo and drummer Leo LeDuc. They were successful enough for each member to focus solely on the music, playing enough gigs around Detroit on a regular basis for MC5 to become a full-time job. When they shortened their name from Motor City Five that same year, MC5 held on to their sizable fanbase and welcomed new listeners into the fold, drawing over a thousand people at their nightly shows. Among their early fans was Iggy Pop, who later dubbed that early iteration of the band âa really fuckinâ good big city cover bandâ in a Mojo interview.
After releasing a cover of Themâs âI Can Only Give You Everythingâ as a single with their original number âOne of the Guysâ in 1967, MC5 dropped another single the following year featuring âBorderlineâ and âLooking at You.â Pressings started selling out at a rapid pace, so MC5, after releasing a third single, embarked on an East Coast tour of the United States, opening for bands like Cream and the Stooges. The more they saw on the road, the more MC5 were drawn to left-wing politics, going so far as to immerse themselves in the White Panther Party, a militant, anti-racist, politically active group cofounded by their manager, John Sinclair.
All of this melded together to influence their debut album, 1969âs legendary Kick Out the Jams, which was recorded live over the course of two nights at Detroitâs Grande Ballroom. In addition to the now-classic proto-punk title track, the album also boasts the standout single âRocket Reducer No. 62 (Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa),â the Sun Raâinfluenced âStarship,â and a sprawling cover of John Lee Hookerâs âMotor City Is Burningâ that praises the Black Panthers during the Detroit riots of 1967. Famously, the album also garnered controversy from Sinclairâs left-wing liner notes and the title trackâs iconic line, âKick out the jams, motherfuckers!â
During the recording of the album, Thompson was heavily inspired by Elvin Jones, Keith Moon, Mitch Mitchell, and Motown. ââKick Out the Jamsâ is actually a rockânâroll soul tune, because the beat is a walking fourâthe snare drum is hit on all the quarter notes,â the drummer later explained to Detroit Metro Times. âWe just accelerated it. My job was to play on top of the tempo, keep it driving along, and then fill a hole here and there. Other bands really werenât playing like this. I was up against Marshall stacks, with no mics. During the recording of âKick Out the Jams,â I think I broke two or three sticks. Back then, I was breaking 15 to 20 sticks per show. And I was using big sticks. I had to play so hard to get heard.â
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