As finally, as to the assertions of the MC5 not being "punk" and supposedly not appreciating being linked to "punk rock"... when the MC5 reformed in 2003, they hired The Dictators' singer Handsome Dick Manitoba for lead vocals. The PUNK singer, from the PUNK band. That's right. The supposedly "acid" rockers (classic rockers) had loads of 60-70s classic rockers to choose from... yet, the chose a PUNK from the punk scene.
@MongoTheLloyd Apparently you're too fucking stupid to look up the interviews where Kramer and Thompson express their opions concerning punk. But that's no surprise, as most punk was about spewing useless, blowhard bullshit as much as anything. It was the best thing that ever happened to the government and the beer companies.
@flamesounds No. I just have a life. I don't sit in mommy's basement at age what, you must be over 60 by now, surfing YouTube to find out what so and so thinks about such and such. I don't believe I ever commented as to what Kramer or anyone else had to say about punk. I believe I stated that the MC5 were amongst the ealy punkers. Whether or not they thought of themselves as such is neither here nor there. The fact, as stated, that they hired a punker says it all.
@MongoTheLloyd if you're under the impression that the Dictators were punk and from the punk scene, then your argument is null and void because you do not know what you are talking about. sorry charlie. try listening to the music first. know a little about what you're talking about. granted, some journalist might have called them punk because maybe they played CBGBs or whatever, but the Dictators were the furthest thing from punk. sorry but NO GAME, NOTHING SET and NOTHING TO MATCH.
@micsolis My impression of the Dictators is neither here nor there. They were catagorized as punk. I never listened to them. I am from the old school punk scene. I DO know what I am talking about. When dealing with an idiot (you), reference something their speed: "The Dictators are an American punk rock band formed in New York City in 1973. Steven Van Zandt called them "The connective tissue between the eras of The MC5, Stooges, NY Dolls, and the punk explosion of the mid to late 1970s
@micsolis That was from the wiki on The Dictators. Not my choice for info... but as stated, when dealing with a retard, use a retarded source. Even the retarded source acknowledges the PUNK link between the MC5, the Stooges, and the NY Dolls - all prototype punk bands. Did they have mohawks and razors in their ears? No. They were punk nonetheless. If your definition of punk fails to acknowledge the roots, then it is low definition. Yes. Game. Set. Match. Go back to school.
Great upload. Fantastic footage (and I like John Sinclair too). The MC5 must have been one of the best Rock'n'Roll bands ever. There's no way you can see shows like that nowadays, with all the security, barriers, bouncers, no smoking, etc... and it sucks. Thanks for posting this
@landis444@landis444 To quote MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer : The phrase was specifically aimed toward British 1960s bands playing at Detroit's Grande Ballroom who the MC5 felt were not putting enough energy into their performances. They would play long extended jams, ( and then the MC5 would blow them off the stage. )
I've never been to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, but I certainly would hope these guys are represented there...Truly amazing and MUCH before their time indeed ! Thanks so MUCH for posting this..WOW!
@gblueslover2 Unfortunately, they are not in the hall of fame. There should be a Detroit rock hall of fame. There are so many bands from Michigan that could be in there as well as the MC5.
@flamesounds : whether they were 'punk' or not depends on your perception. their sound was similar, most likely a forerunner; the punk bands adopted them and covered their songs; they worked with punk musicians later (Tyner recorded with Eddie & The Hot Rods, Kramer with Johnny Thunders in Gang War and he ended up on the punk label Epitaph). I never heard them refer to themselves as Acid Rock. If anything, 'high energy rock & roll'. Why seperate garage rock, punk rock, acid rock, high energy?
@BobTheRecordGuy Kramer and Thompson do not like th 'punk' connotation at all....There are interviews on YouTube that verify this. Dennis Thompson said "a punk is someone that's Bubba's cellmate in the joint" Johnny Thunders hated being called that as well and thought the whole punk thing was stupid. He considered hinself a Rocker and was influenced by Brian Jones....I guess people that are into Punk feel the need to appropriate our music because most of theirs has not stood the test of time.
@flamesounds Your music. Tell me, son... which part of "Kick out the Jams" did YOU write? None of it? None at all? Fucking tool. Uh... since punk wasn't around in 1968 or before, it would be hard to actually be INFLUENCED by it. DUH. Who has appropriated "your" (well, it isn't your music; we established that point already) music? Don't worry son. The punk movement began with educated people rejecting the music industry barf people like you sucked up with straws. I don't see that changing much.
@flamesounds As to punk not standing the "test of time"... punk lasted from about 1975 to about 1979, and most of the popular punk bands REJECTED the industry and their record deals. So... compared to "classic" rockers who sold their asses to the music industry, it would be an apple v orange comparison that only a monkey (you) would attempt to make. Few today even know who the MC5 were... or who MOST of the popular "classic" rockers were through the '70s. So much for standing the test of time.
@MongoTheLloyd Yeah, a lot of integrity in playing crude, simplistic arrangements out of tune and shitting your pants and puking onstage. I have over 100 punk CDs here, Most of them are lameass self indulgent trash. Punk pretty much ruined the club and concert scene-That's why most kids listen to hip hop, now. The punk shows I went to really blew....of course, blowing is something you obviously have an intimate knowledge of.
@flamesounds I Wanna Be Sedated! You got a Personality Crisis! God Save The Queen I am using references to GENIUS MUSIC! You ALL are fools! The reason why hip hop is on now is because THE MEDIA WON! The people gave into that! We have to fight back, exploit this madness, and be liberated! The time to testify is now, the second calling is here. I may sound like bullshit, but I speak then in that case very knowledgeable bullshit!
@RockNEHouseNHipHop During January 1969 to April 1970, the United States sustained 4,330 domestic bombings . Don't EVEN talk to me about revolution. Have YOU ever been to a demonstration in D.C.? You don't even know.. You didn't have anything like the Fillmore, Acid Tests, or Grande Ballroom or the 100s of other underground clubs or Monterey or Woodstock.......we did all that. WE! We made it happen. No one handed anything to us. Punk just ruined what was left...Yeah, You're a punk alright.
@flamesounds Punk didn't ruin shit! If anything it was more of a testament to the shitstorm that was left after the passive hippie movement. The 70s were bleak... and the 80s fed off of that. At a purely sociological standpoint the counter-culture of the two are very similar... there's just more angst in punk culture. That can be blamed on numerous socio-economical reasons. That and the fact that commercialism had gained significant ground.
@dennyman5k You obviously didn't read my last post. The hippie movement was anything but passive. That includes the MC5, who were Detroit hippies. People quit going to rock clubs because of all the violence, puking, moshing etc, and generally lousy music.
@flamesounds i don't know what people you're talking about, or heard about. because a Lollapolooza could have never happened if what you're saying is true. Lollapolooza is directly connected to the punk rock scene, with bands like Rancid, Ramones, Jane's Addiction, the Red Hots, Green Day, etc etc. Perry Farrell came directly from the LA punk rock scene. of course real punk had been diluted by the 80's but that his roots.
@micsolis Lollapolooza is a major corporate event and a lot of the bands are very financially viable. You can't compare it to Monterey, Acid Tests, etc. One thing I have learned recently is that most people that came of age after the 60s ended can't imagine what it was like.They simply have no frame of reference at all. That doesn't mean they're dumb. It just like trying to explain the color orange to a blind man. Consequently the history is becoming very distorted, revised and lost.
@flamesounds wow. what punk shows did you go to? you must be in a bad location because i've seen some great punk shows, myself. of course, maybe you simply missed the good shit, and maybe saw all the wrong shows. it happens. especially when you don't really know the scene or the music. and then to say that punk ruined the club and concert scene? that's why most kids listen to hip hop??? fucking hilarious. where do you get your information? obviously not first hand. maybe some crappy magazines.
@flamesounds As to punk not standing the "test of time"... punk lasted from about 1975 to about 1979, and most of the popular punk bands REJECTED the industry and their record deals. So... compared to "classic" rockers who sold their asses to the music industry, it would be an apple v orange comparison that only a monkey (you) would attempt to make. Few today even know who the MC5 were... or who MOST of the popular "classic" rockers were through the '70s. So much for standing the test of time.
@flamesounds In closing, your embarrassing cover of "Satisfaction", with the incorrect lyrics and guitar power chords, is an example of what was wrong with music, both then and now. Jagger stated that the Satisfaction guitar riff was unique, while Richards claimed that the song's riff could be heard in half of the songs that The Rolling Stones had produced, saying that "there is only one song — it's just the variations you come up with". Exactly. Rehashed industry vomit, and those that eat it.
@flamesounds What??? You have haunted this page for a year (or more), attacking any who mention "punk" in the same sentence? Good fake Christ. You are as douchey as you appear in your photo. I mean, being a douche is not an act with you. You have taken it to heart! "Acid" rock was The Grateful Dead... not The MC5, son. The Dead. Perhaps (early) Airplane. Big Brother and the Holding Co. The Haight scene... not the Motor City. Clearly, you know little... but that fact won't stop you.
@MongoTheLloyd The MC5 played high schools and underground clubs around my area when I was a teen. I met Wayne Kramer, a few of my friends got high with the band and some guys I know, Big Brother and the Holding Company, stayed at their commune for a few days after playing the Grande. They were Detroit hippies and were the musical arm of the White Panther party. You are typical of most of the blowhard, ignorant dumbass punks I've met. I suggest you read Guitar Army by John Sinclair.
@flamesounds No thanks. Taking literature suggestions from an idiot like you would be like picking my nose, and I gave that up by age 2. Alot of work for little payout, in the end. Wow! You met Wayne Kramer? And your friends got high with so and so? Really? Man, I guess that makes you the most in-the-know idiot I have never wanted to meet! Uh... most guys sporting jewfros in the late 60s were called "hippies", moron. Duh. Are you really as stupid as you sound?
@MongoTheLloyd I apologize for for thinking you could digest any literary matter of pertinent content, as my single paragraph posts are well above your ability to grasp. Being the clever little guy you are, apparently you began picking your ass at age 2. Much greater return for your effort. Unfortunately the decades of turd gobbling and jenkem huffing have given you shit for brains and rendered you useless for all but furiously pounding your diminutive petard in your parent's basement.
@MongoTheLloyd Yes, I met Kramer and others. I got out and lived it and didn't sit in my room at home like you do reading about it in a magazine. Still do. Obviously trolling YouTube has become your sex life. Probably sitting there with a tiny woody because you got a reply to your flatulent musings and for a brief second someone paid you attention.
@thisjazzkills lolz no i meant without the commentary from the guy at 0:55 and by show i meant musical performance, not the documentary, but i already found it :)
This is a clip from MC5: A True Testimonial, an absolutely amazing documentary which was ALMOST released before being bogged down in civil litigation. I'm a rock documentary fanboy, and I've never seen a better rock film or a more compelling story than A True Testimonial. The band deserved so much more recognition and fame when they were around and their legacy deserves for this documentary to be seen. If you are even REMOTELY interested in the five, pick it up if it is ever released.
Rest in peace Michael Davis
TheOneeks 2 weeks ago
Hooray for MC5. Fuck John Sinclair.
reaperpro 3 weeks ago
nerd war
cappyshopneck 3 months ago
As finally, as to the assertions of the MC5 not being "punk" and supposedly not appreciating being linked to "punk rock"... when the MC5 reformed in 2003, they hired The Dictators' singer Handsome Dick Manitoba for lead vocals. The PUNK singer, from the PUNK band. That's right. The supposedly "acid" rockers (classic rockers) had loads of 60-70s classic rockers to choose from... yet, the chose a PUNK from the punk scene.
Game. Set. Match.
MongoTheLloyd 5 months ago
@MongoTheLloyd Apparently you're too fucking stupid to look up the interviews where Kramer and Thompson express their opions concerning punk. But that's no surprise, as most punk was about spewing useless, blowhard bullshit as much as anything. It was the best thing that ever happened to the government and the beer companies.
flamesounds 5 months ago
@flamesounds No. I just have a life. I don't sit in mommy's basement at age what, you must be over 60 by now, surfing YouTube to find out what so and so thinks about such and such. I don't believe I ever commented as to what Kramer or anyone else had to say about punk. I believe I stated that the MC5 were amongst the ealy punkers. Whether or not they thought of themselves as such is neither here nor there. The fact, as stated, that they hired a punker says it all.
MongoTheLloyd 2 weeks ago
@MongoTheLloyd if you're under the impression that the Dictators were punk and from the punk scene, then your argument is null and void because you do not know what you are talking about. sorry charlie. try listening to the music first. know a little about what you're talking about. granted, some journalist might have called them punk because maybe they played CBGBs or whatever, but the Dictators were the furthest thing from punk. sorry but NO GAME, NOTHING SET and NOTHING TO MATCH.
micsolis 2 weeks ago
@micsolis My impression of the Dictators is neither here nor there. They were catagorized as punk. I never listened to them. I am from the old school punk scene. I DO know what I am talking about. When dealing with an idiot (you), reference something their speed: "The Dictators are an American punk rock band formed in New York City in 1973. Steven Van Zandt called them "The connective tissue between the eras of The MC5, Stooges, NY Dolls, and the punk explosion of the mid to late 1970s
MongoTheLloyd 2 weeks ago
@micsolis That was from the wiki on The Dictators. Not my choice for info... but as stated, when dealing with a retard, use a retarded source. Even the retarded source acknowledges the PUNK link between the MC5, the Stooges, and the NY Dolls - all prototype punk bands. Did they have mohawks and razors in their ears? No. They were punk nonetheless. If your definition of punk fails to acknowledge the roots, then it is low definition. Yes. Game. Set. Match. Go back to school.
MongoTheLloyd 2 weeks ago
Up against the wall, mother fuckers!
bloderme 5 months ago
we should be alive in that way, sad generation
uomodimerda 7 months ago
Great upload. Fantastic footage (and I like John Sinclair too). The MC5 must have been one of the best Rock'n'Roll bands ever. There's no way you can see shows like that nowadays, with all the security, barriers, bouncers, no smoking, etc... and it sucks. Thanks for posting this
kidcalabria 8 months ago
This is Pure heaven! Let's Go! Let's Rock!
michelesaintthomas 9 months ago
most underrated band ever
shutdownthefed 9 months ago
You shoulda been there man.....I was.
tmf945 1 year ago
I still have that vinyl LP with those liner notes. Very nicely done.
OldJoeCurwen 1 year ago
What in hell does "KIck Out the Jams" mean peeps?
landis444 1 year ago
peeps ?
peeps?
for fucks sake peeps ?
you square cunt
spadge321 1 year ago 2
@landis444 @landis444 To quote MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer : The phrase was specifically aimed toward British 1960s bands playing at Detroit's Grande Ballroom who the MC5 felt were not putting enough energy into their performances. They would play long extended jams, ( and then the MC5 would blow them off the stage. )
ZenDogRadio 1 year ago 2
seeing this band live would be seeing mother earth blossom!make way 4 punk,peace
sonicsteev 1 year ago
@sonicsteev i did see them live in '68..it's like facing a hurricane!
rowlffffff 1 year ago
A Good Time
ArtAristocracy 1 year ago
Great!!!!!
HIDEKIAMPZZILA 1 year ago
The rock n roll hall of fame is just an advertisement in my opinion.
Kostas4e 1 year ago 14
@Kostas4e fuck that cherry picked bullshit, its a bunch of rich old fat elitist that own and pick all that shit
shutdownthefed 9 months ago
I've never been to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, but I certainly would hope these guys are represented there...Truly amazing and MUCH before their time indeed ! Thanks so MUCH for posting this..WOW!
gblueslover2 2 years ago
@gblueslover2 Unfortunately, they are not in the hall of fame. There should be a Detroit rock hall of fame. There are so many bands from Michigan that could be in there as well as the MC5.
67Mosrite 1 year ago
MC5, way ahead of their time. Punk before punk, energy plus. Thanks always. rock and roll thanks you, I thank you.
ZSOSER69 2 years ago 12
@ZSOSER69 They were never punk. That would be considered an insult and Kramer and Thompson have even said that. They were Acid Rock, like Blue Cheer.
flamesounds 1 year ago 3
@flamesounds : whether they were 'punk' or not depends on your perception. their sound was similar, most likely a forerunner; the punk bands adopted them and covered their songs; they worked with punk musicians later (Tyner recorded with Eddie & The Hot Rods, Kramer with Johnny Thunders in Gang War and he ended up on the punk label Epitaph). I never heard them refer to themselves as Acid Rock. If anything, 'high energy rock & roll'. Why seperate garage rock, punk rock, acid rock, high energy?
BobTheRecordGuy 7 months ago
@BobTheRecordGuy Kramer and Thompson do not like th 'punk' connotation at all....There are interviews on YouTube that verify this. Dennis Thompson said "a punk is someone that's Bubba's cellmate in the joint" Johnny Thunders hated being called that as well and thought the whole punk thing was stupid. He considered hinself a Rocker and was influenced by Brian Jones....I guess people that are into Punk feel the need to appropriate our music because most of theirs has not stood the test of time.
flamesounds 6 months ago
@flamesounds Your music. Tell me, son... which part of "Kick out the Jams" did YOU write? None of it? None at all? Fucking tool. Uh... since punk wasn't around in 1968 or before, it would be hard to actually be INFLUENCED by it. DUH. Who has appropriated "your" (well, it isn't your music; we established that point already) music? Don't worry son. The punk movement began with educated people rejecting the music industry barf people like you sucked up with straws. I don't see that changing much.
MongoTheLloyd 5 months ago
@flamesounds As to punk not standing the "test of time"... punk lasted from about 1975 to about 1979, and most of the popular punk bands REJECTED the industry and their record deals. So... compared to "classic" rockers who sold their asses to the music industry, it would be an apple v orange comparison that only a monkey (you) would attempt to make. Few today even know who the MC5 were... or who MOST of the popular "classic" rockers were through the '70s. So much for standing the test of time.
MongoTheLloyd 5 months ago
@MongoTheLloyd Yeah, a lot of integrity in playing crude, simplistic arrangements out of tune and shitting your pants and puking onstage. I have over 100 punk CDs here, Most of them are lameass self indulgent trash. Punk pretty much ruined the club and concert scene-That's why most kids listen to hip hop, now. The punk shows I went to really blew....of course, blowing is something you obviously have an intimate knowledge of.
flamesounds 5 months ago 2
@flamesounds I Wanna Be Sedated! You got a Personality Crisis! God Save The Queen I am using references to GENIUS MUSIC! You ALL are fools! The reason why hip hop is on now is because THE MEDIA WON! The people gave into that! We have to fight back, exploit this madness, and be liberated! The time to testify is now, the second calling is here. I may sound like bullshit, but I speak then in that case very knowledgeable bullshit!
RockNEHouseNHipHop 1 month ago
@RockNEHouseNHipHop During January 1969 to April 1970, the United States sustained 4,330 domestic bombings . Don't EVEN talk to me about revolution. Have YOU ever been to a demonstration in D.C.? You don't even know.. You didn't have anything like the Fillmore, Acid Tests, or Grande Ballroom or the 100s of other underground clubs or Monterey or Woodstock.......we did all that. WE! We made it happen. No one handed anything to us. Punk just ruined what was left...Yeah, You're a punk alright.
flamesounds 1 month ago
@flamesounds Punk didn't ruin shit! If anything it was more of a testament to the shitstorm that was left after the passive hippie movement. The 70s were bleak... and the 80s fed off of that. At a purely sociological standpoint the counter-culture of the two are very similar... there's just more angst in punk culture. That can be blamed on numerous socio-economical reasons. That and the fact that commercialism had gained significant ground.
dennyman5k 1 month ago
@dennyman5k You obviously didn't read my last post. The hippie movement was anything but passive. That includes the MC5, who were Detroit hippies. People quit going to rock clubs because of all the violence, puking, moshing etc, and generally lousy music.
flamesounds 1 month ago
@flamesounds i don't know what people you're talking about, or heard about. because a Lollapolooza could have never happened if what you're saying is true. Lollapolooza is directly connected to the punk rock scene, with bands like Rancid, Ramones, Jane's Addiction, the Red Hots, Green Day, etc etc. Perry Farrell came directly from the LA punk rock scene. of course real punk had been diluted by the 80's but that his roots.
micsolis 2 weeks ago
@micsolis Lollapolooza is a major corporate event and a lot of the bands are very financially viable. You can't compare it to Monterey, Acid Tests, etc. One thing I have learned recently is that most people that came of age after the 60s ended can't imagine what it was like.They simply have no frame of reference at all. That doesn't mean they're dumb. It just like trying to explain the color orange to a blind man. Consequently the history is becoming very distorted, revised and lost.
flamesounds 3 days ago
@flamesounds wow. what punk shows did you go to? you must be in a bad location because i've seen some great punk shows, myself. of course, maybe you simply missed the good shit, and maybe saw all the wrong shows. it happens. especially when you don't really know the scene or the music. and then to say that punk ruined the club and concert scene? that's why most kids listen to hip hop??? fucking hilarious. where do you get your information? obviously not first hand. maybe some crappy magazines.
micsolis 2 weeks ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@flamesounds As to punk not standing the "test of time"... punk lasted from about 1975 to about 1979, and most of the popular punk bands REJECTED the industry and their record deals. So... compared to "classic" rockers who sold their asses to the music industry, it would be an apple v orange comparison that only a monkey (you) would attempt to make. Few today even know who the MC5 were... or who MOST of the popular "classic" rockers were through the '70s. So much for standing the test of time.
MongoTheLloyd 5 months ago
@flamesounds In closing, your embarrassing cover of "Satisfaction", with the incorrect lyrics and guitar power chords, is an example of what was wrong with music, both then and now. Jagger stated that the Satisfaction guitar riff was unique, while Richards claimed that the song's riff could be heard in half of the songs that The Rolling Stones had produced, saying that "there is only one song — it's just the variations you come up with". Exactly. Rehashed industry vomit, and those that eat it.
MongoTheLloyd 5 months ago
@flamesounds What??? You have haunted this page for a year (or more), attacking any who mention "punk" in the same sentence? Good fake Christ. You are as douchey as you appear in your photo. I mean, being a douche is not an act with you. You have taken it to heart! "Acid" rock was The Grateful Dead... not The MC5, son. The Dead. Perhaps (early) Airplane. Big Brother and the Holding Co. The Haight scene... not the Motor City. Clearly, you know little... but that fact won't stop you.
MongoTheLloyd 5 months ago
@MongoTheLloyd The MC5 played high schools and underground clubs around my area when I was a teen. I met Wayne Kramer, a few of my friends got high with the band and some guys I know, Big Brother and the Holding Company, stayed at their commune for a few days after playing the Grande. They were Detroit hippies and were the musical arm of the White Panther party. You are typical of most of the blowhard, ignorant dumbass punks I've met. I suggest you read Guitar Army by John Sinclair.
flamesounds 5 months ago
@flamesounds No thanks. Taking literature suggestions from an idiot like you would be like picking my nose, and I gave that up by age 2. Alot of work for little payout, in the end. Wow! You met Wayne Kramer? And your friends got high with so and so? Really? Man, I guess that makes you the most in-the-know idiot I have never wanted to meet! Uh... most guys sporting jewfros in the late 60s were called "hippies", moron. Duh. Are you really as stupid as you sound?
MongoTheLloyd 2 weeks ago
@MongoTheLloyd I apologize for for thinking you could digest any literary matter of pertinent content, as my single paragraph posts are well above your ability to grasp. Being the clever little guy you are, apparently you began picking your ass at age 2. Much greater return for your effort. Unfortunately the decades of turd gobbling and jenkem huffing have given you shit for brains and rendered you useless for all but furiously pounding your diminutive petard in your parent's basement.
flamesounds 3 days ago
@MongoTheLloyd Yes, I met Kramer and others. I got out and lived it and didn't sit in my room at home like you do reading about it in a magazine. Still do. Obviously trolling YouTube has become your sex life. Probably sitting there with a tiny woody because you got a reply to your flatulent musings and for a brief second someone paid you attention.
flamesounds 3 days ago
CHAOS & Electricity Flying EVERYWHERE, Mosh-Pits before their time for sure.
jthomas666 2 years ago
They were so far ahead of their time, it's still mind bogoling to think they were around in the 60s!
Demonoftheforrest 2 years ago
thanks for posting this!! do you know where i could find recording of this show without the guys talking, just the show?
noteshade 2 years ago
noteshade its part of the show. so good luck finding the recording with out him haha
thisjazzkills 1 year ago
@thisjazzkills lolz no i meant without the commentary from the guy at 0:55 and by show i meant musical performance, not the documentary, but i already found it :)
noteshade 1 year ago
WOW I love it "Kick Out the Jams" Motherf**ker
thanks for posting.
rsn2755 2 years ago
This is a clip from MC5: A True Testimonial, an absolutely amazing documentary which was ALMOST released before being bogged down in civil litigation. I'm a rock documentary fanboy, and I've never seen a better rock film or a more compelling story than A True Testimonial. The band deserved so much more recognition and fame when they were around and their legacy deserves for this documentary to be seen. If you are even REMOTELY interested in the five, pick it up if it is ever released.
timbueter 2 years ago
where the hell is it, or will it ever see the light of day
jthomas666 2 years ago
in fact the last i ever heard it rearin it's ugly head was the Tribeca Film festival in NY almost 7 yrs ago.
jthomas666 2 years ago
amen....absolutely true
theachtungtree 2 years ago
Very Lovely.
twowaymuir 2 years ago
i love this song.I used to listen to it on 8 track with a matchpack jammed under it
LetArtsLive 2 years ago
pity i wasnt born in time to catch this show.
punkrockxzz 2 years ago