According to the concert dates archive on the MC5 Gateway website, the MC5 played in Roanoke, VA on May 7, 1971. I have been unable to locate any other info on this show, such as the venue, etc.
Motor City Five.
Fred smith of mc5, he died a few years back
"Kick Out the Jams" by MC5.
Yes the MCI MC5 has Air assist clutch its at the drivers side on the transmission which is a 4speed .
Mathew J. Bartkowiak has written: 'The MC5 and social change' 'Packaging baseball' -- subject(s): Social aspects, Baseball, Major League Baseball (Organization), Management, Economic aspects
Jackson Five Jurassic 5 Maroon 5 Dave Clarke Five MC5 B-52s Galaxie 500 Ben Folds Five Five for Fighting 5ive Fifth Dimension
I'll give you some options: Way early punk rock: The Stooges Television MC5 Captain Beefheart Early punk rock: Ramones Dead Kennedys Clash Misfits Black Flag 90's punk rock: NOFX Rancid Lagwagon Descendents
Bruce Ellison has: Played Indien in "Panique au village" in 2002. Played Indien in "Panique au village" in 2009. Played Bruce in "Week-End" in 2009. Played MC5 in "Kill Me Please" in 2010. Played Satan in "Lulu du lac" in 2012.
Actually, yes...sort of. The first punk scene was in New York City, at the nightclubs CBGB's and Max's Kansas City. But the very, very first punk bands (what some people call "proto-punk") -- the Stooges, and the MC5 -- were from Detroit. See the Related Question below for more information.
Take a look into the Grado SR-60i's, they are known for excellent sound and build quality, but are open back so people around you may hear the sound quite clearly. If you're considering earbuds, try the Etymiotic MC5's, unbelievable sound quality and a steal at 79 bucks.
None, John Sinclair didn't write The Jungle; Upton Sinclair did. Upton Sinclair was a socialist and a writer (and a future candidate for governor of California) who exposed the conditions in the meat packing industry in his 1906 novel, The Jungle. John Sinclair was a poet (and the manager of the Detroit-based rock group, the MC5) who, because he was sent to prison after selling two joints to a narcotics officer in Michigan, became the subject of a John Lennon song.