The Big Bang: The Best of the MC5 MC5

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/15/2000
  • Sales Rank: 47,514
  • Label: ATLANTIC / WEA
  • UPC: 081227978327

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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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The Big Bang: The Best of the MC5

1LISTENI Can Only Give You Everything 2:59
2LISTENLooking at You 2:48
3LISTENI Just Don't Know 2:40
4LISTENRamblin' Rose 4:25
5LISTENKick Out the Jams Uncensored Version 2:46
6LISTENCome Together 4:34
7LISTENRocket Reducer No. 62 (Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa) 5:43
8LISTENTonight 2:33
9LISTENTeenage Lust 2:33
10LISTENHigh School 2:40
11LISTENCall Me Animal 2:04
12LISTENThe American Ruse 2:29
13LISTENShakin' Street 2:19
14LISTENThe Human Being LAwnmower 2:22
15LISTENBack in the U.S.A. 2:26
16LISTENSister Anne 7:22
17LISTENBaby Won't Ya 5:32
18LISTENMiss X 5:09
19LISTENOver and Over 5:13
20LISTENSkunk (Sonicly Speaking) 5:31
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Editorial Reviews

Forget any other combo's claim to the name; in their short lifespan, the MC5 were truly the world's most dangerous band. Their radical politics -- which advocated breaking drug laws and taking up guns in the streets -- was taken from the White Panther Party in the band's native Detroit, while its screaming, intense sound laid the groundwork for the heavy metal and punk yet to come. This 21-song compilation culls material from each of the 5's distinct periods. From their embryonic stage comes the rumbling, decontrolled squall of "Looking at You"; the hyper-politicized late-'60s era is represented by the uncensored "Kick Out the Jams" (one of the first songs to get an album banned from the stores); and the back-to-basics latter days get painted in the stark proto-punk relief of "Shakin' Street" and "Call Me Animal." Through it all, the dual-guitar attack of Wayne Kramer and the late Fred "Sonic" Smith keeps both energy and danger levels maxed out -- particularly on "The Human Being Lawnmower" and "Ramblin' Rose." The revolution might not have been televised, but its soundtrack came through loud and clear in the work of the MC5. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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