Find out the value of a Vinyl Record, CD, or Cassette, etc. Search within our Price Guide of Sold Auctions
Phono Cylinder: MINTY 1972 ORIG ~ MC5 - HIGH TIME ~ EXPLOSIVE REVOLUTIONARY HARD PSYCH "POISON" FIRING ALL ALL CYLINDERS! WIRED TIGHT HELLACIOUS ROCKER
THE MIGHTY "5" ~ 1972 ORIGINAL ~ HARD AS NAILS BLAZE OF GLORY! | ||
..|/\|...............................................|/\|.. THE MC5 HIGH TIME ..|/\|...............................................|/\|.. USA - Atlantic Records = SD 8285 THE MC5 HIGH TIME MINTY VINYL ~~~ COLLECTION WORTHY 56 YEARS AGO "GEM" Original 1972 first pressing in thick gatefold cover of the mighty "5" and their last album ...and they go down in a blaze of glory!!! original printed inner sleeve included! The testifying begins with “Sister Anne” as Dennis Thompson belabours his no-frills and completely explosive drum kit with cascading, pounding drums and ringing cymbals over twin-engine guitars firing up seering heat. It’s a brilliant cacophony until Tyner steps up to the microphone to begin vocally giving it up as only he can. Fred “Sonic” Smith burns down in the chorus with further full-tilt riffing that anchors everything to a main rhythm axis that rotates continually throughout a series of twists in this depiction of a streetwise nun. “Sonic” then turns up the heat with a blistering solo like he's harnessing a lightning storm while visions of unleashed bladders dance in his head and the following Tyner harmonica soloing keeps the pressure mounting until the break back into his previous begged question: “Sister, won’t you tell me where I went so wrong?” The band keeps nailing it for 7 minutes 23 seconds as though making up for their previous album’s majority of 2 and a half minute pop chart hopefuls. The track soon draws back into the introductory strafe run but with additional female voices and soon crossfades into a rickety Salvation Army band outro. Before you can figure out why, Tyner has already yelped again and it’s straight into another “Sonic” Smith composition, “Baby Won’t Ya.” A drunk as a skunk and wimmen-chasin’ thang, it’s as tight and greasy as a groupie spread on a hotel bed for Fred against a celebratory ’71 Stones groove meets Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Born On The Bayou” sans all the voodoo but plus twice the mojo and every bit as slinky. The twin guitar duels between “Sonic” and Kramer reach a repeating crescendo of unflagging intensity and minimalism pushed to the end of their guitar necks. The (comparatively) romantic “Miss X” follows and this time it’s Wayne Kramer singing of love on the road. Its sound oddly pre-dates Chris Bell’s “I Am The Cosmos” and is heartfelt to the point of bursting while its slapback drums, rudimentary organ make it a highly atypical MC5 moment and indeed it’s the only place on “High Time” to even approach ballad terrain. “Gotta Keep Movin’” by Dennis Thompson draws down side one to a speedy end and it’s one of the most kick ass studio MC5 numbers ever as “Sonic” burns the end of a cigarette down to a half-melted filter with singed fingers. The remarkably flexible musical reflexes shown here are powerful, totally out of control and yet stable as hell all at once (as they are for most of the album, come to think about it.) “The future is now/Yesterday is gone” sings Tyner, referencing his own epic “Future/Now” that will soon enough crack open up the seething second side... SIDE 1 SISTER ANNE 2. BABY WON'T YA 3. MISS X 4. GOTTA KEEP MOVIN' SIDE 2 1. FUTURE/NOW 2. POISON 3. OVER AND OVER CONDITION: The cover: The thick gatefold cover is solid all over, rated "EX" (Excellent) Looks like a presentable collection rarity and has a small delete mark at top left (NO cut corners) delete marks no seam splits, no writing, no bends and has fresh colors... The vinyl: is highly glossy on both sides M- expect to play enjoyable all the way in excellent audio zones ---- and clean Atlantic labels. One to own....
|