Back in 2006 I had the distinct pleasure of interviewing a
man who to me was the living embodiment of a rock and roll legend.
His name was Mike Davis, and he was a member of the
proto-punk gods the MC5.
This was a band that along with Bowie , The Stooges and a whole raft of others
perverted my teenage years, and laid the seeds for a lifetime love affair with
music.
To say that I was blown away by the generosity Mike showed
in giving his time so freely to me would be an understatement.
Mike sadly left us in 2012, but his legacy lives on every
single time that anyone screams ‘Kick out the jams muthafuckers’ into a
microphone.
And that is as it should be.
Here is that interview.
Prior to meeting Rob in '65, had you seen, or even heard of
THE MOTOR CITY FIVE?
MD: No, I had no knowledge of them. I
wasn't into rock music, pop music, whatever, because at the time my ambition
was still to be a painter and I was trying to return to my studies.
At the time you were attending university, had already travelled about a bit,
lived in NY, and even married. Did you initially think that you had much in
common with the rest of the band?
MD: Not much. I thought of them as
suburban drifters, trying to distance themselves and impress their world by
being celebrity neophytes. I had taken a big chance at my own independence and
I had a lot to talk about.
These guys were just
breaking out of Lincoln Park ,
Michigan .
How did the first meeting go when Rob introduced you?
MD: Great. I wasn't expecting to become
a part of their world. Wayne
was the most outgoing of them, more so even than Rob, and I was welcomed into
the fold, but that is typical of Kramer.
If Wayne deems you have something to offer that
he can use, he will put you on his guest list.
I had new brown
Beatle boots, and I looked bohemian to top it off. I guess it was a style thing
that he hadn't seen before. I wasn't like anybody else. He wanted to get a
handle on it.
Yet, the character
that gave off the most vibe in the band was Fred. His mystique was what
impressed ME. I thought the rest of them were pretty common as characters go.
I read that Rob described you as a pretty heavy dude. What do you suppose he
meant by that?
MD: Ha ha…A heavy dude was someone who
was bringing the hip street philosophy that became known as alternative
subculture. It's just a tag, like saying someone is cool, etc.
Was it a bit of a bloodless coup when you joined the band?
MD: More or less. The only bit of fuss
was Fred being put off that Wayne installed me as the new bassist without so
much as asking anyone else how they felt about it. This pattern continued to be
a basic part of the MC5 story. That's just the way it is. It went something
like this; Wayne
to Fred; "So, is he in or out"? Fred to Wayne : "Well,…I guess he's in".
Meanwhile Tyner is nervously shaking his foot and puffing away on a cigarette
as his career takes shape in front of his eyes. It should be said that Rob
initially wanted me to be in the band. So we can blame him.
The MC5 are as well known for their political stance as the music. Can you draw
parallels from Vietnam to
the current situation with Iraq ?
MD: A lot of people do. Certain things
for sure are the same as they always have been.
Like the CIA being
used as a task force for a presidents' agenda somewhere in the world.
It's what gives us a
bad name.
People are concerned
about what we do as a nation, it gives me the shivers that the country can
stand by and watch as successive presidents corrupt our values with brutally
lame policies. I know the world is most complex, but come on now, haven't we
learned anything?
What do you feel is the difference with the kids then and now? Do you think the
tail end of the sixties promoted a more radicalized youth culture compared to
now, and if so, was that a good thing?
MD: It's like this; the kids of then
are the parents of the kids of now.
That's about the
size of it.
Otherwise, kids are
kids, basically. If these kids were faced with the same world as the one we had
in the sixties, the reaction would be the same as then. Everything that led up
to the sixties being the sixties created a powder keg socially.
Now we have a new
powder keg, and I'm wondering how it will play out. It's all just history
anyway, isn't it?
It was, as you say,
a more radicalized youth culture.
Unfortunately, when
someone tries to perform radical behaviour nowadays, they do it like the
radicals of the end of that era, the ones who led it into chaos and defeat. The
better tact was to let the authorities come off as the villains, but somehow
that method was abandoned in favour of aggressiveness.
Problem is, that is
the core of terrorism, and that's bad.
The White Panthers stance was a call for some form of unity, but do you
consider that the Black Panthers had their own agenda, and viewed your rhetoric
with suspicion?
MD: Ha ha. They viewed us as a joke.
Those guys regarded
white people in general as untrustworthy. They were sick of being abused and
wanted to come off as superior to the white world that imprisoned them.
If they had been
really smart they could have used our camaraderie very effectively, but they
couldn't manage it.
The talk was turning
me off.
I thought we had lost sight of the mission. I wasn't thinking we could
overthrow the government. I was thinking we could turn enough people on to the
MC5 message and that after awhile, we would just become the government. I
always thought if anything was possible, we had a chance to bring it about by
staying cool instead of forcing it.
I was a minority of
one.
MD: Yo, until George Bush and his group
of crusaders are removed from office, either by election or eviction, we've got
a problem. Understand that presently people are just coming around to the fact
that Bush-whacker is a liar, and a heartless little bully without humility.
The
Up until now, I
think the common American lunkhead was still trying to believe all this war
business was justifiable. The entire thing has backfired into the faces of
those whom are its promoters.
What's also
interesting is that the whole nation is suffering internally and is on life
support. But it's different from the sixties, because no one can believe it's
really happening. "You know something's happening, but you don't know what
it is…do you, Mr. Jones". I can see a revolt in the making. I think Bush's
days are numbered.
If he can't wriggle
out of the fiasco gracefully, the Democrats will retake the government by
default. They aren't much better, but they are better.
The big picture is
always what I care about. I still think the only sane world is the rock and
roll world. As long as I can play and bring the "heavy dude" message
to my fans, there is hope.
While touring with DTK, did it open your eyes to the worldview regarding your
countries foreign policies?
MD: Believe me, I knew what was up for
some time. I did a lot of touring in Germany
and Europe with The Luminarios in the late
90's prior to DKT/MC5 and got the picture right away.
But do you feel misrepresented by your government?
MD: Absolutely. But remember, when you
play rock and roll, you are more than an American in people's eyes.
You are the carrier
of the torch, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
As I've now mentioned DTK now, how was the tour, what was your personally
highlights, and was there a downside?
MD: DKT is the name. For me, it was
inspiring that our story, legacy, whatever you want to call it, is so globally,
universally important.
We went everywhere
you can imagine with this show.
It seemed there
wasn't any place that MC5 wasn't as revered as if it were Detroit
or New York or London
or Tokyo .
Just unilaterally
too important to be overlooked and forsaken.
In Russia , Croatia ,
Serbia , Scandinavia ,
Greece , Brazil , all of Europe, all of the US ,
the Orient, Down Under, we are known throughout the world as the brief but
bright flame that changed everyone forever.
More than any other
band, the MC5 left a growing legacy that continues today to astonish people and
inspire them. This is what I learned from touring the past couple of years.
That is a great
feeling for me.
To work with great
players who gave their all to the performances, meeting the many fans and
promoters who were so unabashedly honoured to bring us to their venues, and living
the life of a road warrior travelling without end to the next crowd of excited revellers.
That’s real.
The downside is a
bit more difficult to tell.
There is a small
conspiracy that feels the MC5 should be immersed in a jar of formaldehyde, or
encased in a glass tomb for a Smithsonian exhibit.
That's their
problem.
I'm glad we did this.
So there is the final chapter.
The fact that we can
walk away and end the tour of DKT/MC5 is not as much a downside as it is an
upside, in my opinion.
I feel free to go on
a new quest, without the leftover incompleteness that was formerly the case.
We did it, it's
over, let's move on.
The MC5 was only one
stage in my career. In a sense, the tour of DKT/MC5 was a healing experience
all around, both personally and professionally.
I thought of Fred
Smith often. I thought of Rob Tyner often. I didn't write the script, just the
songs. I only played my part. By the time we ended the tour in Los Angeles at UCLA's Royce Hall, I was not
digging the animal that DKT had become. It was more like KKK, and it felt like
time to get out again.
I was at the Glasgow
show (Garage) and was blown away with the energy. Was it tough keeping it
going? (Shameless fanboy question)
MD: Not really. It's what we do. The
MC5 is all about the energy. It's not tough for me. I revel in it. In fact I
felt sort of held back...
On that night in particular there were two other big name bands playing in
Glasgow, Velvet Revolver and another I can't recall at the moment. I was
worried that there would have been a poor turnout for DTK, yet it was a sell
out with the majority of the crowd being under thirty.
Did the age of the crowd, and the success of the shows come
as a surprise for you?
MD: Velvet Revolver isn't doing
anything particularly new or inspiring. If you are looking for something to
ring your bell, the MC5 is your huckleberry.
I never noticed the
age of any crowd. They are pretty equal to me in that they all come expecting
what we deliver. I don't regard them as young or old or any of that. I don't
care if they are all grandpas and grandmas. I wouldn't be surprised if whole
families showed up. The spirit of what we are is in the music we play; it knows
no age.
I'm sure you have been asked a thousand times, but how does it feel playing the
songs without Rob and Fred?
MD: I really wish they could have been
there. I remember when Fred and I lived in the upstairs attic of an old house
in Detroit . We
would dream about being big stars and having an ice box full of Coca Colas or
beer or whatever, and how we stumbled around with our attitudes and dreams and
suffered through outrageous disappointments.
Here I was, some 38
years later, living the glory of those dreams without him.
I almost cry
thinking of it. We meant a lot to each other, I don't care what anybody else
says about it.
All these people who
claim to have made the MC5 what it was are blowing their own trumpets. It takes
a big commitment to have a real band. You bond for the whole trip, not just
awhile. You become "one".
I thought Nicke Royale was outstanding. Do you think you will work with him
again, and is there any further plans for DTK?
MD: I think yes. I would like to work
with Nicke. He and The Hellacopters have been great boosters of Detroit style music. As
far as DKT goes, I'm comfortable to put it to bed until another public demand
is made to bring back MC5 a-go-go. So, no there aren't any plans at this time.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think you left MC5 in '71. Was it a difficult
decision, and how did it come about?
MD: The decision was made without my
participation. Much like the way in which I was brought in, my departure was
brought about behind the scenes. By that time, we were no longer functioning as
a real band. Tyner was slightly desperate to keep on going because he was getting
the business at home about the lifestyle that had taken us over. Tyners' big
kick was weed, coffee, cigarettes, fat chicks, and beer.
He was kind of a
lightweight compared to the rest of us. Kramer, Thompson, and me were addicts.
Smith was a user, but not to the point of being strung out, at least not as I
recall. 1971 was the last year we were a band. Sinclair had done everything in
his power to deride us in print, calling us all sorts of names and trying to
instigate anti-MC5 sentiment.
As we attempted to
forge our way into the business on a professional level, critical errors were
made. We had no management to speak of, only Dee Anthony, a high profile New York pro who did
Stevie Winwood and a host of English rock bands.
He was our record
company guy, so management wasn't his bag - he was on the label's side.
We were listening to
but not accepting offers presented to us by prospective real managers. We were
burning down the forests as we went along. I was caught in a trap, unable to
pull myself out, sinking further and further away from the connection we had
started in 1966.
In my disappointment
I turned to dope as a way to avoid all the crap.
When I got to England late
enough to miss the first gig of an anaemic tour, Kramer made the push to get
rid of me. My behaviour didn't convince any of the others this was a bad move.
I am one of the only two people to ever be kicked out of The MC5 for being a
drug addict.
The pot was calling
the kettle black here.
It was just a
desperate move by desperate people. I was relieved beyond description. The
weight of the world was lifted off my shoulders.
If it hadn't disintegrated, do you think a continuation would have been
detrimental to the bands' legacy. I suppose what I'm asking is, is it better to
burn out, than fade away?
MD: It wasn't burn out. It was crash
and burn. I think the rest of them got caught in the ghost yard and never could
get over it personally.
Actually by me being
terminated, I was spared the trauma of the end. I've been virtually free of MC5
jet lag over the years.
Others may have not
been so fortunate.
How did the DTK idea come about? Who approached who?
MD: My but you are getting into all the
restricted areas, aren't you? I wanted to call the band Renegade Party, but
someone thought we needed to be recognized as the MC5 without calling it the
MC5. So it came down to using our initials as the band name along side MC5 so
that the audiences knew exactly what they were getting. Who did what first is a
can of worms.
I'd rather not even
talk about it.
It's a lot of
explaining this and that, and everyone wants to be credited with the good stuff
and no one wants any part of the bad.
A short time after
Gary Grimshaw and Becky Tyner authorized the use of the mark on t-shirts for
Levis, my manager was tipped off and stepped in to negotiate on behalf of
Dennis and me because when Levis learned that Grimshaw does not have authority
to license use of the MC5 mark, they wanted approval from all of the surviving
band members and the estate of Fred Smith too.
All I know is that
then I got a call on my cell phone from an English guy who proposed the idea of
getting together with the other former original members of the MC5 and coming
to England for a one-off performance. He asked if I thought that it had any
possibility of succeeding.
I told him that from
my standpoint it was very exciting and I would jump at the chance to play with
my former mates. I couldn't speak for the others, but told him he should go for
it and that he would need help.
I referred him to my
manager, who picked up the ball from there, and eventually got the whole thing
rolling in spite of a hoard of conflicts that developed at the beginning. No
one has ever given Angela any credit for pulling the band back together when
there were personalities and demands from all corners. Well, she did it! (While
I am giving credit where credit is due, Margaret Saadi Kramer thought to film
the show at the 100 Club and produced Sonic Revolution; A Celebration of the
Music of the MC5. She and Angela have worked very closely and very hard to do a
lot of repair work where old and new MC5 business are concerned and move it all
forward in a businesslike and ethical way. The members of the MC5, the families
of the survivors and a lot of other people have all benefited a great deal from
their work.)
Was there a moment when you thought "What the hell am I doing"?
MD: I always knew what I was doing. It
was the curtain call of a lifetime.
It might be a cliché, but was the reaction from the fans worldwide something
that made it all worthwhile?
MD: You know, it meant so much to get
it from the people themselves, not the press or the book writers. The real
folks that go out and buy it and collect it, and listen to it every day for
that one more new thing they hadn't heard before. You guys mattered! You guys
made this a better place. If only Fred and Rob could have heard those crowds
cheer for them…maybe they did.
Obviously all the guest singers were exceptional, or they wouldn't be doing it,
but did any stand out and just blow you away?
MD: I thought they were all great, but
one guy was stratospheric by himself. I wasn't completely sure what he was
doing half the time, until I saw the playback of The Craig Kilborn Show. He was
out front doing a sync baritone octave vocal with Mark Arm on Kick Out The
Jams, and I realized what he brought to the sound was uniquely his own
interpretation of that song.
His name is Evan
Dando.
The press derided
his presence with the band from even before day one, but for me he was a true
original. That's something I value above most everything else. That's just a
personal favourite moment.
You have had a varied career, MC5, Destroy all monsters and Lumarios, what's
next?
MD: A lot more than ever before. Angela
and I own and operate Svengirly Music, Inc., an artist management, music
publishing and merchandising company for punk and garage bands. Among others we
manage a great band from L.A.
called The Lords of Altamont. We have a killer record just out right now in the
U.S. and in Europe called Lords Have Mercy. I most likely will join
the Lords on tour in Europe sometime in
February. We are playing SXSW after the tour. Then I'm off to Italy to
produce a great band called OJM. We also have been working on a photo book
project and will travel to Japan
for an exhibition related to that. That's the immediate schedule. A bunch on
the horizon, things are coming along nicely.
In closing, if you had to give a personal mission statement for 2006, what
would it be?
MD: I'm in the midst of treatment for
Hep C. Treatment is also going very well. I've left the old ways of drunk and
disorderly behaviour behind for a relatively calm life as a healthy being. The
healing process is slow by some standards, but I can feel improvements on a
variety of levels. My goal is to reclaim my health and physical strength.
My goal is to fulfil
the promise of youth eternal.
My goal is to unite
a rock and roll culture into a self-aware meaningful society.
Most of all, my
mission is to take good care of my happy family.
Also to give strength
and love to others, and hope for the best outcome.
It's never too late
to bring it all back home.
RIP Mike Davis (1943
– 2012)
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