Wayne Kramer [extended]
- The Hard Stuff [Epitaph, 1995]
- Dangerous Madness [Epitaph, 1996]
**
- Dodge Main [Alive, 1996]
**
- Citizen Wayne [Epitaph, 1997]
A-
- Adult World [MuscleTone, 2002]
***
See Also:
Consumer Guide Reviews:
The Hard Stuff [Epitaph, 1995]
"Crack in the Universe"; "Incident on Stock Island" 
Dangerous Madness [Epitaph, 1996]
visionary guitar, '60s-style, plus low-life lyrics by Mick Farren, who should know ("Dangerous Madness," "A Dead Man's Vest") **
Wayne Kramer/Deniz Tek/Scott Morgan: Dodge Main [Alive, 1996]
so it's never too late for an MC5 tribute ("Future/Now") **
Citizen Wayne [Epitaph, 1997]
The punk line on the MC5 is that their revolutionary pretensions were imposed by conniving hippie John Sinclair. So how come it was Fred Smith who got "People Got the Power" out of Patti? And how come Wayne Kramer has now enlisted ex-rad David Was in the most political record of either career? Despite one small-minded sectarian dis--nobody in my Trotskyite cell would be so gauche as to serve chips with pesto, let me assure you--these songs talk class and counterculture simultaneously, a rare thing, especially with the emphasis on the class. And musically, the two Detroiters tear up each other's roots as Was tilts Kramer's good old guitar toward the avant-funk it has long since deserved. A-
Adult World [MuscleTone, 2002]
declaiming his songpoems to (and like) a rock and roll beat ("Nelson Algren Stopped By," "Great Big Amp") ***
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