Monday, October 12, 2009

TARTER FIELD: THE RE-TOOLED MC5



We had just completed the recording of our first album in the recording studio. Jon Landau produced this album “Back In The USA”, our second record. Jon ran a very tight ship. He virtually changed our lifestyle. We had moved again, this time from Ann Arbor to a small, mainly German farming town by the name of Hamburg, MI.

Quiet and most rural, we gave ourselves some room from the party crowd and all the traffic in general. We needed the change of scenery. Jon was a music writer for Rolling Stone and we were his second recording project ever. He had us running laps around the house and eating a low fat, high protein diet. He also tried his best to run a no drinking and drugging regimen as well. We rehearsed like men possessed and that was a good thing. I have to say now in perfect 20-20 hindsight, that what Jon did for us was actually quite beneficial in many ways.



I was not into this guy at all. I used to call him a Fascist and an amateur. I wanted a professional producer with a proven track record, but once again the powers that be overruled me again. I felt he was anal retentive and was driven to total perfection partly because of his lack of experience, so he overcompensated.

The tunes were too tinny sounding and lacked punch. The music lacked that fullness that we were known for. There was no improvising. We may have overdone that on the first album. I felt very strongly about this. Jon’s heart was 100% in the right place. He wanted a hit single from this band and he knew we needed to change to accomplish this. We confused our fan base. (More on this period later folks.)

The songs were also all 3 minutes long or shorter, and this flew in the face of our first album, KOTJ, where the songs were on average 4-7 minutes long. In retrospect, we did need to clean up the timing and the tightness of the tracks. I will be the first to admit this.




I had to play to a metronome and we layered the tracks as opposed to playing as a group. This felt alien to me. I adapted to this format in a short time, but I still did not like it. Now, years later, many of our fans think it was our best album out of the three. We could have done a hell of a lot better with a pro, but would we have been as tight? I doubt it. All in all, as a result, what you see and hear on the tapes of the Tartar Field performance is a direct result of that conditioning.



Now I think everything is as it should’ve been, because that is the way life comes at you. So here you have it, the first time we played the new tunes off “Back in the USA” or what many people call “The White Album”. We did this in front of a large audience at Tartar Field, Wayne State University, mine and Michael Davis’ alma mater.

Remember that this band was always evolving, we never stood still, and this chapter is just as different as the one before it, and the one that followed it (the High Time Period). “Gotta Keep Movin”, my, oh my…wait till I tell you of the Jac Holzman and Elektra period!

The drama is even better…
MGT

13 comments:

Pete James,  October 12, 2009 11:07 PM  

I Love "Back in the USA" regardless of the process the Talent,Soul and Spirit comes through, Chops, Personality and lyrics...

audioneedle,  October 12, 2009 11:08 PM  

"I can remember my housemate bringing Kick Out the Jams back after break one winter and it burned up the stereo the rest of the year and took its place in my mental mix-tape for life. - L"

Mindless Mike,  October 12, 2009 11:41 PM  

I have some demos you guys did I guess as preproduction? They sound better in some ways then the LP. I really dig the originals on this one, we used to cover High School in a band. My only gripe would be with all the covers. The originals are great & the band is tight!

Daguet Guitars,  October 13, 2009 6:49 AM  

everything could "always" improve, be better.. at least that's what everybody thinks just after creating them... later we learn that they were just "perfect"...

Steven Gier",  October 13, 2009 6:52 AM  

You're the man!

"Mr. Thompson your the sole reason for me picking up a pair of sticks and playing "Looking At You" You're one of the best and my fav drummer of all time. Thank you for reading this and kicking ass!
Steven Gier"

Michael Lynn,  October 13, 2009 7:05 AM  

I was the first freak in Highland Park evolving ftom a Greaser --Brought all my MC5 albums when I moved to LA in 73/74 --They (Cali's) couldn't understand -as they said"the Noise"
Well YOU GUYS showed them the way -Many great mem...ories from Creem Mag Eastown, Grande, Lincoln Park Ice Rink AnnArbor and all the other places "THANK YOU FOR THE MUSIK"

JONAS DAINIUS BERZANSKIS,  October 13, 2009 8:07 PM  

"Got to know Rob at the end of his life. He was a gentleman in every sense of the word. "

Donna,  October 13, 2009 9:27 PM  

"My brother had a set of those babys in the basement...LOVE the music of the DRUM. Have some nice sounds on xm/sirrus spa channel. gorgeous sounds. see ya around Mr. Thompson. Good eve to ya. donna"

Kyle,  October 14, 2009 4:04 PM  

I go to Wayne State presently as a junior and I think about those videos every time I pass Tartar Field. I wish there were more photos/videos/books on EVERY account of the MC5. Their exact addresses. Where they hungout around the Warren/Forest area. Stuff like that...

anon October 14, 2009 5:07 PM  

The Tarter Field videos are amazing. I cant help but wonder if the rest of the show is out there somewhere. Great stuff.

Al King,  October 23, 2009 1:17 AM  

Kick out the Jams at tarter is blazing fast, very tight too.

Jon Dameron,  September 11, 2010 10:25 AM  

"Hey Dennis, that show at Tartar Field in July 1970, did u guys do a whole set or just the the 3 songs on youtube? Thanks. Jon"

travis anthony davivdson January 19, 2011 12:23 PM  

hey dennis ! i was at the tarter field show ya'll,"doe kicked 'em out" !!!! peace power & luv, travis***

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