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Biography
John Sinclair
Poet, blues and jazz historian, former manager of the MC5, radio
host, and political activist all describe John Sinclair, but the
consistent profile is one of a dedicated music enthusiast. Sinclair
was born October 2, 1941, in Flint, MI, where he discovered rhythm &
blues radio as a grade schooler. Disc jockeys like the Frantic Ernie
D possessed the gift of consistently being able to speak in rhyme.
His initial exposure to this music and unique banter had a life-altering
effect on Sinclair. Upon graduation of high school he attended
Albion College, University of Michigan at Flint, and went to graduate
school at Wayne State University in Detroit for an M.A. in American
Literature -- he did his graduate thesis on William S. Burroughs'
Naked Lunch -- before dropping out in 1965. Throughout college Sinclair
became enamored with jazz, embracing not only bebop but also the
burgeoning avant-garde. Sparked by the love of this music, Sinclair
took notice of the surrounding political culture that formed it. He
heard Malcolm X speak, sided with the emerging antiwar movement,
and had been introduced to a beatnik lifestyle. The combination of
influences led to the creation of the Detroit Artists' Workshop,
which would gradually morph into Trans Love Energies. Forming a
commune with like-minded friends, they brought film, music, painting,
and literature to anyone in the community who was interested, presenting
art as universally tangible, not an unknown entity wrapped in an
academic elitist shield. In the midst of these high-energy surroundings,
Sinclair was first introduced to the MC5 and shortly
thereafter worked with the band as manager. In the midst of this
creativity, the Detroit Riots took place in the summer of 1967. Coupled
with years of police harassment aimed at the workshop, the tension
forced Sinclair and friends to take refuge in the college town of
Ann Arbor, MI. After setting up a similar communal situation in Ann
Arbor, Sinclair followed the lead of the Black Panther Party and
created their counterpart, the White Panther Party. The MC5
provided the musical vehicle for "total assault on the
culture" propelling radical political statements to a national
audience through rock & roll. The antagonistic rhetoric surrounding Sinclair
found him among other political dissidents that were targeted by
government officials. Sinclair was finally railroaded off to jail
after giving away two joints to an undercover narcotics agent. Since
this was his third conviction on similar offenses, Sinclair
received the maximum sentence of ten years. While in prison, the Free
John campaign was founded and culminated in a benefit concert to get Sinclair
released. Taking place in Ann Arbor, the benefit featured Phil Ochs,
Stevie Wonder, Allen Ginsberg, Bobby Seale, and the
main attraction, John Lennon and Yoko Ono. Lennon took up Sinclair's
plight on the suggestion of newfound friends and radicals Abbie
Hoffman and Jerry Rubin. He even wrote a song about the case,
"John Sinclair," that was released on the Sometime
in New York City album. Three days after the concert took place, the
Michigan Supreme Court overturned his conviction and Sinclair was
released from prison after serving two years. A thorough investigation
into these years of revolution was chronicled by Sinclair in his
book Guitar Army, originally published in 1971 and featuring many
sections written while in prison. Following his release, Sinclair
hesitantly got back into music management and promotion, despite feeling
burned by the MC5, who had discharged his services immediately
when he went to prison; they dropped the White Panther rhetoric, made
two more albums, and self-destructed in 1972. Meanwhile, Sinclair
co-founded the Rainbow Multi Media Corporation and the Ann Arbor
Blues and Jazz Festival. When the funding for these projects ran
out, he turned his attentions to local grassroots community issues,
hosted radio shows, worked for NORML as state coordinator, and continued
freelance writing for various publications. In 1991 the lifelong
Michigan resident moved to New Orleans. The eclectic music scene
flourishing in the Crescent City provided a rejuvenating base for the
development of his spoken word poetry performances, backed by his band the
Blues Scholars. He also started broadcasting at the award winning
jazz and heritage radio station WWOZ. 1994 found Sinclair
releasing his first musical project If I Could Be With You,
featuring the Ed Moss Society Jazz Orchestra, from a performance
in Cincinnati. In 1995 another live piece Full Moon Night was
issued, this time featuring the Blues Scholars from a date at
Kaldi's Coffeehouse in New Orleans, containing a freer musical backdrop
more in tune with Sinclair's poetic style. Full Circle
followed in 1996, reuniting Sinclair with early Detroit cohorts
former-MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer and former-trumpeter of
the Contemporary Jazz Quintet Charles Moore. The labor of
love tribute to pianist Thelonious Monk, Thelonious: A Book of
Monk, followed after years of red tape hassles, featuring Sinclair
reciting his poetry sans musical accompaniment. In the late '90s, Sinclair
also started digging through his taped archives of early Ann Arbor
Blues and Jazz Festival performances releasing discs by Sun Ra,
Victoria Spivey, Roosevelt Sykes, Little Sonny, and
various obscure Detroit blues artists. ~ Al Campbell, All Music Guide
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