Wayne Kramer is a songwriter, producer and composer whose reputation writing music for television and film risks supplanting his legend as one of rock’s stellar guitarists. Rolling Stone recognizes him as one of the top 100 guitarists of all time and highlights from recent scoring work can be heard in the Will Ferrell comedy Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby for Sony Pictures. And one of Wayne’s signature solo tracks “Edge of the Switchblade” runs at its end title credits. He co-composed the score for the controversial HBO documentary Hacking Democracy, which also featured his single “Something Broken in the Promised Land” as its title track.

Wayne is currently scoring the ITVS/PBS feature length documentary The Narcotic Farm, about America’s decades-long failed drug war as well as its narration and accompanying soundtrack album Lexington. In 2008, he
will score Let It Blurt!, biopic of legendary gonzo writer Lester Bangs, and the indie rave thriller Hooking Up.

On television, Wayne’s title theme for Fox Sports Network’s extreme sports program 5-4-3-2-1 was a bona fide hit and he now has many themes running on Fox including, Spotlight, In My Own Words and Under the Lights. At the end of 2006, Wayne composed the theme for E!’s new hit series Split Ends as well as the “Unlabeled” commercial for Jim Beam.

Wayne’s songs have been featured in a wide array of TV shows, including MTV’s Jackass series, Judging Amy for 20th Century Fox TV and Chris Carter’s Fox series Millenium. Additionally, his songs and cues are regularly heard in NFL, NBA and MLB Playoff events, Telepictures/Fox productions and Food Network productions.

His songs can be heard in various feature films including Cameron Crowe’s Almost Famous, the Ramones’ Rock ’n’ Roll High School, October Films’ action film Detour, Mary Harron’s I Shot Andy Warhol and Pump Up the Volume starring Christian Slater.

Wayne founded the MC5, widely recognized as the prototype for punk rock and heavy metal. In 1969, they released the ridiculously controversial album Kick Out The Jams on Elektra Records, which included the hit of the same name. After leaving Elektra, they released two albums on Atlantic Records: Back In The USA, produced by Bruce Springsteen’s manager Jon Landau; and the critically hailed High Time. Between world tours, Wayne wrote scores for the Caroline Films feature Gold and The Living Theatre’s film production of Paradise Now.

Wayne spent the’80s in New York City, where he teamed up with the infamous Johnny Thunders for a short-lived, but headline grabbing, punk rock supergroup Gang War. Soon after, Wayne co-wrote the acclaimed R&B musical The Last Words of Dutch Schultz with Mick Farren, then he joined the revolutionary acid funk outfit Was (Not Was) with David and Don Was.

Wayne moved to Los Angeles in 1994, signed with Epitaph Records and recorded four records in as many years: The Hard Stuff (1995), followed by Dangerous Madness (1996), Citizen Wayne (1997) and a live album LLMF (1998). He also produced and co-wrote the album Full Circle with John Sinclair and produced a retrospective collection for Rhino Records entitled The Big Bang: Best of the MC5 as well as the punk compilation Wayne Kramer Presents: Beyond Cyberpunk for MusicBlitz.

Wayne launched MuscleTone Records in 2001. Its flagship release in 2002 was his own album Adult World. In 2003, he music-directed a performance for the DVD entitled Sonic Revolution: A Celebration of the MC5. A 30-minute documentary of that reunion performance was produced by MuscleTone Records in partnership with Levi’s Vintage Clothing and was broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom in 2004. The hour-long edit of the concert ran as a broadcast staple for Trio Networks in the USA.

Wayne tours the world as a musician, speaker and activist. He regularly writes with, and produces, upstart rock ‘n’ roll bands.

Blog Entries by Wayne Kramer

My Return to Prison: Views on the Failed Drug War from Inside Sing Sing

24 Comments | Posted May 15, 2009 | 04:30 PM (EST)


On Saturday, May 2nd 2009, I returned to prison. Again.

Tom Morello, Jerry Cantrell, Billy Bragg, Perry Farrell & Etty Lau Farrell, Gilby Clarke, Boots Riley, Carl Restivo, Dave Gibbs, Don Was, Handsome Dick Manitoba, Eric Gardner and the Road Recovery staff went with me. The prison...

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The Day of Sharing

Posted April 8, 2009 | 10:19 AM (EST)


To Bono and John Mellencamp and all of my fellow musicians who moan about the sorry state of the music business: OK, enough already! You're missing the point. The solution is right under our noses.

That the recording industry is in the toilet is no surprise. I don't disagree with...

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Pat Tillman: "All Been Planned"

Posted September 19, 2007 | 02:40 PM (EST)


2007-09-19-orangesuitshow.jpg

After learning more about the actual facts behind Pat Tillman's fate, David Was and I decided we needed to speak up in the way we do best. The song is called "All Been Planned." Without even addressing the personal tragedy of the Tillman family,...

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