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  1. Fred 'Sonic' Smith was the high priest of the High Octane Rock Church of Detroit. Along with MC5 and Sonic's Rendezvous Band, he was ahead of the punk and distortion storms of alternative rock.His exchange of furious electricity discharge with Wayne Kramer were the punk equivalent to those of Duane Allman and Dickey Betts. He never ‘succeeded’ but his sonic imprint is absolutely essential ...

  2. Fred (Sonic) Smith, a guitarist for the influential rock band the MC5, died Friday at St. John's Hospital in Detroit. He was 44 and lived in St. Clair Shores, a suburb of Detroit.

  3. 2 de feb. de 2022 · 2018 West Virginia Music Hall Of Fame Induction VignetteProduced by Brainwrap ProductionsScript by Mary Lee, Michael Lipton and Gavin WissenNarration by Larr...

  4. Sonic's Rendezvous by Fred "Sonic" Smith, released 12 September 2019 1. COME ON BABY 2. SO SINCERELY YOURS 3. STEP BY STEP 4. SONG L 5. U.F.S. 6. DETROIT TANGO 7. YOU'RE SO GREAT 8. SWEET NOTHING 9. GONE WITH THE DOGS 10. CHINA FIELDS • Intriguing, largely instrumental collection of unheard solo acoustic demos, electrifying high-energy isolated live guitar tracks & unreleased studio ...

  5. Fred "Sonic" Smith (b: September 13, 1949 in Harts Creek, West Virginia, U.S. – d: November 4, 1994 in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.) was an American guitarist, best known as a member of the band MC5.Later, he founded Sonic's Rendezvous Band, which released one single, "City Slang", during Smith's lifetime.He was married to singer and poet Patti Smith.

  6. As guitar heroes go, Fred "Sonic" Smith was one of the best, his musical legacy firmly established by his time spent as one half of the dual guitar arsenal that fueled the legendary MC5, and later fronting his own Sonic's Rendezvous Band and collaborating with his wife, Patti Smith. In the late '60s and early '70s, the Motor City Five (later ...

  7. 4 de nov. de 1994 · Thereafter, Sonic lived quietly with his new wife, poet Patti Smith, until his death in 1994. But let us not now give emphasis to the post-revolutionary Frederick, for his idealism was not burned out by drugs or by personal problems, but by the clandestine operations of the highest governmental authorities, all of whom had been determined to deal the ‘60s Revolution an out-and-out Death Blow.