
Radio Free Amsterdam Logo – John Sinclair Foundation
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To this end, John Sinclair is transferring to the Foundation all copyrights to his poetry, recordings, record productions, broadcast programs, books, performances and other creative activities in perpetuity, and the John Sinclair Foundation will share royalty payments and other proceeds from these copyrights equally with the designated heirs of John Sinclair.
The Foundation shall conduct its operations with funds secured through royalties, advances, performance and personal appearance fees, record and book sales, commissions on artworks, donations, gifts, memberships, grants, and other public sources.
Expenditures will be made from the Foundation’s accounts for expenses associated with on-going and prospective projects undertaken by the Foundation, including facility rentals; building operations and maintenance; establishment and maintenance of an Artist In Residence guest living space; staffing and associated costs; insurance; travel costs; grants, fees and honoraria for contributing artists and consultants; and other costs of doing business.
The John Sinclair Foundation will be assisted in its development and activities by an Advisory Board appointed to serve as consultants and advisors with respect to operations, fund-raising and project development.
Our immediate projects include the upgrade of our internet radio station, RadioFreeAmsterdam.com; the establishment of a meeting space/gallery/performance/office space in Amsterdam called the Bohemian Embassy as a new project of the Foundation; the consolidation of several existing websites under the umbrella of the John Sinclair Foundation; preparations for making a uniform digital edition of the poetry and prose of John Sinclair; and registering copyrights and publishing the creations in music and verse of John Sinclair as the property of the Foundation.
ABOUT US
The John Sinclair Foundation has been conceived as the repository of all of John Sinclair’s published works and recordings, copyrights and creative files and to serve as a vehicle to pursue special cultural projects in progress or in the planning stages and then in perpetuity.
The major on-going project of the John Sinclair Foundation is the internet radio station, RadioFreeAmsterdam.com, founded in 2005, and the establishment of a public cultural outpost in Amsterdam called the Bohemian Embassy to house the radio station; present events, workshops and seminars in the arts; provide a meeting, working and relaxation station for residents and travelers in the arts; develop an Artist In Residence program; and create and display art and cultural history exhibits in a warm, friendly, comfortable environment.
The John Sinclair Foundation was been established in Amsterdam in 2016 as Stichting John Sinclair, a non-profit organization registered with the appropriate government agencies. Stichting John Sinclair maintains a bank account at the ING Bank in Amsterdam. The Foundation’s fund-raising efforts in 2016 have generated substantial funding to underwrite our organizational and initial programming costs for 2017.
Stichting John Sinclair has assembled a working group chaired by Sidney Kuijer and comprising Steven Pratt, Tariq Khan, Hank Botwinik, Christian Greer, Janne Svenson, and Marianna Lebrun, with support from Dylan Harding in Bristol UK, Jerome Poynton in Athens, Celia Sinclair in New Orleans, Marion Sinclair and Imani Ashanti in Detroit and Ben Horner in Flint, Michigan.
The Foundation is under the direction of Sidney Kuijer at Singel 10 in Amsterdam and Steven Pratt serves as Project Director. Website construction at www.johnsinclairfoundation.org has been undertaken by Yellow Light Digital and a uniform digital edition of the complete books of poetry, prose, and recordings of John Sinclair is scheduled to be accomplished in 2017.
WHO IS JOHN SINCLAIR
John Sinclair is a poet from Deroit who has cut a wide swath as a prolific cultural worker, an innovative bard who sets his verse to music from the blues and jazz tradition, a dynamic performer and bandleader who has collaborated with scores of outstanding musicians in performance and recordings, an acclaimed editor, leading music journalist, award-winning radio broadcaster and record producer, an iconoclastic educator and lecturer, and a passionate crusader against the War on Drugs for more than 50 years
Sinclair founded and directed the Detroit Artists Workshop, managed the MC-5, formed the White Panther Party, produced the Ann Arbor Blues & Jazz Festival, directed the Detroit Jazz Center, taught Blues History in the music department at Wayne State University, edited City Arts Quarterly for the Detroit Council of the Arts, produced Piano Night at Tipitina’s for the Professor Longhair Foundation and the “live” broadcast of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival for WWOZ-FM. He spent three years in prison for marijuana offenses, overthrew the Michigan marijuana laws, helped institute Ann Arbor’s historic $5 fine for possession of weed, founded the Ann Arbor Hash Bash and served as High Priest of the Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam. Sinclair has collaborated with a brilliant array of contemporary musicians, from saxophone giants Archie Shepp, Marion Brown, Daniel Carter and Earl Turbinton to hornmen David Amram, Michael Ray, Charles Moore, James Andrews and Kermit Ruffins, guitarists Wayne Kramer, Walter “Wolfman” Washington, Willie King, Jim McCarty and Jeff “Baby” Grand, and West African griots Bala Tounkare and Guelel Kuumba.
Sinclair has released more than 25 CDs, including several with his band of Blues Scholars, and his recent books include It’s All Good—A John Sinclair Reader, Song of Praise: Homage to John Coltrane, Sun Ra Interviews & Essays (editor), a book of blues verse called Fattening Frogs For Snakes, and i mean you: a book for penny. John Sinclair was born in Flint, Michigan on October 2, 1941. He attended Albion College and graduated from the University of Michigan-Flint College in 1964 with an A.B. in English Literature. At college he began writing poetry and music criticism and edited the school paper, The Word. Sinclair pursued graduate studies in American Literature at Wayne State University in Detroit, completing his master’s thesis on William Burroughs’ Naked Lunch while beginning his career as a poet, journalist, music presenter, concert and festival producer, music historian, radio broadcaster and educator.
A marijuana activist since 1965, Sinclair has fought on the marijuana side of the War on Drugs through Detroit LEMAR, Amorphia, NORML and a five-year struggle in the courts of Michigan that cost him 2-1/2 years in prison before he overturned Michigan’s marijuana laws on appeal and helped enact the historic $5 fine for marijuana activity in Ann Arbor.
Sinclair was Chairman of the White Panther Party and its successor, the Rainbow Peoples Party, battling Richard M. Nixon and his henchmen from the beginning of his administration to the bitter end. It was Sinclair’s court case challenging Nixon’s warrantless wiretap program that produced the historic Supreme Court decision in U.S. vs. U.S. District Court that “national security” wiretaps could not be allowed—at least not until the Bush-Cheney-Rove era of the 2000s.
Sinclair left Detroit in 1991 and spent 12 years in New Orleans before establishing his present base in Amsterdam in 2003, where he founded his internet radio station, www.RadioFreeAmsterdam.com, in 2005 and began the process of establishing the John Sinclair Foundation. He continues to release records and books and tours throughout Europe and around the United States with a stunning variety of musical collaborators.
John Sinclair may be reached through the John Sinclair Foundation, Singel 10-sous, 1013GA Amsterdam, The Netherlands or at johnsinclair.us@gmail.com.
After taking it for 30 years or so, the City of Amsterdam finally fell in behind the federal government and joined the rollback movement that’s raged for the past several years. The highlight of this demonic development was the government’s effort to ban non-citizens of the Netherlands from the coffeeshops and, concurrently, to transform the coffeeshops—open to the public for more than 40 years now—into private smoking clubs where each Dutch smoker would be forced to register with the authorities as a member of one particular club.
While this solution was adapted by a series of small towns and cities on the eastern border of the country and in some other distant areas, the major cities, led by Amsterdam, rejected the federal government’s attempt to strangle their cash cow and compromised by agreeing to enforce all marijuana regulations presently on the books, like the restriction against the operation of coffeeshops within 250 meters of a school building.
The school building clause has led to the closing of dozens of coffeeshops in the city center. Other city government plans involving the social restructuring of the Red Light District have led to the shuttering of dozens more, including every weed outlet on the popular Warmoestraat corridor.
The number of coffeeshops in Amsterdam itself has shrunk from about 750 some 20 years ago to something like 200 now. The shops closed by government edict are simply shut down without recompense or granting of a license to operate somewhere else—they’re simply out of business. When their current license comes up for renewal, it is not renewed.
The good part is that the coffeeshops that continue to exist are entirely unchanged—except for the additional crowds of people denied access to their former haunts and the waves of tourists who find less and less choices of places to smoke and cop in the Centrum. Ironically, the shutting of so many outlets has turned the ones that remain into virtual goldmines of cannabis profits.
I’ve reported on several of these issues in past columns, but it’s important to reiterate that in Holland—unlike, say, Colorado or Oregon today—marijuana has been accepted only at the end-retail level, that is, it’s okay to sell five grams of weed or hash over the counter to a consumer in a coffeeshop.
But it has remained illegal to grow, cultivate, harvest, transport, wholesale or otherwise provide the marijuana to the coffeeshops. This quaint demonstration of official hypocrisy is what they call maintaining a “gray area” with regard to legalization
DutchNews.nl reported recently that the Dutch police “dismantled 5,856 marijuana plantations last year, or nearly 16 a day {but] estimate this is only one fifth of the total.” Additionally, “the government is making a major effort to stamp out production and last year made it a criminal offence for companies to supply people with lamps, fertilizer and other equipment if they suspect it is being used to grow marijuana.” Sound familiar?
Now comes the membership of the “ruling right-wing party,” VVD, which recently voted to end the “strange situation” where the sale of small quantities of marijuana in licensed coffee shops is accepted but production is not. The party is now committed to “clever regulation” of cultivation and sales and will add this call to the party’s manifesto for the 2017 general election, which DutchNews.nl concludes will “clear the way for a shift in the policy of the next government.”
Further, “Dozens of local councils in the Netherlands have endorsed a manifesto calling for the cultivation of cannabis to be legalized and regulated, and 25 [cities] have applied to the minister of justice for permission to experiment with legal growth and supply.”
Okay. This is the first positive development in the Netherlands for quite some time, and while it may be too late for the Cannabis Cup as we knew it, these developments bode well for the future in this place that has been the future since the early 1970s. Maybe it’s taken the progress made by voters in half the states in the U.S. in terms of gradually removing marijuana from the wrong-headed and heavy-handed approach of the federal authorities, but it’s reassuring to see the Dutch people moving in an intelligent direction once again.
I wish I could say the same for the American voting public as a whole, but their wholesale swallowing of the tissue of horseshit that was the Trump campaign is an extremely bitter pill to have to ingest. Not only is this billionaire reality television star and unscrupulous real estate developer and casino entrepreneur a major liar, blowhard, bigot and bully, but his campaign was built on a call for the imprisonment of his opponent—“Crooked Hillary”—that he has already admitted he has no intention of pursing as president.
Let’s hope that the rest of his bullshit platform will be equally ignored, but it’s hard to see the promise in that point of view when his appointments to administrative posts are so vicious and wrong. Get ready for an attorney general who has said that he thought the Ku Klux Klan was okay until he found out they were smoking marijuana.
In more sad news closer to home, the City of Detroit has managed to close down 102 of the 273 medical dispensaries operating in the city as of last March. “Eighty-seven (of the 273) are out of business,” Detroit Corporate Counsel Melvin “Butch” Hollowell crowed. “Seven of those closed voluntarily, 80 we’ve closed,” and 14 more dispensaries in the city have received closure notices, with 64 additional dispensaries “in the pipeline.”
Outside of the heavily-moneyed initiative to move a new generation of white people into the downtown area and the former Cass Corridor, the opening of 273 compassion centers within the city of Detroit has been the most positive sign of change in the entire ruins of Detroit, and one of the only signs of change and positive growth outside of Grand Boulevard on the north, the Lodge freeway on the west and I-75 on the east.
What kind of morons are running the city of Detroit? Where do they get these people? If I may paraphrase the president-elect, Melvin “Butch” Hollowell should be in prison for conducting this idiotic campaign. Lock him up!
Free The Weed!
—Amsterdam
November 24, 2016
A marijuana activist since 1965, Sinclair has fought on the marijuana side of the War on Drugs through Detroit LEMAR, Amorphia, NORML and a five-year struggle in the courts of Michigan that cost him 2-1/2 years in prison before he overturned Michigan’s marijuana laws on appeal and helped enact the historic $5 fine for marijuana activity in Ann Arbor.
Sinclair was Chairman of the White Panther Party and its successor, the Rainbow Peoples Party, battling Richard M. Nixon and his henchmen from the beginning of his administration to the bitter end. It was Sinclair’s court case challenging Nixon’s warrantless wiretap program that produced the historic Supreme Court decision in U.S. vs. U.S. District Court that “national security” wiretaps could not be allowed—at least not until the Bush-Cheney-Rove era of the 2000s.
Sinclair left Detroit in 1991 and spent 12 years in New Orleans before establishing his present base in Amsterdam in 2003, where he founded his internet radio station, www.RadioFreeAmsterdam.com, in 2005 and began the process of establishing the John Sinclair Foundation. He continues to release records and books and tours throughout Europe and around the United States with a stunning variety of musical collaborators.
John Sinclair may be reached through the John Sinclair Foundation, Singel 10-sous, 1013GA Amsterdam, The Netherlands or at johnsinclair.us@gmail.com.
It's All Good!
by Steve Fly

Radio Free Amsterdam Logo – John Sinclair Foundation
by Steve Fly
How their debut, Kick Out the Jams, became a live album rather than a studio release?
“It was a consensus idea between the band and [producer John Sinclair] and Elektra Records because all of our effort was put into performing live and we had very little studio experience at that point. We just made a handful of 45 RPM singles where you go in and you cut the song in three hours and mix it and you’re done. I think the idea that getting this band in a studio to record an album could be costly and labor intensive, whereas we were a fantastic live performing unit. And if we could capture the excitement of the live concert event on record, it could be a revolutionary way to introduce the band to the world. I think that worked pretty well.”–From Rock Pioneer to Prison: Hear the Story of MC5’s Wayne Kramer, Rolling Stone Magazine.
by Steve Fly
by Steve Fly
by Steve Fly
by Steve Fly
by Steve Fly
John Sinclair, on stage at the Ann Arbor Blues Festival 2018, receiving his plaque of honour, dedicating the festival to him. With Wayne Kramer, Don Was, Harmonica Shah, Tino Gross, Johnny Evans. Special thanks to Jerome for the upload.
by Steve Fly
Clipped from the The Detroit Metro Times, By Jim McFarlin
“Remember a band called Blind Melon?” asks Sinclair, the Michigan native who returned to Detroit from Amsterdam last year. “They moved to New Orleans when I lived there and had recorded an album of John Lennon tributes that included the song, ‘John Sinclair.’ But they thought it was just some song, you know? Then I met the bass player one day and it blew his mind. He said, ‘I had no idea you were a real guy!'”
That kind of thing happens when you are an actual living legend. Poet. Author. Activist. Manager of the MC5. Founding member of the White Panther Party. Foundational contributor to the famed underground paper Fifth Estate. Symbolic touchstone for the counterculture revolution of the 1960s. Sinclair couldn’t attend the inaugural Ann Arbor Blues Festival, hailed today as the first “electric” blues festival in North America, in August 1969: He was in prison, serving an oppressive 10-year sentence for marijuana possession that became a worldwide cause célèbre. It sparked the historic 1971 John Sinclair Freedom Rally at Crisler Arena that attracted a host of celebrities, including Lennon and his wife, Yoko Ono.–Jim McFarlin
(READ THE FULL ARTTICLE HERE: Will The Real John Sinclair Please Stand Up (Detroit Metro Times)
by Steve Fly
by Steve Fly