Your search:
No selection
Filter results:
|
Other products from Iggy & The Stooges |
Details / Tracklist: |
01. "Search And Destroy" 02. "Gimme Danger" 03. "Your pretty face is going to hell" 04. "Penetration" 05. "Raw Power" 06. "I Need Somebody" 07. "Shake Appeal" 08. "Death Trip"
|
 | Number of discs: |
1 |
 | Language |
English (eng) |
 | Description: | Raw Power by Iggy & The Stooges, released 1 June 2006, includes the following tracks: "Your Pretty Face Is Going To Hell", "Raw Power", "Shake Appeal" and more.
This version of Raw Power comes as a 1xCD. - Issued in a standard jewel case with clear tray and illustrated tray-liner containing a 16-page booklet with interview, pics and credits
Copies may have a Nice Price black & gold sticker.
Back cover:
Track 3 originally titled "Hard to Beat".
Originally released in 1973 as the Columbia album [r=489717], KC 32111.
© 1973, 1997 Sony Music Entertainment Inc./? 1973 Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Disc:
Made in Austria
Booklet:
Original recorded in 1972 at CBS Studio, London
Original mixed at Western Sound, Hollywood
Reissue remixed and remastered in 1996 at Sony Music Studio, NYC
|  | Cover: |
CD Jewel box |
 | Producer: |
Iggy Pop |
 | No. of tracks: |
8 |
 | Manufacturer No.: |
4851762 |
 | Product Safety
Responsible Person for the EU:
Sony Music Entertainment International Services GmbH PO BOX 510, 33311 Gütersloh, DE product.safety@sonymusic.com |  |
|
Customers who bought this product also purchased
Alexander S. - 08/Sep/2020  "... Ummm, I have a bunch of songs, but I need another person to record them," Iggy told his then-friend Bowie and the record company after experimenting with other musicians. "Eeeeeeee, no. I need one more, no - two musicians, without them it won't work after all." So, following Ron, Scott Ashton and James Williamson arrived in London, and the Stooges gathered to record an album, only to be silent for a very long time afterwards.
Of course, now the innovative ideas of Dave Alexander with the ethno-raggas of India and psychedelics are left behind, but here the bestial manner of I. Pop and the tough playing of Williamson came to the fore. At the time of the recording of the album, Iggy had been a systemic heroin addict for more than a year, perhaps this was the reason for the genius of the material. How not to remember the quote told to Dave Mustaine by Gar Samuelson (Megadeth) - "If you want to be famous, get on heroin."
Speaking of which record was the debut in proto-punk, it was "Raw Power". Of course, "Funhouse" can be considered a starting point, but it was the specific compositions from the third album of The Stooges that served as the beginning of what the Sex Pistols and Motorhead will diligently develop.
Back then, Bowie's influence on Iggy was not as great as it would be later. But his direct involvement in the creation of the album's sound cannot be underestimated either. Perhaps that is why the material departs from rock roots and is more recent, full of interesting ideas that are unusual for this period of time. An important role was played by the castling of the line-up - Ashton is the guitarist behind the bass, instead of the genius D. Alexander, and the newcomer Dmimmy Williamson with his hurricane, rough guitar. As in the case of the debut album, where, according to the musicians themselves, the composition "We Will Fall" brought the group out of the crowd, here absolutely all the material represents a fundamentally new format of sound and performance. The stake was made, first of all, on the rude, distorted, nervous-sounding guitar for those times, and of course the vocals, striking in their psychopathic nature. The cocktail worked, although it was not well understood, not least because of the subsequent monstrous performances of the group, which, in fact, served as a quick breakdown.
There are no pronounced hits here and at first glance it seems that the album is a solid rock-middling of its era. However, if we compare it with the masters of the rock scene of that moment, and the promising alternative newcomers, this absolute masterpiece looks (although, rather, it is heard) like a renegade who knows that he is the coolest and without unnecessary PR.
P.S. In one of the interviews, when asked about new musical trends and, in particular about The Stooges, Jim Morrison replied: "Well, if people listen to this, then it has a right to exist."
|  | Valeriy R. - 21/Nov/2019  Old kind Iggy! Old kind garage rock! Classical album from The Stooges released in 1973. A real masterpiece! The only minus is in rather budget edition. Fortunately, well sounded.
|  | Ivica S. - 16/Feb/2018  Album that did not publish ELEKTRA - their historical error - I recommend
|  | Jason Neubauer - 07/Jun/2010  It was 1973. The Stooges had officially broken up and Iggy Pop was in the midst of his growing heroin problem while heading off to London to record a...
|  | Mac Scarle - 24/May/2010  The seminal pre-punk classic get a reworking, but is it worth buying for a second timeDisc One: 1. "Search and Destroy" 2. "Gimme Danger" 3. "Y...
|  | Andy Snipper - 20/May/2010  For years people have been talking about selling you a CD/DVD/Tape of the gig you have just enjoyed as you leave the venue and for years it has been l...
|  | cloudspeakers - 17/May/2010 Is there some rock law about archive sets, where the less success you have, the more your work is catalogued, fussed over and released in luxury annot...
|  | ClashMusic - 12/May/2010  The prepartum punk album par excellence, ‘Raw Power’ has been re-released in Legacy and Deluxe Editions packed with extras; including the original Bow...
|  | Lauren Barbato - 12/May/2010  The Stooges were ahead of their time with 1973’s Raw Power, which pierced the flower child movement with its screeching intensity. On the three-disc M...
|  | Ted Maider - 07/May/2010  My favorite musical debate in the history of time is the topic: Who started punk rock It’s a pretty standard argument to have with anybody who ever a...
|  |
|
|
 |
 |
|