Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Stooges is the debut studio album by American rock band the Stooges, released on August 5, 1969 by Elektra Records.Considered a landmark proto-punk release, [3] the album peaked at number 106 on the US Billboard Top 200 Albums chart.
Iggy and the Stooges – Sziget Fesztivál, 2006. Iggy and the Stooges – Sziget Fesztivál, 2006. In 2007, the band released an album of all-new material, The Weirdness, with Steve Albini recording, and mastering done at Abbey Road Studios in London, England. [26] The album received mixed to negative reviews from the press.
The discography of the Stooges—a Detroit, Michigan based rock band founded by "The Godfather of Punk Music" Iggy Pop as singer, Ron Asheton as guitarist, Dave Alexander as bass-guitarist and Scott Asheton as drummer—currently consists of five studio albums, twenty-four singles, four live albums, and three box sets.
"I Wanna Be Your Dog" is a song by American rock band the Stooges, released as the group's debut single from the band's 1969 self-titled debut album. The riff is composed of only three chords (G, F♯ and E), is played continuously throughout the song (excepting two brief 4-bar bridges).
2. Iggy Pop: The Stooges. Net worth: $20 million Iggy Pop -- born James Newell Osterberg -- rose to fame as the lead singer of the Stooges, a proto-punk band who released their first album, "The ...
Australian band Radio Birdman took their name, although incorrectly, from the lyrics of the Stooges song "1970". [136] In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked the Stooges No. 78 on their list of 100 of the most influential artists of the past 50 years. [137] Layne Staley said that he was a big fan of both The Stooges and Iggy Pop. [138]
Raw Power is the third studio album by American rock band the Stooges (credited as Iggy and the Stooges), released on February 7, 1973 by Columbia Records.The album departed from the "groove-ridden, feel-based songs" of the band's first two records in favor of a more anthemic hard rock approach inspired by new guitarist James Williamson, who co-wrote the album's eight songs with singer Iggy ...
In 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (2005), music journalist Stevie Chick wrote that the sleazy tales of hedonism and reckless abandon on the album's first half are followed by "the comedown" on the second side, as evoked by looser song structures, Steve Mackay's saxophone, and "Iggy sounding like a scared, lost child, warning from ...