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Metallic K.O. - The Original 1976 Album

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Metallic K.O. - The Original 1976 Album album cover
01
Raw Power (Remastered 1976 album)
5:34
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02
Head On (Remastered 1976 album)
7:28
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03
Gimme Danger (Remastered 1976 album)
6:57
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04
Rich Bitch (Remastered 1976 album)
10:30
05
Cock In My Pocket (Remastered 1976 album)
4:07
$0.99
06
Iggy Talks (Remastered 1976 album)
3:34
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07
Louie Louie (Remastered 1976 album)
3:34
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Album Information
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Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 41:44

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Great Document

dmdstrhalo

This is the sound of a band imploding. Very raw, somewhat powerful. Most live albums feature a band kicking ass in front of an adoring crowd, and who knows how much of it is really live. No such trappings here. This has the Stooges playing to an indifferent-cum-hostile crowd, you can hear bottles being thrown and breaking. A Must-have for Stooges fans.

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dont skip nuthin

stuffedfrog

r u kiddin skip louie louie? cant say you know anything about history of american music without knowing about this. got my cock in my pocket and ima reelin down the ol highway r u kiddin? there was nowhere for punk rock to go after this

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The raw original

8eezWave

I own the vinyl which I hadn't heard in years. If you're an Iggy fan, this is great!

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A Must-Have for any punk rock fan..

rorythunders

this is the legendary last stoooges show where some biker gang is there whipping shit at iggy and he baits 'em..in between bad-ass renditions of some stooges classics, one of the bikers knocks iggy out cold...and thats him down for the count on the album cover!(true story) the stooges imploded soon after this show...any true igg/stooges/sleaz-rock fan should download this whole thing-you could prob. skip 'louie louie' tho...an absolute must, kid...

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Many rock reunions have an air of inevitability about them and Iggy Pop's reactivation of his legendary late-'60s band The Stooges in 2003 was no different. When, after six years of high-energy, extreme-volume touring, their guitarist Ron Asheton passed away unexpectedly in 2009, many justifiably thought, that was that. Iggy's subsequent decision to reconvene the band's second line-up — and coax legendary guitarist James Williamson out of retirement — was less expected. While the original combo… more »

They Say All Music Guide

There was a time when you really had to hunt for a copy of Metallic KO, chasing false lead after false lead until you finally came upon that backstreet record store that had imported a copy or two of the vinyl (and marked the price up accordingly). Today the thing is everywhere, and in so many perplexing permutations that, sometimes, you wish the CD revolution hadn’t made everything so easy for people. Make them work again for their music — it would mean an awful lot more to them if they did. Because Metallic KO means the world — to anyone and everyone who ever sat down and unsuspectingly dropped needle onto wax and then reeled back in horror; this ain’t rock & roll, it’s a snuff movie. And the fact that it all sounds so tame these days just shows how much it’s become a part of the language. This is not the “true” Metallic KO. Spread out over two CDs, it serves up six songs apiece from the two shows that were boiled together for the original vinyl — doubling the length of the LP, but maybe diminishing the impact some. But still, through lurching takes of “Open Up and Bleed,” “Heavy Liquid,” and the ever-inspiring “I Got Shit” (all of which are new to the package), past the familiar dissolution of “Head on the Curb,” “Rich Bitch,” and “Cock in My Pocket,” and into the nightmare closure, this remains rock & roll so far out on the edge that you get dizzy just listening to it. And, by the time the last glass explodes at the end of the world’s greatest “Louie, Louie,” you’ll be ready to take on anything. – Dave Thompson

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