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Raw Power

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (517 ratings)
Raw Power album cover
01
Search And Destroy
3:28
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02
Gimme Danger
3:33
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03
Your Pretty Face Is Going To Hell
4:54
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04
Penetration
3:41
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05
Raw Power
4:16
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06
I Need Somebody
4:52
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07
Shake Appeal
3:04
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08
Death Trip
5:53
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Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 33:41

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

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Wayne Robins

eMusic Contributor

Wayne Robins has been a journalist specializing in music for more than 40 years. Since his first paid assignment, reviewing the Rolling Stones 1969 Oakland show...more »

06.30.09
The pivotal album between the garage and punk eras
1997 | Label: Columbia/Legacy

It was 1973, OK? Even then, the Stooges two albums on Elektra (released in 1969 and 1970) were legendary for their influence on glam rockers like David Bowie and a nascent generation of punks. Raw Power in its time was renowned for two things: a strange and thin mix by Bowie that Iggy has described as "weedy," and its collection of eight nearly perfectly conceived and executed songs — and "executed" may be the operative word here — written by Pop and Stooges guitarist James Williamson, that are unmatched in their musical brutality and carnal wit. The Legacy remastering and reissue (done in 1996) restores some necessary bottom, played with utter lack of inhibition by the bass/drum brother team of Ron and Scott Asheton, that the original mix ignored, but the hysteria remains intact. Just listen to the opener "Search and Destroy"; the barely controlled lunatic firepower lives up to the title's description of a typical mission in the still-ongoing Vietnam War. "Gimme Danger" embodies the life on the edge that the Doors 'Jim Morrison would have died for if he hadn't, in fact, died. "Penetration" is more subtle than its title suggests, the kind of… read more »

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user avatar

BAH!

Dharmacat1

Tried downloading this once from Emusic and used up 8 of my credits to only receive one song from this gem! When I returned to this site a day or two later, this album was completely removed from here. It's back again, how do i get back my seven credits wasted? What's going on here?

user avatar

Great!

lvargas8

Great album,I just hope the mix was a with a little less treble.

user avatar

Wonderful

Titus-Groan

Utterly stellar, despite sounding as if the recording budget was $2.76, and free sodas

user avatar

Short but sweet

Rambler77

Look, don't ask question's...Just get it.

user avatar

A Classic NOT TO BE MISSED!

OrkyDoc

This is a must have album in any collection. I don't care if you think music started with Black Metal, Nu Metal, this album is part of where it all came from! Even if you are one of those closed minded young kids that say 'I dont care where my music came from' Get this album, it is full of raw enegery it is a masterpiece. Bottom line is Get it or else they'll give you the boot! Nuff said.

user avatar

One of the most important records OF ALL TIME!

DKCOMET

Whenever I hear this album, I just wish there were more songs on it. Of all the stooges records, this is the best, with no filler, no songs to skip. Just turn it up & feel sad for not seeing them live before it was too late. Unless you did, then relish the memory & turn it up till the speakers blow.

user avatar

Yeah!

techtrainer

The influence of Iggy and the Stooges, specifically this album, are immeasurable. By ushering in punk, they may have actually saved rock and roll. Yes, it is that important.

user avatar

Get used to it...

Pikg

It's here to stay --- and it's got it's feet up on your table and it's drinking all of your beer --- and, really, do I have to say what it's doing with your girlfriend?

user avatar

Essential Iggy

Nyabinghi

The first two Elektra Stooges records are great but I still prefer this one. This one seems to be a little more focused; the band sounds tight. James Williamson still the best guitarist Iggy's had. This is absolutely classic stuff!

user avatar

1 of the most important records of 1973

SelfRisinMojo

Despite the thin production of the original and the handful of head scratching moments on this remix , Raw Power, in my opinion, was the one of the most important rock and roll record released in 1973. This harnesses the hair on end electric energy of “Funhouse” within the minimum security walls of some sympathetic songwriting; the results kicked the music scene directly in the bloated fatuity of its softening mainstream ass. Songs like “Search and Destroy”, “Gimme Danger”, “Penetration”, “I Need Somebody” and “Shake Appeal” fit perfectly into the Iggy canon and help set the standards by which a developing movement was measured.

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eMusic Features

3

Interview: Iggy & The Stooges

By Andrew Perry, eMusic Contributor

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

In 1972, the Stooges were near the point of collapse when David Bowie’s management team, MainMan, took a chance on the band at Bowie’s behest. By this point, guitarist Ron Asheton and bassist Dave Alexander had been edged out of the picture, and James Williamson had signed on as Iggy’s new guitar mangler; Asheton rejoined the band shortly before recording commenced on Raw Power, but was forced to play second fiddle to Williamson as bassist. By most accounts, tensions were high during the recording of Raw Power, and the album sounds like the work of a band on its last legs — though rather than grinding to a halt, Iggy & the Stooges appeared ready to explode like an ammunition dump. From a technical standpoint, Williamson was a more gifted guitar player than Asheton (not that that was ever the point), but his sheets of metallic fuzz were still more basic (and punishing) than what anyone was used to in 1973, while Ron Asheton played his bass like a weapon of revenge, and his brother Scott Asheton remained a powerhouse behind the drums. But the most remarkable change came from the singer; Raw Power revealed Iggy as a howling, smirking, lunatic genius. Whether quietly brooding (“Gimme Danger”) or inviting the apocalypse (“Search and Destroy”), Iggy had never sounded quite so focused as he did here, and his lyrics displayed an intensity that was more than a bit disquieting. In many ways, almost all Raw Power has in common with the two Stooges albums that preceded it is its primal sound, but while the Stooges once sounded like the wildest (and weirdest) gang in town, Raw Power found them heavily armed and ready to destroy the world — that is, if they didn’t destroy themselves first. – Mark Deming

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