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The Idiot

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The Idiot album cover
01
Sister Midnight
4:23
$1.29
02
Nightclubbing
4:12
$1.29
03
Funtime
4:18
$1.29
04
Baby
3:20
$1.29
05
China Girl
5:12
$1.29
06
Dum Dum Boys
7:12
$1.29
07
Tiny Girls
3:03
$1.29
08
Mass Production
8:28
$1.29
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 40:08

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eMusic Review 0

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Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

05.18.11
The sound of two brilliant, exhausted men trying to find their feet again
1992 | Label: VIRGIN

Released back in March 1977, The Idiot is the sound of two brilliant, exhausted men trying to find their feet again. Sound, not just the final product — the lurching rhythms on this album were far from the seething charge of the Stooges' 1973 Raw Power, which had been Iggy Pop's prior album, also produced by David Bowie. By the time they went to Paris, Munich and, crucially, Berlin to record, though, they were ready for a change: Bowie was leaving L.A.'s cocaine culture behind, Iggy was getting off smack, and together they mocked their party-lifestyle plight. "Nightclubbing" leeringly refers to "bright-white clubbing," with Iggy smirking, "We learn dances, brand new dances/ Like the Nuclear Bomb." "Funtime" is even more deadpan: "We're gonna get stoned and run around," Iggy drawls, the pause right before "run around" as casually funny as Dylan during his Basement Tapes era, even as the music mimics the Velvet Underground's "White Light/White Heat" done up as an even flatter stomp. (It's not the album's only Lou Reed-besotted moment: "Tiny Girls" sounds like something accidentally left off of Transformer, which, not coincidentally, was also produced by Bowie.) As much of a piece with Bowie's… read more »

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In 1976, the Stooges had been gone for two years, and Iggy Pop had developed a notorious reputation as one of rock & roll’s most spectacular waste cases. After a self-imposed stay in a mental hospital, a significantly more functional Iggy was desperate to prove he could hold down a career in music, and he was given another chance by his longtime ally, David Bowie. Bowie co-wrote a batch of new songs with Iggy, put together a band, and produced The Idiot, which took Iggy in a new direction decidedly different from the guitar-fueled proto-punk of the Stooges. Musically, The Idiot is of a piece with the impressionistic music of Bowie’s “Berlin Period” (such as Heroes and Low), with it’s fragmented guitar figures, ominous basslines, and discordant, high-relief keyboard parts. Iggy’s new music was cerebral and inward-looking, where his early work had been a glorious call to the id, and Iggy was in more subdued form than with the Stooges, with his voice sinking into a world-weary baritone that was a decided contrast to the harsh, defiant cry heard on “Search and Destroy.” Iggy was exploring new territory as a lyricist, and his songs on The Idiot are self-referential and poetic in a way that his work had rarely been in the past; for the most part the results are impressive, especially “Dum Dum Boys,” a paean to the glory days of his former band, and “Nightclubbing,” a call to the joys of decadence. The Idiot introduced the world to a very different Iggy Pop, and if the results surprised anyone expecting a replay of the assault of Raw Power, it also made it clear that Iggy was older, wiser, and still had plenty to say; it’s a flawed but powerful and emotionally absorbing work. – Mark Deming

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