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The Stooges - The Stooges (CD)

The Stooges
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4.9 out of 5.0 stars 7 Ratings (7 Reviews)

Album Details: The Stooges

Release Date:10/17/1990
Label:Wea Japan
UPC:4943674085750

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User Reviews: The Stooges

  • Overall:

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    THE STOOGES

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 5, 2005

    Pros: all

    Cons: Â…

    great album. "fun house" is even better. there's some classic songs in here : 1969, I wanna be your dog or no fun. they still sound a bit like a mix between the doors, the velvet underground and some others but they definitely had alrea...dy their own sound, a sound that would define punk rock and rock music as well, for decades. if u like it, then u should check their second album fun house (and raw power) Read more Less

  • Overall:

    hey mikefgorman

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Jan 2, 2002

    this isn't a discussion board, this is where you say what you think of the music, not where you comment on other peoples comments, you got that geek-boy?

Pro Reviews: The Stooges

  • All Music Guide

    While the Stooges had a few obvious points of influence the swagger of the early Rolling Stones, the horny pound of the Troggs, the fuzztone sneer of a thousand teenage garage bands, and the Velvet Underground's experimental eagerness to leap into the void they didn't really sound like anyone else around when their first album hit the streets in 1969. It's hard to say if Ron Asheton, Scott Asheton, Dave Alexander, and the man then known as Iggy Stooge were capable of making anything more sophisticated than this, but if they were, they weren't letting on, and the best moments of this record document the blithering inarticulate fury of the postadolescent id. Ron Asheton's guitar runs (fortified with bracing use of fuzztone and wahwah) are so brutal and concise they achieve a naïve genius, while Scott Asheton's protoBo Diddley drums and Dave Alexander's solid bass stomp these tunes into submission with a force that inspires awe. And Iggy's vividly blank vocals fill the "so what?" shrug ...of a thousand teenagers with a wealth of palpable arrogance and wondrous confusion. One of the problems with being a trailblazing pioneer is making yourself understood to others, and while John Cale seemed sympathetic to what the band was doing, he didn't appear to quite get it, and as a result he made a physically powerful band sound a bit sluggish on tape. But "1969," "I Wanna Be Your Dog," "Real Cool Time," "No Fun," and other classic rippers are on board, and one listen reveals why they became clarion calls in the punk rock revolution. Part of the fun of The Stooges is, then as now, the band managed the difficult feat of sounding ahead of their time and entirely out of their time, all at once. - Mark Deming, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Stooges

During the psychedelic haze of the late '60s, the grimy, noisy and relentlessly bleak rock roll of the Stooges was conspicuously out of time. Like the Velvet Underground, the Stooges revealed the underside of sex, drugs and rock roll, showing all of the grime beneath the myth. The Stooges, however, weren't nearly as cerebral as the Velvets. Taking their cue from the o... Read more