Oh man. you just opened the door to Iggy Pop. You will not be disappointed with his catalog. he is still putting out music today. Legendary. I would argue he is the single most influential person in rock and punk rock. Edit: sounds you didn't know Iggy was the singer of the Stooges?
The Stooges first album, which this is a track from was produced by John Cale who was a founding member of the Velvet Underground, a band that had a huge influence on The Stooges. Try listening to something like "White Light White heat" and you will see that this sound predates the Stooges themselves. The you need to go listen to the Sonics, a band that formed in 1960. The roots of punk are deep.
The Stooges 1969 album Raw Power has became pretty much the blueprint for punk and the album cover is nothing but pure rock n roll history...capturing the fall of the 60's hippie rock fashion and ethos and of what's to come
Fun factThe Ramones formed because they were the only kids in their school who liked The Stooges. One of The Stooges former managers discovered The Ramones and essentially “corrected” the wrongs that had been done by the record labels who didn’t really understand what they had with The Stooges. Listen to all of their stuff, they have a lot of tracks that never made an album and great live recordings. Iggy Pop (front man) invented the stage dive - doesn’t get more rock n roll than that. Fun House Raw Power Tons of “unreleased” songs that record label wouldn’t cut
And if you go back even further, Elvis, Little Richard, Gene Vincent etc are mentioned all the time as punk influence. So many bands that came before, and most punk has a clear path back to the 50s and 60s. Zeppelin and aforementioned Sabbath as well. I'm partial to Ramones, but I can't deny the Stooges, MC5, NY Dolls, VU etc as being blueprints for so many bands. Bowie, T Rex, Mott the Hoople. Tracing back the influences is one of the coolest things about music.
Welcome to Iggy & The Stooges! I saw them live once, in 2012 and they were so powerful, so charismatic, so fun and so wild, even after all that time. Iggy is STILL the Godfather of Punk
O my fuckinng god yes please do more stooges I’ve been waiting for someone to do them forever they’re the most slept on band of that whole period. Do “Search and destroy” and “Your pretty face is going to hell”
These guys were from Detroit and recorded this album in 1969 - the same time Motown was happening! Another great early punk band worth checking out - also from Detroit - was The MC5. Check out "Kick out the Jams", the live version is the one that they're most known for.
You need to check out Death. A 1971 Detroit proto-punk band that gained legendary status because of how hard it was to find their records. "Keep on Knockin" or "Politicians in My Eyes."
I'm from Detroit, Iggy and the Stooges are from the D, a friend of mine's high school English teacher was Iggy's dad. But also listen to the MC5 also from Detroit, considered proto-punk. Detroit is kind of where early and proto-punk came out of. Also out of Detroit in the 60's is the band Death, see the film A Band Called Death, the sad tale of a black rock, proto punk band ahead of their time.
I think the earliest punk influences came from bands like Blue Cheer. Totally raw and raucous. Have a listen to Babylon and Just a Little Bit by them. And also check out Mc5 - looking at You live 1970. Absolutely incredible raw live performance. I used to listen to this to get me going before I went on stage. Mc5, Blue Cheer, and The Stooges were all from the same era and had a similar very dirty garage punk sound.
I think the thing that hits hard about this song is that, It. Is. Relentless. The way that the vocals are sung, the way that the lyrics progress, and the absolutely inescapable minor chord riff set have this feeling of like just holding on the edge of restrained rage. Like, they use the *piano* as the main point of rhythm! The fuck? So unique!
Early Punk Rock Journey: 1. The Sonics - Psycho 2. The Monks - Complication [compare these guys w/ Dead Kennedys] 3. ? and the Mysterians - 96 Tears [the first song/band called 'punk'] 4. The Music Machine - Talk Talk [compare their look to The Ramones] 5. The Stooges - Search & Destroy 6. MC5 - Kick Out the Jams 7. The Ramones - Sheena Is a Punk Rocker [The Ramones are generally considered the first true punk band] 8. The Jam - That's Entertainment [moving to the UK] 9. Sex Pistols - God Save the Queen 10. The Clash - Wrong 'em Boyo 11. X-Ray Specs - I'm a Poseur 12. Crass [you've heard, but they really brought politics into punk] 13. Bad Brains - Pay to Come (original 7") [back to the US] [considered the first 'hardcore' punk band, Minor Threat soon follow] 14. The Fastbacks - In America [included here because IMO they bridge The Ramones and later pop-punk bands like Screeching Weasel and The Queers]
Just Google, The Punks, the band, and it will show you what took place right after The Stooges, MC5 etc. broke up, around 72-73 They were later known as 'the bastard son's of the Stooges', by some, 1st 'punk band' by others. I got to witness it, had a beer with Iggy and Bowie in NYC, went backstage with the Asheton brothers in Ann Arbor MI. grew up in the area, what a blast! Saw Stooges live 10+ times or so.
Sabbath definitely influenced some punk. The elemental aggression and stripped down direct attack definitely found its way into what would eventually become punk rock. Listen to Black Flag, for example, who often cited Sabbath as an influence.
The Pogues - Irish punk, influenced bands like Flogging Molly, dropkick Murphys, real McKenzie's. Lead singer was so Irish he died from alcohol poisoning...
The Stooges are amazing. They made 3 great albums and then they were gone. Some other classics from them are Down on the Street, Search and Destroy, No Fun, 1969, 1970, Loose, and Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell.
Bands from the ‘60s, tough ask as The Stooges released their first album, (this album,) in 1969. But, like most bands they and others were performing long before they actually recorded and released an album, but my warning is that The Stooges are sort of the turning point from standard rock and art rock to the sound that we recognize as “punk,” (what ya heard here.) There is more of this sound on their next record, (and my favorite Stooges record,) Fun House. Obviously, New York Dolls, The Velvet Underground, Patti Smith, & the MC5 are going to be on the list of bands to check out. Patti Smith “Gloria” The Velvet Underground “What Goes On,” & MC5 “Kick Out The Jams.” ^Pretty crazy, but awesome, Iggy Pop, Wayne Kramer, John Cale, & Patti Smith are all still alive.
The drummer and Guitarist were brothers - Scott Ashton on drums and Ron Ashton on Guitar - both were awesome. The bass player was Dave Alexander. Note I wrote in the past tense. Unfortunately all of the Stooges have passed away except for Iggy, and James Williamson (whose not on this LP). Scott Ashton the drummer was incredible. Find a live vid from the 60s or 70s and check it out. They were actually more of a 70s band. Iggy once said one of his greatest contributions to music was that he "killed off the hippie movement'. Or something like that. Check out "Kick out the Jams" by Mc5. They played with the Stooges a lot, Both bands are from Detroit.
You got your New York Dolls, The Kinks, The Who, Death, The 13th Floor Elevators, Motor City 5, The Sonics, and plenty more, along with the artists who influenced all these bands.
You have to look at the Iggy and Stooges live concert in Cincinnati. He was so high on drugs diving into and out the crowd. Then he crowd surfed and stood on top on everyone. Fukin bad arse.
But The Stooges broke up in 1974, not to reunite until 2003. I saw Iggy with several backing bands (Bowie and the Sales Brothers, for example) during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Peace.
Trivia #2...Iggy and Bowie hooked up in Berlin, iggy wrote China Girl, bowie covered it and forwarded all of the royalties to James, while he was drugged out and broke. Later Bowie helped produce his Lust for Life.
The Ramones greatly contributed to the feel of punk. in the mid 70's. You must play "I'm only 5 foot one." by Iggy. "I'm only 5 foot 1, I got a pain in my neck, from always looking up. What the Hell, what the heck!" 🤗🤗
This is just straight up Detroit hard-core punk from back in the day. And I’m not sure if you have yet check them out but if you have not checked out MC5 kick out the jams
Oh yeah dive deep: Any of the first three Stooges LPs MC5- Their three LPs as well... Velvet Underground- ....all of it.... Thirteenth Floor Elevators- "Psychedelic sounds of..." Love- ..again on the first three LPs... Most of these have a very very long song....usually tedious..... :)
Cleveland - Akron Ohio had a really great punk scene late 70's to mid 80's. If you want to touch the roots of punk You must start with the band MC5. I would call them the OG punk band
The Stooges song “Search and Destroy” is a great example of proto punk. On the album Raw Power Iggy pretty much jacked the levels on the mix up near 10. Its so raw - so punk. If you want more old school 70s punk then check out the Dead Boys. By the way Iggy Pop was the singer for the Stooges…
Iggy Pop was a character. He would get so involved in the music that he would do a total strip down, smear peanut butter on his chest, and one of the first rockers to dive into the crowd.
Also for an even earlier suggestion. Check out “Five Years Ahead of My Time” by the Third Bardo. They are a bit more of a psych garage band but it’s proto punk
protopunk started in Detroit with the mc5 then the stooges. check out the mc5 "kick out the jams" and many more by them. Also, the new york dolls came on the scene a few years later in New York before the Ramones. many bands including kids and the Ramones were influenced by the dolls.
hey if it's not too much trouble, could you react to a band called flipper, they're a "punkish" rock band from the late 70's and early 80's. No one really talks about them but they are incredible and i know every member nirvana were really big fans of them. Some songs that I would recommend is sacrifice live, earthworm, shine live, sex bomb, ever (off of the album sex bomb baby), ha ha ha, falling.
Iggy pop said in an interview about his singing style and the stooges sound, that he was just trying to be Mick Jagger, and they were heavily influenced by the rolling stones among others Then there's the Kinks and alot of bands that were around in the 60s, glam rock bands like the new york dolls etc. The velvet underground with songs like 'waiting for the man' and 'Heroin' and on and on. There is no such thing as the original punk sound or some band or artist that makes something totally new and 100% original. Every artist and genre that comes along is built on and draws from things that came before, even though often the influencial sound tends to be from more obscure and/or underground bands or music scenes.
Boy, if you start listenin' to more Stooges material plus The Fugs, plus The Chocolate Watch Band plus (at least partially) The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band you'll soon more or less forget about Black Sabbath/LOL!
You guys like Tom MacDonald and his one dog is called Steppenwolf, because they are a great band.....so try , some Steppenwolf....every one knows born to be wild, so maybe something different , like ''The Pusher ''
If you wanted to hear the song without the fade during the solo you just need to listen to the alternate vocal. However the vocals are different and have a more serious tone. The songs Not right, Little doll and We will fall are all filler songs for the album but I think they are really great because of how raw they are. Also one more thing you should listen to the band the MC5 as they were a brother band to the Stooges.
Ah, proto punk at its finest. Also, the Ramones are like Black Sabbath. Maybe (definitely, actually) there were elements of punk and metal before those two bands, but those two bands are where you can pinpoint the birth of their respective genres. The Stooges are a great intro to punk though.
If you try the Ramones, check out: Judy is a Punk (1976) Carbona Not Glue (1977) or Teenage Lobotomy (1977) Most reaction videos go directly for "Blitzkrieg Bop" or "I Wanna be Sedated". They're good songs, but the three songs above are better representations of the Ramones. For 60s punk representations, try: The Sonics - Have Love Will Travel (1965..... these guys predated the Stooges and you will love them) The Monks - Complication (1966.... another band that predated the Stooges) I'll stop there :)
One other thing about 90s punk. There was a lot of great punk bands in the 90s that played in the style of the early stuff, but you have to dig deeper for it cause it wasn't as popular as the skate punk and pop punk stuff... and it's typically labelled "Garage Punk" (a fusion of 60s garage elements and 70s punk elements). Good 90s bands are: New Bomb Turks, Teengenerate and The Spaceshits.
Oh man. you just opened the door to Iggy Pop. You will not be disappointed with his catalog. he is still putting out music today. Legendary. I would argue he is the single most influential person in rock and punk rock. Edit: sounds you didn't know Iggy was the singer of the Stooges?
I’d argue Mick Jagger is the single most influential singer / frontman in rock history
Gimme Danger is another good one from the Stooges.
The Stooges first album, which this is a track from was produced by John Cale who was a founding member of the Velvet Underground, a band that had a huge influence on The Stooges. Try listening to something like "White Light White heat" and you will see that this sound predates the Stooges themselves. The you need to go listen to the Sonics, a band that formed in 1960. The roots of punk are deep.
"Search and Destroy" - "1969"
Definitely.
F*** yeah
The Stooges 1969 album Raw Power has became pretty much the blueprint for punk and the album cover is nothing but pure rock n roll history...capturing the fall of the 60's hippie rock fashion and ethos and of what's to come
You and I are both wrong..it came out in February of 1973... your closer to the right answer so I concede
Iggy Pop, what a legend! love this song, so downbeat and understated. A precursor to grunge in attitude and sound.
60's garage was coined-pre punk- pre grunge before word punk rock- Seattle band the Sonics- Shes a Witch or Cinderella also Standells in 60's
Thae dirty heaviness is exceptional.....my god this stuff is one of the foundations of so much in the rock gendra.. Epic
i wish at least someone talked about the engineering of the song. the producer/engineer did really insane job how he separated instrumentals
Fun factThe Ramones formed because they were the only kids in their school who liked The Stooges. One of The Stooges former managers discovered The Ramones and essentially “corrected” the wrongs that had been done by the record labels who didn’t really understand what they had with The Stooges. Listen to all of their stuff, they have a lot of tracks that never made an album and great live recordings. Iggy Pop (front man) invented the stage dive - doesn’t get more rock n roll than that.
Fun House
Raw Power
Tons of “unreleased” songs that record label wouldn’t cut
It has jingly bells in the song so technically it’s a Christmas tune :D
I Wanna Be Your Dog were the Smoke On The Water for punks. The song they all covered when starting out learning to play. And a lot kept doing it.
💯
"I wanna be your dog."
"What up dawg?"
Love the Stooges. Do more. Also check out the MC5 “kick out the Jams” 1970. There is a killer live video on yt too. It’s proto punk. Great reaction.
Yes! The MC5! Kick out The Jams / Rambling Rose! Sooo good.
Agreed n both. That MC5 video you are referring is definitely kickass.
I remember buy this album when I was a teenager and it changed my life.
The Stooges - are considered to be - the grandfathers of punk rock - and - their from Detroit, Michigan.
Even The Kinks and The Who are pioneers of what would be punk rock. But the stooges are really the template.
And if you go back even further, Elvis, Little Richard, Gene Vincent etc are mentioned all the time as punk influence. So many bands that came before, and most punk has a clear path back to the 50s and 60s. Zeppelin and aforementioned Sabbath as well. I'm partial to Ramones, but I can't deny the Stooges, MC5, NY Dolls, VU etc as being blueprints for so many bands. Bowie, T Rex, Mott the Hoople. Tracing back the influences is one of the coolest things about music.
"down on the street", "dirt"
Welcome to Iggy & The Stooges! I saw them live once, in 2012 and they were so powerful, so charismatic, so fun and so wild, even after all that time. Iggy is STILL the Godfather of Punk
O my fuckinng god yes please do more stooges I’ve been waiting for someone to do them forever they’re the most slept on band of that whole period. Do “Search and destroy” and “Your pretty face is going to hell”
These guys were from Detroit and recorded this album in 1969 - the same time Motown was happening! Another great early punk band worth checking out - also from Detroit - was The MC5. Check out "Kick out the Jams", the live version is the one that they're most known for.
One could argue the Little Richard invented Punk Rock, especially if one is Little Richard, himself.
“TV EYE” it’s a banger by the Stooges
The opening scream is the greatest..
You need to check out Death. A 1971 Detroit proto-punk band that gained legendary status because of how hard it was to find their records. "Keep on Knockin" or "Politicians in My Eyes."
Fugazi - Waiting Room 👌
bass riffs don't get much better
I'm from Detroit, Iggy and the Stooges are from the D, a friend of mine's high school English teacher was Iggy's dad. But also listen to the MC5 also from Detroit, considered proto-punk. Detroit is kind of where early and proto-punk came out of. Also out of Detroit in the 60's is the band Death, see the film A Band Called Death, the sad tale of a black rock, proto punk band ahead of their time.
I think the earliest punk influences came from bands like Blue Cheer. Totally raw and raucous. Have a listen to Babylon and Just a Little Bit by them.
And also check out Mc5 - looking at You live 1970. Absolutely incredible raw live performance. I used to listen to this to get me going before I went on stage.
Mc5, Blue Cheer, and The Stooges were all from the same era and had a similar very dirty garage punk sound.
I think the thing that hits hard about this song is that,
It.
Is.
Relentless.
The way that the vocals are sung, the way that the lyrics progress, and the absolutely inescapable minor chord riff set have this feeling of like just holding on the edge of restrained rage.
Like, they use the *piano* as the main point of rhythm! The fuck? So unique!
Another important early influence on punk was a compilation album called Nuggets.
Great vids, man. It's been interesting watching you learn about metal/punk/hard rock.
Early Punk Rock Journey:
1. The Sonics - Psycho
2. The Monks - Complication [compare these guys w/ Dead Kennedys]
3. ? and the Mysterians - 96 Tears [the first song/band called 'punk']
4. The Music Machine - Talk Talk [compare their look to The Ramones]
5. The Stooges - Search & Destroy
6. MC5 - Kick Out the Jams
7. The Ramones - Sheena Is a Punk Rocker [The Ramones are generally considered the first true punk band]
8. The Jam - That's Entertainment [moving to the UK]
9. Sex Pistols - God Save the Queen
10. The Clash - Wrong 'em Boyo
11. X-Ray Specs - I'm a Poseur
12. Crass [you've heard, but they really brought politics into punk]
13. Bad Brains - Pay to Come (original 7") [back to the US] [considered the first 'hardcore' punk band, Minor Threat soon follow]
14. The Fastbacks - In America [included here because IMO they bridge The Ramones and later pop-punk bands like Screeching Weasel and The Queers]
Just Google, The Punks, the band, and it will show you what took place right after The Stooges, MC5 etc. broke up, around 72-73 They were later known as 'the bastard son's of the Stooges', by some, 1st 'punk band' by others. I got to witness it, had a beer with Iggy and Bowie in NYC, went backstage with the Asheton brothers in Ann Arbor MI. grew up in the area, what a blast! Saw Stooges live 10+ times or so.
Two other early punk bands (proto-punk) you must hear are MC5 and The New York Dolls
I worked with a band called the Tubes in San Francisco around 70-71...first big hit was White Punks on Dope.
Then they had some more.
Badass stuff right there.
Poker scene in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
They’re actually playing three card brag, not poker. Close but no cigar.
My Favorite 70’s punk band is The Damned. I Suggest songs like New Rose, Smash it up, ignite, machine gun etiquette.
Neat, Neat, Neat!
@@CretanBull That one too!
1969 and fun house amazing albums 2 of my all time favorites
Iggy, the original punk! Check out "Search and Destroy". Actually, the entire "Raw Power" album is a must have.
Sabbath definitely influenced some punk. The elemental aggression and stripped down direct attack definitely found its way into what would eventually become punk rock. Listen to Black Flag, for example, who often cited Sabbath as an influence.
Oh no shit, this was just in Cruella. Had no idea it was a real song! Love this
Dang, It sure was! I didn't care for the movie but certain parts of it and the music was really good.
Is nothing sacred? Is nothing out of the reach of Disney's stockholders? -sigh-
I felt the EXACT SAME WAY the first time I heard this song..
The Pogues - Irish punk, influenced bands like Flogging Molly, dropkick Murphys, real McKenzie's. Lead singer was so Irish he died from alcohol poisoning...
The Stooges are amazing. They made 3 great albums and then they were gone. Some other classics from them are Down on the Street, Search and Destroy, No Fun, 1969, 1970, Loose, and Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell.
Bands from the ‘60s, tough ask as The Stooges released their first album, (this album,) in 1969. But, like most bands they and others were performing long before they actually recorded and released an album, but my warning is that The Stooges are sort of the turning point from standard rock and art rock to the sound that we recognize as “punk,” (what ya heard here.) There is more of this sound on their next record, (and my favorite Stooges record,) Fun House.
Obviously, New York Dolls, The Velvet Underground, Patti Smith, & the MC5 are going to be on the list of bands to check out. Patti Smith “Gloria” The Velvet Underground “What Goes On,” & MC5 “Kick Out The Jams.”
^Pretty crazy, but awesome, Iggy Pop, Wayne Kramer, John Cale, & Patti Smith are all still alive.
Love America!
The drummer and Guitarist were brothers - Scott Ashton on drums and Ron Ashton on Guitar - both were awesome. The bass player was Dave Alexander. Note I wrote in the past tense. Unfortunately all of the Stooges have passed away except for Iggy, and James Williamson (whose not on this LP). Scott Ashton the drummer was incredible. Find a live vid from the 60s or 70s and check it out. They were actually more of a 70s band. Iggy once said one of his greatest contributions to music was that he "killed off the hippie movement'. Or something like that. Check out "Kick out the Jams" by Mc5. They played with the Stooges a lot, Both bands are from Detroit.
i remeber hearing the stooges for the first time and my raction was prettty much the same as yours lol great band baddest rock band ever !
Believe it or not, my favorite cover of this song is from an alt-country band, Uncle Tupelo.
You got your New York Dolls, The Kinks, The Who, Death, The 13th Floor Elevators, Motor City 5, The Sonics, and plenty more, along with the artists who influenced all these bands.
finally stooges getting some love
You have to look at the Iggy and Stooges live concert in Cincinnati. He was so high on drugs diving into and out the crowd. Then he crowd surfed and stood on top on everyone. Fukin bad arse.
I was lucky enough to get to see Iggy and the stooges in Cleveland back in the early 80's it was definately a different show.
That would've been awesome!
But The Stooges broke up in 1974, not to reunite until 2003. I saw Iggy with several backing bands (Bowie and the Sales Brothers, for example) during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Peace.
In Detroit, Iggy is the godfather of punk, his whole group of friends too.
MC5, and that list grows.
Trivia #2...Iggy and Bowie hooked up in Berlin, iggy wrote China Girl, bowie covered it and forwarded all of the royalties to James, while he was drugged out and broke. Later Bowie helped produce his Lust for Life.
The Ramones greatly contributed to the feel of punk. in the mid 70's. You must play "I'm only 5 foot one." by Iggy. "I'm only 5 foot 1, I got a pain in my neck, from always looking up. What the Hell, what the heck!" 🤗🤗
The original fathers of punkrock are The Sonics! Even older band! Look up Have love, will travel 1964....
The stooges are considered to be the godfathers of punk rock. And they originated from Detroit, Michigan.
Count Five - Psychotic Reaction
THE CLASH , PERIOD.
This is just straight up Detroit hard-core punk from back in the day. And I’m not sure if you have yet check them out but if you have not checked out MC5 kick out the jams
The monks
The Slits
Sex Pistols
The kinks
Velvet Underground
Oh yeah dive deep:
Any of the first three Stooges LPs
MC5- Their three LPs as well...
Velvet Underground- ....all of it....
Thirteenth Floor Elevators- "Psychedelic sounds of..."
Love- ..again on the first three LPs...
Most of these have a very very long song....usually tedious.....
:)
Cleveland - Akron Ohio had a really great punk scene late 70's to mid 80's. If you want to touch the roots of punk You must start with the band MC5. I would call them the OG punk band
MC5...great call.
@@bschuler6216 Can't forget the Rubber City Rebels, Bizzaro.
The Stooges song “Search and Destroy” is a great example of proto punk. On the album Raw Power Iggy pretty much jacked the levels on the mix up near 10. Its so raw - so punk. If you want more old school 70s punk then check out the Dead Boys. By the way Iggy Pop was the singer for the Stooges…
Iggy Pop was a character. He would get so involved in the music that he would do a total strip down, smear peanut butter on his chest, and one of the first rockers to dive into the crowd.
what's not to love about the stooges. legitimate bad asses.
Also for an even earlier suggestion. Check out “Five Years Ahead of My Time” by the Third Bardo. They are a bit more of a psych garage band but it’s proto punk
protopunk started in Detroit with the mc5 then the stooges. check out the mc5 "kick out the jams" and many more by them. Also, the new york dolls came on the scene a few years later in New York before the Ramones. many bands including kids and the Ramones were influenced by the dolls.
The reason it fades out is because this is NOT the full version.
Iggy Pop wrote a song about my sister. "Shoeshine Girl"
hey if it's not too much trouble, could you react to a band called flipper, they're a "punkish" rock band from the late 70's and early 80's. No one really talks about them but they are incredible and i know every member nirvana were really big fans of them. Some songs that I would recommend is sacrifice live, earthworm, shine live, sex bomb, ever (off of the album sex bomb baby), ha ha ha, falling.
Just what you want to hear after losing a half million in notes to a underworld kingpin..❤😂
MC5 from Detroit like the stooges, same times, song? future now!
Los Saicos predates all those bands. 1965. Check out their 1 and only album.
Hey man even through the 90s Detroit punk is grimy grungy dirty and Vybe I see you’re digging it
Hey TNT check The Count Five's "Psychotic Reaction" and The Electric Prunes "I had Too Much To Dream Last Night". Some great garage classics there.
Great reaction 💪🏻 but we need more Tom more often #HOG🤘🏻
It's from 1969.
The start of Punk.
Iggy was an early punk.
Ck out the Damned 1976 and Death (Hackney Brothers) from 1974.
check out “Static Age” by the Misfits. very similar to this Stooges song.
check out the whole Static Age album
Trivia question, howd he get the stage name Iggy Pop?
Real name is Jim Osterberg.
Another root Detroit rocker
MC 5 Before the Stooges..luv em Both
The soundtrack of detroit
Iggy pop said in an interview about his singing style and the stooges sound, that he was just trying to be Mick Jagger, and they were heavily influenced by the rolling stones among others
Then there's the Kinks and alot of bands that were around in the 60s, glam rock bands like the new york dolls etc. The velvet underground with songs like 'waiting for the man' and 'Heroin' and on and on.
There is no such thing as the original punk sound or some band or artist that makes something totally new and 100% original.
Every artist and genre that comes along is built on and draws from things that came before, even though often the influencial sound tends to be from more obscure and/or underground bands or music scenes.
Give a listen to Tight Pants and Penetrationn...and you"ll see how The Stooges became the pioneer of modern hard rock
Boy, if you start listenin' to more Stooges material plus The Fugs, plus The Chocolate Watch Band plus (at least partially) The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band you'll soon more or less forget about Black Sabbath/LOL!
GTA IV Liberty Rock Radio
Check out The Sonics
"The Witch" and "Strychnine", they have a punk sound that predate The Stooges by 4-5 years
Check out the MC5 the album high times..especially the song gotta keep on mooving
You guys like Tom MacDonald and his one dog is called Steppenwolf, because they are a great band.....so try , some Steppenwolf....every one knows born to be wild, so maybe something different , like ''The Pusher ''
Punk rock was began in England
Did no one tell this guy that it was Iggy Pop and the Stooges when, he referenced Iggy Pop’s latter work?
If you wanted to hear the song without the fade during the solo you just need to listen to the alternate vocal. However the vocals are different and have a more serious tone. The songs Not right, Little doll and We will fall are all filler songs for the album but I think they are really great because of how raw they are. Also one more thing you should listen to the band the MC5 as they were a brother band to the Stooges.
look up the band Death they are a all black bad thats how punk starts
Circle Jerks, American Heavy Metal Weekend,
Ah, proto punk at its finest. Also, the Ramones are like Black Sabbath. Maybe (definitely, actually) there were elements of punk and metal before those two bands, but those two bands are where you can pinpoint the birth of their respective genres. The Stooges are a great intro to punk though.
You should checkout Slayer- I’m gonna be your God. Similar music different lyrics. It’s interesting to say the least.
If you try the Ramones, check out:
Judy is a Punk (1976)
Carbona Not Glue (1977)
or
Teenage Lobotomy (1977)
Most reaction videos go directly for "Blitzkrieg Bop" or "I Wanna be Sedated". They're good songs, but the three songs above are better representations of the Ramones.
For 60s punk representations, try:
The Sonics - Have Love Will Travel (1965..... these guys predated the Stooges and you will love them)
The Monks - Complication (1966.... another band that predated the Stooges)
I'll stop there :)
One other thing about 90s punk.
There was a lot of great punk bands in the 90s that played in the style of the early stuff, but you have to dig deeper for it cause it wasn't as popular as the skate punk and pop punk stuff... and it's typically labelled "Garage Punk" (a fusion of 60s garage elements and 70s punk elements). Good 90s bands are: New Bomb Turks, Teengenerate and The Spaceshits.