R260139399. I NEED MORE. LES STOOGES ET AUTRES HISTOIRES DE MA VIE.. 1993. In-4. Broch. Etat d'usage, Couv. lgrement passe, Coiffe en tte abme, Intrieur frais. 139 pages. Premier plat illustr en couleurs. Couverture remplie. Nombreuses photos noir et blanc, dans et hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 927-Artistes, sportifs
James Newell Osterberg, better known by his stage name Iggy Pop, is an American rock singer, songwriter, and occasional actor. Although he has had only limited commercial success, Iggy Pop is considered an innovator of punk and related styles. He is sometimes referred to by the nicknames "the Godfather of Punk" and "the Rock Iguana," and is widely acknowledged as one of the most dynamic stage performers of rock. Pop began calling himself Iggy after his first band in high school, The Iguanas. His direct influence extends to the present day: a Cadillac ad in rotation since February 2007 features his vocal performance on the song "Punkrocker", recorded in 2006 with the Swedish band Teddybears.
Iggy Pop was the lead singer of The Stooges, a late 1960s/early 1970s garage rock band who were influential in the development of the nascent heavy metal and punk rock genres. The Stooges became infamous for their live performances, during which it was not uncommon for Pop to consume narcotics, self-mutilate, verbally abuse the audience, expose himself and leap off the stage (thus being among the first to "stage dive"). Countless subsequent performers have imitated Pop's antics.
Pop has had varying degrees of success in the course of his subsequent solo career. His best-known solo songs include "Lust for Life", "I'm Bored", "Real Wild Child", the Top 40 hit "Candy" (with vocalist Kate Pierson of The B-52's) and "The Passenger". A film about Iggy Pop's life and career titled The Passenger is currently in development.
I don't know. Is it important for books to be challenging to read or to drive into the heart of the human experience? Or is it more important to read something that goes down smoothly and makes you dream of being a badass? This one I read and reread. I tried to live some of the small details in the book. I try to talk the way he writes. So much of the book is great because it makes no sense. He says "You know what i mean?" No we don't. Also, I do not believe his story on how he dodged the draft. i just don't believe it.
Halfway decent autobio of Iggy Pop. One can't help but feel he's holding quite a bit back, though. At times I found his ego to be a little overwhelming, almost getting in the way of telling his story. I bet the Asheton Brothers could probably write a better Stooges book since they have nothing to lose.
This is practically the only good rock autobiography (haven't read 'chronicles' tho) - basically, ig's a poet, and the small miniatures in this book are excellent observations on the technique of giving voice to the pain at the middle of the wild life. And, also, funny as hell.
What's so cool about Iggy is that he kind of played the stupid lug, but was always this ruminative, intellectual about it. The greek ideal. "Look out, I'm gonna rip your convertible top."
Pop has no writing talent (although his recent Lollapalooza set matched any live show I have ever seen.) But this idiosyncratic and profane diary is fascinating in spots. And of course every one should have "The Stooges" and "Fun House" in their record collections.
I've been a big fan of Iggy Pop ever since I discovered The Stooges around 2003.
Written in a candid and conversational style, this is Iggy rambling about his childhood, early days of the Stooges, life in a trailer park in Ann Arbor, loss of virginity, his brief first marriage, problems with authority and the music scene in general. The book moves back and forth in time. It is mostly amusing and he does not mind portraying himself as naïve.
Iggy was much brighter in school than his classmates. But he was also very sensitive.
Nico was a terrible cook.
Iggy acted queer during an army recruitment drive for Vietnam.
He loved Berlin as a city because it gave more freedom than most places in America.
On New York:
The population is akin to a bunch of illiterate Mayan descendants running around through the ruins of a once-great civilization - having no idea of the skills and the craftsmanship that went into building such a city - just playing in the ruins. Well, I don't want to play in the ruins
There is an afterword by Anne Wehrer who helped Iggy write the book.
The book comes with lyrics to The Stooges and Iggy songs.
Thoroughly enjoyable. A fly-on-the-wall account of Iggy's youthful misadventures at the very start of the Stooges era. Laugh-out-loud funny in parts. The narration is grounded in an endearing rebellious awkwardness (what else would you expect from Iggy Pop?).
It's going to be hard to find this book without paying $100+ so I'm hoping I'll find it in a library. This interview with David Letterman is fun, though: https://fb.watch/jQyF9winLj/
Really brings you into the screwed-up world of the Stooges during their heyday. Sort of like my youth in book form with artistic genius sprinkled on top.