The Funhouse Thread (or, more broadly: Stooges - Classic or Dud?)

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Alright, I decided to get my ass in gear and buy 'Funhouse.' I wasn't too excited about it, after reading what Mark wrote in the "Last Five Records..." thread about it reminding him of Stones-circa-'Sticky Fingers' with more menace and swagger (though I do love that album a great deal). With hesitation, I popped it in as soon as I got in the car after work...

I must say, I was pretty floored. I can see how perhaps the instrumentation and the attitude could bring the Stones to mind, but I think it sounds quite different. There is no swing on 'Funhouse,' no restraint. Although Asheton plays pentatonic scales and stuff, it doesn't feel bluesy much at all. And the production is ridiculously raw.

Maybe the charm will wear off, but for now, this is one that I can tell will be played loud and often. Any hoo, I'd like to know what the rest of you think. Is 'Funhouse' as epochal as some would have us believe? Also, what about their other records?

Clarke B., Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I'm amazed we haven't done a Stooges C&D before, maybe because it's too obvious? Classic.

An I think qua Funhouse it is the point that there is no swing and especially *no* restraint, that is good thing. Of course I give a flying fuck about pentatonic scales and the blues, it's about the intensity which you get in one go or not (strange how L.Bangs had to grow into Funhouse).

1st album also very good and Raw Power too.

Omar, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Good god what a classic, fave moments = the bit in 'Loose' where the bass drops down an octave and your gut drops down thru the trapdoor and the rope breaks, the 'Laaaawwwwwdddd!' that opens 'TV Eye', the riff in '1970', the 'Do I dare to - uuh!', the 'singing', Rock Action, Dave Alexander, the cover, everything, and I'm going to go listen to it now. Hold on, I'm at work. Aw shit, I don't care, cuz I'm LERRRNNNNINNNNN'...

dave q, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It's the best Stooges album 'cause it's got all the stuff other stupid bands that copy the Stooges leave out (= don't get). Everything the previous posters said, OK , yeah. Except it *does* swing, what are you talking about. "Down on the St." swings like some kind of heavy metal dub reggae. I just wish they'd survived to make a 3rd album that continued in the direction they were heading here, fuck James Williamson, he ruined things. Yeah I know "Raw Power" is great but, oh you know, it's just rock music.

duane, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Re Duane's post - I agree, I love 'Raw Power' too but doesn't the opening to 'Gimme Danger' sound a bit like Bon Jovi's 'Wanted Dead or Alive'?

dave q, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I do not have this album; I will buy it when I can, though. Stooges: Classic.

Lyra, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I've never been able to hear anything special in the Stooges. Seems fun, stupid, and generic. And I tried, hard, because Lust For Life and The Idiot are two of my favorite records.

Mr. Mark Lerner, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Isn't fun enough?

Lyra, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

The sound of the Stooges is pretty much the meaning of life. It's Classic in the sense of it being one of a handful of records I simply could not do without.

Fun? Well, sure I suppose you can call it fun. It's not exactly the first word that springs to mind, tho. It's not for nothing they have a song called "No Fun".

Sean, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Has anyone here heard Rhino's 7cd Funhouse Sessions box set (32 separate versions of Loose!)? I tried to order it but it was a limited edition and they've all been sold now.

scott, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

That was a bit much even for me, but there is a single-disc distillation of the best bits, which I'm going to get. Vinyl, too!

Sean, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I've *heard* the box set...a friend of mine works for the Philly Weekly and they managed to score a promo copy...we all sat around swilling cheapt fruit wine and listening to 7 hours of the Stooges. Obviously, it was a bit of a mind-fuck. There are versions (especially of LA Blues) that are so OUT THERE its amazing they would even have thought a major would release it. Surprisingly I *wasn't* bored though...

So, without a doubt, classic. TV Eye is the greatest "punk rock" song ever written...that riff sounds like a tank flipped over on its back, treads just endlessly, pointlessly grinding into oblivion...

Jess, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

----- that riff sounds like a tank flipped over on its back, treads just endlessly, pointlessly grinding into oblivion... -----

pure poetry mate :)

Mmm, 32 versions of Loose is a bit much, although all those L.A. Blues versions sound interesting. Ah well, live goes on.

Omar, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Life of course goes on without all those demo-versions of Funhouse.

Omar, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

While Funhouse is certainly their best album, if you're looking for Stonesy swagger, try Kill City. It's a little inconsistent but I like it better than those first couple of solo records. I'm surprised no one has mentioned Metallic K.O. Is it worth hearing?

James Annett, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Uh-oh. I just realized that I've never HEARD Funhouse. I'd been recalling Raw Power all this time. Is Funhouse going to be wildly different/more towards the Lust for life/Idiot end of the Iggy spectrum?

Mr. Mark Lerner, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Metallic KO is OK. Mainly interesting for Iggy's heckling of the audience between songs. Sample: "You're paying five dollars, but I'm making 10,000 baby. So SCREW YA!"

Julien, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Metallic KO and a Bill Hicks bootleg I have are the two most knock- down, drag-out performer vs. audience shows I have ever heard/seen.

Mark: Funhouse is...well, it's raw. It's real friggin raw. There's no sheen to it whatsoever. Raw Power may have been a fuck you, but Funhouse forgoes the lube completely. Obviously it's one of my favorite records, but I would say listen before you buy.

Jess, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Funhouse is a record I can enjoy without being enthralled by. I sense its 'importance' but I can and do live without it for years at a time...

Ned Raggett, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Hmmm. Well, tahnsk for the heads-up. I think I prefer my Iggy lubed. uh.

Mr. Mark Lerner, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I'm with Ned on this one... I own the record, dig it, but rarely play it... however, if I'm out in a club, with a drink in my hand, dim red lights, and "Down On The Street" comes on.... look out. On a similar Michigan thread, does anyone else feel that MC5's "High Time" gets shorted in the praise department? I've listened to it alot lately, and I now say it's BY FAR the strongest album...

Andy, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

mark: fun house is much better than raw power, though not quite like the idiot. the lineup is a bit different: the solos are tighter and less conventional, there is much more emphasis on heavy funky basslines that hold a groove for the duration of the song (do not listen to all these people who say it doesn't swing), the vocals are more distinctive and less jagger-influenced, horns and feedback appear, there is overall more of a jam feel. it is the ultimate rock album, possibly the ultimate album.

sundar subramanian, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

You said it, Sundar. I'm in a cubicle here at work, and I need to hear it, in its entirety, at full volume, right now!!!

btw, "Raw Power" is a damn fine album, but doesn't work me up into a frenzy like "Funhouse" does.

Sean, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It is a classic but the last time I heard it I got really bored of it quite quickly and wanted to put on Adam Ant instead. There's a thread in that somewhere...

Tom, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Well, Sundar, if you want to be like Wynton and say Bach "swings," I guess I could see how you might think Funhouse swings. ;-) I was trying to differentiate Funhouse from Sticky Fingers, though, because those two albums made such different impressions on me. SF seems to be rooted in the blues both harmonically and rhythmically, whereas FH uses blues scales and blues changes, but is set apart (for me at least) by its THUDTHUDTHUDTHUD rhythms. Note: when I said FH doesn't swing, I DIDN'T mean it as an insult. Nor do I imply an insult when I say that SF does swing (at least moreso than FH). Just trying to articulate why the albums sound so different to me! Do you see what I'm aiming at? Maybe you all can help me with better terminology...

Clarke B., Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Tom, I know that sentiment very well (well, not specifically Adam Ant - I'm afraid I haven't heard him since infanthood - but you know what I mean).

I think FH made such an impact on me yesterday because it's so UNlike a lot of what I've been listening to lately.

Clarke B., Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

btw, has anyone ever seen this album as a gatefold? I found a French import gatefold once and grabbed it (band sprawled out on oriental carpet) but every US copy I've ever seen has been a single sleeve.

Sean, Friday, 17 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

ooooh. funhouse. love this album.

my first time in chicago, where my girlfriend used to live, we were sitting in this odd taco burrito house, with an owner who resembled ned flanders, mexican TV blaring and an almost exclusively black clientile (the casual segregation of US inner cities still jars with this south london native). i'm tucking into a taco that will swiftly tear itself out of me within the hour, when all of a sudden the most skin-crawling, abject howl tore through the room. EVERYONE spun around, only to discover some college kids had thrown 'TV Eye' on the jukebox.

fuck. funhouse is sharper than a bag of knives. never really play 'LA Blues' when i listen to it, though. and don't buy the Funhouse box - just full of lacklustre run throughs of songs that were perfect on the LP...

stevie, Saturday, 18 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

And what happened after that?

dave q, Saturday, 18 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

In Napster's hey day, you could get the whole box set off it. The 19 minute first take of "LA Blues" is fucking insane.

S cratch Records has a single LP best of the Funhouse Sessions, which I recommend if you loved the album a lot. It contains alternate versions of everything but "LA Blues", and two tracks not on Funhouse ("Slidin' the Blues"/ "Lost in the Future"). These two tracks are slowed down blues songs (in the broadest sense of the word), with sax.

You can get these two songs by themselves on a pretty expensive 7" if you'd rather just have them. It's on super thick orange vinyl, with a thick cardboard picture sleeve, but a slight warning: my copy has some serious pops at the start of each side, and the edge of the vinyl came broken off, so there's this sliver of wax hanging off. On the plus side, it's better sound quality than the LP's versions because it's mastered at 45 RPM.

Oh yeah, and on the back of The Best of the Funhouse Sessions, there's the picture of the Stooges lounging on the rug, which was available in the early gatefold US pressings.

Vic Funk, Saturday, 18 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I agree that the rhythmic drive of Funhouse gives it something special. Almost a motorik thing going with that straight-ahead pummel that sets it apart from the classic rock of the period. That's my favorite part of the album.

"Loose" is totally "Jumpin' Jack Flash." Dont' you want to go, "Well, it's allllllriiiiight" every time the chorus comes on? (Loose has a better chorus, though.) I know it came out a year earlier than Sticky Fingers.

Suprised that people downplay the blues riffing on this album. The structures of the melodies & riffs seems very steeped in blues to me, and respectful at that.

Maybe I'm just not in the mood for a shamanistic rock'n'roll frontman screaming the blues over heavy guitars at the moment. As I said, I do like the album -- but it's no Led Zeppelin.

Mark, Saturday, 18 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Probably the definitive Stooges punk song is "I Got A Right" which is available on a lot of the Killl City era compilations in Tower or HMV. The guitars are pure 76/77 and the bass playing is fucking amazing. It was quite shocking eventually hearing this track even after years of listening to the 3 albums. It would have been on the 4th Stooges album. Imagine if it had been a hit in 1974 - punk would have been defunct before it was born!!

David Gunnip, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

one year passes...
ABsolute unmitigated effin' classicness cubed! Funhouse & Raw Power are STILL unsurpassed for sheer intensity, IMHO.

John Bullabaugh (John Bullabaugh), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 00:48 (twenty-two years ago)

they're great and all, but to quote what some people said earlier, I never feel like listening to them.

Justyn Dillingham (Justyn Dillingham), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 01:07 (twenty-two years ago)

"Dirt" may be the best song ever recorded.

I listen to the Stooges maybe once a week; it's usually driving home from school (I've a tape of Funhouse & Raw Power in the car) or getting ready to go out--when I'm excited and in a good mood.

Ian Johnson, Tuesday, 13 May 2003 01:16 (twenty-two years ago)

I don't listen to them much recently either, and I think it's because the intense physical thrill the album gives me is a little scary. I mean, there's no point in playing it unless you're gonna take the whole trip, follow it all the way, and it means getting... this isn't going to make sense, but it means getting dirty.

Sean (Sean), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 02:40 (twenty-two years ago)

btw, taking that risk isn't just worth it, it's essential. But yeah, sometimes scary.

Sean (Sean), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 02:42 (twenty-two years ago)

"Probably the definitive Stooges punk song is "I Got A Right""

Exactly. What a fucking record, you can't top it.

rumple, Tuesday, 13 May 2003 02:52 (twenty-two years ago)

"Why, Sir, you find no man, at all intellectual, who is willing not to listen to "Funhouse". No, Sir, when a man is tired of "Funhouse", he is tired of life; for there is in "Funhouse" all that rock 'n' roll can afford."

Samuel Johnson to James Boswell, September 20, 1777.

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 11:59 (twenty-two years ago)

Jeezum Crowe there's a lot of renewed Iggytivity happening on ILM today.

Funhouse could very well be the finest recorded document there is of rock'n'roll, and I dare say that if you haven't heard it, you've never heard rock'n'roll played properly, dammit! That said, you should learn from my mistake and avoid the Rhino Funhouse Complete Sessions box set at all costs, as it cruelly robs the album of its mystique. Via twenty-eight consecutive takes of "Loose," the illusion that the Stooges were drunky, drug-imbibing brigands who swaggered into the studio, let'er rip, and then took off again is blown away to reveal the truth that the band were actually meticulous in their tinkering and exacting standards....a somewhat anal-retentive streak you'd sooner assume bands like Rush and King Crimson being guilty of.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 12:08 (twenty-two years ago)

I've talked abt this on other stooges threads but I never liked it and the hysteria around this record is something. I sold my copy a long while back.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 12:21 (twenty-two years ago)

Joking aside, Julio, I'm really surprised that you cannot see that appeal. Personally speaking, I think Funhouse is vastly superior to both The Stooges and the sacred cow that is Raw Power. I just think they completely gelled (jelled?) on Funhouse.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 14:09 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm not joking. I think the second side of this record ajoke played on the public (I'm serious!).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 14:46 (twenty-two years ago)

Well, hey man, whatever mows your lawn.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 14:48 (twenty-two years ago)

hey man whatever that fuckin' means. maaannn!!!!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 14:49 (twenty-two years ago)

Julio,
I think that Funhouse is distilled rock music at it's finest. It took me a while to come around to it, but i can't get past the dynamic funk (?) power of the title track or the turn-on-a-dime cut loose tightness of down on the street.

Saxophone is introduced 2/3 of the way through the album, but when it cuts loose it seems as though the experience is more intense for the brevity of its appearance and the very testosterone-like accumulation and release of its energy. It is a very masculine album, paced in a really quite traditional if sleazy feel for male sex/drugs satiation.

What Alex says about the alternative takes ruining things makes sense. The original album is so well measured, with each track seemingly building on the dynamic power of the previous track, so the unleashing of sax+guitar twin blat makes perfect sense on side two as measured releases of power controlled (1970) and then casually let in (Funhouse) and then appearing to run wild up the walls (LA Blues). I would have thought you would have liked those side 2 tracks at least.

Yet i think the sax/piano extended rock'n'roll combo power of the stooges is best demonstarted on the final bootleg material like rubber legs and joanna and the rhythmic prowess and accuracy demonstrated on the definitive take of on the curb Get the album Rubber Legs -- worth it for the photos.

george gosset (gegoss), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 14:58 (twenty-two years ago)

Funhouse is my favorite LP.

Iggy?!? Oh, Iggy?!?

hstencil, Tuesday, 13 May 2003 15:00 (twenty-two years ago)

oh, and i think that name The Stooges reflected a certain cynicism within the band -- if they'd got it wrong then it was very wrong if honest, and they'd be the first to admit it.

some friends of mine frustrated with my enthusiasm for free jazz in general were at least able to find plenty to enjoy in LA Blues, and the recent evidence from the box set of alternative takes of this piece, one take apparently 18 minutes long (!), puts paid to the idea that this as-of-then totally "new" "rock" as climax/nadir of the whole exercise was anything but a very well crafted and musical joke for the supposedly intelligent of the fans to chew on

george gosset (gegoss), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 15:08 (twenty-two years ago)

Lawd. Classic.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 13 May 2003 16:19 (twenty-two years ago)

I've probably killed more brain cells listening to the Stooges than any other group. For the first couple of years I got into the group in high school, I believed that Raw Power was their zenith, as it had my favorite couple of songs.

I have a great memory of pulling out of a party the night I graduated from high school and watching a prom queen slip and go face first into the mud just as "Your Pretty Face Is Going to Hell" started playing on the tape player. It was hilarious synchronicity to the nth degree. My favorite Stooges song will probably be "Search & Destroy" no matter how many shitty covers get made, it still isn't played out with me.

Then one time in college I did a massive amount of schrooms by myself and put Funhouse onto repeat. I think I reached my precambrian self that night and ever since then that record is encoded into my DNA.
For better or worse, there isn't many records that I have that kind of an experience.

I've probably listened to those first three Stooges records as much as anything. If you take off "We Will Fall" and "L.A. Blues" all three records will fit on a C90. My tape I made of such eventually was worn out and was played for hours upon hours in my walkman and at work.

Iggy after The Stooges really tapered off. "Lust for Life" is great, "The Idiot" is good and then there is only a few scattered songs that I really like. He should have gotten a regular band together as assembling the records in the studio just didn't work out.

earlnash, Tuesday, 13 May 2003 17:09 (twenty-two years ago)

the tracklists

THE STOOGES (DELUXE EDITION)

Disc One
1. "1969"
2. "I Wanna Be Your Dog"
3. "We Will Fall"
4. "No Fun"
5. "Real Cool Time"
6. "Ann"
7. "Not Right"
8. "Little Doll"

Disc Two
1. "No Fun" (Original John Cale Mix)*
2. "1969" (Original John Cale Mix)*
3. "I Wanna Be Your Dog" (Original John Cale Mix)*
4. "Little Doll" (Original John Cale Mix)*
5. "1969" (Alternate Vocal)*
6. "I Wanna Be Your Dog" (Alternate Vocal)*
7. "Not Right" (Alternate Vocal)*
8. "Real Cool Time" (Alternate Mix)*
9. "Ann" (Including "The Dance Of Romance")*
10. "No Fun" (Full Version)*
*previously unissued

FUN HOUSE (DELUXE EDITION)

Disc One
1. "Down On The Street"
2. "Loose"
3. "T.V. Eye"
4. "Dirt"
5. "1970"
6. "Fun House"
7. "L.A. Blues"

Disc Two
1. "T.V. Eye (Takes 7 & 8)"
2. "Loose" (Demo)
3. "Loose" (Take 2)
4. "Loose" (Take 22)
5. "Lost In The Future" (Take 1)
6. "Down On The Street" (Take 1)
7. "Down On The Street" (Take 8)
8. "Dirt" (Take 4)
9. "Slide (Slidin' The Blues)" (Take 1)
10. "1970" (Take 3)
11. "Fun House" (Take 2)
12. "Fun House" (Take 3)
Bonus Single Mixes
13. "Down On The Street"
14. "1970"

StanM (StanM), Monday, 27 June 2005 10:13 (twenty years ago)

and yeah, that Fun House bonus disc won't be for you if you already have the Complete Fun House Sessions box set.

StanM (StanM), Monday, 27 June 2005 10:17 (twenty years ago)

hmmm

Why not some live stuff instead of alternate takes etc? Guess the tapes don't exist. Around the time of Funhouse das Stooges were covering Pharoah Sanders' "Upper and Lower Egypt" and performing unrecorded/released songs like "Dogfood" (later recorded by Iggy) and I'd love to hear what the 1968/69 Stooges sounded like when they'd perform one droning "song"/"energy freakout" for the duration of their set. (Ron Asheton has always claimed they wrote the bulk of the first album "on demand" during the sessions.) But I'll probably buy these reissues anyway.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Monday, 27 June 2005 10:25 (twenty years ago)

ah... this is more like it...

(although I seem to have most of those already as well)

StanM (StanM), Monday, 27 June 2005 10:28 (twenty years ago)

Around the time of Funhouse das Stooges were covering Pharoah Sanders' "Upper and Lower Egypt"

god yeah, I'd kill to hear this recorded with any sort of fidelity. you'd think there'd be some live tapes in the elektra vaults, somewhere. nontheless I don't have the complete fun house box, so I'll probably get this.

there are twelve people in the world the rest are haitch (haitch), Monday, 27 June 2005 11:19 (twenty years ago)

and yeah, that Fun House bonus disc won't be for you if you already have the Complete Fun House Sessions box set.

Funny thing is -- well, it's not that funny, really -- that when the Complete Funhouse Wallet-Draining Swindle Fuck-You, Completist Dork Fanboy Box came out (and I bought it, natch), I remember saying "y'know, why don't they just cull the best takes and edit it down to something more manageable". Which, of course, now they have.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 27 June 2005 12:09 (twenty years ago)

1st album stuff = amazing it's never been out before!

2nd album stuff = if you weren't one of the thousand to buy the boxset like I was then AMAZING still

Fuck you haters.

Raw Patrick (Raw Patrick), Monday, 27 June 2005 21:02 (twenty years ago)

I pretty excited for these!

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Monday, 27 June 2005 21:05 (twenty years ago)

For some reason i'm really excited to hear these.

That One Guy (That One Guy), Monday, 27 June 2005 21:11 (twenty years ago)

How much is the Fun House box set going for these days?

That One Guy (That One Guy), Monday, 27 June 2005 21:15 (twenty years ago)

Were the Stooges really performing Pharoah Sanders? I know the MC5 did that tune--it's been bootlegged--but don't recall ever hearing the Stooges did it.

I'm very excited about these too. More so about the first record, but I'll bet the Funhouse bonus disc is more fun to listen to (or rather, more consistently listenable) than the box.

Dark Horse, Monday, 27 June 2005 21:16 (twenty years ago)

dark horse maybe not my favourite just the one i listen to most. funhouse, that is. also i'm confused - who are you?

mullygrubbr (bulbs), Monday, 27 June 2005 21:35 (twenty years ago)

Fuck you haters.

You didn't have to put it quite as raw as that, Raw Patrick, but you do have a point and I will still be buying both of them nevertheless since I'm in the Completist Dork Fanboy demographic. I wasn't hatin', I was expressing a slight disappointment that there weren't any new rarities on that Fun House bonus disc.

Oh, and That One Guy: there's one on eBay right now (ends Sunday July 3rd, current bid USD 101), but the last one on there, with damaged box went for USD 322.

StanM (StanM), Tuesday, 28 June 2005 03:15 (twenty years ago)

Oh, no, don't get me wrong, the Stooges are probably my favorite band, Fun House is probably my favorite album, and I will definitely be buying both of these...I just can't help but feel like I'm getting fleeced a little bit. However, it's kind of hard to be a Stooges fan and not get used to that. What I'd really like is some FH-era live material, but apparently there really isn't any extant.

Zack Richardson (teenagequiet), Tuesday, 28 June 2005 03:28 (twenty years ago)

I'd question the sanity and judgement of anyone who did not say 'Classic'.

latebloomer: now with 20% less cetacean content (latebloomer), Tuesday, 28 June 2005 03:39 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
There's an eCard and a "Listening Party" sampler on the Rhino site.

StanM (StanM), Monday, 1 August 2005 19:27 (twenty years ago)

And yes, that eCard really says: "Ringtones: coming soon!"

StanM (StanM), Monday, 1 August 2005 19:33 (twenty years ago)

(coming soon: in a packed train, my phone starts ringing: "LAAAAAAAAWD!")

willem (willem), Monday, 1 August 2005 20:15 (twenty years ago)

Have you people seen this video? Wow, what a video.

http://blog.wfmu.org/freeform/2005/07/iggy_pop_video_.html

Sang Freud (jeff_s), Thursday, 4 August 2005 10:34 (twenty years ago)

That video's from a TV broadcast of a show called "Midsummer Pop." It is circulating as a bootleg, probably fairly easy to come by. Also features Mountain, Traffic, Grand Funk Railroad, and Alice Cooper (during which a fan throws a live chicken on stage, which Alice eventualy throws back into the audience to be torn apart). I have a pretty poor copy of this on VHS.

nickn (nickn), Thursday, 4 August 2005 19:08 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
I think it's called rock and roll.

Bimble The Nimble, Jumped Over A Thimble! (Bimble...), Sunday, 25 September 2005 07:02 (twenty years ago)

two weeks pass...
Yes!

oompatat, Tuesday, 11 October 2005 21:30 (twenty years ago)

The frustrating thing about that live Stooges clip is that they very likely filmed the whole set, and the rest of it was discarded or is lying in a vault somewhere.

Soukesian, Tuesday, 11 October 2005 21:36 (twenty years ago)

wow. godlike!

latebloomer (latebloomer), Wednesday, 12 October 2005 10:08 (twenty years ago)

two years pass...

So fucking classssssssssic

Tape Store, Friday, 8 August 2008 16:29 (seventeen years ago)

This guy who was in an old post-punk band who has been emailing me because I put them on my blog told me that his 16 year old son recently asked him if he'd heard of The Stooges. He & I both thought that was just too much.

Bimble, Friday, 8 August 2008 16:31 (seventeen years ago)

Incidentally, their Massey Hall show on Wednesday night FUCKING ROCKED, MOTHERFUCKERS! Hastily-replaced (or borrowed) equipment notwithstanding.

Myonga Vön Bontee, Friday, 8 August 2008 17:11 (seventeen years ago)

And yes, that eCard really says: "Ringtones: coming soon!"

-- StanM (StanM), Monday, 1 August 2005 20:33 (3 years ago) Bookmark Link
(coming soon: in a packed train, my phone starts ringing: "LAAAAAAAAWD!")

-- willem (willem), Monday, 1 August 2005 21:15 (3 years ago) Bookmark Link

TV Eye actually was my ringtone for a while, until it left my nerves so shattered that I had to change it to something less screamy.

stevie, Friday, 8 August 2008 17:11 (seventeen years ago)

That said, you should learn from my mistake and avoid the Rhino Funhouse Complete Sessions box set at all costs, as it cruelly robs the album of its mystique. Via twenty-eight consecutive takes of "Loose," the illusion that the Stooges were drunky, drug-imbibing brigands who swaggered into the studio, let'er rip, and then took off again is blown away to reveal the truth that the band were actually meticulous in their tinkering and exacting standards....

That's precisely what I love about the Funhouse box. Of course they had exacting standards; bands that great usually do.

And what difference does it make how they got there? They got there, didn't they?

Formerly Painful Dentistry, Friday, 8 August 2008 17:56 (seventeen years ago)

two weeks pass...

I can't seem to post pictures very well today.

http://i307.photobucket.com/albums/nn306/Floridian_20/Stooges.jpg

Bimble Is Still More Goth Than You, Sunday, 24 August 2008 04:18 (seventeen years ago)

two years pass...

What I'd really like is some FH-era live material, but apparently there really isn't any extant.

Email from Rhino today:

To celebrate the release of Fun House in the summer of 1970, The Stooges brought the uncompromising ferocity of their second album to New York City and unleashed it within the cramped confines of Ungano’s, a hole-in-the-wall club on the Upper West Side. A reel-to-reel set up in the audience recorded the manic maelstrom as the band performed the entire album – except “L.A. Blues” – along with the until-now unreleased tracks “Have Some Fun” and “My Dream Is Dead.”

Rhino Handmade brings to light this legendary unreleased show in its entirety on a single disc accompanied by a poster, two glossy photos taken that night, and new liner notes composed by Lenny Kaye. Shipping November 16, HAVE SOME FUN: LIVE AT UNGANO’S will be available for pre-order on October 25 exclusively at www.rhino.com for $19.98.

The adrenalin-drenched set features singer Iggy Pop, guitarists Ron Asheton and Bill Cheatham, drummer Scott Asheton, bassist Zeke Zettner and saxophonist Steve Mackay. The band closes the show with a 10-minute-plus psychedelic, freak out jam featuring two unreleased tracks, “Have Some Fun” and “My Dream Is Dead.”

Musician and writer Lenny Kaye attended the show and transports you there in the album’s liner notes: “The sound comes in sheets of earsplitting noise, dense and bleating, as if a sheep is being led to slaughter. You can literally hear the ’60s gasping for breath, the totemic sacrifice of The Stooges.”

The same day HAVE SOME FUN will be released, Rhino Handmade will also rerelease 1970: The Complete Fun House Sessions. This seven-disc boxed set topped Rhino Handmade’s poll earlier this year to determine which of the label’s sold-out titles to put back in print. The reissued collection – which will not be individually numbered, preserving the collectability of the initial release – will be offered in its original packaging for $119.98.

I've never heard of Bill Cheatham or Zeke Zettner before; anybody know anything about these dudes? Were they just hired hacks for one night?

Born In A Test Tube, Raised In A Cage (unperson), Friday, 8 October 2010 01:51 (fifteen years ago)

i guess zeke must be the zeke mentioned at the start of 'dum dum boys'?

cb, Friday, 8 October 2010 09:13 (fifteen years ago)

Hmm, wonder if Rhino will send me *another* complete sessions?

Still, that live one sounds good...

Mark G, Friday, 8 October 2010 09:58 (fifteen years ago)

Looks like Cheatham and Zettner were roadies:

http://www.glampunk.org/stoogelineup.html

Harrison Buttwhistle (NickB), Friday, 8 October 2010 10:09 (fifteen years ago)

More info here (incl a photo):

http://thehoundblog.blogspot.com/2009/01/repost-of-rare-stooges-photo.html

Harrison Buttwhistle (NickB), Friday, 8 October 2010 10:10 (fifteen years ago)

Really worth reading the comments on that second link btw.

Harrison Buttwhistle (NickB), Friday, 8 October 2010 10:14 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, bless 'em.

Mark G, Friday, 8 October 2010 10:34 (fifteen years ago)

I think Funhouse is the greatest rock album ever, but I still don't feel the need to hear the complete sessions. I wonder how the sound quality is of the live show. I wasn't too chuffed over the live disc with the Raw Power set.

Fastnbulbous, Friday, 8 October 2010 18:09 (fifteen years ago)

I have the complete sessions in my iPod but have never made it through. And the live albums haven't done much for me. I've seen Iggy twice - once solo and once on the initial run of Stooges shows - and that was enough.

Born In A Test Tube, Raised In A Cage (unperson), Friday, 8 October 2010 18:11 (fifteen years ago)

I do like the TV Eye live album from '77, though.

Born In A Test Tube, Raised In A Cage (unperson), Friday, 8 October 2010 18:11 (fifteen years ago)

the sound quality of that easy action box set wasn't great, but the music itself is pretty exciting.

tylerw, Friday, 8 October 2010 18:12 (fifteen years ago)

I want this live thing.

Trip Maker, Friday, 8 October 2010 18:26 (fifteen years ago)

ten months pass...

WOW!!

http://www.howtobearetronaut.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/170.jpg

(thanks to WFMU blog for the tip)

sleeve, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 20:48 (fourteen years ago)

ha yeah, those pics are amazing.
now i guess this show has competition for coolest high school show ever
http://www.garagehangover.com/images7/MyddleClassSummitHighFlyer.jpg

tylerw, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 20:56 (fourteen years ago)

hooooooooly cow!

I can feel it in my spiritual hat (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 7 September 2011 21:00 (fourteen years ago)

a distant third, but still cool
http://lh4.ggpht.com/_oyMn5ruuF1o/S2xhIvJdfuI/AAAAAAAACbY/8ydnvjfqqVo/Buffalo%20Springfield%20Flyer_thumb%5B1%5D.jpg

tylerw, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 21:03 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

you guys didn't tell me that they quoted me on the cover of a stooges reissue!! okay, they really quoted rolling stone but whatever. that made my day. i sold that to some dude and just looked at the quotes out of boredom. simon is quoted on fun house. i feel like i'm part of the stooges family now.

https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/1001233_10152417512352137_1727566765_n.jpg

scott seward, Friday, 2 August 2013 21:21 (twelve years ago)

seven months pass...

R.I.P. Scott Asheton (via Iggy Pop on fb):

IMPORTANT MESSAGE FROM IGGY:
My dear friend Scott Asheton passed away last night.

Scott was a great artist, I have never heard anyone play the drums with more meaning than Scott Asheton. He was like my brother. He and Ron have left a huge legacy to the world. The Asheton's have always been and continue to be a second family to me.

My thoughts are with his sister Kathy, his wife Liz and his daughter Leanna, who was the light of his life.

Iggy Pop

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Sunday, 16 March 2014 21:28 (twelve years ago)

eleven years pass...

little baby girlie, little baby boy.
cover me with lovin' in a bundle o' joy.
do i care to show you what i'm dreamin' of.
do i dare to whoop ya with my love.
every little baby knows just what i mean livin' in division in a shiftin' scene.

llurk, Saturday, 16 August 2025 02:11 (eight months ago)


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