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Metallic K.O.

 
Album Review: Metallic KO

  • Artist: Iggy & the Stooges
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1976
  • Type: Compilation (best of), Live, Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Metallic K.O. isn't quite as epochal as its reputation would have you believe. Time has had its way with it, diluting its original impact, not just through the natural ebb and flow of time, but in the way that historical accuracy has provided a record that might be true to the letter but betrays the myth. Most of the original bootlegs of Metallic K.O. consisted of two separate performances, both recorded toward the end of the band's run, including its very final show, legendary for Iggy's baiting of a hostile audience of drunk bikers. This bootleg was ferocious, capturing the highlights of both shows, distilling its rawest essence. Metallic 2X K.O. performs a historical service by presenting the two shows in their entirety, and while this is welcome, separating the performance does a disservice to the myth. On the original vinyl, the second half of both shows is captured, and the momentum is blinding, capturing the Stooges gleefully careening through a set of new material (including songs like "Cock in Pocket" and "I Got a Right" that didn't show up on studio albums). Here, even the final show seems more like a conventional show -- albeit a show that ends with bottles being thrown onto the stage and the singer brazenly taunting an audience that hates him. And the funny thing about this is that it seems more fun than scary, just a big prank pulled by the Stooges as they recklessly belt out their sleaziest songs and ending it all with a monumental version of "Louie Louie." Yes, the recording is an audience tape and it's nearly antiaudiophile, but music this raw and unhinged deserves nothing less. And make no mistake, in any incarnation, this is one of the best rock live albums, nothing but pure, insane energy. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks



CD 1

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Heavy Liquid Iggy Pop, James Williamson Iggy & the Stooges (3:24)
I Got Nothin' James Williamson, Iggy Pop Iggy & the Stooges (4:29)
Rich Bitch Iggy Pop, James Williamson Iggy & the Stooges (11:46)
Gimme Danger (Lyrics) James Williamson, Iggy Pop Iggy & the Stooges (8:12)
Cock in My Pocket (Lyrics) James Williamson, Iggy Pop Iggy & the Stooges (7:08)
Louie, Louie Richard Berry Iggy & the Stooges (3:41)


CD 2

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Raw Power (Lyrics) Iggy Pop, James Williamson Iggy & the Stooges (5:47)
Head On James Williamson, Iggy Pop Iggy & the Stooges (8:30)
Gimme Danger (Lyrics) James Williamson, Iggy Pop Iggy & the Stooges (7:11)
Search and Destroy (Lyrics) James Williamson, Iggy Pop Iggy & the Stooges (8:44)
Heavy Liquid James Williamson, Iggy Pop Iggy & the Stooges (9:52)
Open up and Bleed Iggy Pop, James Williamson Iggy & the Stooges (3:55)

Credits

Scott Thurston (Guitar), Scott Thurston (Bass), Scott Asheton (Drums), Iggy Pop (Vocals), Iggy & the Stooges (Performer), Ron Asheton (Vocals), Scott Thurston (Vocals), Iggy Pop (Liner Notes), Scott Thurston (Keyboards), Richard Creamer (Photography), Lester Bangs (Liner Notes), Nick Kent (Liner Notes), Ron Asheton (Guitar), Ron Asheton (Bass), Michael Beal (Sleeve Design), Giovanni Dadomo (Liner Notes), James Williamson (Guitar), James Williamson (Vocals)
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Wikipedia: Metallic K.O.
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Metallic K.O.
Live album by The Stooges
Released 1976
Recorded October 1973 & February 1974
Genre Hard rock, protopunk
Length 82:37
Label Skydog Records
Producer Iggy Pop
Professional reviews
The Stooges chronology
Raw Power
(1973)
Metallic K.O.
(1976)
Open Up and Bleed
(1995)

Metallic K.O. is a live recording by American hard rock band The Stooges. In its original form, the album was purported to contain the last half of a performance at the Michigan Palace in Detroit, on February 9, 1974--the band's final live performance until their reformation in 2003. The performance was notable for the level of audience hostility, with the band being constantly pelted with pieces of ice, eggs, beer bottles and jelly beans, among other things, in response to Iggy Pop's audience-baiting.

Subsequent investigation of the master tapes and the 1988 release of the double album Metallic 2X K.O. reveals that the original album contained the last half of the February 9, 1974 show, and opens with the first half of an earlier show (from October 6, 1973) at the same venue. The 2X K.O. version features the full shows from both dates.

Contents

History

The album was recorded on a reel-to-reel tape machine by Michael Tipton, later obtained by Stooges guitarist James Williamson. Considering Williamson's involvement, and the endorsement of Iggy, it was considered a "semi-official" bootleg, when released on the Skydog label in 1976.

The album is mostly composed of previously unreleased material. Studio demo and rehearsal recordings of some of the songs would later turn up on similarly semi-official posthumous Stooges compilations.

The album proved popular, due to its release in the first era of punk rock and The Stooges' growing legend as protopunks. Metallic K.O. outsold The Stooges' major label official releases, selling over 100,000 copies in America as an import in its first year alone.

Musical style

The album is notable for Iggy Pop's vulgar rendition of "Louie, Louie", which deviates widely from the song's original lyrics. Overall, the playing on the album is ragged, and during "Rich Bitch" the band go out of time with each other, having to be coached back into the song by Iggy - "Gimme just the drums! It's the only way you're ever gonna get it right, take it down to the drums!". He then counts the other players back into the beat. In addition to long-time Stooges members Pop, Ron Asheton (bass guitar), Scott Asheton (drums), and Williamson (guitar), the line-up on the album features Scott Thurston on piano, who had become an official member of the band by this point.

Context by Lester Bangs

In the essay "Iggy Pop: Blowtorch in Bondage" critic Lester Bangs calls the album a "documentation of the Iggy holocaust at its most nihilistically out of control." He describes the Stooges concert he attended that immediately preceded the Metallic K.O. performances:

The audience, which consisted largely of bikers, was unusually hostile, and Iggy, as usual, fed on that hostility, soaked it up and gave it back and absorbed it all over again in an eerie, frightening symbiosis. "All right," he finally said, stopping a song in the middle, "you assholes wanta hear 'Louie, Louie,' we'll give you 'Louie, Louie.'" So the Stooges played a forty-five-minute version of "Louie Louie," including new lyrics improvised by the Pop on the spot consisting of "You can suck my ass / You biker faggot sissies," etc.

By now the hatred in the room is one huge livid wave, and Iggy singles out one heckler who has been particularly abusive: "Listen, asshole, you heckle me one more time and I'm gonna come down there and kick your ass." "Fuck you, you little punk," responds the biker. So Iggy jumps off the stage, runs through the middle of the crowd, and the guy beats the shit out of him, ending the evening's musical festivities by sending the lead singer back to his motel room and a doctor. I walk into the dressing room, where I encounter the manager of the club offering to punch out anybody in the band who will take him on. The next day the bike gang, who call themselves the Scorpions, will phone WABX-FM and promise to kill Iggy and the Stooges if they play the Michigan Palace on Thursday night. They do (play, that is), and nobody gets killed, but Metallic K.O. is the only rock album I know where you can actually hear hurled beer bottles breaking against guitar strings.[1]

Track listing

All songs written by Iggy Pop and James Williamson, except where noted.

Original 1976 release

There have been many wildly varying releases of Metallic K.O. over the years on many different bootleg labels. This track listing is based on the first release, the 1976 Skydog LP.[2]

All tracks were recorded in Detroit's Michigan Palace. Side one was recorded on October 6, 1973; side two was recorded on February 9, 1974. The 1974 show was the final Stooges show until the band's reunion in 2003.

Side One

  1. Raw Power (5:29)
  2. Head On (7:23)
  3. Gimme Danger (6:45)

Side Two

  1. Rich Bitch (10:52)
  2. Cock in My Pocket (3:21)
  3. Louie Louie (Richard Berry) (3:24)

Metallic 2X K.O. 1988 release

This expanded version of the album includes the complete shows from both 1973 and 1974. The final show (from 1974) is presented first, on sides one and two; the 1973 show comprises side three and four.

Side One

  1. Heavy Liquid (3:24)
  2. I Got Nothin' (4:29)
  3. Rich Bitch (11:46)

Side Two

  1. Gimme Danger (8:12)
  2. Cock in My Pocket (7:08)
  3. Louie Louie (Richard Berry) (3:42)

Side Three

  1. Raw Power (5:48)
  2. Head On (8:31)
  3. Gimme Danger (7:11)

Side Four

  1. Search and Destroy (8:34)
  2. Heavy Liquid/I Wanna Be Your Dog (9:52)
  3. Open Up and Bleed (3:52)

References

  1. ^ Lester Bangs. "Iggy Pop: Blowtorch in Bondage," in Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung, ed. Greil Marcus (New York: Anchor Books, 1987), 206-207.
  2. ^ "METALLIC K.O.". http://www.connollyco.com/discography/iggy_pop/metallic.html. Retrieved 2009-06-08. 

 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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