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The Weirdness

 
Album Review: The Weirdness

  • Artist: The Stooges
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: March 07, 2007
  • Type: Live
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The creative and interpersonal dynamics of a rock band are notoriously tricky, and when a band hasn't worked together for a few decades, simply getting the same people together in a recording studio doesn't guarantee lightning is going to strike again. In 2003, more than 30 years after the original lineup of the Stooges collapsed after the commercial failure of Fun House, Iggy Pop finally buried the hatchet with his former bandmates Ron Asheton and Scott Asheton, and they hit the road for a series of heroic reunion shows (with Mike Watt standing in on bass for the late Dave Alexander) in which they miraculously re-created the dinosaur-stomp sound and feel of their first two albums. After the riotous reception of the Stooges' reunion shows, Iggy and the Ashetons took the next logical step and recorded a new Stooges album, but while the reconstituted band sounded stunning on-stage (check out the Telluric Chaos CD or the Live in Detroit 2003 DVD for evidence), in the studio the Stooges reunion went horribly awry with 2007's The Weirdness. It would have been foolish to expect The Weirdness to sound just like The Stooges or Fun House, given how much water has flowed under the bridge, but what's startling is how little this album recalls the primal groove of their previous work (or the sound they recently delivered on-stage). While Ron Asheton's guitar howls as loud as ever, the pulsating wah-wah and ripsaw fuzz that were his aural trademarks are all but missing, and while his solos step back into the noisy id, they lack the coherence and internal logic of his brilliant work on Fun House. Similarly, Scott Asheton's drumming is muscular and his timing is superb, but while he created an unexpectedly sensuous groove out of stuff like "Down in the Street," "1969," and "Real Cool Time," here he stomps away with lots of gravity but little nuance, and like his brother, he's traded soul for jackhammer force (emphasized by Steve Albini's hard-edged recording). But surprisingly, the guy who really drops the ball on this set is Iggy. Pop's been in fine voice on his last few solo albums, but much of The Weirdness finds him singing a bit flat or sharp, and while he belts out these songs with commendable passion, this ranks with Beat Em Up as the dumbest set of lyrics the man has ever committed to tape. Instead of reaching into the Real O Mind for the cosmic simplicity of stuff like "TV Eye," "1970," or "I Wanna Be Your Dog," Iggy goes into inane blather mode from the jump-start, and if titles like "Greedy Awful People," "Free and Freaky," and "I'm Fried" don't tip off listeners that he's off his game, lines like "England and France, these cultures are old/The cheese is stinky and the beer isn't cold," "They drive those f*ckin' awful cars/And roll their lips in titty bars," and the deathless "My dick is turning into a tree" tell the rest of the story. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Trollin' Iggy Pop, Ron Asheton, Scott Asheton The Stooges (3:07)
You Can't Have Friends Iggy Pop, Scott Asheton, Ron Asheton The Stooges (2:22)
ATM Scott Asheton, Iggy Pop, Ron Asheton The Stooges (3:15)
My Idea of Fun Scott Asheton, Ron Asheton, Iggy Pop The Stooges (3:17)
The Weirdness Scott Asheton, Ron Asheton, Iggy Pop The Stooges (3:45)
Free & Freaky Iggy Pop, Scott Asheton, Ron Asheton The Stooges (2:39)
Greedy Awful People Scott Asheton, Ron Asheton, Iggy Pop The Stooges (2:07)
She Took My Money Ron Asheton, Scott Asheton, Iggy Pop The Stooges (3:49)
The End of Christianity Iggy Pop, Ron Asheton, Scott Asheton The Stooges (4:19)
Mexican Guy Ron Asheton, Iggy Pop, Scott Asheton The Stooges (3:29)
Passing Cloud Ron Asheton, Iggy Pop, Scott Asheton The Stooges (4:04)
I'm Fried Ron Asheton, Iggy Pop, Scott Asheton The Stooges (3:44)

Credits

Steve Albini (Engineer), 3 Blind Mice (Producer), Robert Matheu (Photography), Nick Webb (Mastering), Eric Fischer (Production Coordination), Ron Asheton (Guitar), Chapman Baehler (Photography), Sean Mosher-Smith (Art Direction), Scott Asheton (Drums), Rob Vester (Assistant Engineer), Henry McGroggan (Production Coordination), Sean Mosher-Smith (Design), Iggy Pop (Vocals), Chris Wujek (Technical Assistance), Steve MacKay (Saxophone), Brendan Benson (Vocal Harmony), Mike Watt (Bass)
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Wikipedia: The Weirdness
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The Weirdness
Studio album by The Stooges
Released March 6, 2007
Recorded October 7 - October 30, 2006 at Electrical Audio Studios in Chicago, Illinois
Genre Punk rock, Detroit rock
Length 40:04
Label Virgin
Producer Steve Albini
Professional reviews
The Stooges chronology
Telluric Chaos
(2005)
The Weirdness
(2007)

The Weirdness is the fourth studio album by influential American hard rock band The Stooges.

The album features founding members Iggy Pop (vocals), Ron Asheton (guitar), and Scott Asheton (drums) along with new band member Mike Watt (bass guitar, formerly of The Minutemen) and Steve Mackay (saxophone, who appeared on the Stooges' 1970 album, Fun House.) It is the first studio album of new material the Stooges have released since Raw Power (1973), and is also the final album to feature Ron Asheton, who died in early 2009.

Contents

Recording

The album was recorded by Steve Albini at his Electrical Audio studio in Chicago, Illinois during October 2006, and was mastered at Abbey Road Studios in London, England in December of that same year.[1] Watt posted a day-by-day diary of the recording sessions on his website, but this was deleted without explanation. Watt referred to the album's title as Secret Plan in his diary entries.

According to Watt's online diary, the songs recorded during the sessions included a finalized version of "My Idea of Fun" (first heard on the live CD Telluric Chaos) and a cover of The Beatles' "I Wanna Be Your Man" (more faithful to the Rolling Stones version), while a November 20 article on the album, derived mainly from an interview with Pop, also gives the following song titles as appearing on the album: "Trollin'", "ATM", "You Can't Have Friends,", "The Weirdness" and "Greedy Awful People." Further titles were announced in December after the album was mastered, and the final track listing was announced by Virgin Records on January 30, 2007.

Two singles for "My Idea of Fun" and "Free & Freaky" were released on the iTunes Music Store on February 20, 2007.

The album was also released as a vinyl LP with four bonus tracks.

"My Idea of Fun" was performed on the reality show Bam's Unholy Union when Bam Margera married girlfriend Missy Rothstein in the final episode at their wedding party in 2007.


Track listing

All songs by Iggy Pop/Ron Asheton/Scott Asheton, except where noted.

  1. "Trollin'" (3:05)
  2. "You Can't Have Friends" (2:22)
  3. "ATM" (3:15)
  4. "My Idea of Fun" (3:17)
  5. "The Weirdness" (3:45)
  6. "Free & Freaky" (2:39)
  7. "Greedy Awful People" (2:07)
  8. "She Took My Money" (3:48)
  9. "The End of Christianity" (4:19)
  10. "Mexican Guy" (3:29)
  11. "Passing Cloud" (4:04)
  12. "I'm Fried" (3:44)
Bonus tracks
  1. "O Solo Mio" (Japanese edition and Vinyl edition-only Bonus Track)
  2. "Claustrophobia" (Vinyl edition-only Bonus Track)
  3. "I Wanna Be Your Man" - Lennon/McCartney (iTunes and Vinyl edition-only Bonus Track)
  4. "Sounds of Leather" (Vinyl edition-only Bonus Track)

Personnel

References

External links


 
 
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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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Weirdness" Read more