Search

Search only in certain items:

Video

Iggy Pop - Everyday (2017) - With Jamie Saft, Steve Swallow and Bobby Previte

  
Iggy Pop is totally on a Tom Waits wavelength in his new collaboration album Loneliness Road. Some classics and new faces here in the world of jazz:

From the coolest member of the Rolling Stones to a punk icon trying on his Sinatra fedora to a former bartender who mixes sounds through her trumpet, jazz music is anything if not diverse.


Loneliness Road by Jamie Saft, Steve Swallow, and Bobby Previte with Iggy Pop

Loneliness Road by Jamie Saft, Steve Swallow, and Bobby Previte with Iggy Pop

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Over a career now spanning nearly thirty years, Jamie Saft has established himself as one of the...


RareNoise
Fly Or Die by Jaimie Branch

Fly Or Die by Jaimie Branch

2.0 (1 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

A mainstay of the Chicago jazz scene and an active recent addition to the New York scene, Jaimie...


jazz
Music from Our Soul by Charnett Moffett

Music from Our Soul by Charnett Moffett

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

For his 30th Anniversary as a recording artist, Charnett Moffett delivers a far-reaching set of his...


jazz
Charlie Watts Meets The Danish Radio Big Band by Charlie Watts

Charlie Watts Meets The Danish Radio Big Band by Charlie Watts

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Charlie Watts is considered by just about everyone to be the coolest man in rock, but he would be...


jazz
Gratitude  by Dayna Stephens

Gratitude by Dayna Stephens

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album

Gratitude, saxophonist/composer/bandleader Dayna Stephens’ eighth album as a leader, is a gift...


jazz
and 5 other items
     
     
After music purveyor Rough Trade's top 100 last year was loaded with the likes of Iggy Pop, Anderson Paak and Margo Price, this year's top 10 is topped by Aldous Harding with her acclaimed second album ‘Party’.

Rough Trade have revealed their top 10 best albums of 2017 – featuring the likes of Bjork, Ryan Adams and many more.


Here Lies Man by Here Lies Man

Here Lies Man by Here Lies Man

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

What if Black Sabbath played Afrobeat? In short, that's the underlying vibe to the self-titled debut...


indie alternative
Drunk by Thundercat

Drunk by Thundercat

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Drunk is Thundercat’s third full-length studio album, released on February 24th via Brainfeeder. ...

Modern Kosmology by Jane Weaver

Modern Kosmology by Jane Weaver

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Modern Kosmology sees Jane Weaver's melodic-protagonist channeling new depths of creative cosmic...


alternative rock
Love In The 4th Dimension by The Big Moon

Love In The 4th Dimension by The Big Moon

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

This debut grabs you quickly and vice-like, shaping scruffy garage guitars around indelible hooks...


alternative rock
Cigarettes After Sex by Cigarettes After Sex

Cigarettes After Sex by Cigarettes After Sex

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Cigarettes After Sex frontman Greg Gonzalez had a clear vision for his band's gorgeously cinematic...


alternative rock R&B soul
and 5 other items
     
     
The Dead Don't Die (2019)
The Dead Don't Die (2019)
2019 | Comedy, Horror
Bill Murray (3 more)
Tilda Swinton
Adam driver
Iggy Pop
Not enough Selena Gomez (0 more)
Finally got around to watching this and I didn't like it as much as I thought I did for a comedy about zombies there wasn't many laughs to be had. Plus not enough Selena Gomez either bill Murray was good and so was Adam driver and too see Tilda Swinton with a samurai sword being badass. Plus Iggy Pop as a zombie wanting his coffee fix. Could have been so much better think I will stick to zombieland
  
40x40

Cee-Lo Green recommended Raw Power by The Stooges in Music (curated)

 
Raw Power by The Stooges
Raw Power by The Stooges
1973 | Punk, Rock
8.4 (9 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"Iggy reminds me a lot of me. And it's all in that name; it's all in the title of that album. It’s raw power, you know? I like the funk that David Bowie was able to get behind Iggy. Believe it or not, I first saw an image of Iggy Pop at church, and they were talking about secret messages and backward masking - and they had [a picture of] Iggy Pop looking crazy. I didn't get into it until later, but I think how I was introduced to it was 'I Wanna Be Your Dog'. And what I like about Iggy is it's just genuine raunch. And the album seems like it’s all done in one take. 'Let's do that one, leave it, just try something else'. With his energy on stage, it seems as if the studio was just destroyed after that album - or at least you'd like to believe that. I just read an interview with him in which he said he wrote a lot of it in Hyde Park sitting under a tree wearing pyjama's too, which gave it a cool twist as well. I just love 'Search And Destroy' and 'I Need Somebody' as well."

Source
  
Singer Diana Krall's 13th album, Turn Up the Quiet, is one of the Observer's early favourites for the year's best jazz records. And there are some surprising turnouts from the Rolling Stones to Iggy Pop. A total mixed jazz bag this year:

From the coolest member of the Rolling Stones to a punk icon trying on his Sinatra fedora to a former bartender who mixes sounds through her trumpet, jazz music is anything if not diverse.


Loneliness Road by Jamie Saft, Steve Swallow, and Bobby Previte with Iggy Pop

Loneliness Road by Jamie Saft, Steve Swallow, and Bobby Previte with Iggy Pop

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Over a career now spanning nearly thirty years, Jamie Saft has established himself as one of the...


RareNoise
Fly Or Die by Jaimie Branch

Fly Or Die by Jaimie Branch

2.0 (1 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

A mainstay of the Chicago jazz scene and an active recent addition to the New York scene, Jaimie...


jazz
Music from Our Soul by Charnett Moffett

Music from Our Soul by Charnett Moffett

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

For his 30th Anniversary as a recording artist, Charnett Moffett delivers a far-reaching set of his...


jazz
Charlie Watts Meets The Danish Radio Big Band by Charlie Watts

Charlie Watts Meets The Danish Radio Big Band by Charlie Watts

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Charlie Watts is considered by just about everyone to be the coolest man in rock, but he would be...


jazz
Gratitude  by Dayna Stephens

Gratitude by Dayna Stephens

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album

Gratitude, saxophonist/composer/bandleader Dayna Stephens’ eighth album as a leader, is a gift...


jazz
and 5 other items
     
     
40x40

Faris Badwan recommended track Mass Production by Iggy Pop in Idiot by Iggy Pop in Music (curated)

 
Idiot by Iggy Pop
Idiot by Iggy Pop
1977 | Rock
9.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Favorite

Mass Production by Iggy Pop

(0 Ratings)

Track

"The Horrors were recently on the tour bus discussing which is our favourite Iggy Pop song. It didn’t even have to be an Iggy song, just a song that he was involved in. My mind went instantly to The Stooges, who are one of the all-time great bands. The Horrors played Rock The House Festival with The Stooges years ago, back in 2007. I was only 21 years old and I got to interview Iggy Pop for NME. I loved The Stooges and talked about them with Iggy Pop for the whole interview. Looking back on it I would have wanted to talk to him about his solo records, because The Idiot is just a brilliant piece of music and interesting in that it’s kind of an early incarnation of industrial music. 'Mass Production’ is so warped, the synth at the end comes in perfectly out of tune – it just sounds brilliant. The first time I heard it I was going through the Bowie in Berlin book shortly after I interviewed Iggy Pop. I’d listened to The Stooges loads, MC5 were one of my favourite bands as a kid and I was looking for something that had this sort of factory made heaviness to it. The song is so dystopian, and dystopian music is definitely something The Horrors do. Most of the songs coming out around that time were emotion led, but ‘Mass Production’ is bleaker. It’s the kind of song you’d listen to at the end of the night when things start to go a bit south. In just one song it sounds like a full body of work and I still listen to it frequently now. Although The Idiot isn’t necessarily representative of Iggy Pop’s work, it does feel just like him to me. If I was to pick something representative of Iggy Pop then I would probably choose the Stooges’ song ‘I’m Sick of You’. In some ways maybe ‘Mass Production’ is more of a Bowie expression, but they clearly built up an amazing rapport and these two creatives made something that perhaps they couldn’t have made on their own and that makes it unique. It feels like a once in a lifetime pairing. I just think Iggy Pop is one of the greatest of all time. He’s an all-time icon of music and expression. And he’s also a great guy, you can get that just by listening to his radio show. People always say things like ‘Don’t meet your heroes’ or whatever, but I don’t need the musicians I respect to be nice people or people I can be friends with. It just so happened that Iggy Pop was a kind guy. And that made it really enjoyable."

Source
  
T2 Trainspotting (2017)
T2 Trainspotting (2017)
2017 | Drama
Intelligent script (5 more)
Robert Carlyle as Begby is back and as brutal as ever
The 'King William' scene
Avoids the obvious pitfalls of a sequel (21 years in the making)
Iggy Pop and Underworld revisited within a brilliant soundtrack
A nod to Transpotting without being too sentimental
Quite long (1 more)
Totally unrealistic in parts
Choose Trainspotting!
  
40x40

Tim Booth recommended Fun House by The Stooges in Music (curated)

 
Fun House by The Stooges
Fun House by The Stooges
1970 | Punk, Rock
8.9 (9 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"A year after the punk gig debacle, when the school banned me from organising outings to gigs, I went to the housemaster about an Iggy Pop gig in Manchester. I explained that Iggy wasn't technically a punk and had been around ten years longer than punk music. I asked him if I could organise a trip to see the show and, very reluctantly, he agreed to me taking five people, as long as I could find a teacher to drive us there. I tried every single teacher in school and everybody turned me down, except the school organist, Mr Parks. God bless him. He had been in a boarding school himself, went to Cambridge and then back to playing classical organ for a choir at another boarding school. He had no experience of life and when he talked to you, he would never look you in the eye. He was a very damaged, sweet human being. And I persuaded the poor fucker to take us to see Iggy Pop at Manchester Apollo. Iggy, fresh out of a psychiatric hospital, who was playing the Lust For Life tour. We knew when we got there that we had to ditch Mr Parks quickly or he would yank us out of the gig. We got the venue and we ditched him. Iggy came on, covered in blood and with a devil's tail between his legs, fucked out of his mind, and throughout the show, his own security would pick him up off the floor and prop him against the mike. He would crawl into the audience and the bouncers were so terrified that they were attacking anyone. I was punched in the face for the first time, aged 16, at a gig by a bouncer who was trying to get away from a blood-covered Iggy Pop. The gig was jaw dropping. It was real, it was primal and Iggy was a force of nature. He looked like the most beautiful man I had ever seen. He looked like Nureyev on bad acid. I am not gay – I wish I was, or at least bisexual – but I fell in love. It was profound and it was beautiful – and Iggy, of course, created punk music. Afterwards, we made our way back to the car, thinking ""we are grounded for fucking life"" and that we might be expelled. We found Mr Parks and for the first time he looked me in the eye and said, ""That was incredible – I have never seen anything like it. Musically, it was very simple, but it was the most exciting thing I have ever seen in my life."" The man wouldn't stop talking all the way back in the car about this revelation. So, Iggy saved my life and probably saved Mr Park's life too. I have met Iggy. I have met James Osterberg, too – which is very different to meeting Iggy Pop – a few times. He is the most articulate, intelligent man. He was reading Dostoyevsky's The Idiot when I first met him. He is witty, gawky and very worthy of my love. I could have chosen a number of his albums, including The Idiot and Lust For Life. I wouldn't choose the more obvious one, Raw Power, because I don't like the production. Fun House is raw, fucked-up and has some astonishing moments and it has primal Iggy all over it. For years, Iggy garnered little respect. As a devotee, seeing him get respect in recent years has been great. I am very happy that the world has recognised him for the artist that he is."

Source
  
40x40

Frank Carter recommended Raw Power by The Stooges in Music (curated)

 
Raw Power by The Stooges
Raw Power by The Stooges
1973 | Punk, Rock
8.4 (9 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"He's the best frontman of all time. Iggy Pop and Nick Cave are up there for me in different ways, but Nick Cave didn't invent the stage dive. I could have picked any Stooges, but Raw Power has everything. I picked this mainly because of my love for Iggy Pop. When Post Pop Depression came out last year I fell in love with it, a collaboration between two of my favourite artists [Pop and Josh Homme], and to see this man play the Royal Albert Hall and stage diving is pretty fucking next level. It was a monumental moment. I was quite young when I first heard The Stooges. I had a couple of weird mixtapes my uncle had made. He was into stuff like The Specials but there were a few random tracks on there and the Stooges were one of them. Now, any time I have to DJ I mainly just play Iggy. He's got so many classic songs that you don't have to think about it, you can just turn to him first, a decent 40 minutes of Iggy Pop, then fill it out with whatever else you need to put in. Iggy's hits are a bit stretched out over his entire career, but Raw Power's got my favourite lyrics he's ever written. It's got the song 'Raw Power' which is just next fucking level and it's got 'Search and Destroy'. ""I'm a street walking cheetah with a heart full of napalm"". If you want to sum up how a man feels walking down a Hollywood street feeling like a badass, it doesn't get any better than that. The name of the album says everything you need to, it's where I took inspiration from when I was trying to come up with Modern Ruin."

Source