Led by the seemingly indestructible Iggy Pop, The Stooges pitched up with their self-titled, John Cale-produced debut album on 5 August 1969. Hard-driving, heavy-hitting and often hypnotically repetitive, the record’s loud, nihilistic brand of primeval rock was at odds with the era’s hippie ideals, yet while The Stooges was a cult-level curio on release, its lasting influence has long since outstripped its commercial yield. Indeed, with the likes of Sex Pistols, The Damned, Black Flag and Nirvana all since citing The Stooges (and their Michigan neighbours MC5) as the primary architects of punk rock, The Stooges’ debut is likely to remain an essential listen for future generations of garage-rock acts. This track-by-track guide reveals exactly why.
Listen to The Stooges’ debut album here.
The Stooges’ Debut Album: A Track-By-Track Guide To Every Song
1969
The Stooges’ debut album immediately sets out its stall with its magnificent opening track, 1969. After Ron Asheton initially throws a curveball with a wah-wah guitar intro, Iggy Pop yells “Awl-right!”, and the band kick into the song proper with Ron’s malicious, two-chord riff and Dave Alexander’s shadowy bassline tussling with Scott Asheton’s heart-pounding Bo Diddley beat for four minutes flat. Pop’s drawled vocal and ennui-stricken lyric (“It’s 1969, OK/All across the USA/It’s another year for me and you/Another year with nothin’ to do”) perfectly captures the alienation and despair of his own blank generation, and also vividly presages punk’s refusenik outlook.