| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 5746 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $2.99 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 1992-06-29 |
| Label: | RCA/ Victor |
| UPC: | 077778615323 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | RCA/ Victor |
| ASIN: | B000000WH8 |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on Lust for Life by RCA/ Victor
- Lust for Life
- Sixteen - Iggy Pop, Pop, Iggy
- Some Weird Sin
- The Passenger - Iggy Pop, Gardiner, Ricky
- Tonight
- Success
- Turn Blue
- Neighborhood Threat
- Fall in Love With Me
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Amazon.com
The relentless, driving drums and thunderous bass of the opening title track are the magic components that make it the best song Iggy Pop ever recorded without the Stooges. They're also why this is Iggy's best solo album--which also includes the ominously upbeat "The Passenger," with its hilariously ennui-filled, sing-along chorus ("La la la la la la la la la..."). As with Pop's first solo album, The Idiot, David Bowie has his hands all over the proceedings (if not somewhere else as well) as the producer, songwriter, and general overseer of Iggy the popstar. The record reached 28 on the U.K. charts. Of course, as the jagged, dark guitars on "Sixteen" and "Neighborhood Threat" make clear, Iggy's version of pop music is anything but conventional, and anything but bland. "Some Weird Sin" ("That's what I want...") could have been Iggy's theme song in 1977, heavy with innuendo and a dangerous joie de vivre. --Percy Keegan
Customer Reviews
iggy isn't quite the neighborhood threat of old here, but completely rocking nonetheless - Reviewed on 2007-04-01
2 customers found this review helpful.
"Lust for Life," which was released the same year as "The Idiot" should have been even more successful than that record, which was Iggy's first taste of commercial success. This album brings back the hard-rocking, swaggering tendencies that Iggy parlayed with the Stooges, although while the music isn't quite as chaotic, it's still a damned good record. The Jim Morrison influence also seeps through a lot on "Lust for Life." Tracks like "The Passenger," which Iggy wrote based on a Jim Morrison poem articulates the vision of searching that many of Iggy's best tunes are built on. The rest of the tracks rock out and make you think, as well. "Success" is about as ad-libbed sounding as an Iggy Pop song could be, but it's still a great piece of work, as is the title track, "Sweet 16" and the others. It's good that "Lust for Life" is finally getting the audience that it deserved so many years ago. Check this record out, you won't be disappointed.
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Book Subjects
- Album Rock
- Detroit Rock
- Hard Rock
- Pop
- Pop/Rock Music
- Proto-Punk
- Rock
- Rock/Pop