Lust for Life (Iggy Pop album)

Lust for Life is the second solo album by American musician Iggy Pop, released on August 29, 1977 by RCA Records. It was his second collaboration with David Bowie after The Idiot, released earlier in the year. The album achieved critical acclaim and became Pop's most commercially successful album to date; it also remains his only gold-certified release in the United Kingdom.

Lust for Life
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 29, 1977 (1977-08-29)
RecordedApril–June 1977
StudioHansa, West Berlin
Genre
Length41:53
LabelRCA
Producer
Iggy Pop chronology
The Idiot
(1977)
Lust for Life
(1977)
Kill City
(1977)
Singles from Lust for Life
  1. "Success" / "The Passenger"
    Released: 30 September 1977
  2. "Lust for Life" / "Success"
    Released: November 1977
  3. "Some Weird Sin" / "Tonight"
    Released: 1977

Production

The Lust for Life sessions took place soon after the completion of a concert tour in support of The Idiot, the tour ending on April 16, 1977.[5][6] Pop has stated, "David and I had determined that we would record that album very quickly, which we wrote, recorded, and mixed in eight days, and because we had done it so quickly, we had a lot of money left over from the advance, which we split."[7] The singer slept little during its making, commenting "See, Bowie's a hell of a fast guy ... I realized I had to be quicker than him, otherwise whose album was it gonna be?"[5] Pop prepared only fragments of lyrics before singing, and essentially improvised at the microphone. This spontaneous lyrical method inspired Bowie to improvise his own words on his next project, "Heroes".[6]

Bowie, Pop and engineer Colin Thurston produced Lust for Life under the pseudonym "Bewlay Bros.", named after the final track on Bowie's 1971 album Hunky Dory.[5] The recording was made at Hansa Studio by the Wall in Berlin and featured Ricky Gardiner and Carlos Alomar on guitars with Hunt and Tony Sales on drums and bass, respectively. With Bowie on keyboards and backing vocals, the team included three-quarters of the future Tin Machine line-up;[5] the Sales brothers' "gale-force" contribution to this album led Bowie to invite them to join his new band twelve years later ("Check out Lust for Life," he told guitarist Reeves Gabrels, "I've found the rhythm section!").[8] The sleeve photo was taken by Andy Kent, who also shot the cover for The Idiot.[5]

Music and themes

Lust for Life is generally considered to be more of an Iggy Pop record than the Bowie-dominated The Idiot, being less experimental and having more of a rock and roll flavor.[9][10][1] However, some of its themes were similarly dark, as in "The Passenger", cited by NME editors Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray as one of Pop's "most haunting" tracks,[9] and "Tonight" and "Turn Blue", both of which dealt with heroin abuse.[11] In contrast were more upbeat songs such as "Success" and "Lust for Life", the latter of which described by Rolling Stone as Pop's "survivor message to the masses".[1][12][13]

According to Pop, Bowie's celebrated riff on "Lust for Life" was inspired by the Morse code opening to the American Forces Network news in Berlin.[14] At various points in the song, the melody is doubled by the entire band; in Carlos Alomar's words, "You can't play a counter-rhythm to that, you just had to follow".[6][15] Joy Division and New Order drummer Stephen Morris declared, "On Lust for Life the drums sound not huge but massive! The loudest cymbals known to man, that riff! I wanted to sound like that, still do."[10]

"The Passenger" was inspired by a Jim Morrison poem that saw "modern life as a journey by car", as well as rides on the Berlin S-Bahn, according to Pop's former girlfriend Esther Friedmann.[16][17] The lyrics have also been interpreted as "Iggy's knowing commentary on Bowie's cultural vampirism".[10] The music, a "laid-back ... springy groove", was composed by guitarist Ricky Gardiner.[18] It was released as the B-side of the album's first single "Success". Characterized by AllMusic as "a glorious throwaway" and by Rolling Stone as "an infectious throwaway", "Success" was a light-hearted track of the call and response variety.[13][19]

At just under seven minutes, "Turn Blue", the longest song on the album, was a sprawling confessional that dated back to an abortive recording session by Bowie and Pop in May 1975, when the latter was in the depths of his drug addiction. Originally titled "Moving On", it was composed by Bowie, Pop, Walter Lacey, and Warren Peace.[12][20] It was the only set of lyrics that did not appear on the original vinyl record sleeve. The album's remaining tracks included "Sixteen", the only piece written entirely by Iggy Pop, "Some Weird Sin", a hard rock number featuring a "lost-boy lyric",[21] the "neo-punk" "Neighborhood Threat",[1] and "Fall in Love with Me", which grew from an impromptu jam by the band to which Pop composed lyrics apparently evoking his then-girlfriend Esther Friedmann.[6]

Release

Original edition

"Success", backed with "The Passenger", was released on 30 September 1977 as a single from the album.[9]

2020 deluxe edition

On April 10, 2020, Pop released an alternate mix of "China Girl" from The Idiot in promotion of the forthcoming release of The Bowie Years, a seven-disc deluxe box set featuring expanded remastered versions of The Idiot and Lust for Life. The box set, released on May 29, includes remastered versions of both albums along with outtakes, alternate mixes and a 40-page book. The two original albums were also re-released individually, each paired with an additional album of live material to create separate stand-alone two-disc deluxe editions.[22]

Reception

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Blender[23]
Chicago Tribune[24]
Christgau's Record GuideA−[25]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[26]
Pitchfork9.0/10[27]
Q[28]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[29]
Sounds[30]
Spin Alternative Record Guide6/10[31]

In a contemporary review, Rolling Stone critic Billy Altman considered that "purely on its own terms, Lust for Life is a successful album", but complained that Pop's "new stance is so utterly unchallenging and cautious."[13] By contrast, Robert Christgau of The Village Voice refuted the critical opinion that Pop's "creative power has dissipated", finding The Idiot and Lust for Life to be more consistent than Pop's albums with the Stooges.[32] He later noted that of the two, he preferred Lust for Life "because it's faster and more assertive—which means, among other things, that the nihilistic satire is counteracted by the forward motion of the music itself."[25]

Charts

Lust for Life reached number 28 on the UK Albums Chart and remained Pop's highest-charting release in the UK[33] until 2016's Post Pop Depression. Initially the album sold well in the United States but the death of Elvis Presley caused RCA to quickly reissue Presley's catalogue and any promotional focus for Pop's album was lost.[6] It eventually performed well in the US, although it only reached number 120 on the Billboard charts at the time of its release.

Covers and live versions

"Lust for Life" and "Sixteen" appeared the following year on the live set TV Eye. Bowie covered "Tonight" (minus the opening lines referencing drugs) with Tina Turner, along with "Neighborhood Threat", on his 1984 release Tonight. Siouxsie and the Banshees recorded a cover of "The Passenger" with brass instruments on their 1987 album Through the Looking Glass. Pop praised it, commmenting: "She threw a little note in when she sings it that I wish I had thought of, it's kind of improved it [...] The horn thing is good."[34] "The Passenger" has also been performed by Nick Cave, R.E.M., Bauhaus, The Lunachicks, Michael Hutchence (on the Batman Forever soundtrack), amongst others (Brazilian band Capital Inicial has recorded a version in Portuguese which is called "O Passageiro"). Duran Duran covered "Success" on the favorites collection Thank You. "Lust for Life" has been played by artists including Yo La Tengo, The Damned, The Smithereens, Tom Jones and The Pretenders, and David Bowie live, and is used as bumper music on The Jim Rome Show; it is also used as the theme music for the ongoing advertising campaign for Royal Caribbean International. Its distinctive riff is commonly cited as inspiring Australian band Jet for their song "Are You Gonna Be My Girl",[35][36] while the drum riff was sampled by Welsh band Manic Street Preachers for the outro of their song "You Love Us" and by Scottish band Travis for the intro to their single "Selfish Jean". The main riff was interpolated into the break section of "What Is Happening" by Alphabeat.

The song Neighborhood Threat was used in the 2006 game Driver: Parallel Lines.

Track listing

All lyrics are written by Iggy Pop except "Turn Blue" by Pop and Walter Lacey; music composers are listed below.

Side one
No.TitleMusic composer(s)Length
1."Lust for Life"David Bowie5:13
2."Sixteen"Pop2:26
3."Some Weird Sin"Bowie3:42
4."The Passenger"Ricky Gardiner4:44
5."Tonight"Bowie3:39
Side two
No.TitleMusic composer(s)Length
6."Success"Bowie, Gardiner4:25
7."Turn Blue"Bowie, Warren Peace6:56
8."Neighborhood Threat"Bowie, Gardiner3:25
9."Fall in Love with Me"Bowie, Hunt Sales, Tony Sales6:30

Personnel

References

  1. Deming, Mark. "Lust for Life – Iggy Pop". AllMusic. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  2. Wilkinson, Matt (March 11, 2016). "Iggy Pop – 'Post Pop Depression' – The NME Verdict". NME. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  3. Brod, Doug; Kenny, Glenn; Peisner, David; Raftery, Brian; Robbins, Ira (October 2007). "The 30 Essential Punk Albums of 1977". Spin. Vol. 23 no. 10. pp. 67–70. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  4. "Gig Highlight: Iggy Pop". Totally Stockholm. May 4, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  5. Pegg 2000, pp. 383–384.
  6. Trynka 2007, pp. 263–272.
  7. Ambrose 2004, p. 173.
  8. Buckley 1999, p. 451.
  9. Carr & Murray 1981, p. 118.
  10. Ambrose 2004, pp. 185–186.
  11. Ambrose, Joe (2007). Gimme Danger: The Story of Iggy Pop. ...two other songs 'Drink to Me' and 'Turn Blue' which, with a new lyric, featured on Iggy's 1977 solo tour and in much altered form on Lust for Life
  12. Thompson, Dave. "Turn Blue – Iggy Pop". AllMusic. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  13. Altman, Billy (January 12, 1978). "Iggy Pop: Lust for Life". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on April 20, 2008. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  14. Pegg 2000, p. 137.
  15. Huey, Steve. "Lust for Life – Iggy Pop". AllMusic. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  16. Pegg 2000, p. 160.
  17. "S-Bahn brachte Iggy Pop auf "The Passenger"". Die Welt (in German). February 21, 2013. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  18. Maginnis, Tom. "The Passenger – Iggy Pop". AllMusic. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  19. Thompson, Dave. "Success – Iggy Pop". AllMusic. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  20. Pegg 2000, p. 223.
  21. Thompson, Dave. "Some Weird Sin – Iggy Pop". AllMusic. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  22. Deriso, Nick (April 10, 2020). "Iggy Pop Box Set to Focus on First Two David Bowie-Produced LPs". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  23. Smith, RJ (September 2004). "Iggy Pop: Lust for Life". Blender. No. 29. Archived from the original on June 30, 2006. Retrieved August 11, 2016.
  24. Kot, Greg (July 22, 1990). "Pop On Pop: Iggy Rates His Own Music (And So Do We)". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved November 4, 2020.
  25. Christgau 1981.
  26. Larkin 2011.
  27. Geffen, Sasha (June 6, 2020). "Iggy Pop: The Bowie Years". Pitchfork. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  28. Goddard, Simon (Summer 2020). "The Berlin Stories". Q. No. 413. p. 108.
  29. Coleman & Kemp 2004, p. 645.
  30. Makowski, Pete (August 20, 1977). "Iggy Pop: Lust For Life (RCA AFLI 2488)". Sounds. Retrieved October 15, 2020 via Rock's Backpages.
  31. Rubin 1995, p. 378.
  32. Christgau, Robert (October 3, 1977). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". The Village Voice. Retrieved August 11, 2016.
  33. Trynka 2007, pp. 417–426.
  34. 120 Minutes. July 15, 1990. MTV.
  35. Eliscu, Jenny (April 8, 2004). "Jet's High Times". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on December 2, 2006. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  36. Fielding, Mark. "Jet – Are You Gonna Be My Girl". MusicOMH. Archived from the original on August 6, 2007. Retrieved October 15, 2020.

Sources

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