Redirected from Stooges
The band soon gained a reputation for wild, primitive live performances. Iggy especially won fame for acting crazy onstage, smearing his naked chest with steak and peanut butter[?], and cutting himself with shards of glass. In 1968, the Stooges were signed by Elektra[?], who had sent a scout to see MC5 and wound up signing both acts.
1969 saw the release of a self-titled debut album, but it did not sell very well. By the time Fun House[?] (1970) was released, the Stooges had begun to disintegrate, primarily due to heavy drug use by the entire band. With the band in limbo, Iggy met David Bowie in 1972 and the pair became good friends. Bowie, then at the height of his Ziggy Stardust-era fame, helped the reconstituted Stooges score a record deal with Columbia Records and then produced their third album, the massively influential Raw Power (1973). This album would go on to become one of the cornerstone of early punk rock, though the album flopped originally. The Stooges disbanded, and Iggy Pop began a solo career in 1976 and (most influentially with 1977's The Idiot[?] and Lust for Life). The Asheton brothers formed New Order, which fell apart. Ron Asheton joined Destroy All Monsters, while James Williamson[?] worked with Iggy Pop during his solo career.
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