The first seeds of what became The Idiot were sown when David Bowie visited the hospital room occupied by Iggy Pop and proposed a collaboration. 
Early 1975 found Iggy Pop disillusioned with the whole Los Angeles Los Angeles UCLA  Hospital Bowie 
During the spring of 1975 James Williamson and Scott Thurston, together with Brian Glascock on drums and Steve Tranio on bass recorded most of the backing tracks that would eventually become Kill City. On carefully sanctioned weekend leave from UCLA, Iggy recorded his vocals in short frantic bursts. Shortly after completing work on the new songs Iggy was fully released from hospital and he immediately hawked the tapes around the various LA record companies. James Williamson tried to dissuade Iggy, as he wasn’t convinced that the record was properly finished, but James needn’t have worried as Iggy’s reputation as a waster and a junkie had preceded him and no-one was willing to take a chance on him. Iggy later said, ‘I had a bad reputation in LA, which is a bad place to have a bad reputation.’
As a postscript to the Williamson / Pop sessions it’s worth noting that the tapes would remain locked away for two years and it was only in late 1977 that Williamson, now working at Paramount recording studios as an engineer, decided to make some cash from his time with Iggy. James dug out the 1975 tapes and with some judicious overdubs and careful remixing presented them to Bomp! records as Kill  City Kill  City Kill  City 
Meanwhile back in 1975 – Iggy remained undeterred by the lack of takers for his new recordings and contacted Bowie Bowie New Mexico 
These sessions at the small Oz studio in LA were significant as they represented the first time that Bowie Bowie Bowie 
After a couple of days the unpredictable Iggy went missing. David mooched about the studio muttering ‘I hope he’s not dead, he’s got a good act.’ But with Iggy still AWOL Bowie headed off to New Mexico Bowie 
Early 1976 found Bowie Los Angeles 
During rehearsals Bowie Bowie Bowie 
As soon as the tour ended in Paris  on 18th May David and Iggy took the chance to book some studio time at the Château d’Herouville, about an hour from Paris 
With no clear idea as to where they were heading David and Iggy set to work. Whenever Iggy was stuck for a direction or a lyric David would usually come up with some left field suggestion. “Funtime” started life as a very straightforward song entitled “Fun Fun Fun” until Bowie 
Another innovation was Iggy’s insistence on using the primitive drum machines he found at the Château. Iggy had begun his music career as a drummer and was fascinated by the unwavering machine driven rhythms. Bowie 
Much of the music was played by David and Iggy themselves, and in the absence of any musician credits it is often assumed that Bowie Bowie Bowie 
A usual day at the Château would consist of Bowie Bowie Bowie Bowie 
The Château sessions stretched into July, but had to be curtailed as other artists had booked the studios during August. Although Bowie himself was due back at the Château in September to record what would become Low, he and Iggy were determined not to lose the impetus of their new music. At very short notice they were able to secure a fortnight at Munich 
When Bowie Bowie ’s band, as well as record the new Bowie Bowie ’s litigation with former manager Michael Lippman, and bad stomachs caused by food poisoning sent Bowie Germany Bowie Berlin Germany 
Abandoning all thoughts of returning to Angie and his nominal home in Switzerland David rented a seven-room apartment at 155 Hauptstrasse, Schoeneberg. Iggy took a smaller flat in the same block. The apartments, above a café and a shop selling car spares, were within walking distance of the Hansa Studios and were situated in a relatively poor area, popular with Turkish immigrants. It was a far cry from the sumptuous houses David had rented in Los Angeles East Germany , Berlin 
Both men adored the faded glamour and seedy sense of fun associated with the tail end of the cabaret scene. There was a big drag queen crowd that intrigued David and Iggy, with celebrated nightclub host(ess) Romy Haag becoming a close friend. Although David described his life in Berlin West Berlin  his home until at least late 1979, sharing his life for much of the time with Esther Friedmann. The daughter of a diplomat, Esther was an excellent photographer but had never heard of Iggy before she met him in a bar in late 1976. Their relationship lasted for nearly three years, allowing stability and calm into Iggy’s life for the first time in ages. 
Iggy also loved the surprising amount of space that Berlin Berlin  luft…the air sweeps in off the Ukraine Berlin Bowie 
Although the usual line is that David and Iggy fled to Berlin to escape the drugs and craziness of the States it’s quite clear that neither man was as clean as most stories state. In recent years both have hinted that their chemical intake in Berlin 
 “Sister Midnight” had been completed at the Château – harder, denser and more remorseless than the funky song originated by Carlos Alomar. A muddy wash of distorted guitars struggle to rise above the relentless thud of bass and drums. The whole song contains an unsettling mood of foreboding. Iggy’s lyrics incorporate elements of a disquieting Oedipal dream, which concluded with his father hunting him down ‘with his six gun’. ‘What can I do about my dreams?’ calls Iggy. Write them into compelling songs it seems. Bowie later used Carlos Alomar’s tune as the basis for a new song - “Red Money” - on his 1979 album Lodger, although it was “Sister Midnight” itself that was resurrected by David as one of the undoubted highlights of his 2003/2004 Reality tour. 
During the recording of The Idiot Iggy was quoted as saying that his new music was a sort of cross between James Brown and Kraftwerk. He must have had “Nightclubbing” firmly in mind - with its powerful blanked out drum machine beats and wobbly bass it’s a fearsome slice of Germanic music, yet still retains an undeniably funky edge. Iggy acknowledged the song’s influences by singing the first verse in German on his autumn 1977 tour. “Nightclubbing” accurately outlines the sort of lifestyle that Iggy and David were living and its machine driven new wave sound ensured that it became a firm favourite with the post-punk bands. Human League incorporated “Nightclubbing” into a cracked medley with Gary Glitter’s “Rock and Roll Part Two.” Grace Jones recorded a seriously moody version as the title track for her 1980 album. And “Nightclubbing” was surely a big influence on Gary Numan. 
Just as “Nightclubbing” described Iggy’s life in 1976, so too does “Funtime.” Interestingly the lyrics to both songs are in the plural (‘we like your lips’, ‘we’re nightclubbing’ etc), which emphasizes the importance of David in the action. In keeping with the title “Funtime” has a much more carefree feeling than that evoked on “Nightclubbing” and it’s cheery refrain ‘all aboard for funtime’ has the effect on including the listener too. “Funtime” has been covered by numerous artists, including Peter Murphy, who also recorded a delightfully lazy ‘cabaret’ version. 
In contrast to the joyous abandon of “Funtime”, “Baby” is a rather depressing experience. Angular shards of guitar cut through ominous descending synth chords as Iggy produces a numb Sinatra croon.
But side one crashes out on a genuine high with “China Girl.” The song kicks off at full pelt with the album’s most euphoric melody full of robust guitars, gloriously swirling synthetic strings and all topped with a vaguely oriental sounding toy piano that Bowie Bowie Bowie Paris 
Side two of The Idiot opens with a low piano picking out a mournful refrain while Iggy mutters about what happened to the Stooges. It makes for somewhat depressing listening, as failure and death seemed to be their fates – 
Dave Alexander (original Stooges bass player, died in 1975 from alcohol related illness);
Zeke Zettner (one of Zander’s replacements, died of an overdose in 1975 after volunteering for Vietnam 
Rock Action (Scott Asheton - Stooges drummer, back living with his mother, but still playing drums);
‘Strait’ James Williamson (Stooges guitarist 1970 – 1974, “he’s going straight” mutters Iggy punningly, working as a studio engineer in Los Angeles). 
Oddly, there’s no mention of Stooges guitarist / bassist Ron Asheton who was beginning a solid if unspectacular career as a guitarist in New Order (not the later UK 
Roll call over and the song, “Dum Dum Boys” blasts off in a mass of grinding guitars and powerfully thudding drums. Bowie  attempted to play the remorselessly twisting guitar lines but his inexperience led to Phil Palmer overdubbing much of the guitar, based on Bowie 
The mood then suddenly switches. “Tiny Girls” is a tender and beautiful interlude between the two longest tracks on the album and this little gem is all too frequently overlooked. Opening with a peacefully reflective Bowie Bowie 
With the recording of “Mass Production” at Hansa in October, the Iggy Pop songs were finally completed. Bowie’s regular bassist George Murray, and drummer Dennis Davis played on this nightmarish song, inspired by the sometimes bleak and frightening industrial landscapes that Iggy remembered from home. Parts of Berlin ’s industrial areas reminded him of the massive production line factories of Michigan 
With the recording over, Tony Visconti assisted David with the final mix of the Iggy songs. Partly due to the haphazard recording process and partly due to the new technology used and not properly understood, Visconti’s work was, in his words, something of ‘a salvage job.’
The title of the album came from Bowie 
The grey cover photo of Iggy in the rain was taken by Andrew Kent, not Bowie Brücke  Museum  in West Berlin  - Roquairol by Erich Heckel. (Bowie would later copy another Brücke painting - Walter Gramatte’s self portrait - for the cover of his 1977 album “Heroes”.) The grey back cover contained all the lyrics but very little else – no list of musicians, for example. 
David then used his influence at RCA to secure a three-album deal for Iggy. Bowie must have been persuasive as it is somewhat surprising that RCA were willing to bankroll three albums by someone who had spent some months in the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute only a year earlier and who’s previous albums had shown little discernable commercial appeal. RCA did however hold the album back until March 1977 when Iggy had agreed to tour to promote the record. In the meantime Bowie Bowie Bowie Bowie 
Not surprisingly, due to the Bowie Bowie Bowie Bowie 
The strong Bowie  influence led to some accusations throughout the year that Iggy was now somehow Bowie US  housewives’ favourite The Dinah  Shore 
The Idiot was not a big success in 1977, but it has sold steadily over the years, and remains one of Iggy’s best selling records. The album received a considerable promotional boost when David agreed to tour with Iggy in March 1977. Backed by drummer Hunt Sales and his younger brother Tony on bass, plus Ricky Gardiner on guitar and David Bowie on keyboards, Iggy kicked off his first tour in three years on 1st March 1977 at the Friars Club in Aylesbury. Although rumours of Bowie 
Iggy was adopted by the emerging punk movement, and frequently hailed as the Godfather Of Punk, something which he neither encouraged or appreciated. Iggy would take every opportunity to deride the term ‘punk’ telling CBC TV in Canada 
The Idiot tour finished in San Diego 16th April 1977, but Iggy was so hyped up from the successful gigs that, with only a couple of weeks break to write some new songs, he headed straight back to Hansa. There he would record one of his most successful albums ever – Lust For Life. But that’s another story. 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment