Iggy Pop - The Idiot - Album Review

Floyd

Administrator
Staff member
Although The Idiot is most effectively categorised as post-punk, its influences and mix of genres are disparate to say the least. Taking elements of funk, krautrock, industrial, rock and electronica, the album boats a highly distinctive and deceptively varied sound. Despite its undercurrent of eclecticism, The Idiot is a very metallic and clinical record – its subtle traces of seemingly incompatible genres are capably moulded into a menacing post-punk cadence by Bowie’s Alomar/Davis/Murray rhythm section, who served him more than splendidly on his classic Station To Station LP, and several of its successors.

The deconstructed funk of the oedipal dream cum nightmare, ‘Sister Midnight’, sets the brooding tone of the album perfectly. Pop’s voice is a deep, gothic crawl, sounding as though he could lapse into roaring anger at any moment (and does so several times on the album, in actuality), and sits alongside angular guitars, stringent bass lines, punchy percussion and synthetic tinges, which make up the musical end of the cut. ‘Nightclubbing’s cheap drum machine and sleazy synth blurps serve as a suitable backdrop to the filthy cityscape imagery conjured by the lyrics and tone of the number, whilst ‘Mass Production’ boats a grimy proto-industrial tune, adding to the album’s variedness.

Further highlights include the suffocated kick of the gothic ‘Funtime’, the gloomy Bowie sax and angst-ridden lyrics of ‘Tiny Girls’, and the infectious, crawling riff of ‘Dum Dum Boys’ – a sublime 7 minute nod to Pop’s Stooge past. Perhaps the most stunning track on offer is ‘China Girl’. What would be turned into a glimmering pop hit by its Bowie co-writer in 1983, here, serves as a complete parallel to the aforementioned version, sounding menacingly dark and brooding, with its fractured melody soon evolving into a paranoid swirl of distorted guitars, gorgeous synths and gruesome vocals and lyrics, all blending together to create an undisputed epic and this writer’s favourite version of the song.

The Idiot is every bit as stunning as you’d expect from two of rock’s most iconic and important stars, and then some. What’s more, The Idiot proved massively influential to the post-punk genre that was soon to emerge, and impressively, this was achieved whilst punk was simultaneously polishing its crown atop the throne of contemporary cool. You can hear traces of Bowie and Pop’s bleak, robotic rock in many succeeding bands; Joy Division deserving a particular mention. Singer/songwriter Ian Curtis sadly chose The Idiot to be his last listening experience on the night of his suicide - perhaps the most startling symbol of the album’s influence on him; arguably, post-punk’s most tragic and ultimate icon. A consistently stunning and ground-breaking listen which breathed life into Iggy Pop’s declining career, The Idiot is unequivocally one of the most defining and essential albums of its era.Tracklist for

The Idiot:

1. Sister Midnight

2. Nightclubbing

3. Funtime

4. Baby

5. China Girl

6. Dum Dum Boys

7. Tiny Girls

8. Mass Production

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