wed 27/11/2024

Rock and Pop: Raw Power at 40 | reviews, news & interviews

Rock and Pop: Raw Power at 40

Rock and Pop: Raw Power at 40

Limited edition prints by the court photographer of glam Mick Rock mark the anniversary of Iggy Pop's iconic album

Iggy Pop through the glass, darkly, by Mick Rock, in a print featuring the scrawled lyrics of 'Raw Power'. Signed by Pop and Rock© Mick Rock

Mick Rock was the court photographer of glam. Among the (un)usual suspects found in his lens were Lou Reed, David Bowie and Freddie Mercury. But no one played up for his camera quite like Iggy Pop.The proof is in the six images released today as limited-edition art prints to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Raw Power. Each of the editions is overlaid with handwritten lyrics from "Raw Power" and "Death Trip", and are individually hand signed by both Rock and Pop.

Jasper Rees on Mick Rock

The photographs capture the feral intensity of Iggy as shaman showman. But from this distance they also conjure up something else: the innocent age of rock music before musicians were shielded behind a cordon sanitaire guarded by PR muscle. Mick Rock fell into photographing pop stars in the time-honoured fashion: by participating in their misdemeanours. “In fact, Bowie was the beginning of the controlling thing,” he recalls. “That was the game his manager played. He’d say, ‘Only Rock can take his picture.’ It was a way of stirring up interest. In truth no one was busting down the door to get access to him, but it started to change.”

It was Rock who took the first pictures of Bowie licking Ronson’s guitar, onstage at Oxford Town Hall. The image of Freddie Mercury that will survive all the others – the aquiline head, top-list and shot from below – was one of Rock’s. He wasn't in it for the money. He got a hundred quid for the cover shot of another seminal glam cover, Reed’s Transformer.  He calls himself an “image-maker”, but the power of these shots of Iggy is that he crept close enough to the look behind the images he constructed. "Here was a 'monster' in the Shakespearean sense," he says. "Elemental, a force of nature. He was like something caged and very angry about it. Something dreamed up by Karl Jung, Dionysius in silver, breaking out."

It was through Bowie that Rock met the two others of the “three Disgraces” – Reed and Pop. Firm friendships were formed. When Rock had a quadruple bypass – the result of three decades of hedonism which began at Cambridge where he studied modern languages, LSD and girls and fell in with Syd Barrett – “David helped me out after the operation. He gave me money and signed some prints. And the first flowers I got in hospital we’re from Lou Reed. That’s Lou’s game. I know about a lot of acts of kindness he’s done, but privately I’ve got pictures of him buying a puppy, and he’s holding it in such a gentle way. I’ve often threatened to publish those.”

There are many far more compromising pictures, involving “needles, and bevies of transsexuals”. If Rock ever needed to dig himself out of a hole, they would make him a fortune. “One star I can think of said, ‘Mick, if you ever let out pictures that…’ I said, ‘You know I never would.’ At one stage I was so broke, and this guy offered me £20,000 for the diary of a rock’n’roll photographder. And, you know what? I thought about it, but I decided I couldn’t live with those people hating me.”

 

Adam Sweeting on Raw Power

Poorly received on release, Raw Power gradually grew into a legendary artefact

Frequently hailed as an album that fired the starting gun on Punk, Raw Power succeeded despite itself. Iggy Pop was in the throes of heroin addiction and the Stooges were in flux, but Iggy (now signed to Tony DeFries's MainMan management alongside Bowie) convened a patched-up band in London in September 1972 and got rockin'. Sadly, Iggy's incompetence at production and mixing left most of the instruments squeezed onto one track (out of 24), his vocals on another and lead guitar on a third. DeFries declared that it would be remixed by David Bowie, who accomplished the task in a single day at the low-budget Western Sound Recorders in LA. The mix wasn't great - Bowie didn't have a lot to work with - but at least it was an improvement. Poorly received on release, Raw Power gradually grew into a legendary artefact, hailed by everyone from Kurt Cobain to Morrissey and its songs covered by Guns N'Roses, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and many more. And it was the start of a close friendship between Pop and Bowie, which helped drag Iggy out of substance-abuse purgatory.

  • The six limited-edition images selected by Mick Rock are available in signed limited editions as archival quality giclee prints. They are overlaid with hand screen-printed extracts from lyric sheets for the tracks "Raw Power" and "Death Trip". The lyric sheets have been especially prepared by Iggy Pop exclusively for Foruli.
They conjure up the innocent age before musicians were shielded behind a cordon sanitaire guarded by PR muscle

Share this article

Add comment

The future of Arts Journalism

 

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters