Review: Iggy and Stooges still have raw power

This CD cover image released by Fat Possum Records shows "Ready to Die," by Iggy Pop and the Stooges. (AP Photo/Fat Possum Records)

Iggy and the Stooges, "Ready to Die" (Fat Possum Records)

Really, Iggy? Ready to die? Not possible. I always thought it would be you and cockroaches at the end of time, man.

"Ready to Die" is the first album from Iggy Pop and members of his old band, the Stooges, since 2007 and the 2009 death of band mate Ron Asheton. And it's the first to feature former guitarist James Williamson since the 1970s.

It's classic "Raw Power"-era Stooges from the get-go on "Burn," a heavy-duty groove that kicks off the collection. And there's no letup for the next several tunes, including "Gun," which skewers a violent culture that just might lead its lone-wolf protagonist astray.

Yet the highlight of the collection might be when the assault lets up: on the un-Stooges like "Unfriendly World." Over spare, acoustic country blues, the 66-year-old Iggy is less your wild uncle and more wise elder, singing in a tender, wistful growl: "Hang onto your girl, cause this is an unfriendly world."

Even after more than four decades, Iggy doesn't go down easy — in all senses of the phrase. But the man and his band have some things worth saying before the cosmic end of the tour.

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