![]() Pretty mature, pretty poetic, by God for the world’s not so forgotten boy. Of course the ‘guy’ he has to ‘beat?’ It’s himself. The guitarist also shines on “Beat That Guy.” Elegiac, almost folk-rock, the performance builds slowly in intensity, Williamson adroitly layering guitars, while Iggy serenades overcoming. “Dirty Deal” sounds personal and universal, using the record company exploits young artist paradigm to address a system that, “favors crooks you don’t find out in civics books.” Williamson’s guitar reminds us that however far we travel from Chuck Berry we always find ourselves taxiing back to the terminal zone. You realize he’s always been “reaching for the sky,” and that he’s really not afraid of death … just not hastening it down. And Iggy’s vocal is less mannered, his lyric sincere. Williamson’s guitar stings, his solo soars and splinters, trilling off and on and off and out as the song fades. Ready to Die Import Iggy & The Stooges Format: Audio CD 129 ratings 1787 See all 7 formats and editions Streaming Unlimited MP3 8.99 Listen with our Free App Audio CD 17.87 2 Used from 11.96 4 New from 12.00 Vinyl from 35.29 7 New from 35.29 1 Collectible from 38. The title cut is meat and potatoes hard rock, frankly – not that patented, snaky Stooges groove.
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