Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Lust for Life" is a 1977 song performed by American singer Iggy Pop and co-written by David Bowie, featured on the album of the same name. In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked it at No. 149 on their list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time", re-ranking it at No. 325 in their 2021 updated list.
Lust for Life is the second solo studio album by the American musician Iggy Pop, released on September 9, 1977, through RCA Records.It was his second collaboration with David Bowie after The Idiot, released in March the same year.
"The Passenger" is a song written by Iggy Pop and Ricky Gardiner, recorded and released by Iggy Pop on the Lust for Life album in 1977. It was also released as the B-side of the album's first single, "Success". It was released as a single in its own right in March 1998, reaching number 22 in the UK charts.
"Tonight" is a song written by David Bowie and Iggy Pop for the latter's second solo studio album, Lust for Life (1977). The song was later made into the title-track for Bowie's own album Tonight (1984).
Classic Iggy Pop: The Universal Masters Collection. Released: 2000; ... Lust for Life, TV Eye Live 1977, as well as unreleased live material/studio outtakes [24]
A Million in Prizes: The Anthology is a 2-disc greatest hits collection of the music of Iggy Pop, released in 2005. It supersedes the compilation Nude & Rude: The Best of Iggy Pop . The title comes from the lyrics of " Lust for Life ".
Written by Nic Cester and Cameron Muncey, the song is often cited for similarities to Iggy Pop's "Lust for Life" (particularly its drum pattern and near-identical guitar riff). [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The band, however, argues that "Are You Gonna Be My Girl" has more in common with 1960s Motown songs, namely " I'm Ready for Love " by Martha and the ...
On Tonight in 1984, Bowie recorded five more of their co-written songs (2 from Lust for Life, 1 from New Values, and 2 new songs), assuring Pop financial security, at least for the short term. The support from Bowie enabled Pop to take a three-year break, during which he overcame his resurgent heroin addiction and took acting classes.