Iggy Pop (May 10 1973) Raw Power – Review
- Iggy Pop

- May 10, 1973
- 2 min read
Publication: Rolling Stone Date: May 10 1973
Country: United States
Section / Page: Records Section Format: Multi‑Album Review Page / Critical Column
Overview
A dense, text‑heavy Rolling Stone Records Section page from May 10 1973 featuring capsule reviews of new releases — including Iggy & The Stooges’ Raw Power, positioned among contemporary rock, soul, and singer‑songwriter titles.
The page reflects the magazine’s early‑’70s editorial style: compact serif type, narrow columns, and a focus on critical authority rather than visual design.

“Raw Power is exactly what it says — a record that doesn’t apologise for its own violence.”
The Story Behind It
By May 1973, Raw Power had already begun to polarise critics. This Rolling Stone review — brief but pointed — situates the album within the broader landscape of early‑’70s rock, contrasting its jagged ferocity with the smoother, more polished releases reviewed alongside it. The critic acknowledges the album’s chaotic mix, Bowie’s involvement, and Iggy’s uncompromising vocal presence, framing Raw Power as a disruptive force in a year dominated by glam, singer‑songwriters, and arena‑rock polish.
The Records Section format means the review is concise, but its placement among mainstream acts underscores the growing recognition of Iggy Pop as a significant — if volatile — creative figure. This clipping matters because it documents one of the earliest major‑press acknowledgements of Raw Power as a work of artistic intent rather than mere shock value.
What the Clipping Shows
• Three narrow columns of text under the RECORDS header, each containing short reviews of new LPs. • The Raw Power review appears mid‑column, accompanied by a small black‑and‑white reproduction of the album sleeve. • Other albums on the page include mainstream rock, folk, and R&B titles, creating a contrast between Iggy’s abrasive sound and the era’s dominant trends.
•The layout is typical of Rolling Stone’s early‑’70s design: minimal imagery, dense text, and a focus on critical voice over visual flair.
Related Material
• Iggy Pop (May 10 1973) A Platter of Raw Iggy To Go – Advert
• Between the Buttons – Article (Dec 1973) • You Might Say, Extreme – Article (Feb 1974)
• The Idiot – Album Advert (Apr 1977)
• Additional entries listed in the scrapbook tag index
Source Details
Publication: Rolling Stone Date: May 10 1973 Format: Records Section / Multi‑Album Review Page Provenance Notes: Original 1973 critical coverage contextualising Raw Power within the broader rock landscape of the period.
© Copyright Notice — Iggy Pop (Rolling Stone, May 10 1973)
All original magazine artwork, photographs, and text remain the property of their respective copyright holders. This scrapbook entry is a transformative, non‑commercial archival summary created for historical documentation and educational reference.





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