Ron Asheton, Prince of (Raw) Power
The new year has scarcely started and already we've got a major music
loss to report: guitarist Ron Asheton, a founding member of American
punk pioneers the Stooges, was found dead this morning at his home in
Ann Arbor, Michigan. He was 60.
Police were summoned to Asheton's house by his personal assistant, who
had been unable to reach him for several days. Responding officers
discovered him in his bedroom looking "fairly peaceful," and while an
autopsy will be performed, there were no signs of any foul play or drug
use; the likely cause is a heart attack.
There was no such term as punk rock when Asheton, his drummer brother
Scott, bassist Dave Alexander and vocalist Jim Osterberg--aka Iggy Pop--formed the Stooges in the University of Michigan college town of Ann
Arbor in 1967. To say that they quickly stood out against the hippie
counterculture backdrop of the day is beyond understatement. While
others sang about peace, love and understanding, the Stooges were
voicing the cry of confused, frustrated and alienated youth everywhere
with in-your-face anthems like "Not Right," "No Fun" and "I Wanna Be
Your Dog." Released right around the time of Woodstock in the summer of
'69, the band's self-titled debut album, as well as its followups
Funhouse (1970) and Raw Power (1973) would become touchstones for
virtually all who'd later come down the punk pike--or for that matter
the grunge one, too.
True, the early Stooges got most of their notoriety due to frontman
Iggy's outrageous onstage antics, which included everything from
smearing peanut butter across his bare chest and writhing on the ground
through broken glass to diving headfirst into stunned audiences. But it
was Asheton's sledge (and sludge) hammer lead guitar (and on Raw Power,
bass) that served as the sonic battering ram for the Stooges' music,
from the anarchy-r-us wah-wah pedal on "1969" and the hellbent chords
of "Dog" to the thunderstruck riffs of "TV Eye" and "Loose."
While the Stooges broke up in 1974, Iggy Pop's long-running solo
career, as well as the band's influential legacy, kept their music
alive. That ultimately led to a 2003 reformation that, as of the end of
2008 and a just-completed European tour, was finally furnishing the
band its long-deserved worldwide props. For Asheton, who'd stayed on
the periphery in a variety of punk and hard rock bands over the years
between Stooges tours of duty, it was especially sweet: the man, after
all, ranked 29 on Rolling Stone's list of the 100 greatest guitarists
of all time.
In tribute to Ron Asheton, then, here are two versions of "TV Eye" to
show just how endlessly fiercesome a player he was--one from a
nationally televised Cincinnati show way back in 1970, and the other
from a 2004 performance in, of all places, Serbia.
As they say: search and destroy.


Your negativity and bashing is really uncalled for you anal cyst.
As for Ron, I just discovered the Stooges a few months back and they have been one of my all time favourite bands. If a band of that intensity came out now it would be amazing enough. To do it when there was no other music like that out there at the time or before, puts the Stooges in the highest order of rock bands. I wish I could have seen them live because their records are incredible.
Stooges were kind of rocking in a raw way in terms of having maybe two good songs, but most punk like someone said is bad music for bad people.
He was semi-skilled at best, rolling stone hasnt had a clue about what
they profess to know for quite sometime.They confuse popularity with talent.
Rawness with innovation.Theyre just a bubble bum commercial and ironically
except for a lick or two , its hype and so was this guy.He had some of those
nice fuzzy double stop things, but a lot of that you can walk in guitar center on a bad day and hear that.
Great!