Shake Appeal

SHAKE APPEAL
 
 
As implied by the name, Rough Power includes the original mixes of most of the songs from Raw Power (and in the same order):  Search and DestroyGimme Danger, “Hard to Beat (Pretty Face)”, PenetrationRaw Power, “I Need Somebody”, and “Death Trip”.  The third track was originally called “Hard to Beat”, while its name on the official Raw Power album is “Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell”.  According to the song listings, these songs were recorded on March 10, 1972 and April 10, 1972.
 
The only Raw Power song that is not included is “Shake Appeal”, but there are two other mixes of this song later in the CD; and Shake Appeal is well represented on another Iguana Chronicles album as discussed below.  However, it is still hard to understand why the full album would not have been presented by, say, including the mix of Shake Appeal that is provided near the end of the CD.
 
As given on the middle portion of Rough Power, presented during the WABX broadcast, and interspersed with discussion (and a lot of apologies about how bad they sound), six of the songs from Raw Power – I Need SomebodyHard to BeatDeath TripRaw PowerSearch and Destroy, and Shake Appeal – are followed by “Not Right”, with the latter song identified as a “previously unknown outtake”. 
 
To call these recordings “mixes” of any kind is probably a compliment that they do not deserve; much of the music is almost unintelligible, and in more than one case, I could not recognize the song at all even though I had the song listing to go by.  However, they are a fascinating glimpse into the earliest versions of these amazing songs; and at least for the people in Ann Arbor – the hometown of the Stooges – getting to hear any new Stooges material three years since the previous album, Fun House came out would be considered a blessing.
 
Rough Power closes with three other mixes by the Stooges of Raw PowerShake Appeal and Search and Destroy that possibly date from November 28, 1972
 
The vinyl edition of Rough Power has eight songs that are evidently the same as the early tracks on the Rough Power CD, plus Shake Appeal” and Not Right but not Gimme Danger”.  
 
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An expanded album based on the 1977 Bomp! Records EP, I’m Sick of You was released in the same time period.  The Discogs listing for the I’m Sick of You CD has a date of 1991, but that is in error; both this CD and the I Got a Right CD came out in 1995.
 
The songs originally released – I’m Sick of You”, “Tight Pants” and “Scene of the Crime – are demo recordings by the Stooges that were made in June 1972.  Along with I Got a Right” and “Gimme Some Skin, they were summarily rejected by David Bowie’s management company MainMan Management, with only Tight Pants considered to have any promise; this song was rewritten and included on the Raw Power album as Shake Appeal.
 
(December 2017)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021