Blah-Blah-Blah by Iggy Pop

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About the album Blah-Blah-Blah
In the mid-'80s, many artists who had been pioneers with their music proposals in the previous decade saw that the new wave and synth-pop of the time had left them behind. Blah-Blah-Blah is Iggy Pop's attempt to adapt to the dominant sound of the '80s.
In fact, it was an album envisioned by Pop's good friend David Bowie, who is also part of the album's production along with David Richards. The album, without being the best Iggy Pop has offered, has two very good moments: the cover of Jerry Allison's Real Wild Child from the distant 1958 and Cry For Love, in which Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols participates in the guitar solo.
Ultimately, Blah-Blah-Blah did not manage to become a very big commercial success. In the U.S., it reached No.75, and in the United Kingdom, it stopped at No.43.
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