

However, it's a good basic primer for those just about to get their feet wet. For those listeners, Search & Destroy doesn't really offer anything out of the ordinary. Hardcore fans don't mind testing out the various discs, simply because if you're collecting Iggy and Stooges music from this era, it's a given that you'll be duplicating certain recordings in your effort to complete your collection. But be forewarned: these aren't necessarily the best versions of these unreleased songs, simply because there was no official final take of any of the songs. This music may not be as flat-out noisy and chaotic as Fun House, but in many ways, these unreleased sessions and outtakes are the nastiest music the Stooges ever cut - primal three-chord rock & roll delivered by musical primates. Similarly, the unreleased songs are simply vicious, with "Rubber Legs," "Johanna," "Cock in My Pocket," "Born in a Trailer" and "She Creatures of the Hollywood Hills" standing as some of their greatest work. Then again, these versions, while not radically different, are so brutal and raw, that they're worth hearing by any dedicated Pop fan. In 1997, 'Search and Destroy' (along with the rest of the songs on Raw Power) was.

Lead singer Iggy Pop said that the title was derived from a column heading in a Time article about the Vietnam War.

The most frustrating thing about the collection is that it relies a little too heavily on reworkings of Raw Power material at the sake of unreleased songs. About Search And Destroy 'Search and Destroy' is a song by American rock band The Stooges, recorded for the groups third album Raw Power (1973). It can also be used half-time at 77 BPM or double-time at 306 BPM. While it's far from perfect, Cleopatra's Search & Destroy: The Detroit Studio Out-Takes is one of the better collections, at least among those released on CD in the late '90s. Search and Destroy - Iggy Pop Mix is a moody song by The Stooges with a tempo of 153 BPM. Iggy Pop & the Stooges post-Raw Power recordings have been released in so many different forms by so many different label, both legit and bootleg, that's it's nearly impossible to tell which collections are good ones.
