Enjoy fast, free delivery, exclusive deals, and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime
Try Prime
and start saving today with fast, free delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Instant streaming of thousands of movies and TV episodes with Prime Video
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Image Unavailable
Color:
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download Flash Player
EVERY LOSER
LP
- Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
- Learn more about free returns.
- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select the return method
- Ship it!
| Listen Now with Amazon Music |
|
EVERY LOSER [Explicit]
"Please retry" | Amazon Music Unlimited |
| Price | New from | Used from |
|
MP3 Music, January 6, 2023
"Please retry" | $9.49 | — |
|
Audio CD, January 6, 2023
"Please retry" | $7.11 | $7.49 |
|
Audio, Cassette, January 6, 2023
"Please retry" | $14.98 | $20.11 |
Frequently bought together

Customers also search
From the brand
Track Listings
Disc: 1
| 1 | Frenzy |
| 2 | Strung Out Johnny |
| 3 | New Atlantis |
| 4 | Modern Day Ripoff |
| 5 | Morning Show |
Disc: 2
| 1 | The News For Andy (Interlude) |
| 2 | Neo Punk |
| 3 | All The Way Down |
| 4 | Comments |
| 5 | My Animus (Interlude) |
| 6 | The Regency |
Editorial Reviews
Widely acknowledged as one of the most influential artists and dynamic live performers of all time, Iggy Pop is a singer, songwriter, musician, author, record producer, DJ, and actor whose epic body of work has earned him both worldwide critical acclaim and fanatic cult success.Atlantic Recordshas announced an exclusive partnership withGold Tooth Records,founded byGRAMMY® Award-winning and multi-platinum producerAndrew Watt.In addition, the one and onlyIggyPopis the first artist signed to this joint venture. The GRAMMY® Lifetime Achievement Award honoree andGodfather of Punk shared he will make his label debut onOctober 28with “Frenzy,” the first single off Iggy’s forthcoming album,Beginning in 1967 with his era-defining group The Stooges, Pop merged primal rock, blues, and free jazz into something altogether dangerous and new, paving the way for punk, post-punk, hard rock, and grunge. His landmark solo career – which kicked off with 1977’s David Bowie-producedThe IdiotandLust For Life– has seen Pop traverse a stunning span of musical genres, inspiring generation after generation of rock ‘n rollers with his iconoclastic songcraft, uncompromising performance style, and one-of-a-kind charisma. Perhaps the greatest living embodiment of rock & roll, Pop has never slowed down, pushing the art form forward for more than half a century, including his most recent full length recording, 2019’s contemplative, critically acclaimedFree.
Product details
- Language : English
- Product Dimensions : 0.2 x 12.32 x 12.32 inches; 10.4 Ounces
- Manufacturer : Atlantic
- Original Release Date : 2023
- Date First Available : November 10, 2022
- Label : Atlantic
- ASIN : B0BLJM97W1
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #12,316 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- #6,140 in Rock (CDs & Vinyl)
- Customer Reviews:
Important information
To report an issue with this product or seller, click here.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Still with me?
This is a solid record that ends before you realize it. It's not perfect, but Iggy and the Losers do a heck of a job. Here's my track-by-track...
Things kick off with "Frenzy", which is a musical version of someone who just started swinging instead of wasting time bucking up to an opponent; the track has a little too much cussing for the sake of cussing, but that chorus with backing vocals really hits a sweet spot I wasn't expecting to get. It's a crunchy slab of rock with a wailing electric in its endgame.
On the first two listens of this record, I had already decided that "Strung Out Johnny" was the stand-out track. It's the polar opposite of the opening song, with that signature lower-octave singing over a medium-paced crafted steak of a song, saturated with fatty backing vocals and extra arrangements at just the right times. This song gets stuck in my head more than any other on the record.
"New Atlantis" begins with some familiar voice-over poetry, as featured in Ig's past discography. The chorus here is chock full of cowbell and backing vocals. The overdrive guitar riff strumming pattern reminds of a chiptune from an obscure Turbografx-16 game called 'Cratermaze'. Yes I'm sure I'm the only one who hears that connection, whatever.
"Modern Day Ripoff" is fantastic. It's energetic and catchy. Sounds like it could have been an prime GnR or Velvet Revolver tune. Probably my second-favorite song on this thing.
The next one reverts back to the low-octave mid-tempo combination. We're already halfway through the number of actual full songs by the time "Morning Show" closes.
The next track, "The News For Andy", is labeled as an interlude, as it clocks in under a minute and it's pretty much Iggy talking over some 'elevator music'.
"Neo Punk" speeds things up, just a tad, with distorted vocals and more crunchy guitar riffs. The whole experience hearkens back to the wave of pop-punk bands of the 90s. You know Iggy had fun with this one based on how it ends with him laughing.
Next up is "All The Way Down". It includes lyrics such as 'I'm going to blow up a turd' in the first verse. This song does't shine until the chorus kicks in.
This next one sounds like a Wipers song when it begins. "Comments" is about being on social media and scrolling through the comments. This is proof that Iggy doesn't care, and also proof that he doesn't know how to write a bad chorus. 'Sold my face to Hollywood, they're paying good, I'm feeling good'. Yeah I hope I make it to 75 and feel that optimistic about everything.
"My Animus" is the second and final one-minute interlude, but this time Iggy sounds like the action movie voiceover guy with a chorus-pedal guitar backing track.
This record ends with "The Regency", which is begins and ends as a slow-burner, but sandwiched inbetween is a faster pace at 45 seconds in. This song features the drumming of the one and only Taylor Hawkins (R.I.P.).
I haven't stopped listening. I'm going to call this record of the year. We're in January.
EVERY LOSER.
With the mp3 album, I re-ordered the tracks to be all rocking at first, then slower towards the end.
Side A: Frenzy, Modern Day Ripoff, Neo Punk, The Regency, Comments
Side B: My Animus, New Atlantis, All the Way Down, Strung Out Johnny, News For Andy, Morning Show
Great album in any order!
Top reviews from other countries
For those of us of a certain age who equate Pop with his Bowie curated Berlin art house releases "Lust For Life" and "The Idiot" the first thing to say is that the raucous rocking punk of "Every Loser" is nothing like these, but then I hadn't really expected it to be. Surrounded by youngsters, or at least comparative youngers including multi-talented, multi-instrumentalist and in-demand producer Andrew Watts, Guns N' Roses' bassist Duff McKagan, a couple of Red Hot Chilli Peppers: drummer Chad Smith and guitarist and keyboards man Josh Klinghoffer, one-time Chilli Pepper and Janes Addiction guitarist Dave Navarro, fellow Jane's Addiction men drummer Chris Chaney and bassist Eric Avery, Blink 182 drummer Travis Barker, Pearl Jam guitarist Stone Gossard and the late great Foo Fighter Taylor Hawkins on possibly his final recordings the Popster shows he can still rock and nowhere more than on the aptly titled heavy punk opener "Frenzy".
But Pop is more than just rock and rage, and despite his age throughout Pop shows he still has his chops particularly when he sings of life as a junky on the confessional ballad "Strung Out Johnny"; and on "New Atlantis", a love letter to Miami, his adopted home [and my former home] where “a man can be himself", but in which he warns of the threat of climate change as he sees "fewer birds, fish, butterflies, plenty of concrete though" and sings "she’s sinking into the sea”, this is a beautiful song that's probably my favourite of the set combining balladry and rock, with love and a mission. By contrast in the grungy rocking "Modern Day Ripoff" Pop is in full on grumpy old man mode as he rages over the things he can no longer do and the changes he has to face up to as a septuagenarian, a theme he continues with but this time with acceptance and stoicism in place of cynicism and anger in the gentle beautiful ballad "Morning Show".
Sixth track "The News For Andy" and ninth track "My Animus" are described as interludes each lasting around one minute, the former dressed-up as a spoof advert break while the point of the latter beats me [ideas anyone?]. Seventh track is another raucous heavy punk number aptly named "Neo Punk" while "All The Way Down" that follows is a sleazy, heads-down, down-down, rocker with some wonderful screaming guitar work from [I assume] Stone Gossard, the Guardian has this down as another that's informed by climate change, but from the opening couplet "I don't wanna hear no phony s***, I've gotta win and that's the end of it" it could well be aimed at former President Donald J. Trump. Taylor Hawkins makes the first of his two appearance on "Comments" a light airy but rocking commentary on the ills of social media, and the second on the elegant final track "The Regency" as Pop croons, rants and rages, and croons again on the ills of the rock industry and in particular the stadium rock aristocracy.
And that's it and I have to concur with the views of the Times and the Guardian's writers that Iggy Pop's "Every Loser" is an absolute winner, "New Atlantis" may be my favourite track [today, and that's largely for sentimental reasons] but I can't fault any of it, it's 5 stars all the way. It might only be January but this could easily be the best new release I buy this year.
Open Web Player






