

Iggy Pop: Post Pop Depression (2016)
Iggy Pop’s show at the Royal Albert Hall on May 13th 2016 has been described as “the performance of a lifetime”. Joined on stage by something of a super-group featuring Homme, Fertita, Helders, Troy Van Leeuwen of Queens Of The Stone Age, and guitar legend Matt Sweeney, Iggy storms through a selection of tracks from Post Pop Depression and his 1977 David Bowie-produced albums The Idiot and Lust For Life. The Royal Albert Hall was packed to capacity and Iggy performed one of the standout shows of his career. The Post Pop Depression backing band supported Pop’s punk antics with a rock ‘n’ roll homage of their own to a true original. An unmissable musical event, which was hailed by The Sunday Telegraph as one of the best gigs the reviewer had ever seen.Iggy Pop: Post Pop Depression featuring Iggy Pop and Joshua Homme is streaming with subscription on Qello Concerts (Via Prime Video), available for rent or purchase on iTunes, available for rent or purchase on Apple TV, and 1 other. It's a documentary and musical movie with a high IMDb audience rating of 9.0 (68 votes).
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Available to stream on a subscription service (Qello Concerts).
Available to rent or buy from $3.99 on 3 services (iTunes, Apple TV, and Prime Video).
Not available to watch free online.
Not available to stream on a TV everywhere service.
Iggy Pop: Post Pop Depression has a high IMDb audience rating of 9.0 (68 votes). The movie is popular with Reelgood users lately.
About Iggy Pop: Post Pop Depression
Iggy Pop: Post Pop Depression Overview
Iggy Pop’s show at the Royal Albert Hall on May 13th 2016 has been described as “the performance of a lifetime”. Joined on stage by something of a super-group featuring Homme, Fertita, Helders, Troy Van Leeuwen of Queens Of The Stone Age, and guitar legend Matt Sweeney, Iggy storms through a selection of tracks from Post Pop Depression and his 1977 David Bowie-produced albums The Idiot and Lust For Life. The Royal Albert Hall was packed to capacity and Iggy performed one of the standout shows of his career. The Post Pop Depression backing band supported Pop’s punk antics with a rock ‘n’ roll homage of their own to a true original. An unmissable musical event, which was hailed by The Sunday Telegraph as one of the best gigs the reviewer had ever seen.