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  1. 6 nov 2013 · Ron and Scott Asheton were the nucleus of the Stooges, the greatest punk band in the world. In Iggy's words, “These guys were the laziest delinquent sorts of pig slobs ever born." Ron passed ...

  2. 23 dic 2009 · Since Asheton’s death, Fields has re-examined some photographs he took of the Stooges’ last performances at Max’s Kansas City in 1973. “You have to look for Ron there,” he says.

  3. 11 gen 2009 · The news of Ron Asheton’s death on January 6, 2009 spread with an urgency and an emotion that likely would have surprised Asheton himself. Even though he was responsible for some of rock’s most explosive and enduring riffs with the Stooges, penning brutally frank, muscular songs like “I Wanna Be Your Dog,” “No Fun” and “TV Eye” that summed up the angst and restlessness of the ...

  4. 13 mar 2013 · Ron Asheton: Detroit's Real Cool Guitar Icon. For a guy who's ranked in the top 30 guitarists of all time by Rolling Stone, Ron Asheton managed to stay below the radar for many a rock music fan. Even after he passed away in 2009, Asheton's legacy hovered somewhere between "overrated" and "underrated," though today his impact cannot be ...

  5. 7 gen 2009 · Born in Washington D.C. on July 17, 1948, Ron Asheton spent most of his childhood in Ann Arbor and became a major rock and roll fan in his teens. Asheton and his friend Dave Alexander were big on the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and the Pretty Things, and in 1965 they dropped out of high school so they could travel to England and check out the ...

  6. Born: 17 July 1948, in Washington DC. Brother of Scott Asheton.Best known as guitarist with the rock group The Stooges. Asheton was found dead in his Ann Arbor, MI. home of a reported heart attack on January 6th, 2009, having died several days earlier, probably either on New Year's Eve or New Year's Day.

  7. Solid Body Electric Guitars. Ron Asheton playing a Flying V at the 1969 Delta Pop Festival (as seen most clearly at the 1:44 mark). He played on this guitar for half of the songs on The Stooges' self-titled debut album before switching over to a Stratocaster. more. Verified Correct, Supported via YouTube.