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11-19-2007, 11:22 PM | #1 (permalink) | |||||
killedmyraindog
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
Posts: 11,172
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Use this thread to give your opinions of an artists best work, through in some reasoning and some tidbits of knowledge and let the masses have it. Enjoy!
I drew this up because I was bored. Things never come out as well as I want them too but hopefully it sparks discussions. Feel free to create your own, or just rip mine up. I get past the obvious stuff relatively early. Have at it fellas.... 1. Icky Thump The new big hit, a song with a misplaced solo and (as Adidasss described it) Baltic organs emerged on the radio in early 2007 with the same ethos as Get Behind Me Satan with an electrified arena-ready seasoning that reminded the masses that the stripes could still throw down and reinforced fans theories that GBMS was a Cobain-mindful celebrity dodge endearing them more to White’s Rock God persona. Quote:
2. Seven Nation Army The map making house hold name that made the most vicious of protesters grit their teeth in admiration. Titled after a misnomer given to the “salvation army” by a young jack white, seven nation army uses one chord, a little slide, and a five note hook to scorch the airwaves of 2004 and leave every other single that year in the dust. With an ominous bass line intro (played on the guitar) that was as foreboding as it was danceable the stripes had their first sing along played by no less than five other acts that very year. The detractors hit this one hard with arguments of simplicity, reminding everyone else that elaborate is for philosophy and art films. Long live rock and roll. Quote:
3. Denial Twist The funkiest white boy jam since Beck released “where its at.” Simple piano chords and some meg white shuffle carried an entire CD designed to shake the hounds off their trail; the stripes roll out a pop song with lyrics still bleeding from the break up. Dig the break down in this one, Jack White testifies like the Godfather himself. Quote:
Coming in the Strokes sweep up of anything sounding remotely retro, fell in love with a girl was shorter than your average song on the radio that year by a good two minutes. Coming in around just under two minutes, the stripes packed enough fuzz, fury, and incoherent lyrics to make even the old folks sing along. Quote:
If Fell in love with a girl helped them draft off of the Strokes surge of popularity, Dead Leaves established the Stripes as their own band, dragging the high speed rush of everyone looking for New York bite down to the delta blues. The song had enough force to dreg up countless bands from Detroit that would otherwise have no shot. A persevering sound, and establishment of style and a minor preparation for the elephant that was about to come. Quote:
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11-19-2007, 11:23 PM | #2 (permalink) | ||||||||
killedmyraindog
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
Posts: 11,172
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6. Broken Bricks
Out of key singing, chords so stiff you can hear the bounce, and is Meg White just jingling keys at certain points? Possibly, but who cares, the stripes show up with more swing than you can shake a stick at, and when meg was potentially playing with actual sticks. Jack channels his inner Springsteen and tells a tale of blue-collar revelry and the man crushing the souls of another family. Quote:
“This place is like a mansion, its like a mansion, look at all this stuff!” And so is this song. The stripes go grifting and come up with enough jump to remind you that bands never used to have to harvest 80’s **** synth to come up with a song people could get down to. Its hard to determine here if the stripes sound more like hobos, carnies, or used car salesmen but the slime that’s all over them in this one is very much their own, which despite all the comparisons is more than you can say for Zeppelin. Who knows, maybe its some amalgamate of all four. Quote:
An unfinished song from an unfinished disc. Too simple and too obvious for any real fan to appreciate, and any non-fan to get. The Beauty of this one lives in its tortured bends and non-sequetir breakdowns. You can feel the grime build on you after this ones over. Quote:
If the Stripes style wasn’t enough of a clue, Jack White ****ing loves Son House, so much so that he covers this throwback gem with notes so distant you’d think it was coming from House himself. Jack always did have the fine fingered knowledge to have those amps throw as much pain as the electric would allow and here he doesn’t let up an inch. The guitar work here might be too beautiful to describe. Quote:
A simple country swing that will make you tap your foot while dreaming of rolling down the open roads of the Midwest. Yorba, given its prominence for allegedly once housing the Fab Four when they visited the blossoming metropolis of Detroit [sic], lets the words do all the fancy talking with Jack telling us the problems of modern life when you’re just trying to love your woman. And really, whats more country than that? Quote:
Dolly Parton might have had it first, but she lacked the vicious lashes of distortion that express the torture of rolling in your bed wide awake at four in the morning with all the demons thrashing in your head, and your man whispering someone else’s name. Quote:
If the opening riff of this one doesn’t speak to you, you might lack a soul. With infections fills that mandate air guitar, and senseless stick clicking on megs behalf, its hard not to bob to this one. Quote:
Written while Jack tried learning a song in Citizen Cane, this brought the stripes into their first legal battle. But what might have been taken from the film is irrelevant, the haunting over drone that creeps in from behind will give you that “someones behind you” feeling on the neck every time. Quote:
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11-19-2007, 11:23 PM | #3 (permalink) | |||||||
killedmyraindog
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
Posts: 11,172
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14. Truth Doesn’t Make a Noise
Arguably the most overlooked Stripes song. It may not be the most elaborate, or the most sonically pleasing but its hard not to find the beauty in arpeggiated piano notes and lyrics like: Quote:
Like Instinct Blues, this one is all music and few words. While certainly more thought out, the power still comes from the non-lyrics, tons of slide, great runs, and parts that are so high on the register your dogs will be screaming. Quote:
For all the Stripes pretend to remain children, they have some filthy god damn lyrics. Taking this one from the king of the delta blues himself, Jack gives it the old White Stripes bounce that makes you dance in your car seat even as the song is miles away from anything dance oriented. Make the kids leave this room on this one, if you can make out the lyrics. Quote:
Buried deep on Elephant and overshadowed by song with bigger star power or more poignant topics, the stripes take aim at the entitled and the hypochondriacs with the nastiest riff this side of the 70’s. Quote:
Another track that I feel should have been more well received. Somewhere south of all the radio hits, Same Boy has more pain in jacks voice than is seen in most of the stripes catalogue, which takes some average level lyrics and gives them an amazing breath of fresh air. Quote:
From the hot pinball rock CD, Jack tells the all to common tale of love lost at the bowling alley. In the aftermath of his loss to a smooth talking interloper with enough pinball’s skills to woo her away, Jack ponders old age and a potential loss of bowling skills. Alas, Lament my friend, lament. Quote:
You can’t play riffs like these with your grandma around. Coming it at over seven minutes, this one clocks in as the stripes longest song to date and what might be their filthiest. After covering enough delta blues men, Jack takes it on up to Chicago and takes a bath so he can “get clean” with his woman. If it wasn’t for euphemisms, the stripes would give Prince and 2 Live Crew a run for their money. Quote:
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11-20-2007, 11:18 AM | #4 (permalink) | |
The Sexual Intellectual
Join Date: Dec 2004
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Quote:
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11-23-2007, 04:22 PM | #6 (permalink) |
killedmyraindog
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
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You know those are the songs that make me value lists like these. Casual fans wouldn't find songs like these and I think, while there are few that are worthy, this is a rare thats worth a spin.
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11-23-2007, 04:27 PM | #7 (permalink) |
Ba and Be.
Join Date: May 2007
Location: This Is England
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Well thought out bite size reviews. I'm not the biggest White Stripes fan, but it was well written.
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11-23-2007, 04:29 PM | #8 (permalink) |
killedmyraindog
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Location: Boston, Massachusetts
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ideally I gave you enough to get interested in something you wouldn't otherwise. Which is not only what I was hoping to do, but what I'm hoping to see in the future. I'd love to find out why David Bowie is so great, but I still havn't.
it took me forever to get into Bruce Springsteen, it was a slow process that I wish was faster. Enter this thread...
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11-23-2007, 04:34 PM | #9 (permalink) |
Ba and Be.
Join Date: May 2007
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Hate Pink Floyd-oo I may have to do one of them lol. Frances is a big Bowie fan. I love Bowie, but I only have about 8 of his albums , so I could'nt give a honest enough appraisal. However I have some ideas bubling away. Great thread.
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11-23-2007, 04:37 PM | #10 (permalink) |
killedmyraindog
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
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You know I don't hate them really, more so that beating over the head I take from them around here. I read the Piper review and wanted to vomit.
Think of a band you're passionate about, I just did the stripes because I was bored and had some knowledge to drop. 8 albums is a lot more than 1 song. Give it a shot if you want.
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