The White Stripes: Icky Thump

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By: Kayceman

One day, decades from now, when all the dust has settled and the scorecards have been tallied, Jack White will be left standing. When future music dorks look back at this time and place to make decisions about who is The Man, there will be others, but Jack White may very well be The One. To rock this fucking hard but also craft huge hooks and sing-along choruses with lyrical genius is no easy task. Toss in incomparable style and a larger-than-life stage persona and you start to understand why Jack White is the most important rock guitarist-frontman alive.

The White Stripes are a living, breathing history lesson on American rock music. Rising from dirty southwest Detroit, it all starts with the Delta blues and a love of simple folk-rock. From there, Jack digs into the garage and fills the cracks with punk urgency and louder-than-hell distorted wail. But, to be the best you have to move forward, and The Stripes most certainly push us into the future. Every White Stripes album is important, but ten years into their career Jack and Meg have created what may be their best to date.

Recorded in Nashville, Icky Thump is a thick slab of rock pulling from all areas of the map. The album begins with the title track's infectious stomp - easily one of the year's best songs. Then, there's the country-laced beauty, charming changes and church organ-meets-guitar sway of "You Don't Know What Love Is (You Just Do What You're Told)," the filthy blues and overdriven guitar of "300 m.p.h. Torrential Outpour Blues," the mariachi trumpet and flamenco driven "Conquest" (made famous by Patti Page in the '50s), the Scottish bagpipes of "Prickly Thorn, But Sweetly Worn," the heavy riffs, quick dynamic shifts and spoken narrative of "Little Cream Soda," the lighter, fun-loving "Rag and Bone," the haunting, delicate ballad "A Martyr For My Love For You," the slide-guitar workout of "Catch Hell Blues" and the lyrical revelation found of closer "Effect and Cause." There's also "I'm Slowly Turning Into You," where we find Jack playing like Jimmy Page and singing in Robert Plant's sexed up high-register.

There is no question that it's the twisted, compressed, technically absurd guitar outbursts of Jack White that make the Stripes so amazing, but what puts them over the top on Icky Thump are the lyrics. Here's a glimpse at the title track:

White Americans, what?
Nothing better to do?
Why don't you kick yourself out
You're an immigrant too

Who's using who?
What should we do?
Well, you can't be a pimp and a prostitute too

One stanza and Jack captures 200 years of hypocrisy. Gawd bless him.

If you take music seriously - and not just one type of music, one band or one scene - you already know The White Stripes are one of the most important rock bands out there. From dusty country and sweaty blues to bagpipes and Mexican trumpets to garage riffs and stadium power chords, Jack White leads us around the world but always firmly plants us back in the soil of American rock & roll. Who knows where the Stripes will take us in their next decade. At this point, I won't even ask, I'll just follow. With yet another stellar album, (a shoe-in for "Best Of 2007" honors) Jack has earned the right of blind faith.

JamBase | San Francisco
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http://www.whitestripes.com/

[Published on: 7/7/07]


 

Comments

deftone984 Sun 7/8/2007 12:53PM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

deftone984

i agree with you all the way. its a fantastic record. i thought the last one was a little disappointing but icky thump is back on track. big ups.

All Loving Liberal White Guy starstarstarstarstar Sun 7/8/2007 01:00PM
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All Loving Liberal White Guy

Simply put.....fuckin awesome album!

kirkbrew starstarstar Sun 7/8/2007 01:57PM
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kirkbrew

My thought about this record:
1. How much can you do with a guitar and drum combo? The White Stripes answered that questions in 5 albums and confirmed it with the sixth.
2. Jack should ditch the analogue synth. Some of the sqeeky-modal-riffs should be left out and Jack should sell the synth back to Mates of State.
3. Meg makes this album half of what it could be. She has been on the cans for over 10 years and about any 15 year old drumming in a Green Day cover band is better than her. The way that she just pounds the hell out of the ride cymbal is almost too annoying to keep listening to well written material.
4. Jack is a good alchemist. He can bring together some rather disparate concepts and blend them together into a pretty cool pop song. That being said, “Conquest” absolutely does not work in any way, shape or form on this album. Too much of a stretch and he is way out of his element.
5. “Who knows where the Stripes will take us in their next decade.” Well, if you look at where they came from in the last decade, we will pretty much be right where we are. It has been 6 studio albums and the White Stripes of Icky Thump sound like a better recorded version of The White Stripes off The White Stripes or De Stijl. Compare that to other “great” bands first to sixth albums:
Talking Heads (77 to Little Creatures),
U2 (Boy to Achtung Baby – not counting Blood Read Sky and Rattle and Hum),
Beatles (Please Please Me to Rubber Soul),
Flaming Lips (Hear It Is to Transmissions),
Radiohead (Pablo Honey to Thief)
Wilco (AM to Ghost)
GD (The Grateful Dead to American Beauty)
When you look at that way, this isn’t the groundbreaking efforts as lauded over by the reviewer.

I have to say that after the Raconteurs, I was looking forward to a new direction for The Stripes. This album does make me look forward to his next Meg free outing.

If you liked Satan, then checkout Elephant, White Blood Cells and De Stijl prior to moving on to the Icky. Cool name of the album though.

21mmer Sun 7/8/2007 05:51PM
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21mmer

i'm in agreement with some criticism surrounding meg's playing, but for me jack has always been able to pull the albums past her shortcomings. does anyone else think that jack and meg, on this album cover, could be just as easily transposed onto a gram parsons era flying burrito bros. cover?

mike_c starstarstarstarstar Sun 7/8/2007 08:04PM
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Great album, INCREDIBLE band. Jack just creates solid albums that work as a whole.

De Stijl, to me, is still their best so far.

Hug starstarstarstar Mon 7/9/2007 06:59AM
-2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

Hug

Great album, but I still felt tremendously let down by their performance at Bonnaroo this year. Was that show pretty indicitive of their usual live shows?

azieja starstarstar Mon 7/9/2007 08:49AM
Show -5 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!
PYITE3 Mon 7/9/2007 10:44AM
+3 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

I'm tired of people trashing Meg's playing abilities. True, she isn't as talented as Jack, but she shouldn't be. The band works a lot better with Jack calling the shots; see them live and you'll know what I mean. Even in interviews, Meg rarely says a word and lets Jack do the talking. I think it's a dynamic that works, and if they're content with each other, Meg-haters be damned.

One of the most pleasureable albums I've heard in months.

G$Love starstarstarstarstar Mon 7/9/2007 11:08AM
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G$Love

In regards to Meg's style, everything doesn't need to be complicated to be good, sometimes simplicity is all that a song needs, can you imagine The Beatles with Keith Moon on drums, my answer is NO, Ringo Starr's simple melodic style made so many tracks by that band great.

Check out the Rolling Stone cover story from 2 years ago:
http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/white_stripes_white_on_white/page/4

Rolling Stone: Are there times when Meg's style of drumming is too limiting -- that you can't take a song as far as you'd like to go?

Jack White: No. I never thought, "God, I wish Neil Peart was in this band." It's kind of funny: When people critique hip-hop, they're scared to open up, for fear of being called racist. But they're not scared to open up on female musicians, out of pure sexism.

Meg is the best part of this band. It never would have worked with anybody else, because it would have been too complicated. When she started to play drums with me, just on a lark, it felt liberating and refreshing. There was something in it that opened me up. It was my doorway to playing the blues, without anyone over my shoulder going, "Oh, white-boy blues, white-boy bar band." I could really get down to something.

G$Love Mon 7/9/2007 11:10AM
+1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

G$Love

Sorry - full URL: www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/white_stripes_white_on_white/page/4

All Loving Liberal White Guy Mon 7/9/2007 11:12AM
+3 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

All Loving Liberal White Guy

CHOMPonThis,

While I wasn't at Bonnoroo, I think I can safley say that a bad set by the White Stripes or any other band at a major festival isn't really indictive of thier live set at a headlining gig. Bear in mind that bands only have a specific time slot at major festivals and that there is no time for each band to do their own soundcheck.

Chaloupka Mon 7/9/2007 11:13AM
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Chaloupka

I dig the Raconteurs a lot better. When is their new album coming out?

Danger8504 starstarstarstarstar Mon 7/9/2007 11:50AM
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good

yemmw Mon 7/9/2007 12:45PM
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yemmw

I'm with kirkbrew all the way.

TravlynnJoe starstarstarstarstar Mon 7/9/2007 02:11PM
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TravlynnJoe

We are BLESSED to have JACK WHITE writing and creating music !

keenan41 Mon 7/9/2007 03:07PM
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keenan41

Double agreed with kirkbrew.

hiddentreasure starstarstarstarstar Tue 7/10/2007 12:46AM
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This was an excellent review. Thank you Kayceman, your few words mirror the kind of minamalism w/ getting so much satisfaction that the White Stripes embody. On first listen I loved this album, although I felt there was a slight lack of sonic exploration I've come to expect from Jack w/ the simple & lovely support of Meg. Thankfully, that quickly passed. After another listen or 2 I've come to realize that this is a more mature album. Could be their best.

hiddentreasure Tue 7/10/2007 02:19AM
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Could be Gram Parsons & Emmylou ala the aughts.

jimmy row Tue 7/10/2007 07:21AM
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Great album through and through. No love for meg eh? I dont care what anyone says about meg white, as long as Jack and her keep pumping out awesome records...whats the big deal?

nuke_ticketbastard starstarstarstar Tue 7/10/2007 09:22AM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

well don't completely agree with kirkbrew , but , although i have only heard the couple radio songs off this new one i must say conquest definately does not work for me either! title song is great , kick ass lyrics too ! but the first 30 seconds of hearing conquest the first time and i was thinking - " wow , a stripes song i don't like! well it is a cover though so that makes a little more sense although i have enjoyed other covers they have done.
anyhow yeah still one of my favorite bands , and STILL on my top 5 to see list! damn i can't believe i have not seen them live yet!

kirkbrew Tue 7/10/2007 10:18AM
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kirkbrew

PYITE3 - The only thing I will give Meg is that she keeps time with Jack by watching him. That is pretty much her only talent. That is important with the way he plays and they way that the whole concept works. Very much like The Who and how Moon and Townsend worked.

G$Love – You can reference what you want by Jack White. I just listened to an NPR interview where he still claims that he and Meg are brother sister. So, he can say what he want but the fact remains a drummer that can keep time with him/herself AND keep time with Jack AND who doesn't cover up for inadequacies by slamming the hell our of the bass drum and ride cymbal would make the White Stripes infinitely more interesting.

Would this be a better album with Neal Prert? Only with one hand tied behind his back. Would it be better with any other drummer? Hell yea. Is Meg easy pickins for bashing? Hell yes! There is no one in the history of rock and roll less qualified than her save for Syd Vicious.

elaufer Wed 7/11/2007 10:35AM
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What all you Meg Haters don't understand, is that there is more to making great music than playing alone. There's a magical ingredient in every great band which is often referred to as "chemistry." Why does Jack continue to play with Meg when there are probably thousands of drummers with more technical skill that would give a kidney to back him up? Because he fuckin' wants to! and because of chemistry.

Would this album and the White Stripes be better with Neal Peart? Are you kidding me kirkbrew? Jack White doesn't think so. And what the hell does he know about making records?

kvh2b starstarstarstar Thu 7/12/2007 02:56PM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

Great review - Their best work yet! Good job citing that RS interview - To the Meg haters: Do you really think Jack couldn't find another drummer if he wanted to? I heard him say in a television interview last year that he wanted the drums to sound primitive to resemble Robert Johnson tapping his foot to the blues. Jack makes the music sound exactly the way he wants and that's true art. I also like the way he uses those octave pedals to get those extra high and low sounds. Check out last month's Guitar World magazine to see what he uses. Somebody customize a pedal for this guy! Also the Raconteurs album should be done soon - They were recording in Blackbird Studios (Same as Icky Thump) and trying to finish before the Stripes hit the road but I haven't heard anything lately.

jjwood star Thu 7/12/2007 03:49PM
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randyandmoe starstarstarstar Fri 7/13/2007 02:21AM
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Thank you Kayceman for articulating with such conviction the magnitude of Jack White's genius and talent.

Many times I've said the same things, typically with intense passion, to friends who are serious music fans and whose opinions I value highly, only to get the response "I just don't get Jack White - why do people like him?"

To which my only response is, after several seconds of silent disbelief, "if you don't get it, I can't explain it to you."

Jack White is indeed The Man!

djseraphim starstarstarstarstar Tue 7/17/2007 02:38PM
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djseraphim

Fantastic... Personally I like Meg & think she actually brings a lot to the table- I wish people wouldn't hate on her too much. Then again I'm not a fan of H8R's in general.

& their outfits on that album cover.... now that is some serious FUNK!

jr2037 Wed 7/25/2007 01:15PM
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jr2037

I always thought the white stripes COULD be one of the greats, but they just need to cut tons of material. They can write great songs, but tons of em are just duds.