The shade of red used on the sleeve varies between the U.S. and U.K. edition, as do Jack's and Meg's positions (they switch sides). "These two people – brother and sister – a blues band dressing in red, white and black doing this and this with peppermint on the bass drum and acting like little children," White explained in an interview with Pamela Des Barres. Everyone with ears has heard if not sung along to its opening track Seven Nation Army but the remainder of the album is pretty good too. The song was later released in December as the Walking with a Ghost EP featuring four other live tracks. If you have subscribed to our mailing list then we will send you alerts according to your choices. The riff is in tact. Jack is back. And it's all so divinely confident, so sexy. Draper quotes the musician in A Brief History of Album Covers: If you study the picture carefully, Meg and I are elephant ears in a head-on elephant. Includes some real deep cuts to delight the serious White fan. The White Stripes can be seen as all of the above. The band were a breath of fresh air amongst the more produced and synthetic music of the day and a year later they returned with De Stijl which was more of the same scuzzy lo-fi rock delivered in the most primitive and raw way possible. Still sounding as fresh as a daisy, it's a further reminder that Jack White's music was so much better when constricted by Meg's rudimentary but intuitive drumming. You get a host of Jack White originals and the usual grab bag of covers closing with 'Seven Nation Army' naturally. Elephant [LP] by The White Stripes (Vinyl, Sep-2013, 2 Discs, Third Man Records) 5 out of 5 stars (16) Total Ratings 16, ... HOLOGRAM COVER THE WHITE STRIPES GET BEHIND ME SATAN COLOR VINYL 2 LP MINT RARE. The other side of this 7”, originally put out as a Stripes tour single and now reissued by Third Man, is a cover of Blind Willie McTell’s ‘Lord Send Me An Angel’. They don't take drugs and they don't do yoga; they even seem to like themselves for what they are. Please read our privacy policy for the full details of how we handle your personal data and our cookies policy for more details on how we use cookies. The former showcases the band using more acoustic textures and noticeably piano driven songs and the latter returns to the group’s punk and garage beginnings for one final outing before the band called it a day. The latest music news, to your virtual door. ... TIL Classical Greece wasn't filled with pure white marble everything. It contains many of their most memorable tracks including 'Hotel Yorba', 'Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground' and 'We’re Going to be Friends' proving that the White Stripes had the songwriting nous to take them away from the garage and into the stadiums and to mainstream success. Neither songs are concerned with species preservation or some such -- they're simply enigmatic titles. Elephant makes no more sense as the name of the White Stripes' fourth album than "Rhinoceros" did as Smashing Pumpkins' first notable song. Since everyone else has to do it: My order: De Stijl, Icky Thump, Elephant, Get Behind me Satan, White Blood Cells, The White Stripes My early favs: 1) Catch Hell Blues--no one really has mentioned this gem in other reviews--but like the under appreciated "Red Rain" from the last album has an epic feel to it. Ah Jack and Meg White. Elephant is the critically acclaimed fourth album by American rock band The White Stripes, released in 2003. Elephant was the big one for Detroit blues rock duo the White Stripes following on the pretty big in itself White Blood Cells. ‘Let’s Shake Hands’ and ‘Look Me Over Closely’ are raw garage-punk wheezes of the kind that would be all over their debut LP. No detail escapes White's attention. Jason Draper asserts in his book A Brief History of Album Covers that "the title was chosen because of the way in which the Stripes perceived the animal: noble, mating for life and only attacking you if you threatened the young."
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