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Detroit minimalist rock duo (specifically, southwest Detroit minimalist rock
duo) the White Stripes -- Jack White, guitar and vocals, Meg White, drums --
formed in 1997 (Bastille Day, to be precise) with the idea of making simple rock
& roll music. From the red and white peppermint candy motif of their debut
singles, self-titled album, and stage show to their on-the-surface rudimentary
style, they succeeded wildly and immediately with that mission. Their first
recordings were a mix of garage rock, blues, and the occasional show tune. In
frontman Jack (a former drummer for Detroit country outfit Goober & the Peas),
the White Stripes have a formidable songwriter, guitar player, and vocalist
capable of both morphing between styles and changing the musical styles
themselves; ranging from the folk blues of Blind Willie McTell to soaring Kinks-esque
pop and narrative pop tunes worthy of Cole Porter and into deepest Captain
Beefheart territory within the span of 15 minutes is not an uncommon listening
experience with either the White Stripes live show or on record. In drummer Meg,
the White Stripes have a minimalist percussionist who seems to sense intuitively
exactly when to not play. The White Stripes are grounded in punk and blues, but
the undercurrent to all of their work has been the aforementioned striving for
simplicity, a love of American folk music, and a careful approach to intriguing,
emotional, and evocative lyrics not found anywhere else in the modern punk, or
garage rock (or amongst post-modern "blues" practitioners such as Jon Spencer,
for that matter).
While they may have sprung from the Detroit rock scene (and they remain regular
fixtures on the Detroit club circuit with Jack producing or working with many
Detroit-area bands), the White Stripes quickly gained a national following after
two successive tours with indie rockers Pavement and Sleater-Kinney in 1999 and
2000. The White Stripes released their second LP, De Stijl, in 2000 and it
further spread the group's reputation. They followed its release with successful
tours of Japan and Australia and entered the Memphis studio of renowned producer
Doug Easley for 2001's White Blood Cells. The album was a critical smash and the
White Stripes soon found themselves, along with the Strokes and the Hives, at
the forefront of the new wave of rock & roll bands poised to take over the
world. The band certainly did their best to acheive world domination, appearing
on Late Night with David Lettterman, being written about in Time, the New Yorker
and Entertainment Weekly, playing the MTV Movie Awards and having their video
for "Fell in Love with a Girl" in heavy rotation on MTV. They also made the
tough decision to jump to a major label; White Blood Cells was reissued on V2 in
January of 2002 and their first two records followed suit in June. The White
Stripes truly became big time rock stars when their "Fell in Love with a Girl"
clip was nominated for four MTV Video Awards including Best Video of the Year
(alongside Eminem and *NSYNC!), Breakthrough Video, Best Special Effects in a
Video and Best Editing in a Video. That summer the group also played four
triumphant shows with the Strokes, two apiece in the bands' respective
hometowns. In spring 2003 their fourth full-length Elephant -- recorded in two
weeks at London's Toerag Studio and dedicated to "the death of the sweetheart"
-- arrived to nearly unanimous critical acclaim. In 2005, the Stripes returned
with Get Behind Me Satan, a dizzyingly diverse album that spanned disco-metal
and light, marimba-driven pop and was written and recorded in two weeks that
spring. ~ Chris Handyside, All Music Guide
Credit: mtv.com
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