Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Jack White Stands On His Own

As great as the band was, Jack White proves on Blunderbuss that he doesn't need The White Stripes. While he also has The Dead Weather and The Raconteurs, being free from a band setting comprised of supposedly equal parts and a set sound style has freed White up for other types of songwriting, while still keeping the garage rock/blues vibe he's become famous for.

This album has an interesting background. RZA of The Wu-Tang Clan was going to record with Jack White but he never showed up so Jack used that time to begin his first solo album instead. He also alternates between two completely different backing bands, one all female (besides himself of course) and one all male. There's also a lot more piano and organ and less guitar compared to most of his other music.

The first single, "Love Interruption" is best described as acoustic soul but, though it has some great vocal harmony, is a slow burner that never really reaches a satisfying crescendo. "Missing Pieces" has a similar problem and has staircase-patterned organ lines doubled by reverb-tweaked guitar.

"Sixteen Saltines" is one of  only a few out and out rockers on the album. It's reminiscent of The White Stripes' "The Hardest Button To Button" it it's treble-heavy buzzsaw guitar riffage. But unlike the aforementioned Stripes song, a distorted electric organ mirrors the guitar.

Oddly but interestingly electronica-tinged "Freedom at 21" has some frenetic drumming that's really the most distinctive part of the song. Most of the guitar playing has a '90s grunge feel though the massive outro solo takes a page from the herky jerky Whammy pedal style of Rage Against The Machine's Tom Morello.

"Blunderbuss" and "On and On and On" have country flavors, especially the former. It features prominent acoustic guitar and pedal steel. Plaintive piano fleshes out this ballad. The later song also has pedal steel but this has a mournful sound akin to the Chinese erhu. The warbling organ, thanks to a Leslie rotating speaker, and the reverb-soaked other instrumentation, brings to mind images of a meandering river.

The guitar and piano compliment each other well on "Weep Themselves To Sleep." The intro is a bit like The White Stripes' "Doorbell." But the more intricate piano playing throughout most of this song has a bit of tango feel.

"I'm Shakin" is straight up rockabilly/call and response blues. The song's written by Rudy Toombs, the doo wop and R&B songwriter most known for "One Mint Julep." Reverb is king here as is the playfully jagged guitar riff.

"Take Me With You When You Go" flies into the stratosphere. It has an expansive, '60s Woodstock kind of vibe to it. Violin flourishes and quick beats Mitch Mitchell (of Jimi Hendrix's band) style drumming help this along. The piano provides the main riff with the guitar used  mostly for a solo in the middle of the song.

If The Raconteurs is analogous to Led Zeppelin, than Blunderbuss is analogous to Robert Plant's solo work of the past decade. Jack White takes bits and pieces of various genres and glues them together in his own unique way to create some great, fresh sounding music that is in turn deeply respectful of the triumphs of the classics in blues, rock, folk and country. Jack's other bands have, for better and for worse, more rigidity in sound and style. The newness and lack of rules of a solo musical persona helped him create a great album that doesn't simply coast on the past.

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