Jack White | Blunderbuss

Third Man/Columbia (2012)
By RYAN REED  |  April 23, 2012
3.5 3.5 Stars

jw1

The White Stripes — the candy-coated, Delta blues-worshipping duo responsible for some of the 2000s' greatest rock albums — recently broke up. Fans across the world wept, but I ask: what's there to miss? Did you really love the sound of Meg White's hollowed-out bass drum? Like the group's pawnshop guitars and arbitrary engineering, Meg's caveman-like percussion functioned as a creative obstacle — one, admittedly, that often brought the best out of Jack's songwriting (and his pan-seared, white lightning solos and riffs). Jack got way more mileage out of his first band than anyone could have expected. But as the subtle experimentation crept in (Get Behind Me Satan and Icky Thump), along with side projects and outside production work, it became clear that White needed more than what the creative parameters of the White Stripes would allow.

Blunderbuss, the first album he's released under his own name (and his most compelling collection of songs in years), is the sound of White — with a team of session players that includes drummer Carla Azar of Autolux and guitarist Olivia Deen from his live band — freeing himself from his sonic shackles, exploring any and all sounds that waft through his brain and tickle his fingers. In Jack-of-All-Trades mode, he journeys through raw blues, country, folk, and soul (complete with chipmunk-like female backing vocals). "Freedom at 21" sports a mighty, Zeppelin-esque riff, a reliably raunchy guitar solo, and hip-hop-styled drums. On stirring single "Love Interruption," White sounds possessed, offering, "I want love to murder my own mother" over folky strums, smoky Wurlitzer, and — what? — a clarinet. Most stunning is "On and On and On," a dreamy psych-soul jam built on rippling tremolo, oceans of piano, and droning bass. Boxing yourself in can be creatively fruitful — but so can the opposite.

  Topics: CD Reviews , Music, The White Stripes, Jack White,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY RYAN REED
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   WAVVES | AFRAID OF HEIGHTS  |  March 18, 2013
    "I Can't Dream," the closer on Wavves' fourth studio album, opens in a drunken lo-fi stupor — Nathan Williams warbling bratty, tone-deaf nonsense over hissy acoustic power chords.
  •   THE VIRGINS | STRIKE GENTLY  |  March 06, 2013
    After a half-decade of semi-obscurity, frontman Donald Cumming is redefining his band as the hipster sultans of swing.
  •   ATOMS FOR PEACE | AMOK  |  February 26, 2013
    Kid A , Radiohead's confounding electro-rock masterpiece, is officially hitting puberty.
  •   ATLAS GENIUS | WHEN IT WAS NOW  |  February 20, 2013
    Atlas Genius are schooled students of modern pop architecture, seamlessly bouncing from Coldplay-styled acoustic rock to fizzy Phoenix funkiness to deadpanned Strokes-ian guitar chug. But When It Was Now is more like an alt-pop NOW compilation than a joyous synthesis.
  •   FOALS | HOLY FIRE  |  February 11, 2013
    Even at their most expansive, Foals are digging into more primal territory.

 See all articles by: RYAN REED