The White Stripes | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | the White Stripes |
Cover: | The White Stripes - The White Stripes.jpg |
Recorded: | January 1999 |
Studio: | Ghetto Recorders and Third Man Studios, Detroit, Michigan |
Genre: | |
Label: | Sympathy for the Record Industry |
Producer: | |
Next Title: | De Stijl |
Next Year: | 2000 |
The White Stripes is the debut studio album by American rock duo the White Stripes, released on June 15, 1999. The album was produced by Jim Diamond and vocalist/guitarist Jack White, recorded in January 1999 at Ghetto Recorders and Third Man Studios in Detroit. White dedicated the album to deceased blues musician Son House.
The album was recorded in a week at Ghetto Recorders with "Screwdriver", "Sugar Never Tasted So Good", "St. James Infirmary", and "Astro" recorded at Jack White's home.[1] [2] Johnny Walker of the Soledad Brothers played slide guitar on two songs: "Suzy Lee" and "I Fought Piranhas". Walker is credited with having taught Jack White how to play slide, a technique featured heavily on the White Stripes' first two albums. Walker explains, "[Jack] had a four track in his living room and invited me to come by and do some recording. In return, I showed him how to play slide."[3]
The duo covered "St. James Infirmary Blues" after being introduced to the song from a Betty Boop cartoon.[4]
The album received mostly positive reviews. Norene Cashen of The Metro Times said the LP "serves better to remind us that [Detroit's] local identity has more options than a membership card to the latest cliché...or a one-way ticket to the coast."[5]
Much of the media feedback came two or three years after its initial release, following the duo's fame spreading beyond Detroit. AllMusic said of the album, "Jack White's voice is a singular, evocative combination of punk, metal, blues, and backwoods while his guitar work is grand and banging with just enough lyrical touches of slide and subtle solo work... Meg White balances out the fretwork and the fretting with methodical, spare, and booming cymbal, bass drum, and snare... All D.I.Y. punk-country-blues-metal singer-songwriting duos should sound this good."
BBC DJ John Peel first spotted the album in a record shop and said, "I just liked the look of it and I looked at the titles – you develop an instinct, d'you know what I mean? And it looked like the sort of record I would like, so I took it out and I did like it, and started playing it."[6] His endorsement was key in heightening their popularity in the UK.[6]
The White Stripes
Additional personnel
Region | Date | Label | Format | Catalog | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States | June 15, 1999 | Sympathy for the Record Industry | LP album | SFTRI 577 | |
Compact Disc | SFTRI 577 | ||||
United Kingdom | November 26, 2001 | XL Recordings | Compact Disc | XLCD 149 | |
LP album | XLLP 149 | ||||
United States | June 11, 2002 | V2 Records | Compact Disc | 63881-27131-2 | |
Japan | March 19, 2003 | V2 Records Japan | Compact Disc | V2CP 148 | |
United States | November 30, 2010 | Third Man Records | LP album | TMR-042 |