eMusic Review
Jack White's mystique has taken a few knocks in recent years. When you've formed not one but two muso side projects, married a model, recorded a jingle for Coke and appeared in a documentary gassing about fretboards with Jimmy Page and The Edge, it's hard to maintain your status as a refusenik weirdo. But he still sounds most potent when he's on a leash, seething and snarling like a guard dog tethered to the post of Meg White's primitivist drumming. With no indication as to when he next plans to don the choke chain, this extravagantly packaged live album and film marks the end of at least the first chapter in the White Stripes' history. With typical conceptual neatness, the movie captures a 2007 concert in Nova Scotia on the 10th anniversary of the duo's first ever public performance.
This album isn't a document of that concert, but a collection of highlights from their Canadian tour threaded together so effectively that it might as well be. Uniquely for a band of their standing, the White Stripes haven't expanded their sound to fit their audience. Other groups add keyboardists or secondary guitarists to their touring line-ups; the White Stripes hire a bagpiper… read more »