eMusic Review 0
Few bands have made such a compelling case for the superiority of analogue sound over digital than the White Stripes did with this exhilarating fourth album. Recorded in the computer-free zone of Liam Watson's Toe Rag Studio in London with, so it's claimed, no equipment younger than 40 years old, Elephant proudly asserts the primacy of the raw over the cooked, seeking to derive as much intensity with as few instruments (and as much spirit) as possible, and the minimum of machines interposing between musicians and listeners.
Despite the basic line-up — just Jack's guitar and Meg's drums, plus occasional piano, organ or harmonica — the White Stripes explore a surprising range of approaches, from the slow, predatory blues of "Ball and Biscuit" through the garage-punk riffing of "Hypnotize" and two-chord thrash of "Black Math," to the rolling raunch of "Girl, You Have No Faith in Medicine" and the plaintive Neil Young-ish folksy frailty of "You've Got Her in Your Pocket" — and further still, to the ingenuous siren call of Meg White's "Cold, Cold Night," a second cousin of sorts to Mo Tucker's occasional vocal contributions to the Velvet Underground.
The stand-out track, of course, is the anthemic "Seven Nation Army"… read more »