The Raconteurs’ second album opens with the faint sounds of people talking and laughing as if at a party. The guitar kicks in, then the drums, and before you know it the whole band arrives rocking hard on the title track, much like the album appearing everywhere to the masses in all formats without the usual press or fanfare that accompanies releases nowadays. The song changes pace and melody depending on whether Jack White III, as he is credited here, or Brendan Benson is singing the lead. It’s an interesting juxtaposition that the music is so dynamic while the main character of the story is a shut-in drug addict of some sort “bored to tears.” “Salute Your Solution” continues the playfulness, and I love the distorted guitar sound at the bridge that continues throughout the rest of the song.
The band expands their musical palette as the album continues. On “You Don't Understand Me,” a piano leads and the band creates wonderful Beatles-esque harmonies on the chorus. On “Old Enough,” the fiddle gives the song a country-rock flavor but the organ keeps the emphasis on rock.
“The Switch and the Spur” sounds like a spaghetti western when the horns kick in, a perfect backdrop for the tale as Benson sings of “an appaloosa and / a wanted man sprung from jail.” Unfortunately, fate can appear cruel, as one of “those who inhabit this land” poisons the man “with a fatal sting.” After what sounds like a rattle (snake or death, take your pick), an odd toy piano joins the mix, and after the screeching guitar solo, the narrator offers a warning to all, though too late for the traveler, that:
Any poor souls who those that trespass against us/
Whether it be beast or man/
Will suffer the bite or be stung dead on sight/
By those who inhabit this land/
For theirs is the power and this is their kingdom/
As sure as the sun does burn/
So enter this path but heed these four words,/
You shall never return.
“Hold Up” offers up a quick straightforward rock attack. “Top Yourself” finds a banjo and fantastic slide guitar work added to the mix, yet there’s plenty of rock power that makes the song sound like it could easily have been a Led Zeppelin track. The horns return on “Many Shades Of Black” to add some emotion to the anguish of Benson’s vocals as he sings of “a wasted worried year” in a relationship that everyone knew was bad except the two participants.
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Article comments
1 - Mat Brewster
I've yet to give it a real hard listen. But as it has played in the background a couple of times I've dug it.
2 - El Bicho
I like it the more I listen to it except for "Blanket." You should give it a random shuffle when you have the time.
3 - Douglas Mays
I have not had a chance to analyse the disc, but I have heard all the songs as I saw the Raconteurs last Monday (4/21/08). The Seattle show. AMAZINGLY GOOD!!!
Jack White is quite the musical powerhouse. The whole show had the feel of a jam, yet so precise. Really heavy rock with the depth and feel of the blues soul. Best of all, flavors of art rock!
Anyway, thank goodness for White Stripes and the Raconteurs. Music you can feel in this sterile day and age. It gives hope that the music industry will be able to get back on its feet.
best,
DM
4 - NewmRadio
Yeah, I def like this new album more than the debut. Thanks to the Raconteurs for keeping real rock alive!