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In October 2006, it was announced on the official White Stripes website that there would be an album of avant-garde orchestral recordings consisting of past music written by Jack called Aluminium. The album was made available for pre-order on November 6, 2006, to great demand from the band's fans; the LP version of the project sold out in a ...
The White Stripes Sign up is open now through Jan. 31 for the release, which includes two vinyl LPs, a 7-inch vinyl single and a Blu-ray with footage filmed during Jack and Meg White’s 2005 tour ...
The White Stripes’ landmark 2001 album, White Blood Cells, has a new digital deluxe edition that’s out now in honor of its 20th anniversary, which was earlier this month. It’s available for ...
After three singles, the White Stripes released their self-titled debut album in June 1999. Their second studio album, the well-received De Stijl, followed in June 2000. [1] The band's third studio album, White Blood Cells, became their breakthrough album, receiving much acclaim while pushing the band to the forefront of alternative rock.
Get Behind Me Satan is the fifth studio album by the American rock duo the White Stripes. It was released on June 7, 2005, through V2 and XL Records. It was conceived after band members Jack and Meg White faced a creative slump, and was recorded in Jack's living room between February and March 2005. Jack was responsible for the album's ...
"Rag and Bone" is a song by the American garage rock band The White Stripes. It is the ninth track on their 2007 album Icky Thump.The track was released as a free red 7" vinyl with the June 6, 2007 issue of the NME magazine, with a unique Jack White-designed etching on the flipside of each record.
When Jack and Meg White’s fourth album as the White Stripes, Elephant, was released on April 1, 2003, the duo seemed poised for stardom far beyond club gigs and college, radio based on early ...
The album is the band's only compilation in their history, and only non-live or non-video release since dissolving in 2011. On behalf of the band, Third Man Records stated: "We get that the idea of 'Greatest Hits' may seem irrelevant in the era of streaming, but we also wholeheartedly believe that great bands deserve a 'Greatest Hits'".