De Stijl by The White Stripes

De Stijl

The White Stripes

2000

De Stijl is a Rock album by The White Stripes, originally released in 2000. On Gatefold: 54 pressings tracked, owned by 72 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Rock
  • Garage Rock
  • raw
  • driving
  • bluesy

About

“I’ll fall in love with you,” Jack White croons as the pounding drums and piano of “Apple Blossom” relax at last. “I think I’ll marry you.” Thing is, only months before The White Stripes recorded the duo’s second album, Jack and Meg White had quietly divorced, their marriage ending in less than four years. Though Jack assumed their band was over just as it had found momentum, Meg insisted they press on and finish their second record a year after their debut was done. Good thing, too: Released in 2000, <i>De Stijl</i> distilled the brutalist blues-rock of their debut into its pure essence and expanded the scope of their sound and vision. <i>White Blood Cells</i> may have made the purported brother and sister from Detroit household names when it was released in 2001, but <i>De Stijl</i> had already made it clear that their electric eccentricity was not a fluke. <i>De Stijl</i> hinges, of course, on The White Stripes’ atavistic two-piece rock. Rarely would the band hit harder than on “Let’s Build a Home,” a whoop-out-loud ode to making the most out of disaster, or its chaser, the deliriously fun bit of doggerel called “Jumble, Jumble.” And their riff-and-rhythm tandem was supreme on “Hello Operator,” with Jack’s slide purring over Meg’s tom thwacks. But it’s the newfound finesse that’s most intriguing here, along with all the future possibilities it suggests. While Jack and Meg had covered Bob Dylan on their debut, they instead invoke him on <i>De Stijl</i>’s “Truth Doesn’t Make a Noise,” a prescient bit of romantic defense that preempts the attacks Meg would soon face for her wonderfully primitive drumming. And “A Boy’s Best Friend” is a compelling death waltz, with Jack affirming his perennial outsider status over a beat that conjures a faltering heart. Jack steps out as an actual songwriter on <i>De Stijl</i>, digging into subtly surreal narratives. The White Stripes dedicated <i>De Stijl</i> to Blind Willie McTell—the bluesman whose “Your Southern Can Is Mine” ends this set—and Gerrit Rietveld, the designer central to the De Stijl art movement. De Stijl’s self-imposed limitations, like controlled color schemes and repetitive motifs, remained paramount for The White Stripes on their second album. But this is also the sound of a band finding more room to roam—and of setting up the stage where they would soon find fame.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

Side A

  1. A1You're Pretty Good Looking
  2. A2Hello Operator
  3. A3Little Bird
  4. A4Apple Blossom
  5. A5I'm Bound To Pack It Up
  6. A6Death Letter
  7. A7Sister, Do You Know My Name?

Side B

  1. B8Truth Doesn't Make A Noise
  2. B9A Boy's Best Friend
  3. B10Let's Build A Home
  4. B11Jumble, Jumble
  5. B12Why Can't You Be Nicer To Me?
  6. B13Your Southern Can Is Mine

Credits

Performers

72 collectors on Gatefold own this · 54 pressings tracked on Gatefold