Icky Thump
From Stripespedia
Icky Thump is the sixth album released by The White Stripes. It was released on June 15, 2007 (Germany), June 18, 2007 (the rest of Europe), and June 19, 2007 (the rest of the world). It is the band's first album on Warner Bros. Records.
Icky Thump entered the UK Albums Chart at number one and debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 with 223,000 copies sold. By late July, Icky Thump was certified gold in the United States. By the end of 2007, 1,235,000 copies had been sold world-wide making it the 39th best-selling album of 2007. As of March 8, 2008, the album has sold 725,125 copies in the US.
The album recieved mostly positive reviews by critics.
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Promotion and release
To promote Icky Thump before its release, the band distributed custom-designed boxes and previewed tracks from the record through Ice Cream Man. The ice cream promotion focused on the Coachella, Sasquatch, and Bonnaroo festivals and culminated in the band's release show on June 20, 2007 at the temporarily rechristened "Icky Thump Records" in West Hollywood.
In addition to being released on CD and 180 gram vinyl, the band released the album on a limited edition 512 MB USB drive. There are two versions, one of which depicts Jack, the other depicting Meg. The pressing was limited to 3,333 of each, and were shipped the week of the U.S. release. Each drive contained the album in Apple lossless format.
The 180g vinyl edition contains alternate versions of both "Icky Thump" and "Rag and Bone". "Icky Thump" is a slightly different mix to the digital version and is also edited to be 14 seconds shorter. "Rag and Bone" is also a different mix but in addition contains totally different vocals for each verse (possibly the original guide vocals and there are no vocals from Meg) and is missing the harmonies from the last chorus, resulting in the track seeming unfinished.
The sound quality of the digital versions of Icky Thump has been a hot topic surrounding this album - it has been criticized by some saying the songs have been mastered too loudly and without using peak limiting. Critics claim this results in clipping or "digital distortion" which can be heard during any of the tracks (particularly during bass drum hits) as nasty crackling. The vinyl version was mastered by Steve Hoffman, a highly respected audiophile mastering engineer.
Track listing
All songs were written by Jack White except where noted.
- 1. "Icky Thump"
- 2. "You Don't Know What Love Is (You Just Do as You're Told)"
- 3. "300 MPH Torrential Outpour Blues"
- 4. "Conquest" (Corky Robbins)
- 5. "Bone Broke"
- 6. "Prickly Thorn, But Sweetly Worn"
- 7. "St. Andrew (This Battle Is in the Air)"
- 8. "Little Cream Soda"
- 9. "Rag and Bone"
- 10. "I'm Slowly Turning into You"
- 11. "A Martyr for My Love for You"
- 12. "Catch Hell Blues"
- 13. "Effect and Cause"
Bonus tracks
- 1. "Baby Brother" (bonus track on the Japanese and iTunes edition)
- 2. "Tennessee Border" (Hank Williams) (live, bonus track on iTunes pre-order edition)
Essay
I saw an image of someone I once knew today and it made me write down my first impressions. I don't normally tend to do that. Guess that makes me an impressionist;
Looks like there's a storm coming
Looks like somebody told you to smile
Looks like you're waiting there for someone
Looks like you'll be waiting there for a while
Guess you'd rather not think about it much
Guess you'd rather not think about much at all
Guess you know just what they like
Guess you don't know much at all
Feels like you're just passing the time---sometimes---
Feels like you never really were a friend of mine
Feels like ghosts do walk among us
And I guess, it looks, as if it feels
Like phantom pain from the bee that stung us.
I do like impressions though. I once saw a man completely impersonate
another man who was not unlike himself if you thought about it. Which I did.
'Who would have thought' needs a question mark at the end of it, doesn't it?
A lot of those symbols at the end of things bother me, actually I can't be bothered.
They make a symbol in sheet music when the writer wants you to keep playing
till the cows come home, but I forget what it's called. I like that idea though.
Playing until someone 'decides' it's time to stop based on the feel of the room.
What's the longest it could go on? I imagine that every time I see that symbol.
What if there was a room that had just the right vibe in it, just the right amount
of energy to push, and inspire, and invigorate a conductor and her entire
orchestra, to hold that last note until...they couldn't even remember they
held it that long? When there's a world record for something, it's an
extreme thing. How big is the biggest of its kind? And how did it get to the point
where the conditions called for something so massive to be constructed?
It's baffling. Beautiful though. Icky thump.
III
Credits
Musicians
- Jack White : guitar, vocals, synthesizer, keyboards
- Meg White : drums, percussion, vocals
- Regulo Aldama : trumpet on "Conquest"
- Jim Drury : bagpipes on "Prickly Thorn, But Sweetly Worn" and "St. Andrew"
Production/Recording/Crew
- Produced by Jack White
- Recorded by Joe Chiccarelli and Lowell Reynolds
- Mixed by Jack White and Joe Chiccarelli
- Mastered by Vlado Meller/Sony Mastering
- Photography by Autumn De Wilde
- Design and Layout by Jack White and Rob Jones at Animal Rummy
- Managed by Ian Montone at Monotone, Inc.
- Recorded February 2007 at Blackbird Studios in Nashville, Tennessee.
Special Thanks
After ten, wonderful, fortunate, and tumultous years, The White Stripes would like to thank:
God, Electra, Tara and Star, Jasper, Elroy and Pigeon, and all the saints at the bar.
To Mexican Town in the southwest, and anywhere we called home,
In fact, to the words home, and bone, not to mention telephone.
And to the sounds of the Airline, and the Kay, and of course Silvertone,
To Muldoon for the tunes, and for Dominic in the room,
And to Chloe, Colleen, Jodie, Sarah, and Rich, for handling all of the press for us two,
To Baka, and Butch who was far past the norm,
Who made three fortunes in his life, but never saw us perform,
To Heather for scooting over, and Planet Ant for being open,
Swank and Walker for rocking, and all of the [[The Raconteurs|Teurs for rolling,
To Blackwell in the back of the van, and Baker in the front,
And to Ian at the helm of this beautiful bus,
To decisions, and planning, and minutia, and luck,
And to Tiff for the things that went unnoticed by us,
Rob Jones with the tones, and Michele with the phones,
Weise, Davidian, and Randy for their low-interest loans,
To anyone who had to endure hearing us moan,
And of course Kaplan and Warby, for booking us shows.
To Miss Stacy Fass, just for being bad ass,
And NO thanks to the lawyers who were shifty and crass.
To Peter, and Matthew, and James, and Mary,
And all the other apostles that made the road less scary.
To Russell, and Gershon, and Whalley, and Mills,
And to all the indie labels and their three dollar bills.
To Teresa, Theresa, Ciciley, Cathy, Kathy, and Kellie,
And all of the other mothers and handmaidens who put food in our bellies.
To Frozen for taking the pictures that move,
To the Heat for warming us up with their groove.
To every brother and sister we could muster to mention,
For every piece of advice that we truly needed,
And to need, the mother of all invention,
To Mo, Anne, Ray, Stephen, Joe, Barb, Leo, Eddie, and Alan,
For support by the truckload, and love by the gallons.
Again don't forget your mothers, turns out they have feelings too,
And fathers of all kinds, teaching us to be true,
To those who stayed home and blessed where we'd roam.
To Matt Pollack for not resting until speakers were blown.
To Liam, and Stewart, and to Kettle, and Joe,
The engineers that compressed us, and told the sound where to go,
To all we have loved, and all we have lost,
To those who stood by us and never thought of the cost,
To Krupa, and Mitchell, Buddy, Bonham, and Bellson,
To the Scarlett White hearted little queenie Miss Elson,
To the people who bought the records, and didn't let others concern it,
You are the ones who deserve your money back, if anyone, you've earned it,
We're sorry that we're never thankful enough for our daily bread,
And so sorry to anyone we didn't mention, or anyone else we've misled,
And lastly you're welcome,
To anyone who might've thanked us instead,
You're welcome to anything we've got left in our head,
It's more yours than it's ours, be it white, black, or red,
If it chooses to come out,
From now 'til we're dead.
This album is dedicated to Good Guy Gorm.
Trivia
- Icky Thump does not feature marimba or piano (although it does contain several keyboards, including a vintage synth).
- The album has the most guitar solos Jack White has ever recorded to tape.
- The album marks the first time the band has performed with horns and bagpipes.
- The album marks the first time the band has recorded and mixed an album in a conventional recording studio.
- Icky thump was still, however, recorded to reel-to-reel, and mixed to tape in complete analog fashion.
- The album was recorded in three weeks, the longest the band have ever spent working on a record.
- Icky Thump is the second longest album of the Stripes pantheon thus far, second to Elephant with more than 48 minutes in running time.
- The title is derived from "ecky-thump", a Lancashire colloquial response of surprise, popularized by an episode of the 1970s UK comedy series The Goodies. On the show "Later... with Jools Holland" (broadcast June 1, 2007), Jack attributed the album's name to its use as an exclamation by his wife, Karen Elson, who is from Lancashire. He added that the deliberate misspelling was to make it easier for an American audience to identify with. The liner notes for Icky Thump also suggest the spelling variation was due to concerns over copyright infringement. Ironically, the pearly costume "theme" that the band used for this album is a traditional Cockney outfit, somewhat contrary to the Northern dialect of the title.
- “I’m Slowly Turning Into You” is possibly the first song to be written based on a video treatment. This was inspired by one which was given to the White Stripes by Michel Gondry which features Jack walking, followed by many other people. The people start off looking like Jack, and then slowly look more and more like Meg. At the end of the line of people is Meg.