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21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Marimba!, 21 Jun 2005
Get Behind Me Satan is a change of tack for the White Stripes. I was expecting it to follow the example of Blue Orchid, but it doesn't. It twists and turns, and each track gives you something new.Blue Orchid, the opener and first single, is well known to everyone, and opens the album at a brilliant pace. All albums should have a first track as good as this! The Nurse is an odd fish. It sounds like Jack is playing the Xylophone (turns out it's actually a Marimba) and Meg is beating him at random intervals with a hammer. I was very worried when I first heard this, it sounded extremely wierd, but I'm pleased to say it's a grower. My Doorbell is classic Stripes. Fantastic, instant hit. I love this song! Forever For Her is different again. Pianos galore and not too bad for it. A very strong track. Little Ghost is again odd. You probably won't like this at first, with some odd vocal harmonising at the end. The lyrics are wierd, but it's grown on me so it's now one of my favourite tracks. Most people say that the Denial Twist is the best track of the album, but even though it's quite good there are better tracks here. White Moon starts off softly and grows towards the end of the track. It seems to carry on the ghost theme of the album. It's not brilliant. Instinct Blues is BRILLIANT. Jack finds his guitar again, and the song is all the better for it. This song reminds me of the Black Keys. Passive Manipulation is the Meg-led short track in the middle of the album. It's difficult not to like this track. Its a breath of fresh air, breaks up Instinct Blues and Take, Take, Take. The lyrics on Take, Take, Take are quality. And musically, it's a pretty strong track too. Very good. As Ugly as I Seem comes out of nowhere. Very quiet, after the previous track it's very easy to overlook this one, but don't. Listen to it on its own and you'll appreciate it a lot more. For wierd use of instruments, look no further than Red Rain. It opens with a triangle, but then breaks into a bout of tourtured, angry guitar. Fairly good, not the best track, but not the worst either. I'm Lonely is a fantastic closing track, but the lyrics could raise a few questions. If you like the White Stripes, and you haven't bought this record, you really should. You can trust Jack and Meg to come up with something odd but not make a dog's dinner of it. This album succeeds. Trust them, they know what they're doing. And if you've just skipped through the review (and let's face it, it was too long) I didn't like this album when I first heard it, but it grew on me.
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