.

Jack White Digs Up 1999 Live Cuts for Third Man Vault

New release to include early versions of White Stripes classics recorded by his band the Bricks

Jack White
Imeh Akpanudosen/Getty Images
January 3, 2013 4:45 PM ET

Third Man Records have dipped back into their vault and are set to release a live recording of Jack White and the Bricks recorded at a Detroit bowling alley in 1999.

Jack White and the Bricks: Live on the Garden Bowl Lanes will be pressed on bowling-pin-white vinyl, with nine tracks including two Bob Dylan covers ("Isis" and "I Threw It All Away") and several songs that would later be reinterpreted by the White Stripes, including "Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground" and "The Union Forever." The set closes with a cover of ? and the Mysterians' "Ain't It a Shame," which White dedicated to "a girl who has to get surgery soon" – i.e. Meg White, who was about to undergo a tonsillectomy.

50 Best Songs of 2012: Jack White, 'Sixteen Candles'

The recording marks the first show Jack White and the Bricks played, with the band featuring future Raconteur Brendan Benson on guitar, Kevin Peyok (the Waxwings, the See-See) on bass and Ben Blackwell (the Dirtbombs) on drums. The setting was a home of the once-thriving Detroit garage rock scene; the band set up and performed on lanes 11 through 14, while a four-track reel-to-reel was placed in lane 10.

Along with Live on the Garden Bowl Lanes, this upcoming Third Man Vault package will also include a seven-inch single with an early demo of the Raconteurs' "Steady, As She Goes" recorded by White and Benson on the A-side, and the B-side featuring the two playing "The Same Boy You've Always Known" from 1999, two years before it appeared on the White Stripes' White Blood Cells.

If you're not already a Third Man Vault member, you can sign up by January 31st in order to receive this upcoming release.

To read the new issue of Rolling Stone online, plus the entire RS archive: Click Here

prev
Music Main Next

blog comments powered by Disqus
Daily Newsletter

Get the latest RS news in your inbox.

Sign up to receive the Rolling Stone newsletter and special offers from RS and its
marketing partners.

X

We may use your e-mail address to send you the newsletter and offers that may interest you, on behalf of Rolling Stone and its partners. For more information please read our Privacy Policy.

Song Stories

“Youth Knows No Pain”

Lykke Li | 2011

“Like on 'Youth Knows No Pain' — we are the ones that should demonstrate, because we can take it,” Likke Li said. “We can pierce ourselves, take Ecstasy, dance all night and still go to work at our McDonald's jobs.” Despite the hedonistic sentiment in the song, the Swedish singer also admitted in hindsight her youth had repercussions. “I remember when I was 18-19 and feeling that I know it all,” Li said. “I always feel that I know it all. But that song is about realizing you don’t, and reflecting, ‘Boy, if I only knew what would follow.’”

More Song Stories entries »