.

Jack White Says New White Stripes "Won't Be Too Far Off"

May 8, 2009 10:07 AM ET

When Jack White announced he was starting up another new band, the Dead Weather, earlier this year, White Stripes fans wondered when they'd see another album of Jack and Meg songs. But now White says that with drummer Meg overcoming the anxiety issues that derailed a tour in September 2007, he doesn't think new White Stripes material will be "too far off. Maybe next year." This is obviously amazing news for the band's fans, who initially suspected the Stripes' hasty withdrawal from the road meant splitsville. "Nothing of the sort," Jack tells Music Radar.

White says the sudden return to the road took its toll on Meg, "and we had to take a break." White tells Music Radar that he was on tour with the Raconteurs for about a year before resuming business with the Stripes, but "Meg had come from a dead-halt for a year and went right back into that madness," he says. "Meg is a very shy girl, a very quiet and shy person. To go full-speed from a dead-halt is overwhelming." Meg is now engaged to Jackson Smith, the son of Patti Smith and the MC5's Fred "Sonic" Smith.

"People don't really understand. They think you go up on stage and you're having a blast, like you're partying or some shit," White continues. "That's not the case. It's hard work to go on tour." As for what fans can expect from the next White Stripes studio offering, White says its too early to say, but that he and Meg "had recorded a couple of songs at the new studio, [and] I talked to her about coming by" this summer, after the Dead Weather does some summer shows.

(Check out the many guises of Jack White.)

In February, Jack and Meg took the stage together for the first time in two years to bid farewell to Conan O'Brien's late-night show before he took off for L.A. to host The Tonight Show. O'Brien spoke to Rolling Stone about his special relationship with the duo, who appeared on his stage many times: "There has always been a childlike silliness to our show, and I'd like to think there's been a silly sweetness to our show. There's a sweetness to the White Stripes — there's the hard rock but there's this sweetness that I think resonates a little bit with our show and it's always been a good fit."

Related Stories:

All White Stripes Album Reviews
Jack White's Dead Weather Debut With a Bang in New York
Raconeturs Team With Skaggs and Monroe for "Old Enough"
Jack White and Alicia Keys: Bond's New Duo

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
Stay Connected

Sign up to get Rolling Stone's daily newsletter.

Song Stories

“Smells Like Teen Spirit”

Nirvana | 1991

"Smells Like Teen Spirit," named after a brand of deodorant marketed to girls, was Kurt Cobain's attempt to "write the ultimate pop song," he said, using the soft-loud dynamic of his favorite band, the Pixies. Cobain "had that dichotomy of punk rage and alienation," the song’s producer, Butch Vig, told Rolling Stone, "but also this vulnerable pop sensibility. In 'Teen Spirit,' a lot of that vulnerability is in the tone of his voice." Sadly, by the time of Nirvana's last U.S. tour, in late '93, Cobain was tortured by the obligation to play "Teen Spirit" every night. "There are many other songs that I have written that are as good, if not better," he claimed.

More Song Stories entries »