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Jack White Show Notes

Tim Bray Posted by Tim Bray | Fri, 29 Aug 2014
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My fifteen-year-old and I attended the August 28, 2014 show at Deer Lake Park in Burnaby, a suburb of Vancouver. Its a terrific venue; a big lawn with a nicely-steep slope so you can see over the mosh pit. If youre not a Jack White fan you can stop reading, but if you are, this is a tour you should catch. My notes on the event, in no particular order, with better pictures than I can take:

  • Its not a terribly long set  just under two hours  but wow, is there ever a lot of music jammed in. Heres the set-list; I didnt take notes so there were noteworthy moments where I cant remember the song they were in. But anyhow, there are a lot of good songs in that list.

  • You cant take pictures. The conditions of entry exclude Professional cameras, defined as those with removable lenses. And you cant really use your phone either, because theres announcement which Ill try to reproduce: The whole show happens right here on the 40 feet of this stage, it looks way better to your eyes than through your mobile. We know you want pictures so Jacks hired a photographer and well post them on the web site, so use them and claim you took them if you like. And anyone standing in front of you holding up their phone is an asshole. Fair enough.

Jack white at Deer Lake Park

All photos: David James Swanson.

  • Theres no pre-cooked set list. At the end of each song, Jack decides whats next and you can see him telling one or two of the band, the ones who need to come in at the beginning; the rest are expected to figure it out and get with the program. It gets complicated; at the end of Alone in My Home, he decided to tack on an extra chorus of Temporary Ground, which required scurrying all over the stage and queueing up more or less the whole band. But it was effective.

  • Temporary Ground is a beautiful, beautiful song.

  • Noteworthy moment: Theremin solo! And really well-integrated into the song, too.

  • High Ball Stepper, which is pretty weird on the album, seems to be getting weirder and weirder as the tour progresses. It went to some very strange places, which is a brave thing to do with your set opener.

  • Ive always thought of Steady As She Goes as a nice tuneful pop ditty. Jack seems to think its a guitar anthem; he didnt quite convince me but his argument is forceful.

Jack White at Deer Lake Park
  • The White audience is a pretty white audience. When you live in immigrant-heavy aggressively-multiethnic Vancouver, the effect is pretty in-yo-face. More or less all the Asians I saw were wives or girlfriends. No, I have no idea why.

  • The first really big rock concert I ever attended was CSNY in the year& well, lets just say dinosaurs walked the earth not just the stage. There were people at last nights show with outfits and hair that could have been at that one. Young people I mean; there are stable Rock-&-Roll Looks that dont die: Straw-hat hippie, black-leather chick, Waynes-world dimbulb, country shitkicker, and so on. New looks have accreted over the decades: Mohawked punk and emo goth come to mind. Being in a rock-&-roll crowd makes me happy. I wore a leather skullcap and black jeans myself.

  • I was totally not the only one who went with a kid or kids; lots of multigenerational parties were head-banging together.

  • The sound was pretty bad, which is inexcusable in a nice outdoor venue. While lots of the individual instruments/voices sounded good, and some combos were spine-chilling  Guitar/theremin, bowed-bass/violin  the whole-band sound was too often an ugly crash-cymbal-heavy screech.

    Also, Jacks acoustic guitar sounded horrible, get a new mike or a new guitar or a new pickup or something. Also, the vocal mike at the upright piano sounded better than the one at the front of the stage. BTW, Jack should do more piano tunes, they bring out something different and good in him.

  • Jack White at Deer Lake Park
  • In the White-Stripes years, Jack got used to having a drummer at the front, stage left, playing a lot of simple CRASH! THUMP! CRASH! THUMP! lines. Megs gone now, but he hasnt lost the habit.

  • Obviously Jack is a significant guitarist, but last night he was way more effective with short stuff, filling in five bars getting to the bridge, than in the big long showpieces (for example on Ball and Biscuit), which wandered off into the weeds a bit.

  • Anyone who goes to soccer matches knows that its a lot of fun to join a few thousand people singing the Seven Nation Army riff. Turns out, its way more fun to do that with a professional backbeat behind you and Jack singing I'm going to Wichita/Far from this opera forevermore&, clapping over his head, letting the audience be the guitar.


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