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The Raconteurs – [Album]

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Saturday, 05 April 2008

While other big-draw names in music

have rebelled against the major-label

machine recently by releasing their

music independently just to prove

(maybe even to themselves) that they

can (Nine Inch Nails and Radiohead are

the biggest names to do so), Raconteurs

masterminds Jack White and Brendan

Benson chose to flex their muscles and

throw their weight around a little in a

totally different way: two weeks before

its ultimate release, the duo shipped

their side project’s new a

lbum, Consolers Of the Lonely, to Warner Brothers with the understa

nding that no changes would be made a

nd no considerations for such profess

ional criticism would be entertained

under any circumstances. Raconteurs&r

squo; label didn’t balk at the la

ck of control and did not argue, they s

imply did as they were instructed.

It’s easy to understand

why there was no fight ins

tigated on those terms. Consolers

of the Lonely is, without quest

ion, White and Benson’s crowning

musical achievement; nothing the pair

has done separately in other bands or

together even comes close to this vin

tage, retro-rock masterpiece. Fo

r Consolers’ fourteen tracks, R

aconteurs have taken pages from the rock

royalty that found fame in the 70s&mda

sh;as well as, of course, The Beatles&

mdash;and overlapped them with

an honest-to-god musical enthusiast&rsq

uo;s sense of construction. In other

words, White and Benson were born and

raised upon the likes of T. Rex, Bob Dyl

an, The Band, Ted Nugent and Th

e Beatles, and you can tell they still

love them but, critically, they saw t

he opportunities those bands originall

y missed and so they’ve taken the

liberty of “fixing” them

here to produce a bombastic record fo

r all time.

The sucker pu

nch that the band lays on listeners righ

t off is that they wear each of those s

ounds on their sleeve as they go an

d make them all readily recogniza

ble in order to point the way. In &ldq

uo;Old Enough,” for example, Racon

teurs crossbreed CSNY’s multi-har

mony vocal writing and “Whatcha g

onna do about it” urgency with t

he band’s roots-inspired and folk

sy songwriting, which lets the Work

ingman’s Dead vibes hang

in the background of that and the band

throws some Steppenwolf-styled vin

tage keyboard washes out front for goo

d measure. Elsewhere, the ghosts of

Motor City Mania color the title trac

k, Sgt. Pepper-era Beatles&

rsquo; pop-filled disillusionment couple

d with Cheap Trick’s love of the

same sound and their ability to infl

ate it and make it sound even big

ger are the hooks laced into &ldqu

o;You Don’t Understand Me,”

and the German cabaret that inspire

d Bowie for three albums ba

ck when informs “The Switch

and the Spur” before the b

and runs back to do it all again.

No wonder the image on the back c

over of Consolers of the Lonely< /em> features Raconteurs bassist Jack

Lawrence clutching a handful of .45s&

mdash;it removes any doubt of w

hat the band was listening to while the

members were writing this.

With so many sounds being absorb

ed and spat back, it’d be easy

to think that The Raconteurs were grasp

ing at straws and trying to recreate t

he magic of their debut, but the tr

uth is that, by incorporating older,

established and classic styles int

o their own all-star brew of fine songwr

iting, they’ve far surpassed it.

Consolers of the Lonely is

a landmark record for White, Benson an

d The Raconteurs. They’ve s

et the bar incredibly high for future r

eleases with Consolers but, at the

same time, express a staggering amount

of talent and versatility that make

s it perfectly reasonable to believ

e that they could not only do it again,

but they can do better too. Listening t

o this album, you know the sky&r

squo;s the limit as far as what this ban

d is capable of.

Con

solers of th

e Lonely is out now on Third Man/Wa

rner.

More on The Raconte

urs here: www.therac

onteurs.com

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