The White Stripes Greatest Hits | |
Type: | greatest |
Artist: | the White Stripes |
Cover: | The White Stripes - Greatest Hits.png |
Recorded: | 1998–2007 |
Length: | 81:42 |
Label: | |
Producer: | Jack White |
Prev Title: | Live at the Gold Dollar IV |
Prev Year: | 2017 |
Next Title: | Live at the Detroit Institute of Arts |
Next Year: | 2021 |
The White Stripes Greatest Hits (also known as My Sister Thanks You and I Thank You: The White Stripes Greatest Hits) is the only compilation album by the American rock duo the White Stripes, released in America by Third Man and Columbia Records on December 4, 2020, and internationally on February 26, 2021. It contains a selection of songs from the band's six studio albums and the standalone singles "Let's Shake Hands" and "Jolene".
The only compilation and non-live release of the band since their 2011 disbandment, The White Stripes Greatest Hits was released with music videos and other memorabilia. The album received positive reviews from critics, who deemed it a fitting retrospect of the band's career.
The album is the band's only compilation in their history, and only non-live or non-video release since dissolving in 2011. On behalf of the band, Third Man Records stated: "We get that the idea of 'Greatest Hits' may seem irrelevant in the era of streaming, but we also wholeheartedly believe that great bands deserve a 'Greatest Hits'".[1]
Of the 26 songs featured on the album, 14 were previously released as singles. Ben Blackwell, co-founder of Third Man and the band's archivist,[2] detailed the stories behind certain tracks in a 2020 interview with Spin.[3]
On October 6, 2020, the album was announced through Third Man, revealing that it consisted of twenty-six songs but only naming "Ball and Biscuit", which was then released as a promotional single.[4] [5] The band also relaunched their Instagram account to promote the album.[6] On November 10, 2020, its full tracklist was revealed through a crossword puzzle, which "Third Man colleagues had trouble solving".[7] [8]
The White Stripes Greatest Hits was released in the United States by Third Man and Columbia Records on December 4, 2020,[9] [10] and was internationally released on February 26, 2021.[11] [12] Music videos for "Let's Shake Hands" and "Apple Blossom" were simultaneously released with the album, which were directed by Wartella: the former features rotoscoped footage of the band performing the song onstage.[13] [14] [15]
On December 22, 2020, the band released a 90-minute animated yule log video, which was directed by Noah Sterling and features the artwork of Blue J.[16] [17]
The White Stripes Greatest Hits was positively received by music critics.[18] Review aggregating website Metacritic reports a normalized score of 89 out of 100 based on 8 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". AllMusic editor Heather Phares wrote "The White Stripes Greatest Hits is filled with the same detail, wit, and willingness to subvert expectations that made the band so dynamic when they were active." She further wrote that "the collection's hand-curated feel is much more personal than the average best-of or streaming play list." The New Yorker's Amanda Petrusich said the album was "a good reminder of how odd and inventive the band was… It feels old-fashioned, even deliberately so, but it sounds awfully good."
Hal Horowitz of American Songwriter said "like all classic music, the songs, and especially the group’s organic, iconoclastic unvarnished garage blues style, remain ageless. This generous 26 track collection handily covers all the album highlights, adding a few cool obscurities to the bit-bursting hour and 20 minute playing time." However, he was critical of the packaging.[19] Clash magazine praised the album for reflecting "the evolution of the band without ever becoming a predictable, chronologically ordered 'Singles Collection'."[20] The Irish Times wrote "Everything here lays out, with a typical minimum of fuss, their low-fidelity aesthetic… console/engage yourself with a rowdy gathering of rock, roll and everything in between."[21] The Independent's Mark Beaumont felt that tracks from their self-titled debut could have been swapped for their later works, but nonetheless said "The faithful will feel more than sated, and newcomers will find more to suck on here than a peppermint bass drum."[22]
Emma Swann of DIY praised the "non-linear" track listing, which she said allowed fans to "rediscover the band again" and stated that the record "feels more like opening a time capsule than self-congratulation; as if that 2011 statement (their breakup) locked a door we’re only now allowed to peek back into."[23] Eric Danton of Paste felt that there was instead a lack of organization, but that it ultimately helped the album nonetheless: "skipping back and forth among albums and sounds demonstrates anew just how idiosyncratic The White Stripes could be" and wrote "this collection also documents an influential piece of the indie-rock revival of the early 2000s… that's as compelling a reason as any to dig into their music all over again."[24]
The White Stripes
Artwork
Peak position | |
Swedish Physical Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[25] | 17 |
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Position | ||
US Top Rock Albums (Billboard)[26] | 66 |
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