Since you are interested in Icky Thump, here is a list of other items that you may find interesting.
The White Stripes
Elephant [ XL Recordings / CD - released 31/Mar/2003 ] The fourth long player from Meg and Jack White is wild, beautiful and fresh... a really intense rock 'n' roll record! From here, The White Stripes went from indie obscurity to gold records and worldwide fame. |
The White Stripes
Get Behind Me Satan [ XL Recordings / CD - released 6/Jun/2005 ] This is 5th album from The White Stripes - the follow-up to their incredibly successful CD, 'Elephant' - and features the brilliant first single, "Blue Orchid". |
Loretta Lynn
Van Lear Rose [ Interscope Records / CD - released 10/May/2004 ] Produced by the White Stripes' Jack White, this album features moody arrangements, loud' rocking guitars and intimate songwriting, plus a stunning Lynn / White duet! |
The Brunettes
Paper Dolls [ Lil' Chief Records / CD - released 27/Oct/2009 ] Heather Mansfield & Jonathan Bree have now released 4 albums and 4 EPs of gorgeously affecting indie pop music. Paper Dolls' sees The Brunettes building on their previous work without sacrificing the aesthetic that has gained such widespread acclaim. |
Tomahawk
Anonymous [ Ipecac Recordings / CD - released 19/Jun/2007 ] Now a 3-piece (Mike Patton, Duane Denison and John Stanie), Tomahawk offer their third album, which explores and reinterprets the darker, more recessed ancestral music created by North America’s indigenous people. |
Various Artists
Platinum Rock Volume Three [ Warner Music New Zealand / 2 CD - released 23/Feb/2009 ] 34 of the best rock songs of the last decade by The Killers, Thirsty Merc, Weezer, Elemeno P, Papa Roach, Kaiser Chiefs, System of a Down, The Raconteurs, Shihad, P.O.D, Blink-182, Nickelback, The White Stripes, Good Charlotte, Seether, The... |
The Vines
Melodia [ Ivy League Records / CD - released 14/Jul/2008 ] Their fourth album sees The Vines pushing themselves to the polar extremes of their sound - pummelling, speedball fired demento rock amped up to the Nth degree plus songs in classically beautiful lazy day territory. |