Write a letter to the editor discussing problem of your Area because of DarkStreet In in your surrounding and no security guards that help in increasing Theifs.You have try to speak in a No steps taken and problem increase write in 150 words
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the first thing to say about brother-sister Detroit duo White Stripes is that it hasbeen some time since a band looked so defiantly, organically
odd
. At one point,there was a hot rumour flying around that they were not siblings at all, rather adivorced couple, which makes you wonder what sort of children they might havehad. Watching their sweaty, intimate show at Brighton’s Concorde 2, it’s clear that,even in music-business terms, White Stripes are not your average twentysomethings.Dressed only in red, white, a touch of black, Jack and Meg Wade resemblesomething Andy Warhol and David Byrne might have dreamt up for an arthappening.Moreover, both remind you of movies. There’s Jack on vocals and guitar,twanging away hypnotically, all raven, mussed hair and screaming paleness. Heresembles one of the lost smalltown teenagers who sat beside the dead body in
River’s Edge
. Then there’s Meg, with her drums, bashing away intensely, all long,drippy pigtails and hillbilly stillness, like she might feel more at home spanking thebanjo in an all-female remake of
Deliverance
. White Stripes’s determined visualoddness sets them apart from the common herd maybe because it suggests that,uniquely for these times, they do not (will not?) exude any stale pop chumminess,any We’re-Just-Like-You-Guys bonhomie (the last refuge of the talentless popscoundrel). With White Stripes, it seems to be a case of: We’re
different
, nothing likeyou at all. Stare as hard as you like, baby – this time it really is all about the music.And what music it is. White Stripes formed in the late Nineties, but it was theirthird album, this year’s
White Blood Cells
, that got them noticed. And deservedly so.Listening to
White Blood Cells
feels like being hypnotised into joining a sinisterreligious cult for the 15-track duration. Remarkably, it manages to be insanely,
impertinently
derivative without irritating the listener. Everywhere on the album,you’re hearing The Stooges, The Pixies, Suicide, Bob Dylan, Sonic Youth, Jane’sAddiction, The Kinks, The Cramps, Sonic Youth, Led Zeppelin, The Beatles andpretty much everybody else of note you can think of.And while at first you laugh and think: Get out of here, you cheeky, thieving littlebeggars, something about the way White Stripes mix it all up, then push it all out ina bluesy, garagey, noir-country roar makes you realise that something very specialis happening. It’s as if all the best facets of twentieth-century music have been fedinto one of those car-crushing machines and White Stripes are the cube that popsout at the end. Any fool can listen to music, many a fool actually makes it, but withWhite Stripes you get the spooky feeling that – without bass-lines, without mincingabout with computer trickery – they have actually become the music.The other great thing about White Stripes is that they’re unafraid to tell youstories. At times, their set at Brighton was less a collection of songs than it was aseries of out-of-towner road movies, part Neil Diamond, part George Formby, partWillie
odd
. At one point,there was a hot rumour flying around that they were not siblings at all, rather adivorced couple, which makes you wonder what sort of children they might havehad. Watching their sweaty, intimate show at Brighton’s Concorde 2, it’s clear that,even in music-business terms, White Stripes are not your average twentysomethings.Dressed only in red, white, a touch of black, Jack and Meg Wade resemblesomething Andy Warhol and David Byrne might have dreamt up for an arthappening.Moreover, both remind you of movies. There’s Jack on vocals and guitar,twanging away hypnotically, all raven, mussed hair and screaming paleness. Heresembles one of the lost smalltown teenagers who sat beside the dead body in
River’s Edge
. Then there’s Meg, with her drums, bashing away intensely, all long,drippy pigtails and hillbilly stillness, like she might feel more at home spanking thebanjo in an all-female remake of
Deliverance
. White Stripes’s determined visualoddness sets them apart from the common herd maybe because it suggests that,uniquely for these times, they do not (will not?) exude any stale pop chumminess,any We’re-Just-Like-You-Guys bonhomie (the last refuge of the talentless popscoundrel). With White Stripes, it seems to be a case of: We’re
different
, nothing likeyou at all. Stare as hard as you like, baby – this time it really is all about the music.And what music it is. White Stripes formed in the late Nineties, but it was theirthird album, this year’s
White Blood Cells
, that got them noticed. And deservedly so.Listening to
White Blood Cells
feels like being hypnotised into joining a sinisterreligious cult for the 15-track duration. Remarkably, it manages to be insanely,
impertinently
derivative without irritating the listener. Everywhere on the album,you’re hearing The Stooges, The Pixies, Suicide, Bob Dylan, Sonic Youth, Jane’sAddiction, The Kinks, The Cramps, Sonic Youth, Led Zeppelin, The Beatles andpretty much everybody else of note you can think of.And while at first you laugh and think: Get out of here, you cheeky, thieving littlebeggars, something about the way White Stripes mix it all up, then push it all out ina bluesy, garagey, noir-country roar makes you realise that something very specialis happening. It’s as if all the best facets of twentieth-century music have been fedinto one of those car-crushing machines and White Stripes are the cube that popsout at the end. Any fool can listen to music, many a fool actually makes it, but withWhite Stripes you get the spooky feeling that – without bass-lines, without mincingabout with computer trickery – they have actually become the music.The other great thing about White Stripes is that they’re unafraid to tell youstories. At times, their set at Brighton was less a collection of songs than it was aseries of out-of-towner road movies, part Neil Diamond, part George Formby, partWillie
gunavchugh:
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