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Lazaretto (album)

Lazaretto
Jack White - Lazaretto.jpg
Studio album by Jack White
Released June 10, 2014 (2014-06-10)
Recorded 2012–14
Studio
Genre
Length 39:13
Label
Producer Jack White
Jack White chronology
Blunderbuss
(2012)
Lazaretto
(2014)
Acoustic Recordings 1998–2016
(2016)
Singles from Lazaretto
  1. "High Ball Stepper"
    Released: April 1, 2014 (promotional)
  2. "Lazaretto"
    Released: April 19, 2014
  3. "Just One Drink"
    Released: June 9, 2014
  4. "Would You Fight for My Love?"
    Released: June 30, 2014
  5. "Alone in My Home"
    Released: September 29, 2014
  6. "That Black Bat Licorice"
    Released: February 17, 2015
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 80/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
The A.V. Club A−
The Daily Telegraph 5/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly B
The Guardian 4/5 stars
The Independent 3/5 stars
NME 7/10
Pitchfork Media 7.1/10
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars
Spin 6/10

Lazaretto is the second studio album by Jack White. It was released on June 10, 2014, through White's own label Third Man Records in association with XL Recordings and Columbia Records. The limited-edition "Ultra" LP features hidden songs, secret grooves and holograms that materialize when the record is being played. Lazaretto was partly inspired by a collection of short stories, poems, and plays White wrote when he was 19 years old and rediscovered years later in his attic. Lazaretto debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, selling 138,000 copies in its first week.

Sessions for the album began in 2012 during gaps in touring for White's Blunderbuss album. White told Rolling Stone in a February 2013 interview that he was working on "20 to 25 tracks." He explained of the new material, "it's definitely not one sound. It's definitely several. Like you heard in Blunderbuss, there're many styles there. I don't pick my style and then write a song. I just write whatever comes out of me, and whatever style it is what it is, and it becomes something later." He hinted during a January 2014 chat session with fans on the Third Man Records message board that he was almost done with the record. "I'm producing two albums this month, and finishing them," White wrote. "One of them is mine."

The Vault, Third Man's exclusive fan club subscription service, released a limited-edition version of the album on blue-and-white vinyl. It was packaged with a 40-page hardcover book, a fold-out poster, a National Archives photo that appears throughout the album art, and a 7-inch featuring demo versions of two songs recorded in Mexico, "Alone in My Home" and "Entitlement", the finished versions of which appear on the album. The "Ultra LP" version contains hidden tracks that are pressed into the vinyl underneath the inner label on each side of the record, a song ("Just One Drink") that has two different intros depending on where the needle is dropped, continuous drones, and holograms that appear on the record's surface when it's being played.

Songs on the album were inspired, in part, by short stories and plays written by White when he was 19 years old. He found the writings in his attic and reworked them into new lyrics. ""Some of it's garbage, and I sort of laughed while I was reading it," he explained to Rolling Stone. "I was going to throw away a bunch of it, but I was just coming up with new styles of attacking songwriting for the album." In April, a video of the instrumental song "High Ball Stepper" was released as a teaser for the album. "Lazaretto", the title track, was confirmed as the album's first single. White explained the song's meaning to NPR: "This was a rhyme about the braggadocio of some hip-hop lyrics — the bragging about oneself in hip-hop music. The character who's singing this song is bragging about himself, but he's actually bragging about real things he's actually accomplished and real things that he actually does, not imaginary things or things he would like to do." The song "Just One Drink" premiered in May.


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