The 3 LP set captures a blistering 2003 set on colored vinyl

Third Man Records is excited to announce the 58th installment of their Vault series with The White Stripes – Live in Las Vegas. The 3 LP set captures a blistering 2003 Las Vegas set at The Joint at the Hard Rock Casino, all freshly remastered and pressed to red, white, and black vinyl. The set also includes a bonus 7-inch featuring Bob Dylan’s 2004 performance of perennial White Stripes favorite “Ball and Biscuit” featuring Jack White, and on the flip side, the first-ever performance of the track. All of this is accompanied by a patch, a bumper sticker, and art prints by The White Stripes’ frequent collaborator Rob Jones.

September 2003 was a moment of transition. Not two months prior, the entire existence of the White Stripes was nervously put on hold as Jack White recovered quickly from a car crash broken finger, the effects of which had the potential to be catastrophic. Ultimately it only briefly inhibited him from playing the D minor chord on guitar.

Once back into the swing of things, with the profile of the band continuing to rise in the wake of Elephant’s release, the shows started to take on a life of their own. Whereas the performances had always been compelling and engaging, this return to stage found the band measurably more ferocious. The unplanned respite, however fleeting, was just the right timing to give Jack and Meg perspective, catch their breaths, and hit back like a fucking rocket.

In the midst of the run of shows in September 2003, a promotional idea was cooked up by the team at V2 Records – 40 or so fans would be flown out to the White Stripes show in Las Vegas, get a meet-and-greet with the band, and then some time afterward be presented with a vinyl pressing of that evening’s show.

The original pressing is sparse to say the least. With no printed artwork, tracklisting or even credits The White Stripes Live In Las Vegas rubber-stamped on the labels is the only true identifier on this record. A dip through the original paperwork shows only 100 copies were ever pressed, all at United Record Pressing in Nashville.

In celebration of 20 years since the performance, the 58th Vault package from Third Man Records is the first-ever commercially available pressing of the White Stripes triple LP Live In Las Vegas.

Josh Hartnett, Steve McDonald, Darryl Hannah, Scott Caan and Josh Klinghoffer were all there, not necessarily together or gambling. Soledad Brothers and Whirlwind Heat tore it up as the opening bands, and the Stripes’ set itself was spectacular. The unpredictable moments electrify…an off-the-cuff take of Buddy Holly’s “Not Fade Away” to a mid-set abandonment of “Offend In Every Way” because of its reliance upon the D minor chord and an opportune tease of “Mary Had A Little Lamb” imbue the evening with spontaneous joy. Songs from Elephant had taken shape as muscled, taut beasts of energy as the blasting jolt of pure rock and roll lava via “The Hardest Button To Button” testifies. All these factors make this nightstick out as measurably better than the rest.

Third Man has returned to the original multi-tracks for a complete remixing and remastering done by the trusted and exacting Bill Skibbe at Third Man Mastering in Nashville. These discs are pressed on 180-gram vinyl at Third Man Pressing in Detroit, in the unmistakable red, white and black colorways we know and love from the Stripes.

All of this is appropriately housed in the unmistakably captivating artwork by Grammy Award-winning designer, Rob Jones. For more than two decades, Rob’s artwork has been synonymous with The White Stripes, from concert posters to merchandise and eventually, album art. As a celebration of 20-plus years of working together, this package brings together elements from all those fields, with his stunning album cover pairing exquisitely with his reimagined silk-screened prints and the eye-catching bumper sticker and patch.

On March 17th, 2004, with nary a warning, Bob Dylan brought out Jack White for a live rendition of “Ball And Biscuit” at the State Theater in Detroit, to date one of maybe two songs Dylan has covered from this century. The special moment has long been available via audience-sourced bootleg audio, but Third Man, in partnership with Sony Music Entertainment, returned to the original multi-track recording and put together an impressive fresh mix of the audio, again done by Bill Skibbe.

The flipside to the single is the first-ever live performance of “Ball And Biscuit” by the White Stripes, from May 2nd, 2002 at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire in London. Recorded in the middle of the two-week stint the band was tracking Elephant just down the road at Toe Rag Studio in Hackney, this embryonic outing serves as a poignant reminder of just how far the band and the song had traveled, literally and metaphorically, in just twenty-two months.

Pressed on glittery red 7-inch vinyl with artwork by the estimable Chris Everhart, the whole shebang is pretty to hold and pleasing to hear.

1. Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground
2. When I Hear My Name
3. Not Fade Away (Buddy Holly)
4. St. James Infirmary Blues (traditional)
5. Black Math
6. The Big Three Killed My Baby
7. I Want To Be The Boy To Warm Your Mother’s Heart
8. Death Letter (Son House)
9. Take A Whiff On Me (Traditional)
10. In The Cold, Cold Night
11. Wasting My Time
12. I Just Don’t Know What To Do With Myself (Burt Bacharach / Hal David)
13. Offend In Every Way (Incomplete)
14. The Union Forever
15. Seven Nation Army
16. You’ve Got Her In Your Pocket
17. I Think I Smell A Rat
18. Look Me Over Closely (Terry Gilkyson / Marelene Dietrich)
19. Cannon
20. Mary Had A Little Lamb (Traditional)
21. Cannon (reprise)
22. Ball And Biscuit
23. The Hardest Button To Button
24. You’re Pretty Good Looking (For A Girl)
25. Hello Operator
26. We’re Going To Be Friends
27. Hotel Yorba
28. Fell In Love With A Girl
29. Your Southern Can Is Mine (Blind Willie McTell)
30. Screwdriver
31. Boll Weevil (Leadbelly)