rdfs:comment
| - "Ball & Biscuit" is a song by The White Stripes which is featured on the Elephant album. Running at 7:17 in length, making it by far the duo's longest studio recording, the song is mainly a blues jam in which Jack White makes memorably heavy usage of an octave pedal while soloing on guitar. The song's main feature is the three extremely heavy and distorted-sounding solos, unique to any other White Stripes song, which are thus improvised with each live performance. They can be said to best demonstrate Jack White's talent with playing the guitar, at least among his studio recordings. They are, not to mention, by far the longest and most in-depth solos he performs with the Stripes, who otherwise make very brief use of solos and improvisation in the studio, and thus the song is extremely uniqu
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abstract
| - "Ball & Biscuit" is a song by The White Stripes which is featured on the Elephant album. Running at 7:17 in length, making it by far the duo's longest studio recording, the song is mainly a blues jam in which Jack White makes memorably heavy usage of an octave pedal while soloing on guitar. The song's main feature is the three extremely heavy and distorted-sounding solos, unique to any other White Stripes song, which are thus improvised with each live performance. They can be said to best demonstrate Jack White's talent with playing the guitar, at least among his studio recordings. They are, not to mention, by far the longest and most in-depth solos he performs with the Stripes, who otherwise make very brief use of solos and improvisation in the studio, and thus the song is extremely unique in the White Stripes catalogue. Ball & Biscuit starts out with a bluesy guitar riff, and Meg White keeping a simple pace on the drums. Spoken vocals are introduced to us soon after. The lyrics show an arrogance, with lines like "It's quite possible that I'm your third man girl, but it's a fact that I'm the seventh son" and "Right now you could care less about me, but soon enough you will care by the time I'm done". The guitar solos make a lot of use of an octave pedal, giving unnaturally high tones, and a lot of fuzz is created in the background riff. It was said to be entirely written in the studio while recording Elephant, and the solos mostly improvised there on the spot.
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