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The White Stripes: Collaboration, 'Conquest'

One of America's biggest rock bands, The White Stripes, is also one of its smallest.

The duo of guitarist Jack White and drummer Meg White draws from blues and punk in equal measure, but its latest release is inspired by a pop song from the '50s.

Patti Page is best-known for her hit "How Much Is That Doggy in the Window." Her more sultry "Conquest" is a song Jack White wanted to sing for years.

"Conquest" is the A-side on three new vinyl singles from The White Stripes. The B-sides are new songs.

"Well, the problem with B-sides is, it's almost like, 'Okay, we'll go and write some mediocre songs,'" Jack White says. "I really love B-sides, because it gives you a new chance to breathe some new life into a whole project that you were already working on. It's almost like the stepchildren of the project of the album."

Earlier this year, the band released its sixth studio album, Icky Thump. For the new B-sides, The White Stripes teamed up with Beck and recorded in his Los Angeles home studio.

The new songs include an acoustic, mariachi-style reworking of "Conquest." Being in Southern California, Beck pointed out a place where they could find mariachi ensembles standing around waiting for work.

"While we were working on a song, we asked if somebody could go over there and check and see if there was anybody there," White says. "She called back and said, 'Do you want a four-piece or a five-piece band?'"

Jack White spoke with Renee Montagne about working with Beck, as well as the new songs and the inspiration for The White Stripes' sound.

"One thing we've always tried to avoid in The White Stripes is all those words that I can't stand that start with 'R,' such as retro, and relic, and reissue, and re-create, all that stuff," White says. "All I know is I just want my stuff to sound as soulful as I can."

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