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Drake Talks ‘Miss Me,’ His Thank Me Later Collabo With Lil Wayne

Young Money MC also clarifies the status of the ‘Afrika Bambaataa’ track to Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes and Sway Calloway Drake and Lil Wayne Photo: MTV News The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive The plot thickens when it comes to the record “Afrika Bambaataa.” Weeks ago, before he went to prison, Wayne revealed on his “Nino Brown: The Road To Rikers” DVD that he was shooting a video to a song called “Afrika Bambaataa” for Drake. Everyone speculated that the song in question would be part of Weezy’s contribution to Drizzy’s Thank Me Later album. On Monday in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania, before the start of his Away From Home Tour , Drake told us “Afrika Bambaataa” isn’t his record. “That’s actually a Lil Wayne song,” he explained. “I don’t know where that confusion came from. I was just on set that day when he was shooting that video. That’s not even my song. I’m not even on it, to be honest with you. Me and Wayne have a song on my album — a song called ‘Miss Me.’ “It’s a pretty straightforward [song],” he continued. “It’s a song about being away from what you love and hoping that when you’re gone, doing you, somebody out there misses you. It goes for Wayne in his situation and it goes for me in my situation, ’cause I’m on the road for I don’t how long right now.” Drake also revealed that he redid the chorus for Wayne’s song “Single” off of the No Ceilings mixtape. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos Mixtape Daily: L.E.P. Bogus Boys

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Drake Talks ‘Miss Me,’ His Thank Me Later Collabo With Lil Wayne

Fabolous Says Exchange Of Twitter Quips With Jim Jones Isn’t Serious

‘The point I’m in, I’m focusing on career,’ Fab tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes and Tim Kash Fabolous Photo: Def Jam The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive According to Fabolous, the back-and-forth he had with fellow New York heavyweight Jim Jones recently on Twitter was no big deal — just jokes. It’s not going to lead into any dis records. The same day Fab’s “Body Ya” video hit the Internet, Jones tweeted about MCs he felt were biting his style. “I just seen another rapper’s video that look just like my chain gang n scarf,” Jones wrote. “Damn, I’m sonnin these n—-az. I guess my style might body ya. Lol.'” Loso came back on his Twitter page with more comedy, poking fun at Jones’ mixtape The Ghost of Rich Porter. “#iJustWannaKnoWhy the competition won’t stay #Dead,” he wrote. “Maybe I should [release] a new mixtape call #TiNc3 — Ghost of the Competition.” “#iJustWannaKnoWhy ni–as think they invented Louis Vuitton??” Fab wrote later. “#nowplaying — ‘You’re Only a Customer’ by Jay Z.” Jones came back with, “Can I at least get a thank u for gettin ur Twitter acct poppin? Lol. I’m out. I quit. I quit. Pow pow, play dead. Lol.” Fab spoke with us on Wednesday about the situation. He says he doesn’t see things escalating. “I don’t know where his comment came from,” Fab said. “I joked around with it too. It was kinda subliminal. “I think it’s definitely competition,” Fab added. “But you can say things — it gets taken out of context whether you meant it as a joke or not. It could have been his opinion, but it still was thrown the way he threw it. It could have been taken in the context of you taking a shot at somebody. But I had fun with it, I made some jokes. That’s it. I’m not looking at it as I got a really big problem or East Coast/West Coast beef. I cracked a couple of jokes about it. I’m not making a dis record about it. The point I’m in, I’m focusing on career. I’m branded as an artist. I’m almost 10 years in the game. Twitter dissing isn’t important. My last mixtape states where I’m at — there is no competition. That’s on Twitter as well.” Fab’s “Body Ya” — in which he kills everyone he comes in contact with just by being in the same vicinity — is just one of many visuals coming from his mixtape The Funeral Service: There Is No Competition 2. “I just shot ‘I’m Raw.’ Since we were talking about ‘raw,’ we went to a meat house in Brooklyn,” the BK native explained. “It’s also a story line, same as ‘Body Ya.’ The story line starts off with me working in a meat market. Definitely a great video. It’s a great visual for a project that was a mixtape project. I wanted to expand it a little more.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos Mixtape Daily: Lil Wayne, Jae Millz, Notorious B.I.G.

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Fabolous Says Exchange Of Twitter Quips With Jim Jones Isn’t Serious

Lloyd Banks Influenced By Lady Gaga, Justin Timberlake On Next Album

‘A lot of people don’t know I write more than rap music,’ MC says. By Shaheem Reid Lloyd Banks Photo: MTV News Lloyd Banks may be joining the recent ranks of Jay-Z ( The Blueprint 3 ) Raekwon The Chef ( Only Built 4 Cuban Linx … Pt. 2 ) and Capone-N-Noreaga ( The War Report 2 ) by making his album a sequel — The Hunger For More 2. Banks posted the title on his Twitter page, although the tweet has since been deleted and the G-Unit said the title is not official. Still, fans are encouraged that Banks is thinking about taking it back to his best effort. In a recent chat with Mixtape Daily , Banks said that going overseas on tour with the G-Unit for two months would be “dangerous” because he was going to devote his free time in the hotel room tp writing his LP. “It’s gonna be dangerous for me, because I’m gonna come home and record anywhere between 40 and 50 records, literally,” he said. “Hopefully I’ll have the bulk of my album from that.” The youngest member of the Unit also said that his sound would be expanding past the gritty beats you hear on his mixtape. Banks wants to add hit records to the mix after hearing what his former Interscope labelmates like Will.I.Am and Timabaland brought to the table. “The music overseas, the party atmospheres — it’s incredible,” Banks offered. “Don’t get me wrong, I love the club scenes in New York city and the States, [but] when you go overseas, you might hear ‘Toniiight’s gonna be a good night.’ You’re hearing that in the club 10 times. So if you didn’t know that joint, I come back over here like, ‘You don’t know that record. You’re buggin’ — that’s poppin!’ That record, Justin Timberlake, Timberland, Lady Gaga — you’re hearing so many different records, it makes you want to expand as an artist and get records that’s enjoyed by all people. They’re definitely gonna hear those kind of records from me too. “A lot of people don’t know I write more than rap music,” he continued. “I can write R&B records. I can write hit records — just put it like that. Hopefully I’ll be writing for a few more people in the future.” Lamborghini Lloyd also says that he would possibly put the call into Will.I.Am for beats. “I chopped it up with him a couple of times,” Banks said. “I seen him in L.A. and he wanted to work on the tail end of Rotten Apple. But between me touring, it was crazy. I didn’t get a chance to hook up with him. But hopefully we can make something happen on this record.” Related Artists Lloyd Banks

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Lloyd Banks Influenced By Lady Gaga, Justin Timberlake On Next Album

Tech N9ne Says He Found Success On The Road

The independent rapper explains to Mixtape Daily how touring builds his fanbase. By Steven Roberts, with reporting by Shaheem Reid Tech N9ne Photo: MTV News Cornerstone Credentials Tech N9ne certainly isn’t a household name. He isn’t necessarily a big name in the realm of hip-hop either, but thanks to appearing at festivals like Rock the Bells and touring on his own, he’s been able to sell over a million records and build a solid, dedicated fanbase. As he prepares to drop his newest album, The Ollie Gates Mixed Plate, named after a restaurant in his hometown of Kansas City, Missouri, he told Mixtape Daily about the unconventional road he took to get here. “Being involved in all of those major labels in the past, nobody knew really how to do me, how to put me,” Tech said. “But who knows how to do me better than anybody: me.” He and his business partner, Travis O’Guin, formed their independent Strange Music label in 1999. Since then, they have enjoyed complete autonomy to do whatever they wanted with their music and their appearance. That’s also meant that he’s been able to go on tour to places where no one knew who he was. Tech said that they would play small-town shows with only 10 people in the audience, and he would still perform. When they came back the next time, there would be 30 people, and 200 people the following time. “If you want to be the hip-hop president, you’ve got to get out there and politic,” reasoned the rapper who won the Left Field Woodie Award from mtvU last year. Tech estimated that he does about 200 shows per year, a schedule that’s more typical of a rock band. All the money they make on tour is pumped back into Strange Music as they sign other artists to the label. They’ve also built a huge $1.2 million facility in Kansas City. He isn’t surprised that other artists have started to go independent and tour heavily to support themselves. In the digital world, artists have had to find new ways to sell their music to the people. Meanwhile, he said major labels are failing because they don’t take the time to build their artists’ fanbase. “We have that core fanbase that’s always going to be there, so whether we put out CDs, whether it’s going to be on iTunes or whatever, our fans are always going to be there,” Tech N9ne said. “A lot of these major cats don’t even have that. A lot of these major cats have sold over a million copies, but can’t get 1,000 people to come see them. … That ain’t for us, though.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines .

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Tech N9ne Says He Found Success On The Road

Game Recruits RZA, Dr. Dre For R.E.D. Album All-Star Production Cast

‘The only person I’m upset I didn’t work with on this album is DJ Premier,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid The Game Photo: Moses Robinson/ WireImage The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive Game said he got just about everybody he wanted for his upcoming The R.E.D. Album — he has some of the finest tracks featuring guests from all over the hip-hop hemisphere. “I feel great about this album,” he said recently after going over tracks at Dr. Dre’s house. “It’s back full-force Aftermath and I’m conjoined with Star Trak.” (Pharrell Williams is one of the LP’s executive producers.) “I got this colorful movement over here where it’s beautiful music on this side [with Star Trak] — then when I need to go dark or super grown and sexy, I got Dre over here. The combination is crazy — mixed in with a Cool & Dre track and RZA track and all the sh– I been doing. The only person I’m upset I didn’t work with on this album is DJ Premier. I feel his sh– would have been perfect for this all-star producer cast that I have. One Premier track would have did me just fine. I would have murdered that sh–. But we ain’t get it in, ’cause he was doing a whole bunch of sh– for Christina Aguilera. I’m just Game. So I gotta just wait for the next album.” The Compton MC said he lets the fans know from the start of the album that he’s not playing. “They got the intro to the album, which is titled ‘Infrared,’ ” Game said of Cool & Dre. “It’s one of them joints that Shaheem is gonna love. All the real hip-hop fans, to hear me rap, how I’m rapping on my intro, it’s gonna f— people up. Before you get to #2, you gonna already know I’m serious. I’m spitting. I go in. I done played this for RZA, Dre, Pharrell — all the people who heard this is like, ‘N—a, that’s crazy!’ I haven’t spit like I’m spitting on the intro since ‘300 Bars.’ I touched every topic. Everything involving me, I touched.” We’ll get a prelude to Game’s work with Cool & Dre on a song called “Shake,” as it’s one of the highlights on his upcoming Gangsta Grillz mixtape with DJ Drama, All Red Everything. Game tells a mayhem-filled story over the beat that incorporates the looped word “shake” throughout. ” ‘Shake’ is bad, man,” Game said. ” ‘Shake’ is crazy. Cool & Dre brought it in and I went through the ‘shakes.’ I told the story, cutting myself off right before the ‘shake’ came in [on the track]. I didn’t write none of that down. I went in and said the whole sh– straight through. “You know what it is about them?” he asked about Cool & Dre. “They are more like my brothers. I can go in with the any moment and make a song. The streets is gonna f— with it.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines .

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Game Recruits RZA, Dr. Dre For R.E.D. Album All-Star Production Cast

Jim Jones Channels The Ghost Of Rich Porter On New Mixtape

‘What you will hear is some hustle music that will make you hit the block early,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid Jim Jones Photo: Byrd Gang This Week’s Main Pick Street King : Jim Jones Holding It Down For : Harlem, USA Mixtape Album : The Ghost of Rich Porter Real Spit : Across 110th Street, Jim Jones grabbed his favorite hero — roast beef with ketchup — and threw waves to the police as squad cars rolled by. One of his old friends, just out of jail, came by and got love from the whole crew, which included Jim and Byrd Gang member Sen City. Jones stood in front of a mural of his late friend Bloodshed, a cousin of Cam’ron’s. Jones spoke of beloved late Harlem figures such as Blood and Rich Porter. “It’s a lot of meanings behind that title,” Jones said of his mixtape, The Ghost of Rich Porter, which comes out Tuesday. “If you’re not familiar with Harlem, I’ll hip you to game kinda quick. If you’re not familiar with Rich Porter, he set the precedent for us as far as how we wanted to live. As far as getting fast money — the cash, the cars, the girls. Then the underlying story behind it — the betrayal, the disloyalty, the backstabbing. Rich was special to Harlem. “If it wasn’t for people like Rich and a few other people, people wouldn’t understand Harlem, as far as the culture, the style. So I credit him for that,” Jim continued. “There’ll never be another Rich Porter in Harlem. He set the precedent for us. It was him we was coming up looking at. On the flipside, I say it’s the ‘ghost,’ because when you think what me, Cam and Juelz and Zeek have done for Harlem, it’s changed from when we was directly in the streets to what we doing now. When we come back now, it’s like people looking at a ghost. Some people are in awe, some people don’t know what they looking at. We’re in the ‘hood.” Shawty Lo, Gucci Mane and the Byrd Gang all appear on the mixtape. “For the past half a year, six, seven months,” Jim said of the tape’s title, “all I been hearing is people saying it’s a recession. It’s getting bad. I never knew it not to be a recession in Harlem. That’s why it’s Harlem. We found a way to get the money. If it wasn’t no job opportunities, our next best thing was to hustle. I’m not telling you what to hustle. I’m not advocating you do anything illegal. I’m advocating you get the money, the moolah, the muggah! That’s what it’s all about. That’s what it portrays. “You won’t hear your traditional pop hit,” Jim added. “What you will hear is some hustle music that will make you hit the block early. … Put that iPod on, hit the train or the bus, get on that commute. All my strap-hangers. Then we’ll get to the album and fulfill all your dreams with all that radio music [later].” Jim’s fifth solo album will be out later this year. It will be an independent release through E1. He has no title yet. Joints to Check For

Jessica Simpson Is ‘Stronger’ After Shooting ‘The Price of Beauty’

‘I know there’s nothing that anybody can say about me that will take me to a very low place,’ Simpson tells MTV News. By Jocelyn Vena Jessica Simpson Photo: WireImage She’s been criticized by people for her appearance. She’s had John Mayer talk about her private life to Playboy magazine. And while these things might have gotten under Jessica Simpson’s skin in the past, the singer, who premiered her new VH1 docu-series “The Price of Beauty” on Monday night, said these days, she’s up for any challenge. “I definitely faced a lot of fears in every country that we went to, but that’s what it was about,” she told MTV News. “It was about going out there and seeing how far I can push myself and seeing what I can discover. Like, ‘Who am I?’ ” She added that given her new, fresh perspective on things, she doesn’t care what anyone has to say these days. “I view the world very differently,” she said. “Everything’s not as big of a deal as people make it out to be, and that’s a really great place to be in. I know there’s nothing that anybody can say about me that will take me to a very low place, because I am stronger.” It was her experiences traveling all over the globe that gave Simpson strength. “The extremes [people] go to to feel beautiful, I think our society puts way, way too much pressure on a woman to feel beautiful,” she said. “But the extremes that we saw in all these different countries were amazing. It was, like, outrageous. “We went to Uganda. We were in fattening huts [where] the fatter you are, the more beautiful you are in this certain village we were in,” she continued. “And so the men want their women to look like cows, because the cows are their prize possession. So the bride-to-be has to gain 90 pounds before she gets married. It does push its limits to what’s healthy, what’s not healthy. I’ve done all kinds of stuff on this trip.” Did you watch Jessica’s new show? What do you think about the lengths people will go to for beauty? Weigh in below! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Jessica Simpson Related Artists Jessica Simpson

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Jessica Simpson Is ‘Stronger’ After Shooting ‘The Price of Beauty’

Nipsey Hussle, J. Cole, More Call XXL Freshmen 10 ‘A Good Look’

Mixtape Daily takes you behind the scenes of this year’s Freshmen 10 photo shoot. By Shaheem Reid, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes XXL Top Ten Freshmen Photo: XXL Don’t Sleep: Necessary Notables Headliners : Nipsey Hussle, Jay Rock, Freddie Gibbs, Fashawn, Wiz Khalifa, Big Sean, OJ Da Juiceman, Pill, Donnis and J. Cole Co-Starring : DJ Whoo Kid Songs We Can’t Stop Playing : Pill’s “Angels” freestyle, Nipsey Hussle’s “When They Talk About Me” and OJ Da Juiceman’s “Bread in the Kitchen” Essential Info :. Now that the cat is out of the bag and XXL magazine has announced this year’s Freshmen 10 issue, the publication is all the way turnt up with promotion. There’s a concert in NYC next week with a lot of the gang, and last week, the mag dropped a tape featuring all the Freshmen 10 picks. DJ Whoo Kid hosts, and the fellas tagged as being the leaders of the new school all contributed songs. “I feel like we’ve been working real hard — not just in 2009, but for the years before it,” Nipsey told us at the cover shoot for the issue about him and his homie Jay Rock. “But to see XXL recognize what we’re doing, especially being from the [West] Coast. … I’m not saying I expected us to be here, but at the same time, I feel like we deserve it.” “This is a real good look,” Rock added about the photo shoot. “We’ve been vibing with each other, and we all getting to know each other too. We’re all getting with this music thing. And the music is what brought us together, straight up. We’re all young, we’re all fresh. We got a story to tell, and it means a lot to me to be around all these talented cats.” “For those people who haven’t heard my name, I guess they are going to be on the lookout,” J. Cole said of the XXL honor. “I’ve always felt the responsibility to push the craft forward. … Cover or no cover. I always felt some type of responsibility to make a difference in the music somehow.” All 10 artists had a different journey to make it to the Freshmen 10. Indiana native Freddie Gibbs definitely has had one of the biggest leaps in the past year. “I mean, it’s a blessing, man,” Gibbs said. “This time last year, I was on my way to the jailhouse. To be here is a blessing. I’ve been looking at these covers, XXL period, since it’s been in existence. For me to make it on the cover, you know, is a blessing. To be here and not be locked down or dead is a blessing. Man, I still can’t believe it. I’m speechless.” Other Heat This Week

Alley Boy Proves He’s ‘A Force To Be Reckoned With’ On Definition Tape

Plus: Akon talks about his latest signing, Ya Boy, in Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes Alley Boy Photo: Atlantic This Week’s Main Pick Street King : Alley Boy, DJ Holiday and the Empire Holding It Down For : Zone Six in Atlanta Mixtape : Definition of F— Sh– Real Spit : “2010 is a new year,” DJ Holiday said. “I had to go get somebody more gutter, more street. I had to go to Zone Six. Have I ever let you down?” Alley Boy gets the prize for wildest mixtape title this year (see above). The rapper said he wants to keep street rap in the spotlight. “I put that title on the mixtape because I wanted something to stand out,” Alley said. (Mission accomplished.) “Just to be different. The topics I went in on, it’s a lot of things people would call negative. My whole image, it seems it’s so negative. I went there with it. I feel that those words definitely represent my attitude. It’s so watered down in Atlanta right now. I wanted to let folks know I’m a force to be reckoned with. I wanted a strong concept and strong title.” He also has a story behind his MC name: “I’m from Zone Six. Edgewood’s finest,” he said. “The way I came up in these hallways, these cuts, these alleys, it just fit me.” Alley has a slew of guest spots holding it down for the A as well. “I wanted to go in with my boy [Young] Dro,” he said. “We got a song called ‘Tall.’ Yung L.A., we had some controversy goin’ on. I wanted to show I reach out. I’m about the A. Princess from Crime Mob is on there. She goes stupid hard.” Waka Flocka Flame is also on the mixtape, as is Gucci Mane, who called in from jail on an interlude. Joints to Check For

The White Stripes’ ‘Under Great White Northern Lights’: Jack White Invades Canada, Because He Can!

Frontman’s workmanlike attitude is on full display in the rock doc, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery The White Stripes Photo: Autumn DeWilde In any other lifetime, Jack White would have been a woodblock printer, a pirate, a missionary, a wheelwright, a buckskin-clad frontiersman, a statesman, a Union soldier, a sharecropping bluesman, a cigar-chomping newsman, an oil baron, an electrical engineer or one of the Wright Brothers. He would have worked very hard for a very long time with very little recognition, would have died for duty and country, would have bested foes with guile and determination, and he would have done all of it simply because that’s what you were supposed to. Instead, he’s trapped in this lousy century, where he’s forced to toil away as one of the most enigmatic, misunderstood musicians on the planet. He spends an exorbitant amount of time on an extraordinary number of projects, usually working within a preconceived set of conditions, for reasons that are usually only apparent to him. He suffers the slings and arrows of his critics not because he wants to, but because he has to. It’s just part of the job. After all, a wheelwright wouldn’t complain, would he? And all of this isn’t meant to serve as some pseudo-psychological profile on White. Rather, it’s about all I could think of after watching the White Stripes ‘ “Under Great White Northern Lights,” a documentary that is very much about doing things the hard way. Filmed in 2007, it follows the Stripes on their ultra-ambitious Canadian tour, on which they decided to play at least one show in every province and territory — 13 in all — mostly because, as White puts it, “Canada is the only country that’s ever turned us away.” This is no easy task: Canada is the world’s second-largest country ( thanks, Wikipedia! ), and getting to places like Yellowknife and Iqaluit is about as difficult as you’d imagine. And not content to simply play straightforward, standing-room-only shows in each city, White also decided that the Stripes would be playing “secret” shows during the day, in places like a bowling alley in Saskatoon, a pool hall in Halifax and aboard a boat in Charlottetown (that’s on Prince Edward Island, FYI). Along for the ride is the band’s shamanic road crew, who White maintains must always be dressed in matching black suits, red ties and bowler hats. And a film crew, that, based on a few glimpses of cameramen in the background of shots, was also required to adhere to the same dress code. In keeping with Stripes mythology, everything involved in the film also incorporates the band’s famous three-color palette (red, white and, the latest addition, black), which means red-and-white propeller planes, amplifiers, guitars, drums and outfits, even during travel days. And, in perhaps the most striking example, the film itself, which is presented almost exclusively — something like 98 percent — in those three colors. Backstage moments are appropriately black and white, onstage performances are a fiery red. You don’t notice it, but it’s there. Because it has to be. And what is most amazing is that White didn’t have to do any of this. Something inside him drives him to operate this way; makes him don a traditional tartan kilt for a ceremony in Halifax (and then wear it onstage that night), meet with Inuit elders in Iqaluit to get their blessing before a show or grind out songs on wholly inadequate — and, in some cases, downright antiquated — instruments. He sums it up best in one of the most compelling “Lights” scenes: an interview segment in which he attempts to explain himself and his ethos. “When I used to work as an upholsterer, it wasn’t always fun. … Sometimes, it was just work, and you do it because you’re supposed to. You force yourself to work,” he sighed. “I like to do things that make it really hard on myself. … I’m constantly fighting all these tiny little things, because all of those little things create tension.” And that tension gives birth to great things. Witness the Stripes’ entire discography, a workmanlike collection of songs built around two people and something like three instruments (occasionally, there’s a piano). Or their rise to fame, which was anything but meteoric, built over the course of a decade’s worth of blisters and bruises. Or this film, which most certainly ranks as one of the best rock docs in recent memory, if not of all time. The onstage moments are incendiary — standouts include a soulful and surging take on “Jolene” in Iqaluit and an undying version of “I’m Slowly Turning Into You” taken from their Yellowknife performance — and the backstage stuff is gripping, particularly the last scene, filmed after their 10th anniversary show in Nova Scotia. While I don’t want to give too much away, it manages to raise goose bumps, a masterful presentation of unspoken emotions and weighty subtext. But mostly, “Lights” serves as testament to the Charles Kane-ian will of Jack White himself (no wonder “Citizen Kane” is one of his favorites) and the greatness that determination can create in its wake. It’s a love letter to his unwavering dedication to doing things the hard way and his uncompromising, Old World work ethic. In fact, the only time he complains about anything during the entire film is when he learns he’s scheduled to do an interview with The Associated Press, and even then, he still ends up doing it. Because he has to. It’s pathological. Psychological. But it is very much him. After all, a wheelwright wouldn’t complain, would he? Questions? Concerns? Hit me up at BTTS@MTVStaff.com .

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The White Stripes’ ‘Under Great White Northern Lights’: Jack White Invades Canada, Because He Can!