dex-romweber

Duane's "Postcard From Hell" and Dex Romweber's "The Wind Did Move" and the subjects of White's latest videos.

Nashville, TN (October 11, 2018) -- Third Man Records is excited to add two new videos to Behind The Blue Series: Musical Origin Stories With Jack White, a video series featuring Jack White explaining the stories behind individual records in the beloved Blue Series. The second pair of videos in the series, detailing the origins of two early Blue Series 7" singles (Duane's "Postcard From Hell" and Dex Romweber's "The Wind Did Move") are now available to watch below.

These singles are near and dear to Jack—each one a snapshot of a passion project turned personal encounter. Third Man Books' recent offering The Blue Series: The Story Behind The Color told the story of the series beautifully with exclusive interviews and photos. Now Jack has set out to describe the origin story of each individual record with his new video series, Behind The Blue Series.

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Dex Romweber grinds out the rhythm on one in a long line of Silvertone 1448 guitars he’s played since the 1980s at Charlotte, North Carolina’s famed Double Door Inn. Photo by Anthony Nguyen

A punkabilly guitar legend finds balance in battered guitars, piano ballads, reverb-drenched vibes, and the inspiration of classic gospel and R&B.

Dex Romweber performs a classic from the gospel songbook, “Trouble of the World” (which was definitively recorded by Mahalia Jackson), with added flourishes of rock ’n’ roll mystery thanks to his brooding chord choices and a vibey tenor sax solo.

The guitar-and-drums power duo is so common today that it’s easy to forget just how groundbreaking it seemed when the White Stripes steamrolled their way into the public consciousness in the late 1990s. Though not as widely known, Local H had been working as a two-piece since 1993, and, with the new millennium, the Black Keys emerged on the scene. Soon bands like Two Gallants, Japandroids, Wye Oak, No Age, Giant Drag, and many more were offering diverse manifestations of the duo format.

But in 1983, more than a decade-and-a-half before the Stripes released their eponymous 1999 debut, a young guitarist named Dexter Romweber and his childhood pal, drummer Chris “Crow” Smith, started bashing out a punky, adrenaline-fueled take on old-school rockabilly and blues in a North Carolina garage. Thus, the Flat Duo Jets were born. Though they had a bass player for a couple of years, for the great majority of their 16-year existence, the Flat Duo Jets were, as the name implied, a duo.

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