For decades, Jack White has been one of rock music’s most fiercely protective figures. As the co-founder of The White Stripes, he built a career defending minimalism, analog grit, and the raw power of doing more with less. That’s why his reaction at the 2025 induction ceremony of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame caught so many fans off guard.
Instead of bristling, White beamed.
As his band was honored, the stage was handed over to Twenty One Pilots, who delivered a daring reimagining of “Seven Nation Army.” Watching from the audience, White later admitted he “smiled for four minutes straight,” stunned by how completely the duo inhabited his most iconic riff. Rather than copying it, they seemed—by his own words—“possessed” by it.
The performance was a bold evolution. Tyler Joseph didn’t reach for a guitar. Instead, he played the riff on bass, subtly nodding to the way White originally manipulated the sound using effects rather than traditional low-end instruments. The arrangement then exploded into a piano-driven breakdown, while Josh Dun anchored the song with thunderous, stripped-back drumming that echoed the primal force once delivered by Meg White.
Visually, the duo wore shredded white-and-red masks, a symbolic gesture that shifted attention away from celebrity and toward lineage. It was less a cover than a ritual—garage rock rebuilt for a stadium-sized generation.
What followed made the moment even more remarkable. Known for guarding his catalog closely, Jack White didn’t just approve. He reached out personally, sending Joseph rare vinyl and boutique pedals from his Third Man Hardware line. He later said that seeing two musicians command a massive room with nothing but piano and drums reminded him why The White Stripes existed in the first place: “the power of the few.”
The impact was immediate. The official Hall of Fame video racked up millions of views, and for Twenty One Pilots’ 2026 tour, White even recorded a tongue-in-cheek video granting them permission to perform the song live—an almost unheard-of blessing.
That night, The White Stripes were inducted alongside genre-shaping acts like Soundgarden and OutKast, but it was this quiet passing of the torch that resonated most. In 2025, Jack White realized that “Seven Nation Army” had transcended ownership. It had become modern folk music—alive, evolving, and roaring just as loudly as ever.