Jack White walked out of SNL’s Studio 8H on Saturday night having done something quietly remarkable: he made people remember why he exists. That’s not a knock. It’s just that White has spent the last few years being Jack White in the most abstract sense, a symbol of a certain kind of rock commitment, a guy who names albums after nothing and refuses to stream and feuds with the White House. The music has been secondary.
Not anymore. On Friday, he dropped two new singles, “G.O.D. and the Broken Ribs” and “Derecho Demonico,” self-produced with his road band of drummer Patrick Keeler, bassist Dominic Davis, and keys player Bobby Emmett. These are the first new songs since 2024’s No Name, and they arrive fully formed: loud, physical, slightly unhinged. “G.O.D. and the Broken Ribs” opens like a power surge and does not apologize. “Derecho Demonico” is dirtier, more sideways, with a riff that sounds like it was built in a furnace.
Both tracks were issued on Third Man Records as a 7-inch vinyl, which is exactly the kind of move White would make. The digital release is secondary. The object is the point.
Then came SNL. White appeared as musical guest for the sixth time, sharing the episode with host Jack Black, which gave the internet exactly the content it wanted: two Jacks, one stage, reworked lyrics to “Seven Nation Army” for the Five-Timers Club sketch. It was funny. It was also a reminder that White is a genuinely great performer when the setting gives him something to push against.
His two musical performances of the new singles were better. White plays electric guitar like he’s in an argument with it. There’s tension in every note, a sense that things could collapse or ignite at any second. Saturday night, they ignited.
He’s got a European tour lined up for spring 2026. If these songs are any indication, it should be worth the trip. White has always been better live than on record, and these two tracks feel built for a room, for volume, for the particular joy of watching someone play guitar like they mean it. There’s nothing ironic here, no wink at the audience. Just the music, swinging hard.
Whatever comes next, the return is properly announced. Jack White is back in the room.
What strikes me about the SNL performance is the production instinct. Jack White knows exactly how much negative space to leave, and that’s not something you can fake in a live room. The guitar is doing the work that a whole band would do for most artists, not through volume but through placement. That’s the thing people who dismiss him miss, the architecture underneath the noise.