Rubber Factory
Rubber Factory is the third studio album by the American rock duo the Black Keys, consisting of Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney, released on September 7, 2004, by Fat Possum Records.[1] The album was self-produced by the band and recorded in an abandoned tire factory in their hometown of Akron, Ohio, using a reel-to-reel tape machine, which contributed to its raw, lo-fi sound characterized by blues-influenced garage rock elements.[2] Featuring 13 tracks, including standout singles like "10 A.M. Automatic" and "When the Lights Go Out," it marked a pivotal point in the duo's career, blending gritty guitar riffs with Auerbach's soulful vocals and Carney's driving percussion.[3] The recording process for Rubber Factory was unconventional, as the band rented space in the derelict rubber factory—once a hub for the city's tire industry—to capture an authentic, unpolished aesthetic that echoed their blues roots.[4] This DIY approach not only influenced the album's sonic texture but also symbolized the duo's transition from underground obscurity to wider recognition, with the record peaking at number 143 on the Billboard 200[5] and earning critical acclaim for its energetic, stripped-back production.[6] Notable tracks such as "When the Lights Go Out" and "Girl Is on My Mind" highlight the album's emotional depth, drawing from influences like Junior Kimbrough and other Delta blues artists, while establishing the Black Keys as a force in the early-2000s indie rock scene.[1]Background
Early career context
The Black Keys were formed in 2001 in Akron, Ohio, by childhood friends Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney, both in their early twenties at the time, as a raw blues-rock duo driven by their shared passion for music.[7] The pair drew heavily from North Mississippi hill country blues artists, particularly idolizing figures like Junior Kimbrough and R.L. Burnside, whom Auerbach described as "our rock stars."[7] This regional influence shaped their minimalist setup—Auerbach on guitar and vocals, Carney on drums—eschewing additional band members or elaborate production to capture an authentic, gritty sound.[8] Their debut album, The Big Come Up, was released in 2002 on the independent label Alive Records, featuring lo-fi recordings that highlighted their garage blues style with covers and originals evoking classic blues traditions.[9] The album's raw production and limited distribution helped build an initial underground audience, leading to a deal with Fat Possum Records, a label known for reissuing and promoting Mississippi blues artists.[7] Their follow-up, Thickfreakness, arrived in 2003 on Fat Possum, recorded in a single intense session in Carney's basement, further solidifying their reputation for unpolished energy and earning them a growing cult following among indie rock and blues enthusiasts.[10][11] Following Thickfreakness, the duo faced mounting pressures from Fat Possum, including financial constraints and expectations to evolve their sound commercially, which clashed with their commitment to artistic independence.[7] This tension fueled their desire for greater creative control, prompting them to self-produce their next project and seek unconventional recording spaces to maintain their DIY ethos amid label demands.[7]Album conceptualization
The Black Keys sought to create Rubber Factory as a raw, unpolished reflection of their hometown Akron, Ohio's fading industrial landscape, drawing direct inspiration from the city's storied rubber and tire manufacturing legacy, which had defined its economy for over a century before widespread factory closures in the late 20th century. Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney aimed to infuse the album with a gritty, authentic blues-rock sound that echoed the resilience of Akron's working-class communities amid economic decline, emphasizing organic tones over studio polish to evoke the "rough and blown out" aesthetic reminiscent of early influences like Junior Kimbrough. This conceptualization positioned the album as a sonic tribute to local heritage, capturing the duo's desire to root their music in the tangible echoes of the Rust Belt's transformation.[12][13] Frustrated by prior experiences and seeking greater artistic control, the duo decided to self-produce Rubber Factory to foster a more experimental, hands-on process. Auerbach and Carney, who had already self-recorded their debut The Big Come Up in a basement, viewed this independence as essential to achieving an "organic" sound free from label-imposed refinements, despite pressure from Fat Possum Records to bring in a professional producer. This shift allowed them to prioritize intuition over convention, experimenting with unconventional setups to maintain the album's raw energy.[13][14][12] Central to the album's concept was its deep tie to Akron's heritage, symbolized by the choice to record in an abandoned tire factory on the city's outskirts, a site that embodied the shuttered plants of the rubber industry and the enduring spirit of blue-collar perseverance. The vast, echoing space of the former General Tire facility not only provided a makeshift studio but also served as a metaphorical canvas, reinforcing the band's commitment to authenticity by immersing the recording in the very environment that shaped their identity. Carney later reflected on the location's scale—"We were in about 1/100th of an old rubber factory. It was huge"—highlighting how it amplified the album's thematic resonance with Akron's industrial past.[14][13]Recording and production
Location and equipment
The recording of Rubber Factory took place at Sentient Sound, a makeshift studio rented on the second floor of an abandoned tire factory—the former General Tire plant—in Akron, Ohio, from January to May 2004.[3][15] The cavernous, decaying space, filled with crumbling drywall, concrete dust, and potential asbestos hazards, provided an unconventional environment that infused the sessions with a gritty, industrial atmosphere reflective of the duo's roots in Akron's fading manufacturing legacy.[16] The technical setup emphasized simplicity and affordability, aligning with the band's lo-fi ethos. Drummer Patrick Carney handled engineering using a second-hand Tascam M-16 mixing console, acquired on eBay from a former sound technician for the band Loverboy, which still bore a faded sticker from the group.[17] Complementing this was a Tascam 85-16B 1-inch 16-track reel-to-reel tape machine, obtained through a trade leveraging an advance from their label, Fat Possum Records.[17] The rudimentary gear, scattered amid amplifiers, wires, and dismantled drum kits in the rented space (at $500 per month), captured the album's raw, echoey sonic character, where the factory's natural reverb enhanced the blues-rock tracks without additional effects.[16] The General Tire plant, shuttered since 1982, symbolized Akron's post-industrial decline and was ultimately demolished around 2010 due to environmental concerns like asbestos pollution, rendering the recording site a fleeting artifact of the city's tire-making history.[17][16][18]Creative process and challenges
The Black Keys' third album, Rubber Factory, was recorded over a five-month period in early 2004, during which Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney relied heavily on improvisation to develop the material directly in the studio. Auerbach handled guitar and vocals, while Carney focused on drums, capturing most tracks as live takes with intervention to build layers; the duo incorporated significant overdubs and studio experimentation on many songs.[19][13][20][14] The self-production approach by Auerbach and Carney involved mixing on the fly without external engineers, allowing them to experiment freely but also introducing significant hurdles. Technical challenges abounded in the disused factory setting, including frequent console malfunctions from the secondhand Tascam M-16 they acquired via eBay, as well as power outages that disrupted sessions. Rather than striving for polished results, the pair deliberately embraced these imperfections—such as tape hiss and unintended noise—as integral to the album's gritty character, reflecting their DIY ethos.[20][21][17] This process yielded a concise 13-track album with a total runtime of 41:43, showcasing the duo's ability to adapt constraints into creative strengths.[22]Music and lyrics
Musical style
Rubber Factory is characterized by its core blend of garage rock and blues rock, featuring raw, minimalist instrumentation that highlights Dan Auerbach's distorted guitar riffs and Patrick Carney's pounding drums. This sonic foundation evokes the gritty energy of 1960s blues artists like Howlin' Wolf, with the duo's setup—guitar, drums, and occasional slide or lap steel—creating a visceral, two-piece dynamic that prioritizes intensity over complexity.[15][23] The album marks an evolution from the Black Keys' earlier works, such as The Big Come Up and Thickfreakness, by incorporating added punk energy through aggressive, garage-punk edges while introducing subtle psychedelic elements in reverb-heavy guitar solos, as heard in tracks like "10 A.M. Automatic." This progression allows for a more structured album flow, balancing the band's primal aggression with moments of restraint, such as the haunting lap steel in "The Lengths," without losing their lo-fi aesthetic.[15][23] Influenced by North Mississippi blues artists like Junior Kimbrough and T-Model Ford, the album adopts a hypnotic rhythm and thick, greasy tone that infuses its blues rock with a driving, repetitive pulse. This regional style contributes to a shift toward more accessible indie rock structures, making Rubber Factory the duo's first broadly appealing release while preserving the raw, unpolished grit central to their identity.[12][23]Themes and influences
Rubber Factory's lyrics center on themes of working-class struggle, isolation, and fleeting relationships, deeply informed by the economic downturn in the band's hometown of Akron, Ohio, where major employers like Goodyear had drastically reduced their workforce from 30,000 to just 3,000 employees by the early 2000s.[16] Dan Auerbach has described the city's transformation into a place of limited opportunities, with many friends leaving for elsewhere yet achieving little more, underscoring a sense of personal and communal stagnation that permeates the album's introspective tone.[16] Tracks like "The Lengths" exemplify this through its portrayal of unwavering loyalty in the face of emotional hardship, evoking the endurance required in strained bonds amid broader socioeconomic pressures.[24] The album's storytelling draws heavily from blues traditions, emphasizing raw, narrative-driven songs that blend personal vulnerability with gritty realism.[24] Auerbach incorporates anecdotes from his own life, using metaphors of industrial toil to convey transformation and disillusionment, as seen in the cover of Robert Pete Williams' "Grown So Ugly," where factory-like drudgery mirrors personal decay and alienation.[24] This approach honors influences like Junior Kimbrough and Hound Dog Taylor, prioritizing emotional authenticity over polished expression, which Auerbach achieved by simplifying his gear to capture a more primal sound.[16] Subtle social commentary on the decay of the American Rust Belt emerges across the record, fusing individual introspection with collective melancholy to highlight resilience in decline.[16] Songs such as "Till I Get My Way" capture this through themes of determination and transient connections, reflecting the instability of life in a fading industrial hub like Akron, where the abandoned rubber factories that inspired the album's recording site symbolize broader obsolescence.[24] Overall, these elements create a cohesive portrait of quiet defiance against adversity, rooted in the duo's Akron upbringing.[16]Packaging and release
Artwork and design
The artwork for Rubber Factory was designed by Michael Carney, the brother of drummer Patrick Carney and a longtime collaborator with The Black Keys. Carney, who has handled the visual design for all of the band's albums, created a collage-style cover using black-and-white photographs taken on film with a Pentax Spotmatic camera, which were then scanned and assembled in Photoshop.[19][6] The front cover features a surreal, distorted collage of Akron landmarks from unusual angles, forming a gritty Rust Belt landscape that includes the band's members Patrick Carney and Dan Auerbach against a red background, alongside elements like the Akron Airdock, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. facilities, a stack of tires, a fleet of Goodyear blimps, water towers, and a cell tower.[19] The back cover incorporates additional east-side Akron imagery, such as the Mattress Factory Outlet sign, a drive-in restaurant marquee reading "Have you Had A Nitemare Lately?", and a small figure of Carney himself standing in the snow. These stark, desolate urban visuals directly evoke the album's industrial theme, drawing from the abandoned tire factory where it was recorded and capturing the nostalgic grit of Akron's history as the Rubber Capital.[19] The packaging adopts a minimalist aesthetic with simple, unadorned typography that prioritizes raw authenticity over commercial polish, aligning with the album's lo-fi ethos and reinforcing its roots in the band's hometown environment.[19][6]Formats and distribution
Rubber Factory was initially released on September 7, 2004, by the independent label Fat Possum Records in compact disc (CD), vinyl, and digital download formats.[2][3] The standard edition features 13 tracks, capturing the duo's raw blues-rock sound recorded in an abandoned Akron tire factory.[2] Certain international variants, such as the Japanese CD release, included a bonus track: a cover of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues."[25] The vinyl edition was produced as a limited initial pressing on 180-gram audiophile-quality records, emphasizing the album's analog aesthetic without involvement from a major label.[26] Distribution occurred primarily through independent channels, including specialty record stores and online retailers aligned with Fat Possum's network, reflecting the band's commitment to grassroots release strategies.[2] Following its physical debut, Rubber Factory became available on major streaming platforms in the late 2000s and 2010s, expanding accessibility via services like Spotify and Bandcamp.[3] As of 2025, no deluxe or anniversary reissues have been officially released, though standard re-pressings of the vinyl and CD continue to be offered by Fat Possum.[2]Promotion and commercial performance
Marketing and singles
The Black Keys promoted Rubber Factory through a series of singles releases that highlighted the album's raw blues-rock energy, beginning with the lead single "10 A.M. Automatic," issued on August 23, 2004, via Fat Possum Records.[27] This track, with its driving guitar riff and urgent vocals, received limited airplay primarily on college and indie radio stations, helping to build buzz among niche audiences without significant mainstream exposure.[23] Following the album's September 7 release, the band issued a double A-side single featuring "'Till I Get My Way" and "Girl Is on My Mind" on November 22, 2004, through Epitaph Records.[28] These songs, both evoking classic garage rock influences, saw similarly modest radio rotation on alternative formats, reinforcing the duo's grassroots appeal rather than chasing commercial radio dominance. Media synchronization deals further amplified the album's reach. "10 A.M. Automatic" appeared in a 2007 American Express commercial featuring athlete Shaun White, exposing the track to broader audiences via television advertising.[29] Additionally, "When the Lights Go Out" was featured in the 2007 film Black Snake Moan, directed by Craig Brewer, where it underscored the movie's gritty Southern Gothic atmosphere as part of the official soundtrack.[30] The band also performed "Stack Shot Billy" live on the Late Show with David Letterman in 2004, delivering a high-energy set that showcased their minimalist setup and raw intensity to national late-night viewers.[31] Promotion extended to a low-budget tour across U.S. indie venues in fall 2004, focusing on small clubs and theaters to connect directly with fans.[32] This strategy leveraged word-of-mouth momentum from their prior albums The Big Come Up (2002) and Thickfreakness (2003), which had cultivated a dedicated underground following through similar grassroots efforts.Chart success and sales
Upon its release in September 2004, Rubber Factory marked The Black Keys' first entry on the Billboard 200, debuting and peaking at number 143.[5] It also reached number 5 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart, reflecting its strong performance among emerging artists.[33] Internationally, the album achieved modest peaks, entering the Australian ARIA Albums Chart at number 18 and spending two weeks there.[34] In the United Kingdom, it debuted at number 62 on the Official Albums Chart, with a total of one week in the top 100.[35] Similarly, it peaked at number 123 on the French Top Albums chart for one week.[36] Following the commercial breakthrough of the band's 2011 album El Camino, Rubber Factory experienced a re-entry on the Billboard 200 in May 2012, peaking at number 131. The album has not received any RIAA certifications, underscoring its initial modest sales trajectory despite later retrospective interest driven by the duo's rising fame. Overall, Rubber Factory's chart performance established it as a pivotal release in building the band's indie rock credibility, even as global sales remained under 500,000 units.Reception and legacy
Initial critical response
Upon its release in September 2004, Rubber Factory received widespread critical acclaim, earning a Metacritic aggregate score of 81 out of 100 based on 23 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim."[37] Critics frequently praised the album's raw, lo-fi production, which captured the authentic essence of blues rock through its gritty, unpolished sound recorded in an abandoned factory.[23][38] Entertainment Weekly awarded the album an A grade, lauding its "raw energy" and describing it as "shockingly well done... a remarkable album" that channeled sensual blues-rock intensity.[37] Pitchfork gave it an 8.3 out of 10, highlighting its role in the blues revival with "sparse arrangements and DIY aesthetic" that provided "rock and roll genuineness" missing from contemporaries, revitalizing the primal force of the genre.[23] Rolling Stone rated it 3 out of 5 stars, appreciating the "grit" in its "high-impact scuzz-blues" that evoked prime Hendrix influences, though it fell short of fully achieving that ambition.[37] Reviewers commonly noted the album's acclaim for preserving the blues' raw spirit amid the garage rock revival, often comparing it favorably to acts like the White Stripes for its indie authenticity and positioning it as a standout in the genre.[24] However, some critiques pointed to its limited accessibility, arguing the unrefined style contrasted with more polished rock productions and might alienate broader audiences.[39] This buzz helped establish Rubber Factory as an indie darling, boosting its initial commercial traction in underground circles.[13]Long-term impact and reissues
Rubber Factory is recognized as The Black Keys' breakthrough album, as it became their first to chart on the Billboard 200 at No. 143 and elevated their profile within the garage rock revival by blending raw blues influences with a stripped-back duo format.[40] The record's cohesive songcraft, exemplified by tracks like "The Lengths," demonstrated Dan Auerbach's songwriting at its peak and helped redefine blues-rock for modern audiences, contributing to the band's transition toward major-label success in subsequent years.[40] Its enduring appeal lies in the raw energy that inspired later garage rock acts, with bands like Bad Mannequins citing it as a formative influence for its simple yet powerful drums-and-guitar dynamic and 1960s-inspired grit.[41] Retrospective rankings underscore its lasting significance, placing it at No. 2 among The Black Keys' discography in Ultimate Classic Rock's assessment and No. 4 on Best Ever Albums' user-curated list of their works.[40][42] While the album itself garnered no major awards, it laid the groundwork for the duo's commercial ascent, paving the way for six Grammy wins across later releases, including Best Rock Album for El Camino (2011) and Brothers (2010). In September 2024, The Black Keys marked the album's 20th anniversary through social media streams, reflective interviews, and discussions of its Akron roots, highlighting its role as the first project recorded in an abandoned tire factory.[19] Reissues have been limited to standard vinyl represses by Fat Possum Records, such as the ongoing 180-gram black vinyl edition and a 2011 picture disc variant, without deluxe or expanded versions featuring additional content.[1] By 2025, the 21st anniversary passed without formal reissues or new material, though the album remains available via the label's catalog and streaming platforms.[2]Credits
Track listing
The standard edition of Rubber Factory contains 13 tracks, all written by Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney of the Black Keys except where noted.[43] The album has a total runtime of 41:33.[15] "10 A.M. Automatic" was issued as the album's lead single.[15]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "When the Lights Go Out" | Auerbach, Carney | 3:24 |
| 2. | "10 A.M. Automatic" | Auerbach, Carney | 2:59 |
| 3. | "Just Couldn't Tie Me Down" | Auerbach, Carney | 2:58 |
| 4. | "All Hands Against His Own" | Auerbach, Carney | 3:17 |
| 5. | "The Desperate Man" | Auerbach, Carney | 3:54 |
| 6. | "Girl Is on My Mind" | Auerbach, Carney | 3:28 |
| 7. | "The Lengths" | Auerbach, Carney | 4:54 |
| 8. | "Grown So Ugly" | Robert Pete Williams | 2:27 |
| 9. | "Stack Shot Billy" | Auerbach, Carney | 3:20 |
| 10. | "Act Nice and Gentle" | Ray Davies | 2:41 |
| 11. | "Aeroplane Blues" | Auerbach, Carney | 2:51 |
| 12. | "Keep Me" | Auerbach, Carney | 2:52 |
| 13. | "Till I Get My Way" | Auerbach, Carney | 2:31 |