A studio-used Shure S4SD (Shure Brothers Incorporated) Unidyne III dynamic microphone used during the recording of Elephant by The White Stripes at Toe Rag Recording Studios in Homerton, East London — one of four Shure S4SD microphones used across the entire album recording, confirmed in a signed handwritten letter from Toe Rag founder and studio engineer Liam Watson. The lot includes Watson’s original letter, a signed Letter of Authenticity from photographer David James Swanson, and an original copy of Pictures from Elephant by Swanson — a photographic record of the recording sessions in which these microphones appear in use throughout.
Historical Context
The White Stripes — Jack White (guitar, vocals) and Meg White (drums) — are among the most critically acclaimed and culturally significant rock acts of the early 21st century. Their fourth studio album Elephant (released April 1, 2003, XL Recordings) is widely considered their masterwork and one of the defining rock albums of the decade. It peaked at #6 on the Billboard 200 and #1 on the UK Official Albums Chart, is RIAA 2x-Platinum certified, and won the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album at the 46th Grammy Awards in 2004 — also receiving an Album of the Year nomination. Rolling Stone’s David Fricke called it “a work of pulverizing perfection,” and in Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums list the record was described as having transformed everything known about rock music. It contains “Seven Nation Army,” whose guitar riff became one of the most recognizable in rock history.
Elephant was recorded entirely at Toe Rag Recording Studios — a deliberate philosophical choice. Toe Rag, founded in 1991 by Liam Watson at 166a Glyn Road, Homerton, East London, is a purpose-built analog facility operating entirely on vintage equipment. Jack and Meg White spent two weeks at Toe Rag in 2002 recording the album, capturing it on Studer tape machines using period-correct instruments and signal chains, with Jack White producing. The album was recorded without digital recording technology — Watson’s core philosophy, as detailed in his profile in Sound on Sound magazine. The sonic character of Elephant — raw, immediate, and intentionally vintage in texture — is inseparable from the Toe Rag environment and the specific microphones and equipment used to capture it. The four Shure S4SD microphones described in Watson’s letter were central elements of that signal chain, placed in the positions Watson describes: at the drum kit, in front of Jack White’s guitar amplifiers, and around White during his live guitar and vocal recording.
Sound on Sound — “Liam Watson & Toe Rag Studios” (in-depth studio profile)
Recording Use
The bulk of Elephant was recorded over two weeks in April 2002 (the band had made their first visit to Toe Rag the previous November 2001 to record one track). Per Liam Watson’s signed letter (June 15, 2023): during the recording of Elephant, Watson used four Shure S4SD Unidyne III microphones in the following roles: top snare microphone; Jack White’s guitar amplifiers (two positions); and Jack White’s live guitar/vocal recording. Watson states: “I have no documentation on which exact mic did what, but all 4 were used extensively. This mic is one of the four.”
Watson’s use of Shure dynamic microphones on the guitar amplifiers is independently corroborated by a separately published interview with Watson for BMI (Broadcast Music Inc.), in which he stated: “Jack’s guitar was going through two separate amps at the same time; I miked these with AKG and Shure dynamic mics, each amp having its own track.” Given the 8-track format used for the album, guitar occupied four of the eight available tracks (two live amp tracks plus two overdub amp tracks), placing the microphone placement — and by extension these four Shure S4SDs — at the center of the album’s sonic architecture. Jack White himself reflected on the intensity of the 8-track format in a contemporary interview, remarking that in pushing the limits of the recorder, “I think how far we went is too far.”
Mixdown Magazine — “20 Years of The White Stripes’ Elephant” (production analysis)
The photographs in Pictures from Elephant — the accompanying book by session photographer David James Swanson — document the microphones in place across these configurations: a mic positioned in front of a guitar amplifier on the Toe Rag checkerboard floor; a mic visible in the drum kit setup; and mics on stands around Jack White during his vocal and guitar recording sessions. Watson’s letter is on official Toe Rag Recording Studios letterhead (166a Glyn Road, London E5 0JE).
Specifications
· Manufacturer: Shure Brothers Incorporated
· Model: S4SD (Unidyne III)
· Type: Dynamic cardioid instrument microphone
· Configuration: Separate silver-tone metal body and black plastic/mesh grille head
Condition
Good. The microphone exhibits wear and patina consistent with extensive professional studio use. The label marking “MODEL S4SD” and “Unidyne III” is present and legible.
Included Items
Letter of Authenticity from Liam Watson / Toe Rag Recording Studios: Original handwritten letter on Toe Rag Recording Studios letterhead, dated June 15, 2023, confirming use of four Shure S4SD Unidyne III microphones throughout the recording of Elephant across multiple specific roles (top snare, two guitar amp positions, live guitar/vocal), and identifying this microphone as one of those four.
Letter of Authenticity from David James Swanson: Signed letter from session photographer David James Swanson.
Pictures from Elephant by David James Swanson: Original photographic book documenting the Elephant recording sessions at Toe Rag, in which the Shure S4SD microphones are visible across multiple images in their documented recording positions.
Contemporary vinyl album sleeve (used) for Elephant (The White Stripes, 2003). 1 red duo-tone canvas print of the microphone in studio use, as illustrated in the listing imagery.
Provenance
Used during the recording of Elephant by The White Stripes at Toe Rag Recording Studios, Homerton, London, 2002-2003. Authentication by Liam Watson (Toe Rag founder and recording engineer for Elephant) and David James Swanson (official session photographer). The book provides photographic corroboration of the microphones in situ during the sessions.
Nostalgia Bandit Letter of Provenance
This lot will be accompanied by a Nostalgia Bandit Letter of Provenance — a document printed on official Nostalgia Bandit letterhead, signed by Nostalgia Bandit’s principal, and affixed with the official Nostalgia Bandit embossed seal. The Letter of Provenance reproduces the complete final auction description for this lot in full, memorializing all provenance documentation, attribution, supporting evidence, and condition details as presented herein. It is designed to travel with the lot through all future ownership transfers as a permanent, platform-independent physical record of the item’s documented history.
Shipping & Measurements
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» Item: 6.2 x 1.5″ · 0.60 lbs.
