Twenty One Pilots are set to perform The White Stripes ‘Seven Nation Army’ in honour of the band’s induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame on November 8th.
Alt-rockers Twenty One Pilots are confirmed to cover The White Stripes ‘Seven Nation Army’ in honour of the band’s induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame on November 8th.
The White Stripes will be inducted alongside Soundgarden, Bad Company, OutKast, Cindy Lauper and more. Chappelle Roan, The Killers, Doja Cat, Olivia Rodrigo and more have all been confirmed as guest performers for the night alongside Twenty One Pilots.
This won’t be the first time Twenty One Pilots have covered the famous White Stripes track. Longtime fans familiar with the ‘Ride’ group’s setlists would know that ‘Seven Nation Army’ used to be a common interlude within the band’s live performance of the track ‘Car Radio’.
As of writing, Jack White has yet to confirm if he also intends to perform at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s 40th annual induction ceremony. Fellow White Stripes band member Meg White has remained out of the public eye since 2011 and has yet to confirm her attendance.
For Twenty One Pilots themselves, the band are coming fresh off the back of releasing their eighth full-length album, Breach, which brought an epic finale to the story the band has been telling in their music for years.
The album, featuring tracks ‘The Contract’ and ‘City Walls’, saw the band claim the number one spot on the Billboard 200. Breach would sell over 200,000 equivalent units in the US, making it not only the best-selling week in Twenty One Pilots’ career, but the biggest week for a rock album since Tool’s Fear Inoculum launched at number one with 270,000 sales back in 2019.
Twenty One Pilots just wrapped their limited tour this month, and are set to take a long break before heading over to Germany to play at Southside Festival and Hurricane Festival.
 
                        
                                                 
             
             
             
             
			 
			 
			