It features the main guitar riff accompanied by a largely drum and bass inspired backing beat. It is the first track on the second disc of the album. "Blue Orchid" has been remixed by High Contrast on the album Fabric Live 25. The video, which was directed by Floria Sigismondi, ends with a horse, its hooves raised in the air, about to stomp on Elson, but just before the hooves land on her, the video quickly goes black, ending. It features Karen Elson, a model who would marry Jack White soon after the shoot. The video for "Blue Orchid" was on Yahoo!'s Top Twenty Scariest Music Videos of all Time, charting at number 13. He has denied that the song relates to the ending of his relationship with Renée Zellweger. In an NPR interview, Jack White referred to "Blue Orchid" as the song that saved the album. The second CD version features 'Jack' on the left. The first CD and the 7" feature the couple in the same order as Get Behind Me Satan, with 'Jack' on the right. All three covers feature two people dressed up as The White Stripes, but are noticeably different people. The single comes in three editions, each with different additional tracks. Live, the sound is produced by a bass-rich guitar tone, used in combination with Whammy Pedal and the POG to create the heavily metallic sounding breaks of the song ("How dare you, how old are you now anyway" and "get behind me, get behind me now anyway".). The recorded sound is produced by playing a guitar into an Electro-Harmonix creation, the Polyphonic Octave Generator (POG).
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