Looking for tickets to Jack White in Warsaw? The concert at Klub Stodoła on June 1, 2026 brings raw blues-rock, echoes of The White Stripes and current material from "No Name" into a close, high-energy club setting. Plan your ticket purchase in time
Jack White brings raw blues-rock to Warsaw's Stodoła
Jack White arrives at Klub Stodoła in Warsaw as one of the few rock songwriters who simultaneously sounds like a guardian of the old electric tradition and like a musician constantly searching for a new edge. The concert is scheduled in the Duża Scena space, in a club that is large enough for a powerful sound, yet close enough to the audience for every guitar twitch and change of tempo to be felt directly. Doors open at 18:00, and the start of the event is listed for 20:00. Ticket sales for this event are ongoing.
White's reputation does not rest on just one great riff, although "Seven Nation Army" has long outgrown the status of a rock hit and become a global stadium chant. His catalogue connects The White Stripes, The Raconteurs, The Dead Weather and solo albums in which garage rock, blues, punk tension, country shades and studio curiosity alternate. In Warsaw, therefore, the audience that enjoys concerts where songs do not behave like museum exhibits, but like living material, will enjoy it the most.
Why this concert matters in the current phase of his career
The newest context for this performance is provided by the album "No Name", White's sixth solo album. Third Man Records describes it as a record made at White's Third Man Studio during 2023 and 2024, with a clear return to his DIY habits: his own production, his own studio, his own publishing infrastructure and a sound that relies on direct guitar, rough rhythm and short explosions of energy. The album brings songs such as "Old Scratch Blues", "That's How I'm Feeling", "It's Rough On Rats (If You're Asking)", "Archbishop Harold Holmes" and "What's The Rumpus?".
In 2026, White further opened a new chapter with the singles "G.O.D. And The Broken Ribs" and "Derecho Demonico". Both songs connect him with his touring band: Patrick Keeler on drums, Dominic Davis on bass and Bobby Emmett on keyboards. This is an important detail for visitors because it shows that the current phase is not just a studio project, but material written with the stage in mind - with room for the pressure of the rhythm section, sudden stops and White's guitar in the foreground.
The sound the audience can expect
Live, Jack White rarely seems like a performer who neatly works through a chronology of hits. His concerts in recent years have often combined newer songs, solo material, returns to The White Stripes catalogue, the occasional piece by The Raconteurs and the blues or rock roots behind all of it. That does not mean there is a guaranteed set list for Warsaw, but it is clear what type of evening the audience can expect: a tight band, little space between songs and a feeling that the concert is being built from the reaction of the hall.
The most attractive part of White's performance is the way older material changes shape. "Lazaretto" can lean on a heavy groove, "Steady, As She Goes" carries a chorus for a wider audience, and songs from The White Stripes period have a simplicity that often sounds more massive in a hall than on a recording. On the other hand, songs from "No Name" return White to the zone of dirty garage rock, where the guitar does not have to be polished in order to be precise.
It is worth securing tickets in time, especially because Stodoła is a concert venue where the energy of the audience is quickly felt across the entire standing area. This is not an environment in which rock is watched from a great distance; here you can hear the details of the amplifiers, changes in the drums and the way the band speeds up or slows down a song in front of the audience.
Who this performance is especially interesting for
The concert will most attract three types of audience. The first are long-time fans who have followed White since The White Stripes and recognize how much "Elephant", "White Blood Cells" and "Icky Thump" changed the sound of guitar music in the 2000s. The second are listeners who discovered him through solo songs, especially through the albums "Blunderbuss", "Lazaretto" and the newer "No Name". The third are visitors who may know only a few big songs, but want to hear how one of the most recognizable guitarists of his generation sounds in a club, not in a distant festival format.
- For fans of The White Stripes: an opportunity to encounter songs that redefined 21st-century garage rock.
- For lovers of blues and punk: White's sound often starts from old forms, but he plays them nervously, quickly and without ornament.
- For audiences following current releases: "No Name" and the new singles give the concert a fresh framework, not just nostalgia.
- For travelers to Warsaw: the location is close to the metro and well connected with the rest of the city.
Klub Stodoła as a space for an intimate rock concert
Klub Stodoła is located at ul. Batorego 10, 02-591 Warszawa. Liveurope lists a capacity of 2,000 visitors, placing it among the larger independent concert venues in Poland. This is important for the Jack White experience: there is enough space for the full, powerful sound of the band, but the venue still retains a club feeling. Unlike large arenas, here the audience does not lose contact with the stage.
Stodoła has a long musical history. The club was founded in 1956, and in its early years it was connected with jazz, cabaret and the student cultural scene. Today it operates as a concert venue that brings international performers of different genres to Warsaw. For White, whose career often relies on a direct relationship between performer and audience, such a space makes sense: guitar, drums, bass and keyboards can occupy the entire hall without losing their raw character.
Arrival, metro and parking
For visitors coming from outside Warsaw, the simplest option is to plan arrival by public transport. The club lists the Pole Mokotowskie metro station on line M1 as the nearest important point, about 400 metres away. Nearby are also the tram and bus stops Metro Pole Mokotowskie and Stefana Batorego, which makes arriving from the city centre and returning after the concert easier.
- Address: ul. Batorego 10, 02-591 Warszawa.
- Nearest metro: Pole Mokotowskie, about 400 metres from the club.
- Distance from Warszawa Centralna: about 2.5 km.
- Distance from Chopin Airport: about 6.5 km.
- Parking: the club does not list its own parking; public paid spaces along ul. Batorego and near Skwer Wasyla Stusa are used.
If you arrive by train, the area around Warszawa Centralna is close enough for the arrival to be handled by metro, taxi or public transport. If you are coming from the airport, count on city traffic and leave enough time before the doors open. For a concert of this profile, it pays to arrive earlier, especially if you want a good position in the standing area.
Warsaw as a concert city
Warsaw is a rewarding host city for travelers because it combines a wide choice of accommodation, a good public transport network and districts that are easy to explore before an evening concert. Stodoła is located in an area that is not isolated from the city: it is close to Mokotów, the student and green zones around Pole Mokotowskie and a relatively short ride from the centre. This means that a visit to the concert does not have to be just an arrival at the club doors, but can turn into a one-day or weekend stay.
For audiences from the region, the fact that the Warsaw date is part of a wider European route adds extra value. In Jack White's tour schedule, Warsaw comes after the performance in Sigulda in Latvia and before the concert in Kraków. Poland thus gets two consecutive concerts, which makes the Warsaw performance one of the early stops of the European run, before Berlin, Hamburg, Aarhus, Malmö, Stockholm, Paris, Brussels, Lyon and the final festival dates.
What not to expect
One should not expect a pre-announced evening of grand promises, spectacular guests or an exact song list. No special guests, support acts or production elements that could responsibly be listed as part of the programme have been confirmed for this concert. With Jack White, that is not a flaw, but part of the way his performances function: the focus is on the band, the guitar, the dynamics and the choice of songs, which can change from city to city.
Also, he should not be reduced only to "Seven Nation Army". That song probably remains the broadest entry point into his world, but White's concert is worth viewing as a cross-section of several careers. There is the minimalist rock of The White Stripes, the melodic strength of The Raconteurs, the darker energy of The Dead Weather and the solo phase in which White plays with the studio, genres and his own rules.
The atmosphere of the evening
The best description of expectations for this concert is the tension between control and chaos. White is a musician who knows very well how to shape sound, but on stage he often lets it feel dangerous, open and unpredictable. The audience can expect an evening in which riffs cut clearly, the rhythm section pushes the songs forward, and the vocal moves from blues storytelling into an almost punk attack.
Places are disappearing quickly. Stodoła is a large enough club to receive a strong audience, but for an artist of this profile, a 2,000-capacity venue still means an intimate, sought-after concert format. For those who want to hear Jack White from close range, the Warsaw performance has a very concrete advantage: this is not a distant festival crowd, but a concert in a hall where the work of the band can be felt.
Practical reminder for visitors
Plan your arrival so that you do not count only on the start of the programme at 20:00. Doors open at 18:00, and at concerts with a standing area, earlier arrival often means a better position and less rushing at the entrance. Check the route to Pole Mokotowskie station, avoid relying on parking in front of the club and bring only what you really need for an evening in a concert venue.
This concert makes sense for audiences who expect more from a rock performance than the reproduction of familiar recordings. Jack White brings to Warsaw a catalogue that combines garage, blues, American roots, punk nerve and authorial stubbornness. At Klub Stodoła, that combination can come to the fore precisely because the space does not distance the audience from the performer. Tickets for this event are in demand.
Sources:
- Klub Stodoła - information about the date, Duża Scena space, door opening, organizer and basic description of the event.
- Jack White - Tour - confirmation of the Warsaw date in the 2026 tour schedule and context of the European route.
- Third Man Records - information about the album "No Name", the recording method, track list and current singles.
- Liveurope - information about Stodoła, the year of foundation, capacity and the club's role among independent concert venues.
- Stodoła Kontakt - address, public transport, distances from key points in the city and parking information.
- Pitchfork, NME, The Guardian and Uncut - context of the tour, current releases and recent concert impressions.