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Watch Conan, Jack White Play ‘We’re Going to Be Friends’ at Newport Folk Festival


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O’Brien’s set included appearances by Mavis Staples, Nathaniel Rateliff, Brittany Howard, and more

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 08:  (L-R) Liza Powel O'Brien, Conan O'Brien and Jack White attends the Recording Academy producers and engineers wing presents 10th Annual Grammy week event at The Village Recording Studios on February 8, 2017 in Los Angeles, California.  (Photo by Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic)

Conan O’Brien and Jack White attend 10th Annual Grammy week event on February 8, 2017 in Los Angeles, California.

Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic

The final guest during Conan O’Brien’s star-studded Sunday evening set at Newport Folk Festival was his podcast companion and friend Jack White. The two friends first delivered a duet of the White Stripes classic “We’re Going to Be Friends,” with White and O’Brien trading verses. White played electric guitar alongside O’Brien on acoustic for the “song about friendship,” per White’s introduction of the track.

The song has a long history with the comedian: It was the last song ever performed on O’Brien’s NBC late night show, and O’Brien uses the song for his podcast.

O’Brien opened the set by introducing himself as “folk music legend Conan O’Brien” before explaining that he’d showed up to close out the storied festival as an exercise in destruction: “I am here to prove I can ruin any genre,” he quipped.

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White was the final guest during O’Brien’s set, which featured an original song from Triumph the Insult Comic Dog about how bad O’Brien was at telling music stories, like the one about O’Brien meeting Bob Dylan; classic rock covers from guests including Nathaniel Rateliff (“Let It Bleed”), Brittany Howard (“Come and Get Your Love”), and Taylor Goldsmith (“Ramblin’ Man”); and a rousing performance from Mavis Staples, who sang an extended rendition of her Staple Singers signature “I’ll Take You There.”

After the White Stripes ballad, White and O’Brien launched into the rockabilly rave “Twenty Flight Rock” by Eddie Cochran before O’Brien brought out a gaggle of singers from throughout the day for a Newport finale sing-along of the traditional “Midnight Special.”

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