Thom Yorke & Jonny Greenwood - Give Up the Ghost (Late Night With Jimmy Fallon)
Posts tagged Radiohead.
As I’m spamming tonight here have Happy Song by Radiohead I’m just picturing Jonny banging away on that celeste and now I cannot stop laughing goodbye
Radiohead - OK Computer (1997)
I kind of doubt that anyone saw this coming. Obviously, being a music blog, I review music, but this one is such an obvious choice really. It’s so widely known as one of the hugest albums ever, often compared to The Wall: it’s Radiohead’s biggest album, and they’ve only gone up from there, maybe not in popularity, but in experience. You can’t say that this isn’t a beautiful album, but from there, they’ve sort of been whittling their fanbase to a lot of real fans who actually care about them, as opposed to having a couple of their tracks lodged away on their iPod so that when you search through it, you go ‘OH YOU HAVE RADIOHE-oh, it’s Creep.’
But yeah, everyone’s reviewed this album. Everyone.
Personally, I think at the moment I’m going through a Hail To The Thief phase, but Kid A is growing on me a lot right now, and so is Amnesiac, because they really go together. Anyway, I was meant to review this album, right. But the point is, I’ve never really gone through an OK Computer phase as such - I’ve never been as thoroughly attached to it as I have been with any of the others - it’s always just been some sort of assumption that I loved it, right from when I started listening. And it is, indeed, a beautiful album which usually leaves me in tears.
I’m going to do track-by-track of this one, because it’s Radiohead. So here goes.
Airbag - Airbag is like one of those songs that completely throws you off for the rest of the rest of it. It’s a heavier track, and there’s a lot of Phil’s drum looping in there. It’s a really good beginning track, and the breakdown at the end of the song really makes for letting the rest of the album come through.
Paranoid Android - this is one of those incredibly odd songs - it trades itself a lot, in a perfectly good way. It starts off acoustic, then it launches into sinister and dark and you don’t know what it’ll do next, then, bam, Jonny! (I’ve always wanted to say that…’Bam, Jonny’ what am I doing okay I’ll carry on maybe no one noticed) There’s a huge solo, shoved to the teeth with effects with Ed’s brilliant harmonies and everything about this is wonderful.
Subterranean Homesick Alien - this is one of the mellower songs, the first of the album thus far. It’s quite relaxing, but there’s this aura of fear in the vocals, and it comes across wonderfully.
Exit Music (For A Film) - this is bitter and wonderful and even if you’re passively listening to it, you’ll notice Colin’s crunchy bass in the last half, and it’s really phenomenal. You know one of those songs that can actually get an audience to sit back and shut up? This is that.
Let Down - Let Down is one of those songs. I can’t quite describe it, I can only describe what it does, and it spirals into a lot of effects at the end and I can’t breathe.
Karma Police - this song makes me incredibly sad. It’s catchy, but for me it’s in the most morbid way: if I were singing this song to myself in my head, I’d be in tears every time it happened, which is why I’m grateful it doesn’t get in my head too often - crying fits are not what everyone else needs. It’s a beautiful, beautiful song, and a real anthem at that.
Fitter Happier - this is it, really. The point of the whole album, if there is one. It isn’t a song as much as a poem read from a computer, but the point is, it completely lacks emotion. It’s very draining and mocks everything, yet it’s still there for its purpose.
Electioneering - this is a really straightforward song, and I can’t quite describe it as messy, because it’s not. Frenzied? Yeah, that’s probably the right word.
Climbing Up The Walls - I do not even want to start on this one but I have to anyway. This is one of the only songs I know that can scare me straight off, and wherever I hear it, I want to curl up in a ball. Not that I hear it on the radio or anything, usually it’s just on the iPod, but if they played this on the radio, heaven help me. It’s distorted and lonely and dark and I’d hate it if I could but I can’t, it’s such a good song. I think this is actually one of my favourites - not on the album, but in general.
No Surprises - Jesus, this one makes me sad. It’s not even real, it can’t be. Jonny’s glockenspiel really hits home, and there’s a lot of cynicism in here, and it’s almost like a lullaby. And the vocals and the guitar and I can’t write about this coherently I can’t it’s a beautiful song and that is all I’m listening to it at the moment and I think I might cry.
———
So listening to the album whilst trying to write the review for it, in this case, was a real mistake. I’d forgotten how emotional this album makes me. Okay, I can do this. I can. Carrying on.
———
Lucky - the guitar on this album really stands out, and I’ve never had that many instruments (as opposed to vocals/lyrics) want to make me cry, but here it is. It’s really, really a great song.
The Tourist - this song is by Jonny, and it shows. It’s a wonderful piece. It just leaves you wondering, at the end, ‘is it really over?’ and it’s then that you realise that you really don’t want it to be, but it’s almost a relief all the same.
And then you listen again.
I’m probably making an estimation in saying that you probably already have this album. But if you don’t have it, you should get it.
Get it on iTunes.
Get it on Amazon.
Radiohead - A Wolf At The Door (2003)
I’m probably not lying to myself if I say that Hail To The Thief is my favourite Radiohead album, but this song, this song really gets to me, and has for a while. I’ve been trying to write one that is blatantly influenced by it, and it’s so fucking difficult to come up with the melodies they do, it’s so incredibly unusual, and the song itself makes my heart squirm.
Radiohead - The King Of Limbs (2011)
First thing to mention about this album - IT’S GREAT OH MY GOD.
Second thing - considerable lack of guitar, if you’re looking for it. There’s so little Jonny that you bring yourself to miss him right away. There’s little, if any, guitar on most of the tracks. In fact, the only appearance of an acoustic is the last track, Give Up The Ghost.
Even without Jonny, like pretty much every other Radiohead album, this is excellent. I’ve only listened to this album once, and I’m definitely going to give it about three more listens to let it sink in and then it’ll be one of those that I come back to on a very regular basis.
But on first listen, it’s full of repetitive melodies, which really lets a theme form throughout the album. It reminds me a little of Kid A, and there’s almost a Philip Glass-esque minimalism about the whole thing. You can detect a lot of influences from Thom Yorke’s solo project, The Eraser, too. I started listening to Bloom, and at first I was almost a little unsure, but then less than a minute in, everything fell into place.
This album settles nicely in jittery electronica, if I had to put a label on it (not that I really want to). Oh, also, there’s a newspaper album!
Radiohead’s new record, The King Of Limbs, is presented here as the world’s first* Newspaper Album, comprising:*perhaps
- Two clear 10” vinyl records in a purpose-built record sleeve.
- A compact disc.
- Many large sheets of newspaper artwork, 625 tiny pieces of artwork and a full-colour piece of oxo-degradable plastic to hold it all together.
- The Newspaper Album comes with a digital download that is compatible with all good digital media players.
- The Newspaper Album will be shipped on Monday 9th May 2011 you can, however, enjoy the download now.
- Shipping is included in the prices shown.
- One lucky owner of the digital version of The King Of Limbs, purchased from this website, will receive a signed 2 track 12” vinyl.
The artwork is designed to look like a newspaper, if you were wondering.
And with that, I’ll stop because otherwise I’ll rant a lot more.
The album isn’t available on iTunes; Radiohead have decided to take a different route with it this time.
Get it on Amazon.
RADIOHEAD’S NEW ALBUM IS COMING OUT
I’ll have you know it took me twenty minutes to stop squealing and another twenty for me to be able to type straight.
The King Of Limbs is available now for preorder as the world’s first* Newspaper Album.
*perhaps
WHY AM I POOR.
I’m going to beg my parents to buy this for me when they get home.
Oh yeah, it’s officially released on MP3 on 19th February, and into stores on 28th March, and the newspaper album is being released in May.
x
Jonny Greenwood - Norwegian Wood (2010)
Recently, I’ve gotten very into Jonny Greenwood. Before listening to his solo stuff, he was already my favourite member of Radiohead, but god, this just puts him in his place. I have yet to listen to Bodysong and There Will Be Blood, but as soon as I get them, you can bet they’re going to be pretty worn.
Say hello to something beautiful. You’ll hear some gorgeous classical music and see sparks. You’ll go over it again and again in your mind, and it’ll drive you crazy with appreciation for this guy.
And he’s gorgeous.
Get it on Amazon.
Radiohead - The Bends (1995)
I only started to listen to Radiohead in depth a couple of days ago, courtesy of Elizabeth (www.bornandraisedforthejob.tumblr.com) for telling me to listen to them for about three months. Anywho, from what I hear, these guys are fucking amazing. I’ve come across a few familiar tracks, presumably the more famous ones, whilst listening to this, and what really stuns me about Radiohead is not their songs (although that’s probably a great deal of it), it’s the care they take in making their lineups flow into each other. Each song is carefully crafted to fit both on its own, and to blend perfectly with the songs surrounding it on the album.
Before I go gushing about this band that I’ve only very recently had real experience of, I have to say - there’s a lot of intricacy; the melody is usually focused in the vocals, but when there’s focus on the background, it really goes all out to impress. You’ll find quirky drumbeats, dulcet guitars and piano tones.
Favourite tracks on this album are Just and My Iron Lung. For the most part, Radiohead isn’t exactly cheery listening, but it’s really, really great.
Get it on iTunes.
Get it on Amazon.
THERE’S A RADIOHEAD TOUR COMING UP.
Radiohead are out of the shed, all is right with the world, and Dead Air Space is once again getting updates!
At this point, you should do a victory dance and an air punch. Dead Air Space has been updated with scraps of Thom Yorke’s poetic license, track listings, and a book review from Colin (who locked the band in the shed in the first place, goddammit), and other banter.
Anyway, where was I going with this? Oh yeah! Now the band are out of the shed, there’s a tour coming up for the first time in a while, so get your ass up and get tickets! There’s a rumour that they’re headlining Glastonbury in 2011, and if they are, you bet your face I’ll be going!
Also, there’s a possibility that this is the last tour they’ll ever do, so bear that in mind before neglecting to buy tickets.
This tour is going to be fucking amazing.