Weird, but I think of Paul McCartney when I listen to Faust Arp.
― van smack, Saturday, 13 October 2007 04:52 (eighteen years ago)
the 13th or 14th play is the incredible care with which the album, as an album, was constructed.
100% OTM. Headphoning listening is required.
― the next grozart, Saturday, 13 October 2007 04:53 (eighteen years ago)
The end of Nude.
― the next grozart, Saturday, 13 October 2007 04:56 (eighteen years ago)
You notice I'm drunk? It's tragic.
― the next grozart, Saturday, 13 October 2007 04:58 (eighteen years ago)
Tell me: I'm on my second listen and this sounds great - I mean like Bjork or Scott Walker - and I'm just wondering if it sounds that way after, say, the seventh listen.
― Rich Smörgasbord, Saturday, 13 October 2007 06:57 (eighteen years ago)
It sounds like Radiohead after the seventh listen.
― Cosmo Vitelli, Saturday, 13 October 2007 07:03 (eighteen years ago)
Wrote a review: (hope you don't mind the spam.)
How long has it been since an album release was an event? When In Rainbows, the new Radiohead album, launched I received delirious text messages from long forgotten people known by my phone only as [first name] Radiohead, random, mostly strangers, many met on the last Radiohead tour all sharing a long lost feeling. If you're of a certain youth- say, post Napster- you may have never have done this but I remember queueing with friends at midnight and rushing home for the first listen knowing that everyone else was also hearing this for the first time. By releasing their album online, at whatever price you wish to pay for it and only ten days after it was announced, Radiohead have recaptured this moment and neatly side stepped the promo and marketing bullshit. There are no interviews, no launch parties and no television advertisements but plenty of hype. Hype that has been left unshaped by the critics who are all without advance copies. Listeners are left entirely to make up their own mind. I have mine, In Rainbows is Radiohead's best album.
The dark clouds of label life have cleared and a gay Radiohead is shown In Rainbows. At just ten tracks and a little over forty minutes, with purposeful sequencing, this asks to be listened to as an album rather than a collection of songs. In Rainbows has none of the patience-trying sprawl of their last album, 2003's Hail to the Thief, which felt like a disjointed Best of composed entirely of new songs. It is far more cohesive, akin to Kid A, but paradoxically it is also Radiohead's least electronic album since The Bends. The vast majority of the percussion is live and many songs are built upon sparse piano or acoustic guitar with the other instruments flowing organically in and out of the song. On last year's solo album, The Eraser, Thom Yorke discovered how not to hide his voice under the music, or, when that technique did not suit the song, distort the humanity out the performance. Evolving from that, his vocals, especially on the upbeat tracks, have a comfortable swagger that I've never heard from him before and which is reflected by the rest of the band.
The album opens with a false start, glitchy drums that sound like a sped up slow jam -a Timbaland technique thrown into 5/4- and Thom sings 'How come I end up where I started' to begin 15 Step, which can be read as loose parable of Radiohead's career only with samples of happy school children cheering and the dismissive, 'You used to be alright, What happened? Etcetera etcetera, Facts for whatever'. Bodysnatchers is reminiscent of The National Anthem with its heavy fuzzed-out bass. Thom snarls, 'I have no idea what you are talking about' and the track builds to create a breathless conclusion to the one two punch of using the album's most straight up rock songs as openers. A long breath and then a beat, that, I imagine, sounds like the last thing you hear before hypnotherapy, begins Nude whose gentle, swelling strings make you feel like you're floating down the Liffey. Weird Fishes/Arpeggi follows next and, rather literally, sounds like arpeggios mixed underwater, slightly outstaying its welcome. All I Need, one of the album's standouts, completes the first half and is anchored by a subtle sythn (one of the few) bass and the despairing romance of , 'I am a moth, who just wants to share your light'. A track sure to launch a thousand mix tapes at people too cute to speak to in person.
The second half of the album begins with the playful, 'One two three four, Wakey wakey' of Faust Arp which sounds absolutely nothing like the krautrock band. It is built around an intricate acoustic guitar and a insanely beautiful melody reminiscent of the The Beatles' finest. Thom slyly name drops 'Blackbird'. The next song, Reckoner, is set to be the most discussed among nerdy musical types. Drums hard right, tamberine hard left, which could be equally Motown as In a Silent Way era Miles Davis, yet Reckoner sounds more like something from Talk Talk's Laughing Stock. I can not get my head around it but I think it is brilliant. 'House of Cards' is an unlikely Radiohead song about sex and infidelity opening with the incongruous line, 'I don't want to be your friend, I just want to be your lover' over a deep southern-soul groove filtered through dub; all elongated sounds and echoy vocals that transform what is a very simple song into something much more. Jigsaw Out of Place is the most accessible song on the album and sure single material. You can dance, or as Radiohead fans tend to do, nod your head to this shameless crowd-bait. Videotape is the piano and vocal closer. Very beautiful and filling its purpose adequately in much the same way as Motion Picture Soundtrack or True Love Waits but will be a love it or hate it affair.
At this price there is no reason not to listen to In Rainbows. If you are the eager for more, and you should be, the on sale only from Radiohead's website discbox ships by the 3rd of December and includes the album, in much higher fidelity, a second disc consisting of eight bonus tracks recorded during the same sessions and a bunch of other stuff. Will the bonus disc be the Amnesiac to this Kid A, ie. a less cohesive collection of arguably greater songs? Stay detuned.
― Anthony Walsh, Saturday, 13 October 2007 07:08 (eighteen years ago)
Somehow I missed dude's sarcasm. Long day. ^^^
― Cosmo Vitelli, Saturday, 13 October 2007 07:12 (eighteen years ago)
Also children shouting or whatever, that song is all about the bass - Colin plays a fucking blinder.
otm. I didn't even notice the children cheering until the third listen. On headphones that bass is so badass, surely his best since Airbag.
― Roz, Saturday, 13 October 2007 08:39 (eighteen years ago)
didn't think i was really getting into this album much. then WEIRD FISHES/ARPEGGI popped up in a dream last night.
― pisces, Saturday, 13 October 2007 09:29 (eighteen years ago)
Ned, there's no AMG review yet. Pls advise.
― Davey D, Saturday, 13 October 2007 09:52 (eighteen years ago)
Still no reaction from geir?
― MRZBW, Saturday, 13 October 2007 11:53 (eighteen years ago)
House of Cards sounds like a Grizzly Bear record.
― caek, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:40 (eighteen years ago)
-- Cosmo Vitelli, Saturday, October 13, 2007 7:03 AM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Link
I want this enshrined in a plaque, thanks. This is the Nobel peace price (I mean prize) of this thread. Let's hang it on the wall and be done with it.
― Bimble, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:58 (eighteen years ago)
17 times and it still sounds remarkably like Radiohead, to wit.
― Bimble, Saturday, 13 October 2007 14:00 (eighteen years ago)
Do us a favor Radiohead. Tell us you're going to e-mail codes to everybody who purchased "In Rainbows" online so they can get the bonus material included on the CD FOR FREE! And then stop talking shit about files. CDs sound bad. I'm surprised you're even selling them. The sampling rate is so LOW! Why not make everybody buy an SACD player, to hear your music right. Or, buy turntables to hear the infinitely superior vinyl. You think you're doing something innovative, but it just looks like you've got contempt for your audience. I never fire up the big rig anymore. I LOVE my iPod. Files rule. Get OVER IT!
Lefsetz chimes in on the idea that Radiohead will be selling a cd version in the stores soon with extra tracks. http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/
― curmudgeon, Saturday, 13 October 2007 14:17 (eighteen years ago)
BUT I REQUIRE ALL MY ALBUMS TO ... BE EASILY RATE-ABLE AMONGST SAID ARTISTS ENTIRE DISCOGRAPHY
Wow, dudes are going crazy with the comparison stuff.
Mos def:
OK Computer > In Rainbows > Kid A > Hail To The Thief > The Bends > Amnesiac > Pablo Honey *
* Subject to change by 2012
― MC, Saturday, 13 October 2007 15:40 (eighteen years ago)
* or tomorrow, which ever comes first
― MC, Saturday, 13 October 2007 15:48 (eighteen years ago)
Oh and:
Thus, I think most of the experimentation that is going on here is about pushing four minute songs to be as intense and peculiar as they can possibly be and still fit the mood. In a sense these aren't pop songs anymore, in that they often don't give the pleasures of a pop song, or at least those pleasures: movement, climax, resolution etc., are really diluted, in favor of a different goal.
OTM
― MC, Saturday, 13 October 2007 15:56 (eighteen years ago)
Well, OTM except for this edit.
― MC, Saturday, 13 October 2007 16:02 (eighteen years ago)
the last minute of Reckoner still kills me every time
― ciderpress, Saturday, 13 October 2007 16:06 (eighteen years ago)
Oh and AMG's written review isn't up yet, but they have given it 4.5 stars and best track checkmarks to Bodysnatchers, Weird Fishes/Arpeggi, All I Need, and Jigsaw Falling Into Place.
Can't really argue with that, though I might have checked Reckoner or House of Cards instead of All I Need.
― MC, Saturday, 13 October 2007 16:11 (eighteen years ago)
i was going to post about not liking house of cards but then i listened to it and it's great.
― LaMonte, Saturday, 13 October 2007 16:33 (eighteen years ago)
First two tracks = good, especially "15 Step"
Rest of album = boring shit that only serves to remind me why I don't like Radiohead
― The Reverend, Saturday, 13 October 2007 17:34 (eighteen years ago)
"Faust Arp" is such a weird little song. I can't seem to wrap my head around it. At first I was on board with all of the "sounds like the Beatles, sorta" references, until I realized that it was only because the fingerpicking on it is almost a deadringer with John Lennon's "Julia".
― Z S, Saturday, 13 October 2007 17:41 (eighteen years ago)
Yeah, me too, but it's been out for 3 1/2 days.
― Cosmo Vitelli, Saturday, 13 October 2007 18:31 (eighteen years ago)
updated today on metacritic, Radiohead currently ranked number 2 for 2007 albums
http://www.metacritic.com/music/bests/2007.shtml
― djmartian, Saturday, 13 October 2007 19:03 (eighteen years ago)
Yeah but only because a small handful of publications have the arrogance to review it at this point.
― Cosmo Vitelli, Saturday, 13 October 2007 19:11 (eighteen years ago)
the last minute of Reckoner still kills me every time i seriously don't get that. reckoner like most songs on the album starts well and doesn't go anywhere. it's all in the first two minutes before the break. afterwards there is a big void. just rehashing and strings and rubbish. i think they have kind of lost it. they can hardly write a three minute song which holds the tension and is varied from beginning to end. except 15 step. this album could well be the last album ever a million or so people are listening to. albums are anachronistic in these fast-paced days. which is quite sad. and this album would be a very disappointing last album.
― alex in mainhattan, Saturday, 13 October 2007 19:23 (eighteen years ago)
this has a few really good tracks. but it also has a LOT of tracks that are so fucking boring that dont really go anywhere, just like half the songs on the last one.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Saturday, 13 October 2007 21:53 (eighteen years ago)
I seem to be the only person on earth that thinks the opening minute is exhilarating.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 13 October 2007 21:58 (eighteen years ago)
But I've always kinda wanted them to do d&b + skronk or something.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 13 October 2007 21:59 (eighteen years ago)
Nope.
― Ned Raggett, Saturday, 13 October 2007 21:59 (eighteen years ago)
far from the only person.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:07 (eighteen years ago)
it might be the best minute of the album.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:08 (eighteen years ago)
I'm with you, HOOS. It's just the rest of the album that sucks, amirite.
― The Reverend, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:11 (eighteen years ago)
Best moment of listening to record: about 20 seconds before the end of "15 Step" when I figured out the joke of the name.
― The Reverend, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:13 (eighteen years ago)
i don't get it
― ledge, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:31 (eighteen years ago)
there have supposedly been 1.3 million downloads of this so far.
― tricky, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:35 (eighteen years ago)
"i don't get it"
2step---------->15step
rofl etc
― titchyschneiderMk2, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:36 (eighteen years ago)
cute
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 13 October 2007 22:39 (eighteen years ago)
is it just me, or does that seem like rather a small number?
i'm still absolutely loving this album; i felt like i'd stopped caring about them about 5 years ago, but at this rate i'll be digging around in my cupboards for the letter i got from thom yorke a decade ago before the week is out.
― toby, Saturday, 13 October 2007 23:33 (eighteen years ago)
It's a preposterously large number by the standards of physical releases. OK Computer has sold about three times as many copies, but it's been out for ten years, not four days.
And it's not too shabby considering that the website was basically unusable for people who tried to order on Thursday and Friday (rather than pre-order).
Also, if the average price people are paying really is £4, it's not exactly pocket change for the band, either.
― caek, Sunday, 14 October 2007 00:11 (eighteen years ago)
i'll be digging around in my cupboards for the letter i got from thom yorke a decade ago
!
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 14 October 2007 00:27 (eighteen years ago)
I was trying to pretend like I wasn't really, really intrigued by that comment.
― Z S, Sunday, 14 October 2007 00:28 (eighteen years ago)
"DAEREST TOBY WAHT IS IT MAED SINED HTOM"
― Ned Raggett, Sunday, 14 October 2007 00:29 (eighteen years ago)
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2254/1554963486_b9401453c4.jpg?v=0
― Z S, Sunday, 14 October 2007 02:56 (eighteen years ago)
^ a victory
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 14 October 2007 02:59 (eighteen years ago)
Toilet has a weird tongue.
― Ned Raggett, Sunday, 14 October 2007 03:19 (eighteen years ago)
mommy y is clown fellating that toilette
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 14 October 2007 03:23 (eighteen years ago)