RAdiohead

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Lol yeah I actually liked this more than I thought I would. I really like the production too… I feel like Godrich is good but sometimes a slight change is good.

TKOL is easily a top 3 RH album for me - probably top 2 if Staircase and Supercollider were part of it - idk why so many Radiohead fans seem to rank it next to Pablo Honey.

✖✖✖ (Moka), Wednesday, 31 January 2024 22:05 (two months ago) link

The new issue of The Wire is out, so here's my full review of the Smile album:

The Smile
Wall Of Eyes
XL CD/DL/LP
Why do The Smile exist? Jonny Greenwood has done brilliant work as a composer for films. Thom Yorke has his solo work and Atoms For Peace. Is it just a way to play concerts without being asked to sing “Karma Police”?

The group’s previous studio album and its accompanying live document offer songs that feel as half-sketched as those on the last two (or three, or four) Radiohead albums. Occasional post-punk outbursts tease the prospect of excitement, but middle aged ennui always wins out, and Tom Skinner, one of the most exciting drummers on the London jazz scene, is reduced to delivering somnambulistic half-remembered Ethio-jazz, like a library music version of Sault.

The title track lays a gentle Brazilian guitar strum over booming tympani. In the back, electronics crackle like distant firecrackers, and eventually strings come in. The music is gentle but ominous, and it’s hard to be sure which impression they want to linger. “Read The Room” and “Teleharmonic” are more conventional rock songs; the former in particular could have come off any 21st century Radiohead album. “Under Our Pillows” has a math rock feel to start, guitars sliding into place like the gears of a watch; in the song’s second half, a motorik bassline materialises, pumping the energy level up somewhat. “Friend Of A Friend” pulls from multiple early 1970s sources. Yorke’s near falsetto vocals bring to mind Elton John at his most mawkish and the orchestral arrangements amplify that tendency, but there’s some Bowie-ish theatricality and King Crimson-esque buzz around the edges.

In the final moments of the inexplicably eight minute “Bending Hectic” someone plugs in an electric guitar, an almost bafflingly aggressive gesture compared with everything before. And/but the minute all these songs end, they vanish from your mind’s ear as if they’d never existed. Again, why?

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Tuesday, 6 February 2024 15:23 (two months ago) link

Home visiting my folks and going through boxes of stuff from youth, found my copies of the 'Drill' EP 12", the 'Pop Is Dead' 12", original UK 2LP of 'OK Computer' and 2x10" of 'Amnesiac' all in a closet unplayed (and upright) the last 23 years...

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GGIJLFIWQAA8EOP?format=jpg&name=large

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GGIJT-wXMAAW9Uq?format=jpg&name=large

Should probably sell them, right?

Soundslike, Monday, 12 February 2024 15:57 (two months ago) link

always valuable to learn who an obscure young vocalist like this Yorke fellow "brings to mind"

Evans on Hammond (evol j), Monday, 12 February 2024 19:20 (two months ago) link

Again, why?

Davey D, Monday, 12 February 2024 19:24 (two months ago) link


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