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Radiohead: Albums
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Radiohead Radiohead was one of the few alternative bands of the early '90s to draw heavily from the grandiose arena rock that characterized U2's early albums. But the band internalized that epic sweep, turning it inside out to tell tortured, twisted tales of angst and alienation. More
Radiohead - The Bends Radiohead is a British experimental/rock band from Oxfordshire. They are often praised as being amongst the most creative musical groups of their era, noted for their multilayered songs and often radical evolutions from album to album. They were ... seen by some to have maintained a spirit of musical and political independence despite recording for EMI, a major label.
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For their next trick of mass public deception, Radiohead decided to embark on a cosmic journey into the center of Neo-Pink-Floydian masturbatory pretension with OK Computer, the first in a series of Radiohead concept albums entirely lacking in concepts. They once again took MTV and modern rock radio by storm, this time with a long and tedious single called Paranoid Android. It was basically Bohemian Rhapsody by Queen, weirded up about 80% and without the element of irony that made it at least bearable as something to smirk at. It featured an adorable video (which was seemingly animated with Mario Paint) in which, appropriately, a pale and skinny man engaged in entirely meaningless and surreal exploits. The song was typical of the album; it was a tale told by five idiots, full of sound and fury but signifying nothing. Their prog-rock gambit was successful; rather than being cornered into admitting that they were too stupid to understand the album, fans and music journalists instead just assumed it had some sort of deep and profound meaning, and showered it with simpering praise that still reverberates today on a thousand Internet nerd colonies. A million brainwashed converts were left yearning for more Radiohead like lambkins for the teat.
More of a fine artist than illustrator, Stanley Donwood, 38, created the artwork for Radiohead's album sleeves. The man himself is not one naturally drawn to the limelight. For years, the only way to contact him was to fax his local pub in Bath, from whence any communication would be forwarded to him. Much of Donwood's work delights in rediscovering antiquated processes. A recent series of images, London Views, created a panorama of the capital out of 14 pieces of hand-cut linoleum, printed on a Victorian printing press. His latest work, If You Lived Here You'd Be Home By Now (recently shown at the Lazarides Gallery in London's Soho), comprises a series of darkly compelling etchings that used the century-old photogravure technique.
Radiohead Tickets Radiohead was formed in 1986 in England, and they spent six years perfecting their craft before releasing their first album in 1992. Their first studio album, Pablo Honey, released the following year, climbed into the Top 40 on the album charts both in the United States and the UK. Each of their five subsequent albums have reached the Top Five on the Album charts in both the US and the UK, and every album presents an artistic progression that makes Radiohead tickets to every tour distinct from the previous performances.
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Radiohead, collaborating with Stanley Donwood, created this bear logo to accompany the release of Kid A. In early 1999, Radiohead began work on a follow-up to OK Computer. Although there was no longer any pressure or even a deadline from their record label, tension during this period was high. The members all had different visions for the band's future, and Yorke was still experiencing writer's block,[37] influencing him toward a more abstract, fragmented form of songwriting.[5] Eventually, all the members agreed on a new musical direction, redefining their instrumental roles in the band.[38] For the first time the band recorded without considering live performance, secluding themselves with producer Nigel Godrich in a series of different studios from Paris to Copenhagen to Gloucester, to their newly completed studio in Oxford. In the process, they pared 40 newly recorded songs to the 30 which were ultimately released on their subsequent two albums and accompanying B-sides.[39]
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