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Great Hail To The Thief review for those interested in Radiohead Latley, I've seen a great deal of intrest and growth towards their popularity and music.. So if anyone is still interest in their latest efforts, (and aside from the reviewers remarks toward any comparson towards u2) take a look at this article, which defines the artistic triumpth they have created.
Radiohead Hail to the Thief [Capitol; 2003] Rating: 9.3 When I head out to my local record shop during my designated lunch break today-- a topic Radiohead's Thom Yorke would readily turn into a melodramatically fatalistic, Orwell-lite meditation on routine and alienation-- I'll mingle with teenagers and CEOs frantic to walk out with their own copy of Hail to the Thief. Because today, Radiohead are U2, Pink Floyd, and Queen-- they could have been bigger than The Beatles if the success of "Creep" hadn't agitated an Oxford-bred guilt complex. As Yorke put it in Meeting People Is Easy: "English people aren't impressed. There's this automatic assumption that any degree of success means that you've cheated. Or you're full of shit." That's a cross Thom no longer has to bear, since whatever shit he was full of was kicked out of him-- in his hometown, no less-- one night in 2000. Like Johnny, the similarly bloodied main character from Mike Leigh's Naked, the assault appears to have Thom dealing with reality for possibly the first time. Protected from street-level human misery-- first by privilege, and then as a celebrity-- by a misguided belief in the world as something definite and easily changed, Yorke's pummeling rightly refocused an unparalleled modern songwriter on more immediate and emotionally resonant issues, stuffing him back in boots he was growing too big for. Which is not to say I advocate violence, or that any end could justify its employment, but there are tertiary benefits when an artist's perspective is forcibly altered. Listen to George Michael's Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1 or-- less sarcastically, this time-- listen to Kid A, the most remarkably finessed redesign of an established band's sound since U2 recorded Achtung Baby. A reaction to overexposure, the undermining effects of commodification and the alienation of celebrity, Kid A hasn't aged a day (even while Amnesiac, a less inspired collection of underdeveloped tunes from the same sessions, has somewhat dulled its glimmer). Kid A and Amnesiac were written and recorded before Thom was attacked, before he became a father, before the world became a lot smaller, when nothing really mattered. Hail to the Thief is almost four years removed from the reality Yorke last wrote about, and for that suspicious title and his recent exploits, it's thankfully less concerned about third world debt and paranoiac global conspiracy theories than I'd expected. Which is reassuring: Radiohead aren't turning into Midnight Oil-- though there's plenty of simplistic condemnation to be found here. Hail to the Thief doesn't dig up Britpop skeletons from The Bends, and it's not OK Computer 2, as Yorke has called it in the press. It is, however, a holding pattern. Thom's excusatory remarks only underscore his chief failing: he can't grasp that pure, radical change isn't always the best option, whatever personal pride he as an artist takes from doing something "new" (and personally, I think Eno and his German collaborators from the late 70s have plenty of reasons to bristle at Kid A). There's nothing to apologize for here: Radiohead are a band, and after a fashion, bands are defined by their music. Much as U2's Zooropa still sounded like U2, anything Radiohead does from here on out will sound like Radiohead. The triumphant "2+2=5" could only work as the set's opener, though the positively begging single "Go to Sleep" (due for release in June) is a close second. "2+2=5" is a more encompassing declaration of intent, defining the exploratory boundaries of Hail to the Thief as well as the professedly temporary return to "rocking out," something Ed O'Brien's been wanting to do ever since Kid A was born. Before any heady analysis (and there's plenty later in the record), Thom deals with his recent political distractions, pointing out the medieval ignorance of inaction in the face of overwhelming odds: "Are you such a dreamer/ To put the world to rights?/ I'll stay home forever/ Where two and two always makes up five." It's a bit grandiose, but he rightly concedes the possible arrogance of his bravado during the tune's neurotically charged finale: "Go and tell the king that the sky is falling in/ When it's not/ Maybe not." "Sit Down. Stand Up.", on the other hand, is, in part, a return to old fears of impotence in the face of global forces at work, but Thom-- a new father-- has every reason to revisit the emotions that dominated one of the great societal laments in rock history, OK Computer. Juxtaposing a dread spawned by media oversaturation with a resigned, hands-over-ears focus on rain falling outside, the tune is devastating in its defeated isolation, the diary of a medicated droog in his chair on a Sunday afternoon, bubbling under the skin. Though it's compositionally identical to "2+2=5", the darker subject matter and more sinister execution-- in the form of far-off piano melodies, icy xylophone hits and maniacal vocal doubling-- reveal a demonic twin caught sideways in a cracked mirror. Leading with such an excellent couplet, it's something of a disappointment to find that those reactionary barbs about stagnation Yorke is trying to defuse are critically valid, if irrelevant to fans. "Sail to the Moon" has the serenity to survive its lamentably tired title and refrain, but for its beauty, it's both lyrically and melodically reconstituted from better ballads past, like "Pyramid Song", "How to Disappear Completely", and "The Tourist". For fans, it's another wondrous lullaby from Radiohead; for critics, it's not only nothing new, it's topically laughable, as Thom cautions: "Maybe you'll be president/ But know right from wrong/ Or in the flood/ You'll build an Ark/ And sail us to the moon." An apocalyptic vision with all the emotional impact of AI. "Backdrifts" is the first beacon signaling that Radiohead haven't lost touch with the radical experimentalism of Kid A and Amnesiac. It's a carefully attended piece that's easily overlooked on first listen, featuring a boxed-in, minimal collection of sine waves, gurgling vocal delay and distorted drum machine loops. Toward the middle, the band cuts loose with reverse-echoed piano and guitar swipes to approximate scratching vinyl. "Go to Sleep", a tightened retread of Amnesiac's Smiths tribute "Knives Out", drapes Old West reverb and twang over hugely mixed acoustic guitars. The tune carries through a surprisingly traditional half-time rock and roll chorus as Yorke rambles through placeholder lyrics, alternating tossed-off lines like, "We don't want the loonies taking over," with the constant response, "Over my dead body." This leads into "Where I End and You Begin", which is the only real low point on the album, as aside from Yorke's vocals, it's a U2 song. Shuffling snare rolls usher along an admittedly succulent liquid bassline, but these are only drawn out from their terrestrial locus by a hard-panned pair of keyboard tracks, which, for their simplicity, save an otherwise underdeveloped track. The finale is more alluring with its raspy whispers and excellent melodic interplay, but it's mostly chaos, stacked high to mask the creative nudity underneath. "We Suck Young Blood" returns to the piano mode the band has explored increasingly since Kid A, a sort of drunken New Orleans death dirge that embodies its vampiric title, creeping along at a measured, sickly pace that's punctuated only by languid, distanced handclaps. The approach pays off hugely here, as Yorke's gorgeous, metallic whinny embraces the stumbling progression with harmony after harmony, and moments of depressed, gentle wistfulness. Along with "Backdrifts", "The Gloaming" exposes the band's potential future. Simple, looping glitches and obstinate videogame blurts dash all expectations, remaining resolutely compact, using huge reverb plates that allow Yorke to sing over his own voice. It's arguably academic in its basic composition, a theoretical dare, but it's one of few on this relatively sociable record, a kind of reward for the more studious members of their audience. Which is where the advance single "There There" comes in, the unification of all of Radiohead's recently mixed aims (Jonny wants to play with Moogs, Ed and Colin want to rock out, Thom wants to change music forever). They meet up in this terrifyingly strange yet straightforward anthem, full of beautiful and more universal lyrics, soaring harmonies and a thundering crescendo they've wisely trimmed from its concert length (the band used to launch into "rock" mode after Thom's midpoint scream). Yorke has said he wept uncontrollably when he heard the first mixdown of "There There", and the unmastered MP3s of Hail to the Thief which leaked in March support this: unlike most other tracks, "There There" is essentially unchanged. Possibly even more inspiring and enduring are "Myxomatosis" and "A Wolf at the Door", two of the last tracks on the album. The former is a buzzing prog redux of OK Computer's "Airbag" that shows how the simplicity Radiohead strive for can work wonders with tempo; drums fall all over the track until Thom winds up a layered, head-spinning (drunk?) verse that spills the rhythm on the floor. It's a dizzying stereo-panned stomp, and one of this record's finest moments. As usual, Radiohead save a masterstroke for the closing slot; "A Wolf at the Door" continues in the Slavic New Orleans jazz vein, the same kind of Russo-Bayou parlor waltz as Amnesiac's "Life in a Glasshouse". As with most of Hail to the Thief, "A Wolf at the Door" is thorough, refined and consequently more potent-- almost slick-- in comparison with its drunken, ephemeral predecessor. It's here, at the end of the record, that Yorke most openly deals with the impact of his physical assault three years ago and the fears he holds with regard to role-playing traps in society and relationships (nicely summarized in a quick nod to Bryan Forbes' terrifying The Stepford Wives). Evil is out there-- he's suffered its wrath-- and like a terrified Chechnyan matriarch, he relies on tangible protection from the fuckers and future come to ransom his child. For its moments of gravity and excellence, Hail to the Thief is an arrow pointing toward the clearly darker, more frenetic territory the band have up to now only poked at curiously. Experimentation fueled the creativity that gave us Kid A and Amnesiac, but that's old hat to Radiohead, who are trying and largely succeeding in their efforts to shape pop music into as boundless and possible a medium as it should be. Without succumbing to dilettantism, they continue to absorb and refract simpler posits from the underground-- ideas that are usually satisfied to wallow in their mere novelty. The syncretic mania of Radiohead continues unabated, and though Hail to the Thief will likely be viewed as a slight placeholder once their promissory transformation is complete, most of us will long cherish the view from this bridge. -Chris Ott, June 10th, 2003 [This message was edited Mon Dec 15 11:59:46 PST 2003 by Sdldawn] | |
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hmmm, long but nice review...
but why does everyone neglect "punchup"? | |
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endorphin74 said: hmmm, long but nice review...
but why does everyone neglect "punchup"? True Dat | |
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I've just recently started listenig to them.I first heard "pyramid song"a nd it stopped me in my tracks.The track fucked my head up immediately.It is sooo beautiful .And the sky had this strange look that day when I was listening.Too deep.It has affected me.
I went on to get The Bends and Hail to the Thief.I got OK Computer just the other day.I haven't taken in everything,but it's coming along.I thought I heard u2 in there abit,but I figured if I said that peoiple would look at me like I was crazy.I'm glad to see I wasn't the only one thinking that.Their music can be truly haunting. "I'm a pig..so,magic elixir I swill" | |
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rockwilder said: I've just recently started listenig to them.I first heard "pyramid song"a nd it stopped me in my tracks.The track fucked my head up immediately.It is sooo beautiful .And the sky had this strange look that day when I was listening.Too deep.It has affected me.
I went on to get The Bends and Hail to the Thief.I got OK Computer just the other day.I haven't taken in everything,but it's coming along.I thought I heard u2 in there abit,but I figured if I said that peoiple would look at me like I was crazy.I'm glad to see I wasn't the only one thinking that.Their music can be truly haunting. Hopefully u got Amnesiac.. A masterpiece that needs a closer look. That whole album is brilliant. At first glance, the tracks dont gel, they dont even sound right.. but the more u listen, the more the dust scatters and u see the pure melody of each track and how each one sounds like their own independant world.. truely stunning. Pryamid song is a masterpiece, but its only a piece of the amazing document of radiohead bliss. Give Amnesiac the chance! | |
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From a radiohead website regarding Thoms views and expressions of AMNESIAC:
Thom: "It goes off in two ways. One is like very broken machinery. The other is really fat and dark. I played one of the songs to Bjork-- he said, name dropping-- and she said it sounded like I’d just seen something really frightening, then gone and written about it. It’s sort of bearing witness to things. We’ve all listened to these other songs, getting an idea of what we have. It could be an EPs thing; maybe it will be a better record than the one we’ve just made. It’s impossible for us to judge. In the same way, I can’t judge what Kid A is like. I can’t listen to it-- I don’t want to listen to it. When you’re in the mastering suite and you hear it for the final time, with all the gaps between the songs, that’s it. After that, I went home with the CD and showed it to Rachel [Yorke’s girlfriend], and said, “This is Kid A, and I don’t want to hear it anymore.” I want to do the same thing with the next one. It’s fantastic when you finish something that’s hanging around your neck." Thom Yorke has given the strongest indication yet that 'KID A' and forthcoming album 'AMNESIAC' contain similar musical themes, saying the new record is "the sound of what it feels like to be standing in the fire". When deciding which album to release, that or 'Kid A', it was simply "a question of which gun to fire first". Speaking about the inspiration behind 'Amnesiac', he said: "It's about, the things you forget. And remembering...if you look at the artwork for 'Kid A', well that's the fire from afar. 'Amnesiac' is the sound of what it feels like to be standing in the fire." Yorke claims the record features "vocals sung through egg boxes", and the artwork is being made with "a broken photocopier". | |
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Sdldawn said: rockwilder said: I've just recently started listenig to them.I first heard "pyramid song"a nd it stopped me in my tracks.The track fucked my head up immediately.It is sooo beautiful .And the sky had this strange look that day when I was listening.Too deep.It has affected me.
I went on to get The Bends and Hail to the Thief.I got OK Computer just the other day.I haven't taken in everything,but it's coming along.I thought I heard u2 in there abit,but I figured if I said that peoiple would look at me like I was crazy.I'm glad to see I wasn't the only one thinking that.Their music can be truly haunting. Hopefully u got Amnesiac.. A masterpiece that needs a closer look. That whole album is brilliant. At first glance, the tracks dont gel, they dont even sound right.. but the more u listen, the more the dust scatters and u see the pure melody of each track and how each one sounds like their own independant world.. truely stunning. Pryamid song is a masterpiece, but its only a piece of the amazing document of radiohead bliss. I'll pick that up.Thanks. Give Amnesiac the chance! "I'm a pig..so,magic elixir I swill" | |
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Sdldawn said: From a radiohead website regarding Thoms views and expressions of AMNESIAC:
Thom: "It goes off in two ways. One is like very broken machinery. The other is really fat and dark. I played one of the songs to Bjork-- he said, name dropping-- and she said it sounded like I’d just seen something really frightening, then gone and written about it. It’s sort of bearing witness to things. We’ve all listened to these other songs, getting an idea of what we have. It could be an EPs thing; maybe it will be a better record than the one we’ve just made. It’s impossible for us to judge. In the same way, I can’t judge what Kid A is like. I can’t listen to it-- I don’t want to listen to it. When you’re in the mastering suite and you hear it for the final time, with all the gaps between the songs, that’s it. After that, I went home with the CD and showed it to Rachel [Yorke’s girlfriend], and said, “This is Kid A, and I don’t want to hear it anymore.” I want to do the same thing with the next one. It’s fantastic when you finish something that’s hanging around your neck." Thom Yorke has given the strongest indication yet that 'KID A' and forthcoming album 'AMNESIAC' contain similar musical themes, saying the new record is "the sound of what it feels like to be standing in the fire". When deciding which album to release, that or 'Kid A', it was simply "a question of which gun to fire first". Speaking about the inspiration behind 'Amnesiac', he said: "It's about, the things you forget. And remembering...if you look at the artwork for 'Kid A', well that's the fire from afar. 'Amnesiac' is the sound of what it feels like to be standing in the fire." Yorke claims the record features "vocals sung through egg boxes", and the artwork is being made with "a broken photocopier". Thanks that's interesting.That kid is interesting.Should I get Amnesiac first??Then,I listen to Kid A,huh?Man,so much to take in all at once.Thanks,though.This is cool.I'm hungry. "I'm a pig..so,magic elixir I swill" | |
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