Categories
Radiohead

I MIGHT BE WRONG

Radiohead’s latest release I Might Be Wrong – Live Recordings is now available for you to purchase except for those in Australia, where it won’t be released until November 26.

Here are some reviews:
CDNow
CMJ
Amazon
NME

Categories
GP

Server Hell

Well, I’m happy to say that greenplastic.com is back up and functional after being offline for some time. We were first shut down by our host for exceeding their “unlimited bandwidth” hidden policy and then experienced problems with transferring our domain name to our new server… sheesh! Thank you for you patience!

Categories
Radiohead

Vanilla Sky

Here’s the press release about the upcoming soundtrack to Vanilla Sky:

As with all of rock journalist-turned-screenwriter Cameron Crowe’s films, from “Singles” to “Jerry Maguire” to his most recent, the Grammy-winning “Almost Famous,” music not only plays an important role but has resulted in best-selling albums. The soundtrack album to “Vanilla Sky” promises to be no exception. From the title song by Paul McCartney to classic rock, from modern heroes such as R.E.M. and Peter Gabriel to Generation X, Y and Z stars such as Radiohead and Sigur Ros, from Bob Dylan and Jeff Buckley to Todd Rundgren and the film’s score composer, Heart’s Nancy Wilson, “Vanilla Sky” paints a musical landscape appealing to the ears of a wide audience.

Categories
Amnesiac Radiohead

I Might Be Wrong – Live Recordings Listening Parties

Capitol Records is throwing some listening parties for the upcoming new Radiohead release I Might Be Wrong – Live Recordings. Here are the dates and locations:

Arizona State – 11/6 @ 6-7pm – The Blaze KASC Radio studio
University of San Francisco – 11/7 @ 2pm – Harney Plaza
UCSD – 11/9 @ 11-2p – Price Center Theatre
University of Colorado – 11/12 @ 10:30pm – Teresa’s Pizza Colore (on the Hill)
Hunter College – 11/13 @ 2pm – Thomas Hunter Bldg Room 105
University of Washington – 11/15 @ 8-10pm – Caf? Sol Spice
SW Texas State – 11/8 – Gil’s Broiler (no time on this one yet)

There may be more announced really soon so stay tuned…

Categories
Radiohead

Radiohead voted Best Act In The World Today

From the BBC:
Radiohead, famed for their distinctive brand of haunting rock, are officially the best band in the world, according to this year’s annual Q Awards.

And while Liam Gallagher was unusually well-behaved it was former Sex Pistol John Lydon who stole the limelight as he heckled winners and tried to hand back his own award.

Oxford-based Radiohead beat off competition from the likes of the Stereophonics, Manic Street Preachers and last year’s winners Travis.

Radiohead, who have achieved the difficult task of breaking the US market, were voted favourites by the readers of music magazine Q.

Read the full article…
{thanks to Jason, John, Alan, & Zach}

Categories
Radiohead

I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings RS Review

Here’s the Rollingstone review of the upcoming I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings release:
Radiohead: I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings
Capitol
Less is more for rock’s best live band
Before he sings a word of “The National Anthem,” the opening track on the surprisingly raw I Might Be Wrong, Radiohead’s Thom Yorke makes his presence felt with some human-beatbox-style mouth percussion. Like a boxer delivering jab after jab, he sprays a series of ohh-ahh syllables over the calm-seashore pulse. The syncopation is practically under the surface, but it still kicks the introduction into high gear and offers a clue about why Radiohead are so compelling live: Rather than chase the textured grandiosity of recent studio recordings Kid A and Amnesiac, the resourceful Oxford five-piece grabs whatever’s around ? anything that might help translate the occluded texts of those psychodramas, or take them, scraping and clawing, toward some hint of enlightenment. If they recent studio work has been distinguished by additive, layer-by-layer composition, in concert Radiohead’s magic comes from subtraction: The elegy “Like Spinning Plates” relies almost entirely on Yorke’s famously anguished voice. The music evaporates in the second verse of “Idioteque,” leaving Yorke to wrestle his demons with just the drums for support. You get the feeling he likes controlling the temperature: Even when the band is roaring, the peaks are still somehow shaped by Yorke’s sense of beautiful understatement.
?Tom Moon
{thanks to Shane}