LONDON - One of the U.K.'s
most singular modern rock bands is ready to return
with the album that Capitol
and Parlophone executives feel "could change the
way records are marketed."
Such is the level of confident
anticipation for "OK Computer," the third album
by Oxford, England-based
quintet Radiohead, that it will be introduced with a
lead track, "Paranoid Android,"
that runs 6 1/2 minutes and incorporates
several tempo changes -
but no chorus. Moreover, Capitol Records plans to
debut the track in the U.S.
via a "video exclusive" on MTV later this month.
"OK Computer," the band's
first self-produced set, is being released in the
U.K. by Parlophone June
16, with its U.S. appearance on Capitol July 1.
"Paranoid Android" had its
British radio debut April 30 on BBC Radio 1's
"Evening Session" show and
will be commercially available May 26.
An animated video for the
track is in production, and Capitol VP of marketing
Clark Staub says that the
label hopes MTV will premiere the clip around May
25. The video network, as
well as college radio, are due to be serviced with
the track May 19.
"We've already had initial
meetings with MTV, who've been strong supporters of
Radiohead since 'Creep,'"
says Staub, referring to the track from the band's
1993 debut album, "Pablo
Honey," that alerted programmers, retailers, and
consumers alike to the group's
strange charms. "Creep" went to No. 34 on the
Hot 100, while "Pablo Honey"
climbed to No. 32 in a six-month run on The
Billboard 200; the 1995
follow-up, "The Bends," peaked at No. 88.
"In a world of four-minute
pop songs, we don't want to bank on airplay for
'Paranoid Android,'" says
Staub, adding that by the time of the MTV airing,
promotional CDs of the track
will be ready for commercial alternative stations
that request them. The first
commercial single from the album will be "Let
Down."
"Radiohead have delivered
a very unconventional record," Staub continues,
"that does not sound like
anything else that's popular, but sounds like
everything that could be
popular. I've seen them compared to U2 or R.E.M., but
we're not falling into the
trap of over-hyping them. We're setting this up to
be firmly rooted."
"It's quite a difficult record;
it's not a 'first listen' thing," says
Radiohead lead singer Thom
Yorke about "OK Computer," complimenting Parlophone
on the free rein afforded
the band in making it. "First we said, 'We're going
to produce it ourselves,'
then, 'We're going to take as long as we want.' We
had complete license to
do what we wished, and when we realized that, it was
really scary."
Acknowledging the great expectations
for the album already whirling around the
U.K. industry, Yorke adds,
"The anticipation that people might have for it was
funny to us. 'Paranoid Android'
is addressing that anticipation in away, like,
"We're having fun recording
it, and you'll either get it or you won't.'"
Radiohead will play two showcases
in Barcelona, Spain, May 22 and 24, to which
EMI is inviting international
territory representatives and key media. In the
U.S., the band will play
with U2, Foo Fighters, and the Beastie Boys at the
Tibetan Freedom concerts
June 7 and 8 in New York, followed by club dates
there and in Los Angeles.
European festivals follow, and a U.S. tour is due to
start July 26.
"The unanimous reaction to
this record is that it's something very special,"
says Parlophone U.K. managing
director Tony Wadsworth. "The single is a
brilliant piece of music.
It might fly in the face of all the rules and
conventions, but everything
we've ever done with Radiohead that's worked has
broken the rules. Because
of that, they're going to change the acceptance to
certain types of music."
Wadsworth adds that the slow
build of "The Bends," the series of U.K. chart
singles taken from it, and
belated acclaim in the music press have made the
band (formed in 1991) widely
influential on the British alternative scene.
"Every record company's
got its Radio-head now," he muses.
So gradual was the ascent
of "The Bends" that it reached a domestic peak of
No. 4 in its 42nd chart
week, a rare event among the fast-moving U.K. best
sellers, and was still in
the chart in November 1996, 20 months after release.
"It was the longest campaign
I've ever worked internationally," says EMI
international marketing
manager Carol Baxter. "At the beginning of it, people
were saying, 'There's no
obvious single,' but we were still working the album
two years later. It'll be
the same with this."
Radiohead appears on one
multi-platinum Capitol album: "Talk Show Host" is
featured on the soundtrack
to "Romeo + Juliet," while "Exit Music" (from "OK
Computer") is the song heard
playing at the end of the film. Other songs from
the new album were introduced
last summer during the band's U.S. tour
supporting Alanis Morissette.
Jon Cobbin, product manager
at Tower Records' Piccadilly Circus store in
London, got an advance listen
to "OK Computer" and says it sounded
"incredible." He adds, "Each
track stood out on its own. We're being asked
about it already." Cobbin
says that catalog sales of both previous Radiohead
albums remain very strong.
"We love Radiohead," says
Lisa Worden, music director at modern rock KROQ Los
Angeles. "We supported the
[first two] albums, and we're very much
anticipating the new one."
Of the early success with "Creep," she says, "It
takes a while for a band
to shake a song like that, like Beck with 'Loser'; he
went out and made another
great album, and Radiohead did the same."
Capitol has devised a novel
promotional device for its upcoming mail-out of
the new album to 1,000 key
media players. "We're making a special 'OK
Computer' listening package
for our industry mailing," says Staub. "We're
sending out a Walkman tape
recorder with the cassette of the album permabonded
inside, so the only way
to listen to it is with the headphones provided. We
want to have people get
to know the record in its entirety."
Yorke says of the prominent
place in the British rock firmament now commanded
by Radiohead, "It doesn't
feel like we've come a long way. I have a very small
house in Oxford that I can
pay the mortgage on. I suppose we have in the sense
that we've met all our idols
and done lots of amazing things. But we have to
keep reminding people this
is only our third album."