You know the feeling. You're
finally secure in your own wretchedness, at peace with the fact that your
clothes aren't the hippest
and your friends aren't
big wheels. But then you're drawn to someone so perfect, so unattainable,
you just want to weep--and
instead you end up berating
your pathetically uncool self and sneering at this special person't position.
Yeah, right.
Last year, English pop sensations
Radiohead eloquently cast that feeling into their first single, "Creep".
Vocalist Thom E. Yorke's
initial quiet despair is
cracked wide open with a jarring, fragmentation grenade of a guitar riff
that grabs you ears and twists hard.
When the video hit MTV earlier
this year, U.S. masochists lapped it up--much to the Oxford quintet's surprise.
"It's frightening," confides
soft-spoken "abusive guitar" player Johnny Greenwood, the one responsible
for the soul-ripping blast that
diffuses Yorke's depression
like any good manic swing should. "We still feel very much like a new band,
really. It just feels very
fast."
Indeed, "Creep" -- from Radiohead's
debut Capitol Records album, Pablo Honey--seemed to take over the airwaves
rather
suddenly. But the song actually
languished for months in the band's native land, partly because, Greenwood
says, journalists there
were more interested in
Radiohead for the group's release of a cleaned-up version, in which the
object of desire is merely "so very
special." (The version on
the CD expresses the same concept, albeit a bit more stringently!) Greenwood
says they initially balked
at going radio-friendly,
but ultimately decided that, if Dinosaur Jr., and Sonic Youth could do
it, so could Radiohead. "But, sadly, we
didn't get away with it,"
he notes, in reference to the band's lambasting by the press for "selling
out." (Curiously, by the end of 1992,
those very same writers
had changed their tune, voting "Creep" one of the year's best singles.
Go figure.)
This minor controversy has
fortunately not overshadowed Radiohead's real noteworthiness as one of
the most exciting new pop
bands around. They've managed
to translate heaps of angst into a fetching fusion of loudness and introspection,
and the appeal is
cemented by creative three-guitar
interplay among Greenwood, Yorke, and "polite guitar" player Ed O'Brien,
ably propped up by
Colin Greenwood's inventive
bass and Phil Selway's rock steady drumming. Each member has distinct musical
tastes--from
classical to country--but
Radiohead's unique sound is a focused blend of punk, new way, and grunge.
Educated ears will, however,
notice an undeniable question
from The Hollies' "The Air That I Breathe" near the end of Creep--and rest
assured it was
intentional.
"What happened was, we wrote
'Creep', and the middle eighth just had...my guitar playing a tune," says
Greenwood. "And Ed
stopped [us] and said, 'This
is the same chord sequence as that Hollies song,' and then sang it. So
Thom copied it. It was funny to
us in a way, sort of feeding
something like that into [it]. It's a bit of change."
The press kit contends that
Radiohead is "the antithesis of rock'n'roll," but the band is grounded
in rebellion, and what could be
more rock'n'roll that ?
They twist typical subjects like romance into festivals of simultaneous
self-hatred and lashing out, with
Yorke's poetic lyrics venting
frustration, anger, and yearning, channeled through rampaging, grimy riffs
that are barely held in
check by the songs' tight
structures. And, although optimism pops up regularly on tunes like "Anyone
Can Play Guitar" (the second
single) and the plaintive
soul tonic "Lurgee", you get the feeling that Yorke is one troubled individual.
Not exactly, says Greenwood.
"Like the rest of the band, he sort of doesn't have any friends, really--which
is a bit weird. We got
back to Oxford after touring...and
it was really sad. We all got home, and I phoned up one or two people that
we knew, who were
away, and then we ended
up sort of phoning each other up again."
This group of college chums
started playing music together for the same reason most people do: out
of boredom. With such a
guitar-heavy sound, it's
shocking to learn that earlier editions of the band, which officially became
Radiohead in 1991, were not so
axe-intensive. Weirdly enough,
the first incarnation included a horn section. "It was just basically the
same [kind of sound] but with
saxophones," says Greenwood.
"It's hard to believe, but we had three of them, and it harder and harder
to write parts for them."
Although Colin, Radiohead's
bassist, is Jonny's older brother, it wasn't easy for Jonny to grab his
own slot. "The rest of the band
are basically [Colin's]
friends," Jonny says. "So it was me following them around and begging them
to let me be in their band for
two or three years. And
they finally let me in on the harmonica, actually, and then the keyboards,
and finally the guitar."
While still novices in the
big world of rock, Radiohead is adjusting nicely to the lifestyle. Extensive
touring in the U.S. and Europe
has connected them with
adoring fans, who mostly just want to talk, says Greenwood, although there
was a rather bizarre groupie
incident in Los Angeles,
which is a naked young woman appeared at his hotel-room door. "Luckily,
I wasn't there," he says. "I was,
like, miles away. But it
was described to me. I felt very, very thankful [to have been away]."
The band has also rubbed
elbows with the newly canonized PJ Harvey, opening up for them in New York
and Los Angeles, which
Greenwood says was a real
honor. "She's really great," he enthuses like a fan-boy. When Radiohead
hits the road again in
September they'll pair up
with Tanya Donelly's band Belly. "We can't wait," he says, confessing like
a schoolboy that, when Belly
played a gig at London's
Town & Country club, "Tanya kissed me, and I nearly fell over."
While the band will certainly
soon be working on material for their next album, Greenwood says he prefers
the road life.
"Recording doesn't really
excite me as much, not yet, anyway." The guys travel by bus in perfect
harmony. "Four of us just sit in
the back playing bridge
for most of the journey and stuff like that," he says. "No exciting scandal."
They've made a point of
exploring the cities they
visit, he says, and he "fell in love with" Chicago Seattle. But his favorite
souvenir was from Israel, where
he met his current girlfriend.
"I'm very attached to [her]... She's staying with me right now."
So it would seem that these
boys aren't such creeps after all. Anyway, notes Greenwood, the tune itself
isn't necessarily negative.
"It's not a bad thing to
be, in some ways. Part of the song is about following the girl around and
dying to be part of her kind of
special group, but it's
also about knowing what you are."