some music is made for the
dance floor, some for political rallies.
radiohead's music is for
headphones--the big, plush ones that let you
lean back, close your eyes
and become lost in the sound.
cue the british band's new
album and you'll hear shards of guitar
cutting and swirling through
dense, trippy compositions. holding it all
together is the unnervingly
beautiful wail of thom yorke, who sounds
like johnny rotten (if he
could sing).
the sonically daring ok computer
has recieved near-unanimous praise as
an album-of-the-year candidate
and manages to recall the dubious "art
rock" era without drowning
in its excesses.
how hot is radiohead with the rock cognoscenti?
when the band played new
york's irving plaza this summer, the vip
section was crowded with
madonna, sheryl crow, courtney love, marilyn
manson, joan osborne and
members of u2, rem, and the beastie boys.
yorke knew all this was coming
the minute ok computer was finished.
yeah, sure he did.
"it took a year and a half
to do and it was very difficult to be sure of
our ground because the ground
itself was very unfamiliar," he said. "at
the end of it was a week
of sleepless nights worrying about it thinking,
'this is not what people
are expecting. oh god, we're doomed.'
"by that point, we weren't
in a position to judge because we'd worked on
it so long," he said.
capitol records wasn't pleased.
there was nothing like "creep," the
1993 hit song that gave
radiohead its start. in fact there wasn't
anything remotely close
to a catchy song that radio stations could
embrace.
"i think some panic buttons
were hit, which was cool," yorke said. "we
didn't expect anything else."
capitol came around when
the reviews came in and the album showed strong
initial sales.
radiohead's music is as demanding
upon rock and roll generally gets.
songs develop slowly and
shift dynamics abruptly. melody is there, but
it's not drilled into the
brain with repetition.
perhaps because the five
members of radiohead grew up in the ost-punk
era, the ridiculous elements
of "progressive" rock--ham-fisted classical
references and ponderous
solos--are missing from what they do.
"i never considered it to
be a difficult album to listen to or obscure
in any way. it's just the
sound we had in our heads," he said. if we
wanted to be willfully obscure
and difficult, we could have made a much
more willfully obscure and
difficult record."
ask what sounds yorke, guitarist
gonny greenwood, guitarist ed o'brien,
bass player colin greenwood
and drummer phil selway drew inspiration
from and you get a stew
of popular uic: marvin gaye's what's going on?,
miles davis' bitches brew,
the beach boys' pet sounds, some kraftwerk,
some bjork.
try to find a common thread and you'll wind up with your hands tied.
yorke's lyrics are filled
with vivid though indistinct images: kicking,
sqealing gucci little piggy
came to his mind when watching a woman spill
wine on an expensive dress.
the album has been described
by listeners as everything froma concept
album about aliens to a
commentary on an information-clogged society.
yorke leaves the interpretations
to others, but notes he's been writing
more as a reporter these
days.
"the record before was very
much about my personal feelings-- a drunk
guy on the back of a bus
feeling sorry for himself," he said. "this one
was much more about being
a witness to the external world. it's very
much more of a difficult
way to write."
he writes almost like a shopper,
drawing up compulsive lists of images
and arranging them into
categories that become songs. he "sees"
melodies in colors, the
colors that ended up on the album's cover.