"Return of the Mac!"
Last week we coaxed most
of a rather reluctant Radiohead out to talk about their astonishing new
album. Now THOM Yorke joins in for an exclusive track-by-track run down
of 'OK Computer'. Plug in right here...
"AIRBAG"
Originally titled "Last
Night An Airbag Saved MyLife" in,a typically tongue-in-cheek tribute to
lndeep's 1983 disco hit,'Last Night A DJ Saved My Life', this makes for
a brooding, claustrophobic start to the album.
Colin: 'We wanted it to
be like 'Planet Telex' off' The Bends' -a start that's not really anything
like the rest of the album. It's quite dancey. That's cos Phil's been attending
drum'n'bass nights.' Phil: 'I told you, I thought it was a line-dancing
evening! It was actually DJ Shadow who inspired it-the way he cuts up beats
is amazing.The end result doesn't really sound like what we were aiming
for, but that's probably a good thing.'
Ed: "It's about the wonderful,
positive emotion you feel when you've just failed to have an accident;
when you just miss someone and realise how close it was and stop the car
and just
feel this incredible elation.
There's something joyous about it- life suddenly seems more precious."
Key lyric: "In a jack-knifed
juggernaut, l am bom again...
Thom: 'Airbags go off spontaneously,
so researchers claim. I think that's a cool judgement, don't you? Driving
along in your mercedes.'
Colin: "They're actually
quite dangerous things. They cankill."
Ed:'What would you know
about it? You can't even drive!"
"PARANOID ANDROID"
Hyper-complex vaguely prog-rock
multi-mood epic, ranging from acoustic angst to pure white noise, yet perversely
chosen to be the first single from 'OK Computer". Perhaps
because all those clearly
defined segments make it a "Bohemian Rhapsody"
for the Nineties. Allegedly.
Ed- "Well, when we wrote
it, one of the references was 'Bohemian Rhapsody'. But
the other was the Pixies.'
Jonny: 'It's not actually
complex enough to be "Bohemian Rhapsody" -- there's only really two different
bits there. Plus it's way too tense."
Ed: "It's not a "Bohemian
Rhapsody" for the nineties-- it's just a handy reference point. It's like
"Creep" was meant to sound like Scott Walker...it just didn't come out
that way. But "Paranoid Android" is the song we play to people when they
want to know what the album's like, cos it should make them think, "What
the f*** is going to happen on the rest of the album?'"
Colin: "Plus it's so long,
we have time to make them a cup of coffee while they listen to it."
Key Lyric: "When I am King
you will be first against the wall/With your opinions which are of no consequence
at all..."
Ed: "It's not about the
press, if that's what you're thinking. Thom wouldn't be that specific."
Thom: "Everybody has an
opinion. People make professions out of it. Most of it is white noise.
It is not personal, OK? 'Opinions are like arseholes, everybody's got one'.
What liberates 'Paranoid Android' is a sense of humour -- Marvin the paranoid
android. The bleakest things can be said with jokes -- re, 'The Fast Show'
: it's funny."
"SUBTERRANEAN HOMESICK ALIEN"
Sprawling, freeform, spooked-out
sounding, tale of alien abduction. Title is a homage to Bob Dylan's "Subterranean
Homesick Blues", apparently.
Thom: "Yeah! Jonny's in
the basement mixing up the medicine, I'm on the pavement thinking about
the government..."
Colin: "When we were doing
'The Bends', John Leckie told us about this hollow earth theory that John
Power of Cast has. Apparently, there's a sun revolving in the centre of
the earth and there are holes in the north and south poles that aliens
fly into. We, er, weren't completely sold on it to be honest, John."
Jonny: "Americans believe
in alien abduction but that's about it. I'm a fully paid-up subscriber
to Sceptical Inquirer magazine. If you go into a newsagent in America you'll
find 30 mags about UFOs, aliens, the supernatural, etc and Sceptical Inquirer,
which has all these scientists providing logical explanations for everything.
Thanks to 'The X-Files' and everything, it's become the lazy option to
believe in all this stuff, but science fascinates me far more than aliens."
Colin: "Yeah apparently
there is now neurological evidence to prove the existence of a human soul.
They've had big meetings about it in the Vatican, because obviously the
Roman Catholic church are very keen to control it. Er, I sound like John
Power now, don't I?"
Key lyric: "I'm just uptight..."
Thom: "What do I think of
'The X-Files'? And which Spice Girl do I like?"
"EXIT MUSIC (FOR A FILM)"
Brooding ballad specially
composed for the movie, "Romeo & Juliet", where it appears alongside
another Radiohead song "Talk Show Host". Significantly, Radiohead are first
heard just as the characters are discussing Romeo's "black portentous humour".
Thom: "I like the film very
much, it's just my sort of thing -- not quite as many bodies as 'Hamlet'."
Ed: "It's the only song
we've ever done on demand. We were on tour with Alanis Morissette last
September when we got sent through the last half hour of the film. It looked
great so we did this song straight away."
Colin: "Soundtracks are
a bit naff nowadays: they just stick on some contemporary music. We wanted
to be a bit more intelligent than that."
Ed: "The only thing I don't
like is 'Exit Music...' appears over the end credits, so it will just play
to the sound of loads of chairs banging upright."
Key lyric: "Pack and get
dressed before your father hears us, before all hell breaks loose..."
Ed: "Thom looked at Shakespeare's
original text and tried to incorporate lines from it into the song -- but
he gave up on that quickly. But I still think it fits with the film amazingly
well, especially as the lyrics are actually quite personal."
"LET DOWN"
Old school Radiohead song,
with Thom crooning away in Bono-esque style. Despite the title, sounds
resigned, rather than angry.
Jonny: "It's like when Andy
Warhol said he enjoyed being bored. It's about that feeling that you get
when you're in transit but you're not in control of it -- you just go past
thousands of places and thousands of people and you're completely removed
from it."
Ed: "Feeling let down is
just down to your insecurities and paranoia most of the time, which is
why the song sounds sad rather than furious. It's about not being in control
of a situation."
Thom: "I am fascinated by
how insects are squashed, especially wasps -- the cracking sound and the
yellow gak, just like people.'
Key lyric: "Crushed like
a bug in the ground..."
"KARMA POLICE"
Ignoring the appalling track
record of the word "karma" in pop music (Boy George, George Harrison, etc),
Radiohead use it to project an Orwellian vision of the future and write
a bonzer tune to boot.
Jonny: "It was a band catchpharse
for a while on tour -- whenever someone was behaving in a particular shitty
way, we'd say, 'The karma police will catch up with him sooner or later.'
You have to rely on something like that, even though we're probably just
kidding ourselves. But it's not a revenge thing, just about being happy
with your own behaviour."
Key lyric: "This is what
you get when you mess with us..."
Thom: "Karma is an important
idea. I like it. It makes me nicer to people. It fills me with joy. This
song makes me laugh. It was Ed's idea."
"FITTER HAPPIER"
A computer speaks a random
spiel of modern-living buzzphrases to a soundtrack of tinkling piano, screeching
violin and, er, that's it, actually. Weird.
Colin: "Thom didn't want
to have to say it, so we were messing around with a computer voicebox.
We really liked the way the emotion still comes across, so we kept it."
Thom: "The computer was
the most emotional voice I had ever heard, at the time."
Colin: "It sounds like Stephen
Hawking is guesting on the album. Maybe he should have been. I use to see
him when I was in college, toddling around in his wheelchair."
Key lyric: "Concerned but
powerless..."
Thom: "Are the lyrics a
reflection of my own life? Yes."
Ed: "It's about the lack
of naturalness in modern life. I'd like to see the lyrics printed as a
full page advert in one of those dreadful magazines like GQ or FHM, cos
some people might believe all that stuff."
Colin: "Really, it's an
exercise in finding meaning in things that seem to be random and chaotic
and out of your control. A bit like life, really."
"ELECTIONEERING"
Big, scary, searing rock
track. Nothing to do with Tony Blair and his New Dawn for Britain, etc.
Ed: "Basically, it's about
those times when you go out to a territory and have to sell yourselves
and sell your record. You can meet some very cool people but, if you're
pissed off or tired, it feels like a huge propaganda machine and you feel
like a politician -- kissing babies, shaking hands..."
Jonny: "We're not a political
band, but we are political people. One of the first things I can remember
is Margaret Thatcher coming to power, so just the fact that it's changed
is revelation enough. We had a hell of a party that night."
Ed: "It was weird all those
people going down to Downing Street to mob Blair. He's definately the first
pop star PM."
Colin: "The first New Grave
PM more like. He IS the New Seriousness."
Phil: "Where does that leave
us, then? Perhaps we're the Labour Party of New Grave. New Radiohead, New
Danger!"
Key lyric: "When I go forwards,
you go backwards, and somewhere we will meet..."
Thom: "This is about getting
beyond the dirge, they are all bullshitting, but I'm already laughing.
On the other side, I trust I can rely on your vote."
"CLIMBING UP THE WALLS"
Even bigger, even scarier
rock track. Thom Yorke does his best to sound demented, but is out-done
by the monumental chaos going on behind him.
Colin: "It's quite horrible,
isn't it?"
Ed: "We always knew that
song had an atmosphere and it was very easy to capture. The white noise
is loads of violins."
Colin: "We recorded in in
the ballroom of this old stately home. Dare we say there was something
Gothic about the environment? It was certainly very New Grave of New Grave."
Key lyric: "In the crack
of your waning smile/15 blows to the skull..."
Thom: "'Was it an accident
that of the 10 largest mass-murderers in American History, eight have occurred
since 1980, typically acts of middle-aged white men in their 30s and 40s
after a prolonged period of being lonely, frustruated and full of rage
and of 10 precipitated by a catastrophe in their lives such as losing their
jobs or divorce?'
"New York Times October
17 1991 -- quoted by Eric Hobsbawn in 'Age of Extremes'."
"NO SURPRISES"
In contrast, the simplest,
most stadium friendly song on the album. Built around the chimes from a
jewellery box. Lovely.
Colin: "Scare the living
daylights out of 'em, then soothe their brow: that's the Radiohead way."
Ed: "It was meant to be
like a nursery rhyme. Strangely, it was the very first song we did for
the album. Didn't exactly set the tone, did it? If it had been the first
single it wouldn't have been a very true representation of the album. It's
a bit like Louie Armstrong's 'Wonderful World'."
Colin: "We'd like it to
be a single at some point we're not making any promises. We are the New
Labour of Rock, after all."
Key lyric: "A heart that's
full up like a landfill..."
Thom: "What is fad today
is rubbish tomorrow. I am an emotional dumping ground."
"LUCKY"
Highlight of the Bosnia-aiding
"Help" album, included here largely out of embarrassment at the way it
fared when released as a single.
Ed: "Yeah, number 53 with
a bullet or something. That was pretty bad considering it was for charity
and it was the best song we'd ever done. It did seem to make a difference
to how people perceived us though -the broadsheets started to get interested
in us and stuff. And it was a brilliant thing to be involved in. We're
very proud of it, especially as we took the hard option and recorded a
brand new song. Although, admittedly, that's only because we're so bad
at covers. Always have been even when we were a school band we couldn't
do them.'
Key lyric: "I'm on a roll..."
Thom: "It's our song, we
want it on our album and it fits exactly where it is."
"THE TOURIST"
Written by Jonny, the calm
after the storm. Features minimal vocals and maximum mellow Eric Clapton-esque
guitar.
Jonny. "I'm still amazed
that everyone else in the band let it on the LP. It was a bit of late runner.
We were packing up and leaving when we decided to do it.'
Thom: 'What do I think of
Jonny's songwriting? Whenever I am tired, he is there and awake.'
Key lyric: "Hey man slow
down, idiot slow down..."
Jonny "We just wanted a
song where we weren't paranoid about making something happen every three
seconds and where we could record it with space.'
Colin: "But not record it
with Space. That would never have worked,frankly.'