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Radiohead

UPDATED: Thom and Ed on Radio 1

Thom and Ed appeared on Radio 1 today with DJ Mark Radcliffe. 2+2=5 was played, and Follow Me Around was played by Thom on a 1940s acoustic guitar. There was also an odd little segment called “Thom Yorke’s Schooldays”.
You can listen to Follow Me Around and some clips from the show here.
(Thanks to Mark.)

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Radiohead

w.a.s.t.e Holiday Ordering Information

From w.a.s.t.e.-
Dear All,
As you can no doubt tell from the amount of airtime St. Nick is getting, the festive period is rearing its festive head.
We owe it to you to let you know that the last dates we can accept orders for despatch in time for the 25th December.
So, our last order dates are as follows, depending on where you live.
If you live in the UK Thursday 18th December
If you live in Europe Friday 12th December
If you live in Canada, USA or Japan Thursday 11th December
If you live anywhere else, Monday 8th December.
Also, we owe it to you to let you know that we have some new arrivals for your consumerist pleasure……
1. The all new aubergine colour Test Specimen T shirt.
2. Limited edition art print pack. This pack contains eight A2 size (34cm x48cm) Stanley Donwood prints with a bonus card insert. These tip top quality prints are despatched to you in a textured black Radiohead portfolio.
Both now available at www.waste.uk.com
That is the end of this message from w.a.s.t.e.

Categories
Radiohead

Thom Rages at Bush in NME

From NME-
Radiohead’s Thom Yorke is spearheading a growing chorus of protest aimed at US President George Bush?s visit to the UK ? branding him and Tony Blair “liars”.
Bush and a massive entourage came to London this week (November 18) for a rare state visit. Even before he arrived the trip provoked fury, with reports that US security officials wanted to create a three mile ?exclusion zone? around him, effectively shutting down central London and stopping legitimate protesters from getting anywhere near the President.
Angry at what he sees as using the “threat of terrorism to suppress whatever they choose”, Thom Yorke e-mailed NME last week, urging people to protest against the visit.
When asked why he?d chosen to speak out, Thom told NME: “To make Blair squirm over his decision to take us into a illegitimate war (In Iraq) and follow this religious lunatic (Bush) toward a dangerous future for the whole planet.
“Both of these men are liars. We have right to call them such, they are putting our children?s future in jeopardy. They are not controlling the terrorist threat, they are escalating it. Blair will not be allowed off the hook by his pathetic pleading for us to ?move on?, neither shall Bush.”
Thom continued: “(The visit) will be heavily staged I think. I expect they will use the threat of terrorism to suppress whatever they choose, intimidate and arrest whoever they wish. The majority of British people were against this war, and Bush’s visit will just taint Blair even further.”
While in the UK Bush will be staying in Buckingham Palace. Yorke urged the Royal Family to “do something useful” and protest too. He continued: “This is a royal invitation isn’t it? How about one of the little heirs to throne doing something useful with their lives and speaking out? Refusing to shake hands for example? As we are still awaiting the results of the Hutton Inquiry I think now is a good time to remind Blair that he’s on very very very very very very very very thin ice.”
The article continues with further comments from Damon Albarn and Fran Healy (of Travis- playing second fiddle to Radiohead once more?). Read it here.

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Radiohead

2+2=5 Singles/DVD Released

Several people have written in to describe the DVD, and most have expressed severe disappointment. The content is essentially as follows-
2+2=5-
Best described as the words on the promo cover flying into the picture as the song plays. Note that this is not really a video (see below for an explanation why).
Sit Down Stand Up Video-
From the first Gigantic Lying Mouth episode. Basically zooming through a city, speeding up in time to the climax of the song.
The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time Excerpt-
The “host” of TMGLMOAT reads the lyrics to No Surprises over a strange MIDI version of the song, as strangely cheap effects mimic the lighting of the No Surprises video. Rather funny, actually.
It must be noted that Official UK Charts Company (the OCC is basically the Billboard of the UK, responsible for the sales charts) rules for CD and DVD singles state that there is a maximum of three tracks (only two of which can be videos), and a time limit of twenty minutes. This is also why all recent Radiohead singles have been two-part releases, another frequent question.
The rules must be followed in order to get a single on the charts, so although it’s compulsory, nearly every major label follows them.

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Radiohead

Radiohead on MTV2’s Subterranean

Thom, Ed, and Colin popped in on MTV2’s Subterranean last Friday night. Some highlights were-
-Thom and Colin naming “Hey Ya” by OutKast the single of the year.
-The rarely seen Stop Whispering video.
-Thom commenting on how the crew was so bored with the setlists by the end of the European tour that they complained, so now he changes them more often.
-Ed commenting on how the band hasn’t been in a video since High & Dry.
-Thom ranting about how the record companies are using file-swapping as a scapegoat for people not buying the garbage being released.
(Thanks to Jim and At Ease.)

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Radiohead

Radiohead Featured in Atlanta’s Creative Loafing

Atlanta’s delightfully named Creative Loafing magazine has a piece about the intellectual appeal of Radiohead’s music. An excerpt-
“Like a college curriculum, Radiohead’s discography begins with basics, influences and theory (Pablo Honey); moves through seminal concepts, weighing pros and cons (The Bends and OK Computer); and opens its scope into innovation (Kid A and beyond). Each album finds the studious Brits progressing in their path to musical enlightenment: precocious young adults producing a melange of the Pixies and the Smiths; surprise purveyors of two of the finest mortality- and technology- fearing albums of the rock era; trailblazers into an unfamiliar territory of sound and space.
“This studied progression hasn’t been without its compromises and obstacles. A decade ago, Radiohead was trying to break its single, “Creep,” off its Pablo Honey debut (an album the band barely acknowledges anymore). Back then, the eager-to-please lads lip-synched their breakout track at the MTV Beach House, while Yorke sported long bleached-blond hair. And upon the release of Kid A, disgruntled rock purists cried heresy at a band they had nearly canonized a couple years before.”
You can read the entire article here.
(Thanks to Joseph, who runs the impossibly interesting pulk-pull* site.)