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RH join trade protest


Rock band Radiohead have joined thousands of protesters in a mass lobby of parliament to help mobilise “people power” against global trade laws.

Their presence boosted the profile of the event, which was expected to see 10,000 people descend on Westminster.

The group said they would “hopefully” get to meet their local MP – Liberal Democrat Dr Evan Harris, who represents Oxford West – to urge him to sign a House of Commons motion to support the campaign.

Singer Thom Yorke said he was there because trade laws were “completely outmoded and exploitative towards poor countries”.

The band were taking a break from preparations for a string of concerts in Spain and Portugal in July and August, at which new material is expected to make its debut.

Mexican wave
The rally was organised by the Trade Justice Movement, a new pressure group comprising charities including Christian Aid, Oxfam and Save the Children.

The band’s campaigning follows the high-profile support they gave to the “drop the debt” Jubilee 2000 cause, which has now ended.

“For me personally, it was a real sense of frustration when it ended,” Thom Yorke told BBC News Online.

“I find that the Trade Justice Movement, in a way, is bringing back all those issues.”

The trade laws are “pretending to be in the interests of the poorest, but are really highly exploitative,” he said.

The group were due to take part in a mass “mexican vave” of noise that passed down the line of protestors waiting to meet their MPs that stretched across the Thames.

Guitarist Ed O’Brien said they felt like they could make a difference.

“You meet a lot of people who are similar to you and who feel the same way and ultimately it does make a difference,” he said. “We are the people.”
He said it was “fantastic” to see so many people of all ages at the rally.

“And it’s not just in Britain, it’s around the world, and that’s really encouraging, that’s really exciting,” he said.

Fair trade
He had been to May Day anti-globalisation protests in London for the last three years, he said.

“I feel very strongly about how trade is done throughout the world, how unfair it is, and how it places burdens that can never be removed on developing countries.

“They are complicit in being the main source of poverty and environmental damage to the planet.”

The band tries to buy fair trade products as well as raising awareness, he said.

Yorke said he was not tying to send a message to the band’s fans – but they could join the crusade if they wanted to.

“It’s something that we’re well into, and hopefully we don’t have the sort of fans who just follow us around like that,” he said.

“I don’t think we do, actually.”

“We put addresses on our website, but we do not tell people to go there. It’s like, if you’re interested, whatever.”

He has previously condemned those in charge of free trade rules as “a bunch of lunatic economic zealots waving stupid little flags”.

Yorke is one of the highest-profile rock stars to take up charity issues, and has also spoken out in favour of CND and the War on Want.

He sent a Christmas message to his fans, saying President George W Bush had “his hands covered in oil and military hardware” and said the world needed “love, understanding and tolerance and good laws that apply to everyone”.

Yorke has said that a new CD will be out “sooner than you think” after they released two albums in 2001.

The first single that will be taken from the new material is rumoured to be called Parrots.

Taken from the BBC.

(thanks to Ben, Heikki, John, Robin, & Emily)

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Thom Yorke

Thom Yorke #56

Thom Yorke was voted the 56th Greatest Man in music on VH1’s 100 Greatest Men show.

(thanks to Keith & Dave)

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Radiohead Thom Yorke

Mogwai on RH

Careless Talk Costs Lives Magazine did an interview with Mogwai for their January 2002 issue and Radiohead were brought up, Oasis-style. Here’s what was said:

” ‘We’re not particularly angst-y. What have they got to moan about? It’s the Thom Yorke syndrome: being a complainer and a hypocrite.
Well-channelled brilliant angst like The God Machine is amazing, but pointless angst is not good.’
I’ve never liked Radiohead. Right from the start I thought they sounded like Kingmaker…
(Laughter) ‘That’s a slag, isn’t it?’
…but what does Thom Yorke do — keep his mouth shut and stop whining?
‘It would be a start,’ replies Stuart. ‘A facelift would be a second, and going to the dentist would be a third. Radiohead’s stance against corporations and globalisation is ridiculous when their t-shirts cost more to buy than our records. I’m anti-globalisation on a local scale with the appearance in almost every town of Spars, Woolworths and Griegs destroying small businesses. I’m OK with McDonalds and Starbucks, but not Spar.'”
another bit, later on….
“Is there a line you won’t cross that stops you from turning into Radiohead?
‘In what way?’
Like if you sold millions of records.
‘That would be all right. There’s nothing wrong with selling plenty of records. The line is just hypocrisy.’
‘You get married to supermodels and take cocaine and drive about in limousines if that happens. You don’t dress like a fucking student and complain about fucking corporations. You kill people off, you don’t complain about it.'”

(thanks to Aurora)

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Radiohead Thom Yorke

DJ Shadow and Thom

“Radiohead singer Thom Yorke was the surprise guest at DJ Shadow’s Bristol gig last night (May 19). Shadow is in the UK performing a trio of shows in support of his new album ‘The Private Press’, which is released on June 3.

At last night’s gig at the Bristol Academy, Shadow announced he had a “special guest” who would be making an appearance later in the evening.
Towards the end of his set, Yorke came on to the stage and performed the song ‘Rabbit In Your Headlights’. The track doesn’t feature on either of Shadow’s solo albums, instead on the 1998 UNKLE album ‘Psyence Fiction’, on which the pair collaborated.

Speaking recently to NME.COM, Shadow, who played with Radiohead on some dates on their ‘OK Computer’ tour, said he remains a big fan of the group.

He revealed: “That would be amazing if they did ask me to work on something. They routinely ask me to tour with them, but the timing always seems to be wrong. Hopefully they haven’t given up on me yet because I’d really like to do something with them. I’m an unequivocal fan of that group.”

Shadow concludes his tour this evening (May 20) at the London Astoria.” from NME.com.

(thanks to J, Meggie, Ciaran, John, Brian, & Aurora)

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Hail to the Thief Radiohead Thom Yorke tour

Thom on the mb

Thom made an appearance last night on the official Radiohead messageboard. He was asked if they would play Glasto this year and his response was, “um. sorry. we arent. we never said we would this year. this always happens. its a compliment that the rumour spreads, but we aint aint aint. maybe next year.”

What about the next Radiohead album? Thom had this to say: “yes we are working bloody hard on it now. we are trying to me a bit more err focused, less neurotic. itll be sooner than you think. some old songs may appear yup”

Read more here.
(thanks to rosaline)

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Radiohead Thom Yorke

Thom in Toronto?

From Chart Attack:

It’s not that unusual to see minor celebrities on Toronto’s 501 Queen streetcar. When you’re a touring rock star or an environmentally friendly hipster living downtown, you usually a) can’t afford your own car and b) have to get around somehow.
That said, it’s an entirely different scenario when you seemingly spot rock royalty casually riding around on the Red Rocket. And that’s where, at around 10 a.m. this morning, ChartAttack spotted what looked to be Radiohead’s frontman Thom Yorke.
Sure, initially the idea of Yorke scooting around on the TTC screams out unlikely, but when you throw in the fact that the fellow in question was sitting with Sook-Yin Lee, the lovably quirky artiste, former MuchMusic VJ and Yorke’s pal, the odds go up appreciably.
The pair were spotted going eastward on a 501 car which was being redirected off of Queen and up Church Street, owing to what was reportedly panes of glass being blown off a new skyscraper being constructed at the corner of Yonge and Queen. While Sook-Yin was looking demure in her knitted cap, Yorke (or the Yorke doppelganger, as it were) looked positively dapper in a crackling black almost-patent leather jacket and a stylishly fuzzy black fedora. This suave look would directly contrast the rather carefree slacker sensibilities Yorke displayed during his appearance at the 2002 Grammy Awards at the end of February. Yorke, who was then sporting a rangy beard and disheveled mop of hair, was there to pick up an award for Best Recording Package for the elegantly designed limited special edition of Amnesiac.

Lee and Yorke have a long and checkered history together. The sometimes actress and sometimes member of The Wood Choppers Association met and befriended the Radiohead boys back in the early days when “Creep” was still stigmatizing them as sub-Nirvana imitators. Over the years, Lee’s been one of the few people in Canada to interview Yorke, doing so for a bizarre series of conversations on behalf of MuchMusic as well as for the June 2001 Chart Magazine cover story.

Yorke has always been known to mix the aloof with the everyman, so a trip through Toronto on the least subsidized transit system in all of North America isn’t entirely out of question. (Yorke also once spent the better part of a day lounging around reading magazines on a couch at a Calgary campus radio station where our news editor worked. He was apparently bored of being on the tour bus.)
And it’s not like Radiohead’s itinerary is full right now. Beyond drummer Phil Selway running in the London Marathon and the announcement of some continental European tour dates in late July and early August there’s been remarkably little news about the Radiohead clan.

Perhaps Yorke is just in Toronto to soak up some of the city’s rich entertainment and culture. He could have been in town for the recently concluded Hot Docs festival, featuring among other things, a fascinating Wesley Willis expose. Or perhaps Yorke’s got intentions of checking Yoko Ono’s exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario before it concludes on May 20. He could also be here for the glut of arty shows coming up this week: Antipop Consortium, Belle And Sebastian, David Sylvian, 1 Giant Leap, Rainer Maria? Or maybe he’s just got Leaf fever and needs to cheer the injury-depleted Buds in their holy playoff war against the least charismatic team in professional hockey, the Ottawa Senators.

Or maybe it was actually Remy Shand on the streetcar with Lee. In which case we’ll feel horribly embarrassed.
Aaron Brophy

(thanks to DeAnn)