The Post-Rock Band.

AuthorMARZORATI, GERALD
PositionRadiohead, its personalities and music

Trying to top its landmark OK Computer, Radiohead leaves the whole rock-band thing behind

Halfway through the making of its new album, Kid A, Radiohead was going to call it quits.

There was tension in the group over the direction the band should rake, brought on to a certain extent by lead singer Thom Yorke. Yorke, 31, possesses one of the finest voices ever to grace a pop recording, and it is what ultimately makes a Radiohead song a Radiohead song. He is the band's chief songwriter and driving force. "We operate like the UN," he says. "I'm America."

But he can be a difficult man to work with. He chooses not to speak to his fellow band members from time to time, which ends to make them uneasy.

Radiohead's five members met 15 years ago at the Abingdon School in Oxfordshire, England. In 1997 the group released OK Computer, a '70s-style concept album about a world of technological disasters and capitalist conformity. Critics hailed OK Computer as a masterpiece, and it was nominated for the Album of the Year Grammy. When the time came to record a follow-up, the pressure on the band was enormous.

Bass player Colin Greenwood says Radiohead did not want to settle for a repeat of OK Computer. "The whole thing, really, comes down to finding a new sound," he says. "You think about the Beatles, they sort of came up with a new approach every album--they listened to all this stuff, then brought it to bear on their work. But it's getting harder not only for us, but it would seem for music itself, to do something new."

In making Radiohead's earlier albums. Yorke would bring in his songs and the band would rehearse them for recording. However, when Yorke and the other band members gathered for the Kid A sessions, they learned that that was the last thing Yorke had in mind. He didn't think guitar bands were "relevant" anymore, he told the other band members, and was interested in new, more contemplative forms of hip-hop, like that produced by San Francisco's DJ Shadow, and recordings from the early '90s by Autechre and the Aphex Twin, weavers of rave-scene chill-out sound tapestries. The other members didn't get it.

"It was rather incredible to see," says Nigel Godrich, the band's producer. "I mean, Radiohead is a remarkable guitar band. But what Thom wanted now was a sound that doesn't tend to get made by bands."

A NEAR BREAKUP

The sessions went nowhere. Godrich recalls Yorke not talking much to anyone...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT