Categories
Radiohead

Various Tidbits

In brief-
-There’s a good article in the Manchester Times, featuring Colin and Chris from Shynola (creators of the Kid A blips).
-The Malaysian Star has a review of Bodysong.
Audio Revolution.com awarded Radiohead Honorable Mention in their 10 Rock-Pop Acts Making Great Music Today list. Number one was the Foo Fighters (!).
-Kid A is referenced as the first major album to be leaked to the internet in a MTV.com story.
-Radiohead’s music is featured in The Athena Theatre Company’s production of The River, although according to this review in The Crimson, it doesn’t help matters.
-Spin Magazine named HTTT the #10 album of 2003. The White Stripes snagged #1.

Categories
Radiohead

UPDATED: More Coachella Rumors/Urb Magazine Article

We continue to get reports that Radiohead is playing this year’s Coachella festival in Indio, California. The latest report states that this month’s issue of Urb magazine confirms this, as well as an appearance by the reunited Pixies (named as a big Radiohead influence). While we’re still searching for the magazine to try and confirm this, we can tell you that Radiohead is on the cover, and that you can read part of the cover story online in the “guts” section.
Please note that this is all still one big fat unconfirmed rumor (even if it is a cool one), and should be treated thusly. Stay tuned, we’ll keep you posted as always.
UPDATE: Looks like NME’s getting in on the act (though for all we know, they got the rumor from us!).
UPDATE AGAIN: Page 74 of URB states that Thom is “happy to be on the [Coachella] bill, but is visibly affected when informed of the Pixies reunion plans to play before them.” Thom then goes on to say, “No! That’s just not right! The Pixies opening for us is like the Beatles opening for us. I won’t allow it. There’s no way we can follow the Pixies!”
Still, nothing has been officially announced so stay tuned…

Categories
Radiohead

Johnny Cash Covering Creep?

According to an AP article, he would have, if producer Rick Rubin had gotten his way. An excerpt-

Rubin would send Cash CD after CD of song suggestions before each of the recording sessions, and they tried a lot. (Not every idea: Rubin, unsuccessfully, kept trying to get Cash to make a version of Radiohead’s “Creep.”)

That certainly would have been interesting. You can read the entire article here.

Categories
Radiohead

Earls Court Show on Chicago Radio

As mentioned before, this Wednesday’s show at Earls Court will be taped for future broadcast on Westwood One stations (in addition to being broadcast live on London’s XFM). The first confirmed playback of the show is on Chicago’s WXRT 93.1 FM, this Thursday (the 27th) from 8 to 10pm.
If you hear of any other stations planning a broadcast (and there should be quite a few more), please drop us a line so we can share it with the masses.
(Thanks to Treefingers.)

Categories
Radiohead

2+2=5 Hits #15

2+2=5 debuts at number 15 on the UK charts this week.
(Thanks to Treefingers.)

Categories
Radiohead

Interview with Howard Zinn and Thom

ZNet recently sat down with Howard Zinn, author of the absolutely required A People’s History of the United States of America, and Thom for a detailed interview.
Here’s an excerpt-

Q: So would you say that there’s a place for both directly political and non-political artists? What importance do you think each have?
Zinn: There are all sorts of artists. There are artists who really don’t have a social consciousness, who don’t see that there’s a connection between art and life in a way that compels the artist to look around the world and see what is wrong and try to use his or her art to change that. There are artists who just entertain. You can look upon entertainment as something useful, as we don’t want to eliminate art which is only entertaining, and insist that all art must be political, must be revolutionary, must be transforming. [But] there’s a place for comedy and music and the circus and things that don’t really have an awful effect on society except to entertain people-to make people feel good, and to act as a kind of religion.
That is what Marx called the “opium of the people,” something that people need. They need distraction. So it does serve a purpose, but if that’s all that artists do, the entertainment that you seek will become permanent. The misery that people live under and the wars that people have to go through, that will become permanent. There are huge numbers of people in the world whose lives are bound, limited. Lives of sheer misery, of sickness and violence. In order to change that you need to have artists who will be conscious of that, who will use their art in such a way that it helps to transform society. It may not be a blunt instrument, but it will have a kind of poetic effect.
Yorke: Yeah, I don’t think we are [political] at all, I think I’m hyper aware of the soapbox thing. It is difficult to make political art work. If all it does is exist in the realms of political discussion, it’s using that language, and generally, it’s an ugly language. It is very dead, definitely not a thing of beauty. The only reason, I think, that we go anywhere near it is because, like any reason that we buy music, these things get absorbed. These are the things surrounding your life. If you sit down and try to do it purposefully, and try to change this with this, and do this with that, it never works.
I think the most important thing about music is the sense of escape. But there are different ways to escape. I think escape is sort of like coming to a show with ten thousand other people and responding to that moment. Sharing that moment-that’s escape. Wherever the music came from originally is secondary to what’s happening at that moment, how the music sends you somewhere else. That’s the important thing.

Head on over to ZNet to read the whole thing.