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Radiohead are an English rock band formed in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, in 1985. The band members are Thom Yorke (vocals, guitar, keyboards); the brothers Jonny Greenwood (guitar, keyboards, other instruments) and Colin Greenwood (bass); Ed O'Brien (guitar, backing vocals); and Philip Selway (drums). They have worked with the producer Nigel Godrich and the cover artist Stanley Donwood since 1994. Radiohead's experimental approach is credited with advancing the sound of alternative rock.

Key Information

Radiohead signed to EMI in 1991 and released their debut album, Pablo Honey, in 1993. Their debut single, "Creep", was a worldwide hit, and their popularity and critical standing rose with The Bends in 1995. Their third album, OK Computer (1997), is acclaimed as a landmark record and one of the greatest albums in popular music, with complex production and themes of modern alienation. Their fourth album, Kid A (2000), marked a dramatic change in style, incorporating influences from electronic music, jazz, classical music and krautrock. Though Kid A divided listeners, it was later named the best album of the decade by multiple outlets. It was followed by Amnesiac (2001), recorded in the same sessions. Radiohead's final album for EMI, Hail to the Thief (2003), blended rock and electronic music, with lyrics addressing the war on terror.

Radiohead self-released their seventh album, In Rainbows (2007), as a download for which customers could set their own price, to critical and commercial success. Their eighth album, The King of Limbs (2011), an exploration of rhythm, was developed using extensive looping and sampling. A Moon Shaped Pool (2016) prominently featured Jonny Greenwood's orchestral arrangements. Yorke, Jonny Greenwood, Selway and O'Brien have released solo albums. In 2021, Yorke and Jonny Greenwood debuted a new band, the Smile.

By 2011, Radiohead had sold more than 30 million albums worldwide.[1] Their awards include six Grammy Awards and four Ivor Novello Awards, and they hold five Mercury Prize nominations, the most of any act. Seven Radiohead singles have reached the top 10 on the UK singles chart: "Creep" (1992), "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" (1996), "Paranoid Android" (1997), "Karma Police" (1997), "No Surprises" (1998), "Pyramid Song" (2001), and "There There" (2003). "Creep" and "Nude" (2008) reached the top 40 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Rolling Stone named Radiohead one of the 100 greatest artists of all time, and included five of their albums in its lists of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Radiohead were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2019.

History

[edit]

1985–1992: formation and first years

[edit]
Abingdon School, where Radiohead formed

The members of Radiohead met while attending Abingdon School, a private school for boys in Abingdon, Oxfordshire.[2] The bassist Colin Greenwood and the guitarist and singer Thom Yorke were in the same year; the guitarist Ed O'Brien was one year above, and the drummer Philip Selway was in the year above O'Brien.[3] When O'Brien and Yorke formed a band, they asked Colin to play bass.[4] They asked Selway to join after playing their first show with a drum machine.[5] Colin's brother, the multi-instrumentalist Jonny Greenwood, was three years below Colin and Yorke and the last to join.[3]

In 1985, the group formed On a Friday, the name referring to their usual rehearsal day in the school's music room.[6] The band disliked the school's strict atmosphere—the headmaster once charged them for using a rehearsal room on a Sunday—and found solace in the music department. They credited their music teacher for introducing them to jazz, film scores, postwar avant-garde music, and 20th-century classical music.[7]

Advertisement placed in the Oxford music magazine Curfew announcing On a Friday's change of name[8]

While each member contributed songs in the band's early period, Yorke emerged as the main songwriter.[9] According to Colin, the band members picked their instruments because they wanted to play together, rather than through any particular interest: "It was more of a collective angle, and if you could contribute by having someone else play your instrument, then that was really cool."[10] They played few gigs, and focused on rehearsing in village halls.[11] Oxford had an active independent music scene in the late 1980s, but it centred on shoegazing bands such as Ride and Slowdive.[12] On a Friday played their first gig in 1987 at Oxford's Jericho Tavern.[13]

On the strength of an early demo, On a Friday were offered a record deal by Island Records, but they decided they were not ready and wanted to go to university first.[14] They continued to rehearse on weekends and holidays,[7] but did not perform for four years.[6] At the University of Exeter, Yorke played with the band Headless Chickens, performing songs including future Radiohead material.[15] He also met Stanley Donwood, who later became Radiohead's cover artist.[16]

In 1991, the band regrouped in Oxford, sharing a house on the corner of Magdalen Road and Ridgefield Road.[17] They recorded another demo, which attracted the attention of Chris Hufford, Slowdive's producer and the co-owner of Oxford's Courtyard Studios.[18] Hufford and his business partner, Bryce Edge, attended a concert at the Jericho Tavern; impressed, they became On a Friday's managers.[18] According to Hufford, at this point the band had "all of the elements of Radiohead", but with a rougher, punkier sound and faster tempos.[19] At Courtyard Studios, On a Friday recorded the Manic Hedgehog demo tape, named after an Oxford record shop.[19]

In late 1991, Colin happened to meet the EMI A&R representative Keith Wozencroft at a record shop and handed him a copy of the demo.[18] Wozencroft was impressed and attended a performance.[18] That November, On a Friday performed at the Jericho Tavern to an audience that included several A&R representatives. It was only their eighth gig, but they had attracted interest from several record companies.[18] A Melody Maker review praised their promise and "astonishing intensity", but said their name was "terrible".[20] On 21 December, On a Friday signed a six-album recording contract with EMI.[7][18] At EMI's request, they changed their name; "Radiohead" was taken from the song "Radio Head" on the Talking Heads album True Stories (1986).[7] Yorke said the name "sums up all these things about receiving stuff ... It's about the way you take information in, the way you respond to the environment you're put in."[18]

1992–1994: "Creep", Pablo Honey and early success

[edit]

Radiohead recorded their debut EP, Drill, with Hufford and Edge at Courtyard Studios. Released in May 1992, its chart performance was poor.[6] As it was difficult for major labels such as EMI to promote bands in the UK, where independent labels dominated the indie charts, Radiohead's managers planned to have Radiohead use American producers and tour aggressively in America, then return to build a following in the UK.[21] Paul Kolderie and Sean Slade, who had worked with the US bands the Pixies and Dinosaur Jr., were enlisted to produce Radiohead's debut album, Pablo Honey, recorded quickly in Oxford in 1992.[6] With the release of their debut single, "Creep", that September, Radiohead began to receive attention in the British music press, not all of it favourable; NME described them as "a lily-livered excuse for a rock band",[22] and "Creep" was blacklisted by BBC Radio 1 as "too depressing".[23]

Pablo Honey was released in February 1993. It reached number 22 in the UK charts. "Creep" and its follow-up singles "Anyone Can Play Guitar" and "Stop Whispering" failed to become hits, and "Pop Is Dead", a non-album single, also sold poorly. O'Brien later called it "a hideous mistake".[21] Some critics compared Radiohead to the wave of grunge music popular in the early 1990s, dubbing them "Nirvana-lite",[24] and Pablo Honey initially failed to make an impact.[22] The members of Radiohead expressed dissatisfaction with the album in later years.[25]

In early 1993, Radiohead began to attract listeners elsewhere. "Creep" had become a hit in Israel after it was played frequently by the influential DJ Yoav Kutner, and, in March, Radiohead were invited to Tel Aviv for their first show overseas.[26] Around the same time, "Creep" became a hit in America, a "slacker anthem" in the vein of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana and "Loser" by Beck.[27] It reached number two on the Billboard Modern Rock chart,[7] number 34 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart,[20] and number seven on the UK singles chart when EMI rereleased it in September.[28] To build on the success, Radiohead embarked on a US tour supporting Belly and PJ Harvey,[29] followed by a European tour supporting James and Tears for Fears.[20][19]

1994–1995: The Bends, critical recognition and growing fanbase

[edit]
The Bends marked Radiohead's first collaboration with the producer Nigel Godrich (top) and the artist Stanley Donwood, both of whom have worked on every Radiohead album since.

Radiohead began work on their second album in 1994 with the veteran Abbey Road Studios producer John Leckie. Tensions were high, with mounting expectations to match the success of "Creep".[30] To break a deadlock, Radiohead toured Asia, Australasia and Mexico and found greater confidence performing their new music live.[31] However, troubled by his new fame, Yorke became disillusioned with being "at the sharp end of the sexy, sassy, MTV eye-candy lifestyle" he felt he was helping to sell to the world.[32]

The My Iron Lung EP and single, released in 1994, was Radiohead's reaction, marking a transition towards the greater depth they aimed for on their second album.[33] It was Radiohead's first collaboration with their future producer, Nigel Godrich, then working under Leckie as an audio engineer,[34] and the artist Stanley Donwood. Both have worked on every Radiohead album since.[16] Though sales of My Iron Lung were low, it boosted Radiohead's credibility in alternative circles, creating commercial opportunity for their next album.[35]

Having introduced more new songs on tour, Radiohead finished recording their second album, The Bends, by 1995, and released it that March. It was driven by dense riffs and ethereal atmospheres, with greater use of keyboards.[6] It received stronger reviews for its songwriting and performances.[22] While Radiohead were seen as outsiders to the Britpop scene that dominated music media at the time, they were finally successful in the UK,[12] as the singles "Fake Plastic Trees", "High and Dry", "Just", and "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" became chart successes. "High and Dry" became a modest hit, but Radiohead's growing fanbase was insufficient to repeat the worldwide success of "Creep". The Bends reached number 88 on the US album charts, and remains Radiohead's lowest showing there.[36] Jonny Greenwood later said The Bends was turning point for Radiohead: "It started appearing in people's [best-of] polls for the end of the year. That's when it started to feel like we made the right choice about being a band."[37] In later years, The Bends appeared in many publications' lists of the best albums of all time,[38] including Rolling Stone's 2012 edition of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" at No. 111.[39]

In 1995, Radiohead again toured North America and Europe, this time in support of R.E.M., one of their formative influences and at the time one of the biggest rock bands in the world.[40] Attention from famous fans such as the R.E.M. singer Michael Stipe, along with distinctive music videos for "Just" and "Street Spirit", helped sustain Radiohead's popularity outside the UK.[41] The night before a performance in Denver, Colorado, Radiohead's tour van was stolen, and with it their musical equipment. Yorke and Jonny Greenwood performed a stripped-down acoustic set with rented instruments and several shows were cancelled.[42][nb 1] Their first live video, Live at the Astoria, was released in 1995.[43]

1995–1998: OK Computer and acclaim

[edit]
Yorke performing with Radiohead in 1998

By late 1995, Radiohead had already recorded one song that would appear on their next record. "Lucky", released as a single to promote the War Child charity's The Help Album,[44] was recorded in a brief session with Nigel Godrich, the young audio engineer who had assisted on The Bends. Radiohead decided to self-produce their next album with Godrich, and began work in early 1996. By July they had recorded four songs at their rehearsal studio, Canned Applause, a converted apple shed in the countryside near Didcot, Oxfordshire.[45] In August 1996, Radiohead toured as the opening act for Alanis Morissette.[46] They resumed recording not at a studio but at St. Catherine's Court, a 15th-century mansion near Bath.[47] The sessions were relaxed, with the band playing at all hours of the day, recording in different rooms, and listening to the Beatles, DJ Shadow, Ennio Morricone and Miles Davis for inspiration.[6][37]

Colin Greenwood, Jonny Greenwood, Ed O'Brien, and Phil Selway discussing OK Computer in 1997

Radiohead released their third album, OK Computer, in May 1997. It found the band experimenting with song structures and incorporating ambient, avant-garde and electronic influences, prompting Rolling Stone to call the album a "stunning art-rock tour de force".[48] Radiohead denied being part of the progressive rock genre, but critics began to compare their work to Pink Floyd. Some compared OK Computer thematically to the 1973 Pink Floyd album The Dark Side of the Moon,[49] although Yorke said the lyrics were inspired by observing the "speed" of the world in the 1990s. Yorke's lyrics, embodying different characters, had expressed what one magazine called "end-of-the-millennium blues"[50] in contrast to the more personal songs of The Bends. According to the journalist Alex Ross, Radiohead had become "the poster boys for a certain kind of knowing alienation" as Talking Heads and R.E.M. had been before.[7] OK Computer received acclaim. Yorke said he was "amazed it got the reaction it did. None of us fucking knew any more whether it was good or bad. What really blew my head off was the fact that people got all the things, all the textures and the sounds and the atmospheres we were trying to create."[51]

OK Computer was Radiohead's first number-one UK chart debut, and brought them commercial success around the world. Despite peaking at number 21 in the US charts, the album eventually met with mainstream recognition there, earning Radiohead their first Grammy Awards recognition, winning Best Alternative Album and a nomination for Album of the Year.[52] "Paranoid Android", "Karma Police" and "No Surprises" were released as singles, of which "Karma Police" was most successful internationally.[28] OK Computer went on to become a staple of "best-of" British album lists.[53][54] In the same year, Radiohead became one of the first bands in the world to have a website. Within a few years, there were dozens of fansites devoted to them.[55]

OK Computer was followed by the year-long Against Demons world tour, including Radiohead's first headline Glastonbury Festival performance in 1997.[56] Despite technical problems that almost caused Yorke to abandon the stage, the performance was acclaimed and cemented Radiohead as a major live act.[57] Grant Gee, the director of the "No Surprises" video, filmed the band on tour for the 1999 documentary Meeting People Is Easy.[58] The film portrays the band's disaffection with the music industry and press, showing their burnout over the course of the tour.[6] OK Computer is often acclaimed as a landmark record of the 1990s[59] and the Generation X era, and one of the greatest albums in recording history.[60][61]

In 1998, Radiohead performed at a Paris Amnesty International concert[62] and the Tibetan Freedom Concert.[63] In March, they and Godrich entered Abbey Road Studios to record a song for the 1998 film The Avengers, "Man of War", but were unsatisfied with the results and it went unreleased.[64] Yorke described the period as a "real low point".[65] He and O'Brien developed depression,[66] and the band came close to splitting up.[67]

1998–2001: Kid A, Amnesiac and change in sound

[edit]
Jonny Greenwood has used a variety of instruments, such as this glockenspiel, in live concerts and recordings.
Phil Selway discussing Kid A in 2000

After the success of OK Computer, Radiohead bought a barn in Oxfordshire and converted it into a recording studio.[68] They began work on their next album with Godrich in early 1999, working in studios in Paris, Copenhagen, and Gloucester before their new studio was completed.[24] Although their success meant there was no longer pressure from their record label,[7] tensions were high. The members had different visions for Radiohead's future, and Yorke suffered from writer's block, influencing him toward more abstract, fragmented songwriting.[67] O'Brien kept an online diary of their progress.[69] After nearly 18 months, recording was completed in April 2000.[70]

Radiohead's fourth album, Kid A, was released in October 2000. A departure from OK Computer, Kid A featured a minimalist and textured style with more diverse instrumentation, including the ondes Martenot, programmed electronic beats, strings, and jazz horns.[67] It debuted at number one in many countries, including the US, where it became the first Radiohead album to debut atop the Billboard chart and the first US number-one album by any UK act since the Spice Girls in 1996.[71] This success was attributed variously to marketing, to the album's leak on the file-sharing network Napster a few months before its release, and to advance anticipation based, in part, on the success of OK Computer.[72] Although Radiohead released no singles from Kid A, promos of "Optimistic" and "Idioteque" received radio play, and a series of "blips", short videos set to portions of tracks, were played on music channels and released free online.[73] Radiohead continued a 2000 tour of Europe in a custom-built tent free of advertising; they also promoted Kid A with three sold-out North American theatre concerts.[73]

Kid A received a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Album and a nomination for Album of the Year in early 2001. It won both praise and criticism in independent music circles for appropriating underground styles of music; some British critics saw Kid A as a "commercial suicide note" and "intentionally difficult", and longed for a return to Radiohead's earlier style.[12][22] Fans were similarly divided; along with those who were appalled or mystified, many saw it as the band's best work.[32][74] Yorke denied that Radiohead had set out to eschew expectations, saying: "We're not trying to be difficult ... We're actually trying to communicate but somewhere along the line, we just seemed to piss off a lot of people ... What we're doing isn't that radical."[12] The album was ranked one of the best of all time by publications including Time and Rolling Stone;[75][76] Rolling Stone, Pitchfork and the Times named it the best album of the decade.[77][78][79]

Radiohead's fifth album, Amnesiac, was released in May 2001. It comprised additional tracks from the Kid A sessions, including "Life in a Glasshouse", featuring the Humphrey Lyttelton Band.[80] Radiohead stressed that they saw Amnesiac not as a collection of B-sides or outtakes from Kid A but an album in its own right.[81] It topped the UK Albums Chart and reached number two in the US, and was nominated for a Grammy Award and the Mercury Music Prize.[22][71] Radiohead released "Pyramid Song" and "Knives Out" as singles, their first since 1998.[82][83] Radiohead began a North American tour, their first there in three years, in June 2001.[84] With a string of sold-out dates, The Observer described it as "the most sweeping conquest of America by a British group" since Beatlemania, succeeding where bands such as Oasis had failed.[85] Recordings from the Kid A and Amnesiac tours were released on I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings in November 2001.[86]

2002–2006: Hail to the Thief and solo work

[edit]

In July and August 2002, Radiohead toured Portugal and Spain, playing a number of new songs. For their next album, they sought to explore the tension between human and machine-generated music[87] and capture a more immediate, live sound.[88][89] They and Godrich recorded most of the material in two weeks at Ocean Way Recording in Los Angeles. The band described the recording process as relaxed, in contrast to the tense sessions for Kid A and Amnesiac.[2] Radiohead also composed music for "Split Sides", a dance piece by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, which debuted in October 2003 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.[90]

Radiohead's sixth album, Hail to the Thief, was released in June 2003.[91] Its lyrics were influenced by what Yorke called "the general sense of ignorance and intolerance and panic and stupidity" following the election of US President George W. Bush and the war on terror.[92] Hail to the Thief debuted at number one in the UK and number three on the Billboard chart, and was certified platinum in the UK and gold in the US. The singles "There There", "Go to Sleep" and "2 + 2 = 5" achieved heavy circulation on modern rock radio. At the 2004 Grammy Awards, Radiohead were again nominated for Best Alternative Album, and Godrich and the engineer Darrell Thorp received the Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album.[93] In May, Radiohead launched radiohead.tv, where they streamed short films, music videos and live webcasts from their studio.[94] The material was released on the 2004 DVD The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time.[95] A compilation of Hail to the Thief B-sides, remixes and live performances, Com Lag (2plus2isfive), was released in April 2004.[96] In May 2003, Radiohead embarked on a world tour and headlined Glastonbury Festival for the second time. The tour finished in May 2004 with a performance at the Coachella Festival in California.[97]

Radiohead at the 2004 Coachella Music Festival

Hail to the Thief was Radiohead's final album with EMI; in 2006, The New York Times described Radiohead as "by far the world's most popular unsigned band".[97] Following the Hail to the Thief tour, Radiohead went on hiatus to spend time with their families and work on solo projects. Yorke and Jonny Greenwood contributed to the Band Aid 20 charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?", produced by Godrich.[98] Greenwood composed soundtracks for the films Bodysong (2004) and There Will Be Blood (2007); the latter was the first of several collaborations with the director Paul Thomas Anderson.[99][100] In July 2006, Yorke released his debut solo album, The Eraser, comprising mainly electronic music.[101] He stressed it was made with the band's blessing, and that Radiohead were not breaking up. Jonny Greenwood said: "He had to get this stuff out, and everyone was happy [for Yorke to make it] ... He'd go mad if every time he wrote a song it had to go through the Radiohead consensus."[102] Selway and Jonny Greenwood appeared in the 2005 film Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire as members of the fictional band the Weird Sisters.[103]

2006–2009: departure from EMI, In Rainbows, and "pay what you want"

[edit]

Radiohead began work on their seventh album in February 2005.[100] Instead of involving Godrich, Radiohead hired the producer Spike Stent, but the collaboration was unsuccessful.[104] In September 2005, Radiohead contributed "I Want None of This", a piano dirge,[105] for the War Child charity album Help: A Day in the Life. The album was sold online, with "I Want None of This" the most downloaded track, though it was not released as a single.[106] In late 2006, after touring Europe and North America with new material, Radiohead re-enlisted Godrich and resumed work in London, Oxford and rural Somerset, England.[107] Recording ended in June 2007 and the recordings were mastered the following month.[108]

In 2007, EMI was acquired by the private equity firm Terra Firma. Radiohead were critical of the new management, and no new deal was agreed.[109] The Independent reported that EMI had offered Radiohead a £3 million advance, but had refused to relinquish rights to the band's back catalogue. An EMI spokesman stated that Radiohead had demanded "an extraordinary amount of money".[110] Radiohead's management and Yorke released statements denying that they had asked for a large advance, but had instead wanted control over their back catalogue.[110][111]

Radiohead self-released their seventh album, In Rainbows, on their website on 10 October 2007 as a download, for any amount users wanted, including £0. The landmark pay-what-you-want release, the first for a major act, made headlines worldwide and created debate about the implications for the music industry.[112] Media reaction was positive, and Radiohead were praised for finding new ways to connect with fans.[113][114] However, it drew criticism from musicians such as Lily Allen and Kim Gordon, who felt it undercut less successful acts.[115][116]

In Rainbows was downloaded an estimated 1.2 million times on the day of release.[117] Colin Greenwood explained the internet release as a way of avoiding the "regulated playlists" and "straitened formats" of radio and TV, ensuring fans around the world could experience the music at the same time, and preventing leaks in advance of a physical release.[118] A special "discbox" edition of In Rainbows, containing the record on vinyl, a book of artwork, and a CD of extra songs, was also sold from Radiohead's website.[119]

The retail version of In Rainbows was released in the UK in late December 2007 on XL Recordings and in North America in January 2008 on TBD Records,[119] reaching number one in the UK and in the US.[120] The success was Radiohead's highest chart placement in the US since Kid A. It became their fifth UK number-one album and sold more than three million copies in one year.[121] The album received acclaim for its more accessible sound and personal lyrics.[122] It was nominated for the Mercury Music Prize[123] and won the 2009 Grammy awards for Best Alternative Music Album and Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package. It was nominated for five other Grammy awards, including Radiohead's third nomination for Album of the Year.[124] Yorke and Jonny Greenwood performed "15 Step" with the University of Southern California Marching Band at the televised award show.[125]

Radiohead performing at the 2008 Main Square Festival in Arras, France

The first single from In Rainbows, "Jigsaw Falling into Place", was released in January 2008,[126] followed by "Nude" in March,[127] which debuted at number 37 in the Billboard Hot 100; it was Radiohead's first song to enter the chart since "High and Dry" (1995) and their first US top 40 since "Creep".[28] In July, Radiohead released a digitally shot video for "House of Cards".[128] Radiohead held remix competitions for "Nude" and "Reckoner", releasing the separated stems for fans to remix.[129] In April 2008, Radiohead launched Waste Central, a social networking service for Radiohead fans.[130] In May, VH1 broadcast In Rainbows – From the Basement, a special episode of the music television show From the Basement in which Radiohead performed songs from In Rainbows. It was released on iTunes in June.[131] From mid-2008 to early 2009, Radiohead toured North America, Europe, Japan and South America to promote In Rainbows, and headlined the Reading and Leeds Festivals in August 2009.[117][132][133]

Days after Radiohead signed to XL, EMI announced a box set of Radiohead material recorded before In Rainbows, released in the same week as the In Rainbows special edition. Commentators including the Guardian saw the move as retaliation for the band choosing not to re-sign with EMI.[134] In June 2008, EMI released a greatest hits album, Radiohead: The Best Of.[135] It was made without Radiohead's involvement and contains only songs recorded under their contract with EMI. Yorke was critical of the release, calling it a "wasted opportunity".[136] As social media expanded around the turn of the decade, Radiohead gradually withdrew their public presence, with no promotional interviews or tours to promote new releases. Pitchfork wrote that around this time Radiohead's "popularity became increasingly untethered from the typical formalities of record promotion, placing them on the same level as Beyoncé and Kanye West".[55]

2009–2010: reissues, singles and side projects

[edit]

In 2009, EMI reissued the albums recorded while Radiohead was signed to them in a series of expanded "Collector's Editions", without Radiohead's involvement.[137] Press reaction expressed concern that EMI was exploiting Radiohead's back catalogue.[138][137][139] In May, Radiohead began new recording sessions with Godrich.[140] In August, they released "Harry Patch (In Memory Of)", a tribute song to Harry Patch, the last surviving British soldier to have fought in World War I, with proceeds donated to the British Legion.[141][142] The song has no conventional rock instrumentation, and instead comprises Yorke's vocals and a string arrangement composed by Jonny Greenwood.[143] Later that month, another new song, "These Are My Twisted Words", featuring krautrock-like drumming and guitars,[144] was leaked via torrent, possibly by Radiohead.[145][144] It was released as a free download on the Radiohead website the following week.[146] Commentators saw the releases as part of Radiohead's new unpredictable release strategy, without the need for traditional marketing.[147]

In 2009, Yorke formed a new band, Atoms for Peace, to perform his solo material, with musicians including Godrich and the Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea. They played eight North American shows in 2010.[148] In January 2010, Radiohead played their only full concert of the year in the Los Angeles Henry Fonda Theater as a benefit for Oxfam. Tickets were auctioned, raising over half a million US dollars for the NGO's 2010 Haiti earthquake relief.[149] That December, a fan-made video of the performance, Radiohead for Haiti, was released via YouTube and torrent with Radiohead's support and a "pay-what-you-want" link to donate to Oxfam.[150] Radiohead also released the soundboard recording of their 2009 Prague performance for use in a fan-made concert video, Live in Praha.[151] The videos were described as examples of Radiohead's openness to fans and positivity toward non-commercial internet distribution.[152][153]

In June 2010, Yorke and Jonny Greenwood performed a surprise set at Glastonbury Festival, performing Eraser and Radiohead songs.[154] Selway released his debut solo album, Familial, in August.[155] Pitchfork described it as a collection of "hushed" folk songs in the tradition of Nick Drake, with Selway on guitar and vocals.[156]

2011–2012: The King of Limbs

[edit]
A second drummer, Clive Deamer, joined Radiohead on tour between 2011 and 2018. He also performed on the "Staircase / The Daily Mail" single and A Moon Shaped Pool.

Radiohead released their eighth album, The King of Limbs, on 18 February 2011 as a download from their website.[157] Following the protracted recording and more conventional rock instrumentation of In Rainbows, Radiohead developed The King of Limbs by sampling and looping their recordings with turntables.[158][159][160] It was followed by a retail release in March through XL, and a special "newspaper album" edition in May.[161]

The King of Limbs sold an estimated 300,000 to 400,000 copies through Radiohead's website.[17] The retail edition debuted at number six on the US Billboard 200[162] and number seven on the UK Albums Chart.[163] It was nominated for five categories in the 54th Grammy Awards.[164] Two tracks not included on The King of Limbs, "Supercollider" and "The Butcher", were released as a double A-side single for Record Store Day in April.[165] A compilation of King of Limbs remixes by various artists, TKOL RMX 1234567, was released in September.[166]

To perform the rhythmically complex King of Limbs material live, Radiohead enlisted a second drummer, Clive Deamer, who had worked with Portishead and Get the Blessing.[167] In June, Radiohead played a surprise performance on the Park stage at the 2011 Glastonbury Festival, performing songs from The King of Limbs for the first time.[168] With Deamer, Radiohead recorded The King of Limbs: Live from the Basement, released online in August 2011.[169] It was also broadcast by international BBC channels and released on DVD and Blu-ray in January 2012.[170] The performance included two new songs, "The Daily Mail" and "Staircase", released as a double A-side download single in December 2011.[171] In February 2012, Radiohead began their first extended North American tour in four years, including dates in the United States, Canada and Mexico.[172]

On 16 June 2012, an hour before gates were due to open at Toronto's Downsview Park for the final concert of Radiohead's North American tour, the roof of the venue's temporary stage collapsed, killing the drum technician Scott Johnson and injuring three other members of Radiohead's road crew.[173] After rescheduling the tour, Radiohead paid tribute to Johnson at their next concert, in Nîmes, France, in July.[174] In June 2013, Live Nation Canada Inc, two other organisations and an engineer were charged with 13 charges under Ontario health and safety laws.[175][176] In September 2017, after several delays, the case was dropped under the Jordan ruling, which sets strict time limits on trials.[175] Radiohead released a statement condemning the decision.[177] A 2019 inquest returned a verdict of accidental death.[178]

2013–2014: side projects and move to XL

[edit]
Radiohead performing on the 2012 King of Limbs tour

In February 2013, Yorke and Godrich's band, Atoms for Peace, released an album, Amok.[179] The pair made headlines that year for their criticism of the free music streaming service Spotify. Yorke accused Spotify of only benefiting major labels with large back catalogues, and encouraged artists to build their own "direct connections" with audiences instead.[180][181]

In February 2014, Radiohead released an app, PolyFauna, a collaboration with the British digital arts studio Universal Everything, with music and imagery from The King of Limbs.[182] In May, Yorke contributed a soundtrack, Subterranea, to The Panic Office, an installation of Radiohead artwork in Sydney, Australia.[183] Yorke and Selway released their solo albums Tomorrow's Modern Boxes and Weatherhouse in late 2014.[184][185] Jonny Greenwood scored his third Anderson film, Inherent Vice; it features a version of an unreleased Radiohead song, "Spooks", performed by Greenwood and members of Supergrass.[186] Junun, a collaboration between Greenwood, Godrich, the Israeli composer Shye Ben Tzur and Indian musicians, was released in November 2015,[187] accompanied by a documentary directed by Anderson.[188]

In April 2016, Radiohead's back catalogue was acquired by XL Recordings, which had released the retail editions of In Rainbows and The King of Limbs and most of Yorke's solo work.[189] XL reissued Radiohead's back catalogue on vinyl in May 2016.[190]

2015–2016: A Moon Shaped Pool

[edit]

Radiohead began work on their ninth studio album in September 2014.[191] In 2015, they resumed work in the La Fabrique studio near Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France.[192] The sessions were marred by the death of Godrich's father[193] and Yorke's separation from his wife, Rachel Owen, who died from cancer in 2016.[194] Work was interrupted when Radiohead were commissioned to write the theme for the 2015 James Bond film Spectre.[193] Their first submission, "Man of War", was rejected as it had not been written for the film.[195][196] After their second submission, "Spectre", was also rejected, Radiohead released it on the audio streaming site SoundCloud on Christmas Day 2015.[197]

Radiohead's ninth studio album, A Moon Shaped Pool, was released digitally in May 2016, followed by retail versions in June via XL Recordings.[198] It was promoted with music videos for the singles "Daydreaming" (directed by Anderson) and "Burn the Witch".[199][198] The album includes several songs written years earlier, including "True Love Waits",[200] and strings and choral vocals performed by the London Contemporary Orchestra.[201] It became Radiohead's sixth UK number-one album[202] and reached number three in the US.[203] It was the fifth Radiohead album nominated for the Mercury Prize, making Radiohead the most shortlisted act in Mercury history,[204] and was nominated for Best Alternative Music Album and Best Rock Song (for "Burn the Witch") at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards.[205] It appeared on several publications' lists of the best albums of the year.[206][207][208][209][210]

Radiohead performing on the 2016 Moon Shaped Pool tour

In 2016, 2017 and 2018, Radiohead toured Europe, Japan, and North and South America,[211][212][213] including headline shows at the Coachella and Glastonbury festivals.[56] They were joined again by Deamer.[211] The tours included a performance in Tel Aviv in July 2017, disregarding the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign for an international cultural boycott of Israel. The performance was criticised by artists including Roger Waters and Ken Loach, and a petition urging Radiohead to cancel it was signed by more than 50 prominent figures.[214] In a statement, Yorke responded: "We don't endorse Netanyahu any more than Trump, but we still play in America. Playing in a country isn't the same as endorsing the government. Music, art and academia is about crossing borders not building them, about open minds not closed ones, about shared humanity, dialogue and freedom of expression."[215]

2017–2021: hiatus and reissues

[edit]

Following the Moon Shaped Pool tour, Radiohead went on hiatus; Yorke was dealing with the death of Owen, and O'Brien said the band members felt "disconnected and spent".[216] In June 2017, they released a 20th-anniversary OK Computer reissue, OKNOTOK 1997 2017, comprising a remastered version of the album, B-sides, and previously unreleased material.[217] Radiohead promoted the reissue with music videos for the bonus tracks "I Promise", "Man of War" and "Lift".[218][219][220] OKNOTOK reached number two on the UK Album Chart,[221] boosted by Radiohead's televised Glastonbury performance that week,[222] and reached number 23 on the US Billboard 200.[223] In August, Yorke and Jonny Greenwood performed a benefit concert in the Marche, Italy, to help restoration efforts following the August 2016 Central Italy earthquake.[224]

Radiohead performing in Montreal in July 2018

Radiohead were nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017, their first year of eligibility.[225] They were nominated again in 2018 and inducted in March 2019. Though Jonny Greenwood and Yorke were uninterested in the event, Selway and O'Brien attended and made speeches.[226] The singer David Byrne, one of Radiohead's formative influences, gave a speech praising Radiohead's musical and release innovations, which he said had influenced the whole industry.[227]

In June 2019, several hours of recordings made by Radiohead during the OK Computer period leaked online. In response, Radiohead made them available to purchase online as MiniDiscs [Hacked], with all proceeds to the environmentalist group Extinction Rebellion.[228] In December, Radiohead made their discography available free on YouTube.[229] The following January, they launched the Radiohead Public Library, an online archive of their work, including music videos, live performances, artwork and the 1998 documentary Meeting People Is Easy.[230] Radiohead suspended their online content for Blackout Tuesday on 2 June, protesting racism and police brutality.[231]

In 2017, Selway released his third solo work, the soundtrack to the film Let Me Go.[232] Jonny Greenwood was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Score for his fifth collaboration with Anderson, Phantom Thread (2017),[233] and scored his second film by Lynne Ramsay, You Were Never Really Here (2018).[234] Yorke released his first feature film soundtrack, Suspiria (2018),[235] and his third solo album, Anima (2019), backed by a short film directed by Anderson.[236] In 2020, O'Brien released his debut solo album, Earth, under the moniker EOB.[237] He had been writing songs for years, but found they did not fit Radiohead.[238][239] In April, to compensate for the lack of performances during the COVID-19 pandemic, Radiohead began streaming old concert films on YouTube on a weekly basis.[240]

Radiohead abandoned plans to tour in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[241] In November, they released Kid A Mnesia, an anniversary reissue compiling Kid A, Amnesiac and previously unreleased material. It was promoted with download singles and videos for the previously unreleased tracks "If You Say the Word" and "Follow Me Around".[242] Plans for an art installation based on the albums were cancelled due to logistical problems and the pandemic. Instead, Radiohead created a free digital experience, Kid A Mnesia Exhibition, for PlayStation 5, macOS and Windows.[243]

2021–present: side projects, Israel controversy and return to touring

[edit]
Jonny Greenwood and Yorke performing with Tom Skinner as the Smile in January 2022

In a livestream event held by Glastonbury Festival in May 2021, Yorke and Jonny Greenwood debuted a new band, the Smile, with the drummer Tom Skinner.[244] Greenwood said the band was a way to work with Yorke during the COVID-19 lockdowns.[245] The Smile toured internationally between 2022 and 2024,[246][247] and released the albums A Light for Attracting Attention (2022), Wall of Eyes (2024) and Cutouts (2024).[248] Critics interpreted the Smile as a liberating, lower-pressure project for Yorke and Greenwood,[249][250][251][252] with more jazz, krautrock and progressive rock influences and a looser, wilder sound.[253][249][251]

Colin Greenwood toured with Nick Cave between 2022 and 2024,[254][255][256] and performed on Cave's 2024 album Wild God.[257] He released a book of his photographs of Radiohead in October 2024.[258] Selway released his third solo album, Strange Dance, in February 2023.[259] He also played drums and percussion on Versions of Us (2023) by Lanterns on the Lake, and joined them on tour.[260] Jarak Qaribak, an album by Jonny Greenwood and the Israeli rock musician Dudu Tassa, was released in June.[261] Yorke released his second film soundtrack, Confidenza, in April 2024,[262] and began a solo tour, Everything, in October.[263] Selway said in 2023 that it was healthy for the members to work with other musicians and that all the projects came under the Radiohead "umbrella".[264][265]

Yorke reworked Hail to the Thief for a production of Hamlet by the Royal Shakespeare Company that opened at Aviva Studios, Manchester, in April 2025.[266] Tall Tales, an album by Yorke and the electronic musician Mark Pritchard, was released in May.[267] This Is What You Get, an exhibition of Yorke and Donwood's Radiohead artwork, opened at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford in August.[268] On 13 August, Radiohead released Hail to the Thief (Live Recordings 2003—2009), a selection of performances of Hail to the Thief tracks.[269] Greenwood scored his sixth film for Paul Thomas Anderson, One Battle After Another, released in September.[270] On 4 November, Radiohead began a European tour, their first tour in seven years. Deamer was replaced by Chris Vatalaro.[271]

Pressure for Radiohead to boycott Israel grew following the outbreak of the Gaza war in 2023.[272] Jonny Greenwood was criticised for performing in Tel Aviv with Tassa in May 2024, and responded in a statement that Israeli artists should not be silenced.[273] In October, Yorke temporarily left the stage after he was heckled by a pro-Palestine protester at a solo concert in Melbourne.[272][274] In May 2025, two UK concerts by Jonny Greenwood and Tassa were canceled following threats to the venues and staff.[275] Colin Greenwood described the cancellation as "a curtailment of free speech and the possibilities of forging bonds between people with music and art".[276] That month, Yorke released a statement condemning the war efforts of Israel and Hamas and saying that pressuring artists to respond was not the solution.[277] O'Brien has shown support for Palestine,[278][279] and defended his bandmates: "My brothers abhor what is going on in Gaza. Just because they aren't all over social media or using the exact wording that some feel is necessary does not mean they aren't genuinely upset and angered by what is going on."[280] Pitchfork wrote that the controversy had damaged Radiohead's public perception, and questioned their "ambiguous political position" after releasing albums such as Hail to the Thief, which was "so evocative of the horrors of lopsided military annihilation".[281]

Artistry

[edit]

Style

[edit]

Radiohead's musical style has been described as art rock,[36] alternative rock,[288] electronica,[291] experimental rock,[294] progressive rock,[285] grunge,[285] art pop,[295] and electronic rock.[296] Critics found elements of grunge in their first album, Pablo Honey.[297][298][299] Their second album, The Bends, is sometimes described as Britpop, though Radiohead disliked Britpop, seeing it as a "backwards-looking" pastiche.[300][301][194]

Radiohead songs often use pivot notes and pedal points, creating "looser, roomier" harmonies and a "bittersweet, doomy" feeling.[7] Many use mixed modes and unusual or changing time signatures, such as "You", "Everything in Its Right Place", "Morning Bell" and "15 Step".[302][303] O'Brien said Radiohead were hesitant to create "epic" music, which they felt had negative associations of stadium rock. However, he conceded that "epic is also about beauty, like a majestic view", and cited "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" as an example of a song that was "obviously epic in scope".[304]

Jonny Greenwood said Radiohead strive to find a middle ground between their experimental influences and rock music, and were driven by a desire not to repeat themselves rather than to be "experimental".[305] The drummer Clive Deamer, who joined Radiohead on tour between 2011 and 2018, said they do not see themselves as a rock band and that their methodology is closer to jazz: "They deliberately try to avoid cliché and standard forms for the sake of the song ... Rock bands don't do that. It's far more like a jazz mentality."[306] Yorke dismissed accusations that Radiohead make "depressing" music, saying in 2004: "Depressing music to me is just shit music. It's like air freshener – just a nasty little poison in the air."[307]

Songwriting

[edit]

Though Yorke acts as Radiohead's director, all the members have a role in arrangement.[67][308] In 2004, Yorke said that while his power was once "absolutely unbalanced" and he would "subvert everybody else's power at all costs", later albums had been more democratic.[309] He apologised to his bandmates for his earlier "control freak" behaviour.[310] O'Brien said that no member was replaceable and each was comfortable with their position.[308]

Radiohead songs usually begin as a sketch by Yorke, which is harmonically developed by Jonny Greenwood before the rest of the band develop their parts.[7] Whereas Yorke does not read sheet music, Greenwood is trained in music theory. In Pitchfork, Ryan Dombal wrote that "the duo's left brain-right brain dynamic has proven to be one of the most adventurous in rock history".[311] Yorke typically plays rhythm guitar, while Greenwood plays most lead guitar parts and O'Brien often creates ambient effects, making extensive use of effects units.[312][313] O'Brien said Radiohead tired of songs "with distorted guitars all the way through" after Pablo Honey, preferring separation and "riffs and melodies that interweave at different registers".[314]

The Kid A and Amnesiac sessions brought a change in Radiohead's music and working methods.[67][315] Since their shift from conventional rock instrumentation, the members have gained flexibility and often switch instruments.[67] On Kid A and Amnesiac, Yorke played keyboard and bass, Jonny Greenwood played ondes Martenot, Colin Greenwood worked on sampling, and O'Brien and Selway worked with drum machines and digital manipulation.[67]

Jonny Greenwood said he saw Radiohead as "just a kind of an arrangement to form songs using whatever technology suits the song", be it a cello or a laptop.[194] They often attempt several approaches to songs, and may develop them over years. For example, Radiohead first performed "True Love Waits" in 1995, and recorded several versions before releasing it on A Moon Shaped Pool in 2016.[316] Selway said Radiohead had a tendency to overanalyse their work: "You have it there and then you just try to pull it apart and then when you put it back together it doesn't look like a television set any more ... But it was there all along."[317]

Influences

[edit]

Among Radiohead's earliest influences were Queen,[318] Bob Dylan,[318] Pink Floyd, Elvis Costello, post-punk acts such as Joy Division,[318] Siouxsie and the Banshees[318][319] and Magazine, and significantly 1980s alternative rock bands such as R.E.M.,[318] U2, the Pixies, the Smiths and Sonic Youth.[320] Jonny Greenwood named the Magazine guitarist John McGeoch his biggest guitar influence.[321] By the mid-1990s, Radiohead were adopting recording methods from hip-hop, inspired by the sampling work of DJ Shadow,[6] and became interested in using computers to generate sounds.[322] Radiohead cited 60s and 70s jazz artists such as Miles Davis, Charles Mingus and Alice Coltrane as influences.[323] According to Jonny Greenwood, "We bring in our favourite jazz albums, and say: we want to do this. And we enjoy the sound of our failing!"[323] He likened their jazz influence to 1950s English bands imitating American blues records.[323] Other influences include the soundtracks of Ennio Morricone, 1960s rock groups such as the Beatles and the Beach Boys, and Phil Spector's "wall of sound" production.[6][37] O'Brien said Scott Walker was Radiohead's "unifying" influence, citing his voice, arrangements and instrumentation.[324]

The electronic music of Kid A was inspired by Yorke's admiration for artists signed to the record label Warp Records, such as Aphex Twin and Autechre.[73] In 2013, Yorke named Aphex Twin as his biggest influence.[325] Kid A also samples early computer music,[24] and 1970s krautrock bands such as Can and Neu! were other major influences during this period.[326] Jonny Greenwood cited the influence of the 20th-century classical composers Krzysztof Penderecki and Olivier Messiaen.[37] Since the recording of Kid A, Greenwood has played the ondes Martenot, an early electronic instrument popularised by Messiaen.[7] While recording In Rainbows, Radiohead mentioned rock, electronic, hip-hop and experimental musicians as influences, including Björk, M.I.A, Liars, Modeselektor and Spank Rock.[327][328]

Themes and lyrics

[edit]

Yorke is Radiohead's lyricist.[7] Though his early lyrics were personal, from Kid A on, he experimented with cutting up words and phrases and assembling them at random.[329] He does not write biographically, saying he instead writes "spasmodic" lyrics based on imagery and taken from external sources such as television.[330][331] He deliberately uses cliches, idioms and other common expressions,[332] suggesting "a mind consumed by meaningless data".[333] The New Republic writer Ryan Kearney speculated that Yorke's use of common expressions, which he described as "Radioheadisms", was an attempt "to sap our common tongue of meaning and expose the vapidity of everyday discourse".[332]

According to Yorke, many of his lyrics are motivated by anger, expressing his political and environmental concerns[334] and written as "a constant response to doublethink".[335] The GQ critic Josiah Gogarty wrote of "the uncharitable caricature that's sometimes fixed to [Radiohead's] music – Thom Yorke warbling vaguely political sentiments over fiddly drum patterns and melodies", which he argued began with Hail to the Thief and its references to the war on terror.[336] Pitchfork wrote that Yorke's lyrics on A Moon Shaped Pool were less cynical, conveying wonder and amazement.[333]

Legacy and influence

[edit]

Radiohead are cited as one of the foremost rock bands of the 21st century.[337][338][339][340] By 2011, Radiohead had sold more than 30 million albums.[341] Their 90s albums The Bends and OK Computer influenced a generation of British acts,[342] including Coldplay, Keane, James Blunt and Travis.[343] [nb 2] Radiohead's experimental approach is credited with expanding alternative rock.[344][345]

According to the AllMusic journalist Stephen Thomas Erlewine, in the early 21st century, Radiohead became "a touchstone for everything that is fearless and adventurous in rock", succeeding David Bowie, Pink Floyd and Talking Heads.[344] In 2001, Johnny Marr, the guitarist for one of Radiohead's early influences, the Smiths, said that Radiohead was the act that had "come closest to the genuine influence of the Smiths".[346]

In 2003, the Village Voice critic Robert Christgau wrote that Radiohead were "the only youngish band standing that combines critical consensus with the ability to fill a venue larger than the Hammerstein Ballroom".[347] Gavin Haynes of NME described Radiohead in 2014 as "our generation's Beatles".[337] In 2020, the academic Daphne Brooks described Radiohead as "the blackest white rock band to emerge over the past 30 years", citing their black jazz influences, influence on black artists, and their "introspective other worlds", which parallel the work of radical black artists.[348]

Industry

[edit]

Kid A is credited for pioneering the use of the internet to stream and promote music.[349][350] The pay-what-you-want release for In Rainbows is credited as a major step for music distribution.[351][114][112] Forbes wrote that it "helped forge the template for unconventional album releases in the internet age", ahead of artists such as Beyoncé and Drake.[350] Speaking at Radiohead's induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2019, the Talking Heads singer David Byrne, an early influence on Radiohead, praised their musical and release innovations, which he said had influenced the entire music industry.[227]

Accolades

[edit]

Radiohead's work places highly in both listener polls and critics' lists of the best music of the 1990s and 2000s.[352] In a 2004 list composed by 55 musicians, writers and industry executives, Rolling Stone named Radiohead 73rd-greatest artist of all time.[353] They have been listed among the greatest bands of all time by Spin (15th)[354] and among the greatest artists by VH1 (29th).[355] They were also named the third-best British band in history by Harry Fletcher of the Evening Standard.[356]

Radiohead are the most nominated act for the Mercury Prize, with five nominated albums. They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2019.[226] In 2009, Rolling Stone readers voted Radiohead the second-best artist of the 2000s, behind Green Day.[357] In 2021, Pitchfork readers voted OK Computer, Kid A and In Rainbows among the ten greatest albums of the preceding 25 years.[358] Jonny Greenwood and O'Brien were both included in Rolling Stone's lists of the best guitarists[359][360] and Yorke in its lists of the greatest singers.[361][362]

Collaborators

[edit]
"Modified bear" logo by Yorke and Stanley Donwood

Nigel Godrich first worked with Radiohead as an audio engineer on their second album, The Bends. He has produced all their studio albums since their third album, OK Computer.[34] Godrich has been dubbed the band's "sixth member", an allusion to George Martin being called the "Fifth Beatle".[34] In 2016, Godrich said: "I can only ever have one band like Radiohead who I've worked with for this many years. That's a very deep and profound relationship. The Beatles could only have ever had one George Martin; they couldn't have switched producers halfway through their career. All that work, trust, and knowledge of each other would have been thrown out of the window and they'd have to start again."[363]

Godrich also plays Chieftain Mews, a character who first appeared in The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time and has since appeared in Radiohead's promotional material.[364] The journalist Mac Randall described Mews as "a 21st-century Max Headroom" who "intones non-sequiturs".[21] Yorke credited the filmmaker Chris Bran for his creation.[365]

The graphic artist Stanley Donwood met Yorke when they were art students. Together, they have produced all of Radiohead's album covers and visual artwork since 1994.[16] Donwood works in the studio with the band as they record, allowing the music to influence the artwork.[366] He and Yorke won a Grammy in 2002 for the special edition of Amnesiac, packaged as a library book.[16]

Since Radiohead's formation, Andi Watson has been their lighting and stage director, designing the visuals of their live concerts.[367] Peter "Plank" Clements has worked with Radiohead since before The Bends, overseeing the technical management of studio recordings and live performances.[6] Jim Warren has been Radiohead's live sound engineer since their first tour in 1992, and recorded early tracks including "High and Dry" and "Pop Is Dead".[368] Radiohead enlisted the drummer Clive Deamer to help perform the complex rhythms of The King of Limbs for live performances; he also joined them for the Moon Shaped Pool tour.[167][201][211] On Radiohead's 2025 tour, Deamer was replaced by Chris Vatalaro.[271] Paul Thomas Anderson has directed several music videos for Yorke and Radiohead, and has collaborated with Jonny Greenwood on several film scores and the 2015 documentary Junun.[369]

Business and song catalogue

[edit]

Radiohead are managed by Chris Hufford and Bryce Edge of Courtyard Management, which also manages Faithless, Supergrass and Kate Nash.[370][371] They recorded their first six albums under contract with Parlophone, a subsidiary of EMI.[372] The contract ended with the release of Hail to the Thief in 2003. They did not renew the contract for their next album, In Rainbows (2007), as EMI would not give them control over their back catalogue and they did not trust the new owner, Guy Hands.[109][110][373] Radiohead have self-released their subsequent work, with retail editions released by XL Recordings.[189]

In September 2012, EMI was bought by Universal Music. The European Commission approved the deal on the condition that Universal Music divest Parlophone, which controlled the Radiohead records.[374] In February 2013, Parlophone was bought by Warner Music Group (WMG).[375] As a condition of the purchase, WMG made an agreement with the Merlin Network and the trade group Impala to divest 30% of the Parlophone catalogues to independent labels, with artist approval.[189] In April 2016, WMG transferred Radiohead's back catalogue to XL.[189] The Best Of and the reissues released by EMI in 2008 without Radiohead's approval were removed from streaming services.[189][376] In October 2015, Radiohead sued Parlophone for deductions made from downloads of their back catalogue.[377]

In 1993, Radiohead created a limited company, Radiohead Ltd, to handle income from tours. It had a revenue of £735,765 after the release of The Bends (1995), £2.1m after OK Computer (1997) and almost £8m following Hail to the Thief (2003).[378] In May 1996, Radiohead established Waste Products Ltd. to produce and sell merchandise.[378] The band members also own half of Sandbag Limited, created in 2002 as a sister company of Waste, which handles direct-to-customer sales of albums, merchandise and other goods for Radiohead and other acts.[379] Starting with In Rainbows, Radiohead have created limited companies or limited liability partnerships for their releases, minimising risk in the event of commercial failure, lawsuits or touring accidents.[379][378]

Band members

[edit]

Touring musicians

[edit]
  • Clive Deamer – drums, percussion (2011–2018)
  • Chris Vatalaro – drums, percussion (2025)

Discography

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Radiohead are an English rock band formed in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, in the mid-1980s by schoolmates from Abingdon School, initially convening weekly before adopting the name On a Friday in 1987 and signing with EMI in 1991, which prompted the name change to Radiohead.[1][2] The lineup comprises Thom Yorke (lead vocals, guitar, piano, keyboards), Jonny Greenwood (lead guitar, keyboards, orchestral arrangements), Colin Greenwood (bass), Ed O'Brien (guitar, backing vocals), and Philip Selway (drums).[2] Over their career, the band has released nine studio albums, evolving from alternative rock on early releases like Pablo Honey (1993) and The Bends (1995) to experimental electronica and avant-garde styles on later works such as Kid A (2000) and A Moon Shaped Pool (2016).[3] Their third album, OK Computer (1997), marked a commercial and critical breakthrough, selling millions worldwide and establishing their reputation for conceptually dense, technologically inflected songwriting that critiques modern alienation.[4] Subsequent releases like Kid A, which won the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album in 2001, demonstrated their willingness to subvert expectations by largely abandoning traditional rock instrumentation for electronic and jazz elements, yet maintaining strong sales and acclaim.[5] Radiohead's 2007 album In Rainbows pioneered a pay-what-you-want digital release model, generating substantial revenue—estimated at three million copies equivalent in its first year—while challenging conventional music distribution amid industry decline.[6] By the early 2010s, the band had sold over 30 million albums globally, earning multiple Grammy Awards including for In Rainbows as Best Alternative Music Album in 2009, alongside consistent critical recognition for innovation despite limited mainstream radio play.[7]

History

1985–1992: Formation as On a Friday and early demos

Radiohead originated as the band On a Friday, formed in 1985 by students at Abingdon School, an independent boys' boarding school in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England.[8] The founding members were Thom Yorke on vocals and guitar, Colin Greenwood on bass guitar, Ed O'Brien on guitar, and Philip Selway on drums; these four had met during their time at the school.[9] The band's name derived from their regular rehearsal day in the school's music room, which was Fridays—the only weekday available after classes.[10] Jonny Greenwood, Colin's younger brother and a junior student at Abingdon, joined in 1987 as the final core member, initially playing harmonica and keyboards before taking up lead guitar.[11] Prior to his full integration, the group occasionally included saxophone player Rasmus "Raz" Peterson. On a Friday began performing at local venues in the Oxford area and recorded their first demo tape in 1986 at Abingdon School, featuring tracks such as "Fragile Friend," "Mr. Celibate," "Stonefaced," "Sweet Justice," and "Fat Girl."[12] Subsequent demos followed, including a 1987–1988 tape with unreleased songs and the late 1991 Manic Hedgehog demo, recorded at Courtyard Studios and named after an Oxford record shop.[13][14] The Manic Hedgehog demo attracted attention when bassist Colin Greenwood encountered an EMI talent scout, leading to a six-album recording contract with the label in 1991.[10] Upon signing, the band renamed themselves Radiohead, inspired by the Talking Heads song "Radio Head" from their 1986 album True Stories, to avoid conflicts with another act named Friday.[9] This period marked the transition from school-based rehearsals and amateur demos to professional prospects, though the group had previously declined an earlier record deal offer.[15]

1992–1994: Pablo Honey, "Creep" breakthrough, and initial commercial stir

Radiohead's debut single, "Creep", was released on 21 September 1992 by Parlophone, marking their first output under the new band name after signing with EMI in 1991.[16] Initially, the track failed to chart significantly in the UK, receiving limited radio play and selling modestly despite its raw grunge-influenced sound featuring Thom Yorke's anguished vocals and a dynamic quiet-loud structure.[17] The song's breakthrough occurred with its re-release in April 1993, coinciding with mounting college radio airplay in the US and Israel, where it topped charts and gained traction through live performances.[18] "Creep" ultimately peaked at number 7 on the UK Singles Chart, number 34 on the US Billboard Hot 100, and achieved top positions in countries including New Zealand and Norway, propelling Radiohead from obscurity to international attention.[18] Recording for the band's debut album, Pablo Honey, took place in September and November 1992 at Chipping Norton Recording Studios and Courtyard Studio in Oxfordshire, England, under producers Paul Q. Kolderie and Sean Slade, who emphasized a polished alternative rock sound drawing from influences like Pixies and R.E.M.[19] The 12-track album, featuring "Creep" as its second single, was released on 22 February 1993 in the UK via Parlophone and on 20 April 1993 in the US through Capitol Records.[20] Pablo Honey debuted at number 22 on the UK Albums Chart, where it remained for 114 weeks, reflecting sustained sales driven by "Creep"'s momentum; by 1995, it had sold over 1 million copies in the US alone, earning gold certification, and accumulated approximately 1.97 million units worldwide.[21][22] In the US, the album reached number 32 on the Billboard 200, bolstered by touring slots opening for acts like PJ Harvey and the Pixies.[23] The period saw Radiohead undertake extensive touring, including UK headline shows in 1992 at venues like the University of Sheffield and Peterborough Arena, followed by North American and European dates in 1993–1994 to capitalize on "Creep"'s viral spread via MTV and alternative radio.[24] This initial commercial stir established the band as a grunge-era contender, though Pablo Honey received mixed reviews for its derivative style, with critics noting its formulaic tracks beyond "Creep" while acknowledging the standout single's raw emotional punch.[17] Sales figures and chart longevity underscored a breakthrough from indie demos to major-label viability, setting the stage for broader recognition despite the band's later ambivalence toward their debut hit.[22][16]

1994–1996: The Bends, touring expansion, and critical consolidation

Radiohead began recording their second album, The Bends, in early 1994, following dissatisfaction with the grunge-influenced sound of Pablo Honey and a desire to showcase deeper songwriting. Sessions took place at Canned Applause Studios in Oxfordshire and RAK Studios in London, with producer John Leckie emphasizing layered guitars and dynamic arrangements to differentiate from contemporaries. The album marked the first significant involvement of engineer Nigel Godrich, who later became a longtime collaborator.[25][26] The Bends was released on 13 March 1995 by Parlophone in the UK and Capitol in the US, featuring 12 tracks including "My Iron Lung," "High and Dry," "Fake Plastic Trees," and "Just." It peaked at No. 6 on the UK Albums Chart but reached only No. 88 on the Billboard 200, reflecting slower US commercial uptake despite radio play for singles like "Fake Plastic Trees." The preceding "My Iron Lung" EP, released in September 1994, charted at No. 24 in the UK and signaled the band's intent to transcend their "Creep" association through introspective lyrics on fame and isolation. Subsequent singles "High and Dry" (May 1995, No. 78 UK), "Fake Plastic Trees" (September 1995, No. 20 UK), and "Just" (October 1995, No. 74 UK) received moderate airplay but no major hits, underscoring a shift toward artistic substance over pop accessibility.[25] Touring expanded significantly from the Pablo Honey era's club-focused runs, with Radiohead performing over 170 shows in 1995 alone across North America, Europe, and Asia, often headlining mid-sized venues and supporting acts like R.E.M. on their Monster tour. Key dates included US legs in spring and fall 1995 (e.g., Ogden Theatre, Denver on 5 October) and European festivals, building audience rapport through extended sets blending old and new material. By 1996, they continued with club and theater dates, such as Chicago's Metro in April, honing a live sound that amplified the album's textural guitars and Thom Yorke's emotive vocals, which drew growing crowds amid rising word-of-mouth. This period marked a transition from opening-act status to co-headlining viability, with setlists increasingly favoring The Bends tracks to redefine their image.[27][28] Critically, The Bends consolidated Radiohead's reputation beyond a novelty act, earning praise for its melodic sophistication and avoidance of Britpop clichés, in contrast to Pablo Honey's derivative grunge leanings. Reviewers highlighted its "sonically ambitious" guitar interplay and thematic maturity, positioning it as a "jumping-off point" for the band's evolution, though initial sales lagged behind hype. While not an immediate blockbuster, the album's reception elevated the band from one-hit wonder perceptions, fostering sustained media interest that foreshadowed OK Computer's breakthrough.[25][29]

1997–1998: OK Computer, mainstream acclaim, and cultural phenomenon status

Radiohead released their third studio album, OK Computer, on 21 May 1997 via Parlophone in the United Kingdom and Capitol Records in the United States.[30] Produced by Nigel Godrich, the album featured a shift toward layered electronic and orchestral elements blended with rock instrumentation, addressing themes of alienation, technology, and modern disconnection.[31] It debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart on 28 June 1997 and peaked at number 21 on the US Billboard 200.[32] By 2025, OK Computer had sold approximately 5.7 million copies worldwide, including 2 million in the US (certified double platinum by the RIAA) and 1.6 million in the UK (certified five times platinum by the BPI).[33][34] The album garnered widespread critical acclaim in 1997, with reviewers praising its ambitious song structures, Thom Yorke's emotive vocals, and the band's experimental production.[31] Publications highlighted tracks like "Paranoid Android"—a six-minute prog-influenced single released on 26 May 1997 that reached number three on the UK Singles Chart—and "Karma Police," which became radio staples.[30] Spin magazine named Radiohead its Band of the Year for 1997, crediting OK Computer for elevating the group beyond alternative rock conventions.[35] In 1998, Q magazine's reader poll voted it the greatest album of all time, reflecting its rapid elevation in critical esteem.[36] OK Computer emerged as a cultural phenomenon, capturing millennial anxieties about technological dehumanization and corporate overreach at the dawn of the internet age.[37] Its dystopian lyricism and sonic density influenced subsequent alternative and indie acts, signaling a pivot away from Britpop's guitar-driven optimism toward introspective electronica.[38] The band supported the release with the OK Computer Tour, spanning May 1997 to April 1998, including headline slots at major European festivals and extensive North American dates, such as performances at Philadelphia's Electric Factory in August 1997.[39] This grueling schedule, involving over 90 shows, amplified the album's reach but contributed to band exhaustion, as later reflected in Yorke's accounts of tour-induced stress.[40]

1999–2001: Electronic shift with Kid A and Amnesiac

Following the critical and commercial success of OK Computer, Radiohead's members, particularly frontman Thom Yorke, expressed exhaustion from extensive touring and the pressure to replicate their guitar-driven sound, prompting a deliberate pivot away from traditional rock structures.[41] This led to exploratory sessions starting in January 1999 at Studio Guillaume Tell in Paris with longtime producer Nigel Godrich, where the band de-emphasized live band performances in favor of sampling, looping, and electronic manipulation.[41] Sessions continued across locations including Medley Studios in Copenhagen and Batsford House in Gloucestershire, concluding in April 2000 after approximately 15 months of intermittent work, yielding enough material for two albums.[41] The resulting Kid A, released on October 2, 2000, by Parlophone Records, represented a stark electronic shift, incorporating ambient textures, glitchy beats, and influences from IDM artists via tools like software sampling for tracks such as "Idioteque," which drew from electronic dance rhythms without conventional promotion—no singles were issued, and previews were limited to anonymous web leaks and Mediterranean tour performances of unfinished songs in mid-2000.[41][42] Yorke described the album's creation as a reaction against rock expectations, prioritizing abstract, machine-like sounds over lyrical clarity or guitar solos, with Jonny Greenwood integrating modular synthesizers and Ondes Martenot for orchestral unease.[41] Commercially, it debuted at number one on both the UK Albums Chart and Billboard 200, selling over 1.7 million copies in the US by 2001 despite initial fan division over its departure from OK Computer's anthemic style.[43] Critics offered polarized responses: Pitchfork awarded it a perfect 10/10, praising its "emotional, psychological" innovation akin to a "clouded brain recalling an alien abduction," while some outlets decried it as an esoteric betrayal of rock accessibility.[44][41] Amnesiac, drawn from the same sessions and released June 5, 2001, extended this experimentation with jazz-inflected pieces like "Pyramid Song" and krautrock pulses in "Knives Out," the latter promoted as a single with a video.[41] It also topped charts in the UK and reached number two in the US, with sales exceeding 800,000 copies domestically in its first year, though reception remained divided—some viewed it as a fragmented sequel lacking Kid A's cohesion, yet it reinforced Radiohead's pivot toward electronic abstraction.[43]

2003–2006: Hail to the Thief, political context, and band fatigue

Radiohead recorded their sixth studio album, Hail to the Thief, from September 2002 to February 2003 at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood, California, and Canned Applause studios in Didcot, Oxfordshire, with longtime producer Nigel Godrich. The band faced significant internal tensions during the process, with members reporting massive arguments over the direction and structure of the material, which initially yielded a sprawling double album before being edited down to a single disc of 14 tracks. Released on 9 June 2003 by Parlophone in the UK and Capitol in the US, the album debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart and number three on the US Billboard 200, eventually selling over 2.5 million copies worldwide.[45][18][46] The album's title, Hail to the Thief (The Gloaming)—shortened to Hail to the Thief for release—drew inspiration from the disputed 2000 US presidential election outcome and the traditional presidential anthem "Hail to the Chief," reflecting lead singer Thom Yorke's critique of the George W. Bush administration. Yorke described the record as infused with political agitation, addressing themes of paranoia, power, and the impending Iraq War, though he emphasized it was not solely a protest album but a broader expression of dystopian unease. Songs like "2 + 2 = 5" and "There There" incorporated layered electronics and rock elements, echoing the experimental shift from Kid A and Amnesiac while returning to guitar-driven structures, amid Yorke's lyrics evoking authoritarian overreach and environmental decay.[47][48] Following the release, Radiohead embarked on an extensive world tour from mid-2003 to late 2004, performing over 100 shows across North America, Europe, Japan, and Australia, including headline slots at festivals like Coachella and Glastonbury. The demanding schedule, coupled with the physical and creative toll of promoting a politically charged record during a polarized global climate, exacerbated band fatigue; Yorke later cited the exhaustion from relentless touring and interpersonal strains as key factors prompting a prolonged hiatus after the final dates in November 2004. This period of burnout led to individual solo pursuits, with the group not reconvening for new material until 2006, marking a temporary retreat from collective endeavors to recharge amid growing disillusionment with the music industry's expectations.[49][50][51]

2007–2009: In Rainbows self-release, pay-what-you-want experiment, and EMI split

Radiohead's contract with EMI expired following the 2003 release of Hail to the Thief, allowing the band to negotiate independently for future projects.[52] Negotiations for a new EMI deal collapsed in 2007 due to financial disputes, with the band reportedly seeking a £10 million advance that EMI's new owner, Guy Hands, deemed excessive and unwilling to subsidize at the expense of other artists.[53] [54] Band members attributed the split to personal disagreements with EMI's revamped management rather than broader ideological conflicts over digital distribution.[55] [56] Opting for self-management, Radiohead announced In Rainbows on October 1, 2007, and released it digitally on October 10 via their website, employing a pay-what-you-want model where users could enter any amount, including zero, for the download.[57] This approach bypassed traditional label intermediation, enabling direct fan engagement and retaining full revenue control after costs.[58] The experiment yielded approximately $3 million from website digital sales alone, with publisher Warner Chappell reporting earnings exceeding the total from Hail to the Thief prior to any physical release.[59] [58] While exact average payments varied—often cited around £4 per download, though many opted for free—the strategy generated buzz and sustained catalog sales, demonstrating viability for established acts in a piracy-era market.[60] Physical editions followed, with a "disk 2" bonus tracks package mailed to pre-order "From the Basement" fans on December 3, 2007, and standard CD releases in early December internationally via self-distribution or partners like XL Recordings, while the U.S. retail version launched January 1, 2008, through TBD/ATO Records.[61] [62] The self-release model, coupled with the EMI departure, marked Radiohead's shift toward autonomy, influencing subsequent digital strategies and affirming touring as a primary revenue pillar, with In Rainbows-era shows contributing significantly to finances amid the 2008-2009 economic downturn.[63]

2011–2012: The King of Limbs and digital-first approach

Radiohead self-released their eighth studio album, The King of Limbs, as a digital download on 18 February 2011, one day ahead of the originally announced date of 19 February.[64][65] The announcement came on 14 February via the band's website, offering the MP3 version for £6 or $9 and a higher-quality WAV edition for £9 or $14, emphasizing a fixed-price digital model distinct from the pay-what-you-want approach of their prior album In Rainbows.[66][67] Physical formats followed, with CD and standard vinyl editions available from 28 March in the UK and 29 March internationally, alongside a deluxe "newspaper album" package priced at £30 featuring artwork, lyrics, and additional content.[68] The album's production, overseen by longtime collaborator Nigel Godrich, originated from sessions initially intended as a brief experiment but extended over six months, incorporating looped drum patterns, electronic manipulation, and live instrumentation recorded at the band's Oxfordshire studio.[69] This digital-first strategy aimed to prioritize immediate fan access and control over distribution, leveraging surprise announcements via social media to generate buzz and minimize leaks, redefining artist-fan dynamics in an era of rapid online dissemination.[70][71] In December 2011, Radiohead recorded a full performance of The King of Limbs for the From the Basement series at BBC's Maida Vale Studios, adapting the album's studio-heavy electronic elements to a live band setup with expanded arrangements.[72] The resulting live video and audio release, issued in early 2012, showcased rearranged tracks like extended versions of "Bloom" and "Feral," highlighting the band's ability to evolve material beyond the original recording.[73] This period marked Radiohead's continued independence post-EMI, with touring in 2012 supporting the album, including dates in North America that drew on the live interpretations developed in the From the Basement session.[74]

2013–2016: Extended hiatus, solo endeavors, and A Moon Shaped Pool

Following the 2012 tour supporting The King of Limbs, Radiohead entered an extended hiatus from collective activities, allowing members to explore solo pursuits over the next several years.[75] Thom Yorke led the supergroup Atoms for Peace—featuring Flea, Mauro Refosco, and producer Nigel Godrich—on a world tour in 2013 to promote their debut album Amok, with dates including U.S. stops in September and October, as well as festival appearances.[76][77] Jonny Greenwood composed film scores during this period, including the soundtrack for Paul Thomas Anderson's Inherent Vice, released in December 2014.[78] Phil Selway issued his second solo album, Weatherhouse, on October 7, 2014, via Bella Union, featuring tracks like "Coming Up for Air."[79][80] Ed O'Brien and Colin Greenwood maintained lower profiles, with O'Brien beginning preliminary work on future solo material and occasional production contributions.[81] Radiohead intermittently developed new material starting after the King of Limbs tour, with principal recording sessions occurring in 2014 and 2015 at locations including RAK Studios in London, their Oxford facility, and La Fabrique studio in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France.[82] The sessions, overseen by longtime producer Nigel Godrich, were described by band members as "difficult" and "fragile," incorporating older compositions like "True Love Waits" alongside fresh orchestral elements arranged by Greenwood.[83][84] A Moon Shaped Pool, the band's ninth studio album, launched as a surprise digital release on May 8, 2016, through their website, bundled streaming services, and platforms like Apple Music, accompanied by animated videos for lead singles "Burn the Witch" and "Daydreaming."[85] The physical edition followed on June 17, 2016, distributed by XL Recordings.[86] A supporting tour commenced that month, featuring performances such as the second show at Le Zénith in Paris on May 24.[87]

2017–2025: Archival reissues, side projects, The Smile, and 2025 reunion tour

In June 2017, Radiohead issued OK Computer OKNOTOK 1997–2017, a deluxe 20th-anniversary edition of their 1997 album featuring the remastered original tracks, three previously unreleased songs ("Man of War", "Big Boots", and "Lift"), B-sides, and additional archival material including videos and photographs.[88] The release topped charts in multiple countries and was praised for unveiling material from the original sessions, though some critics noted it did not substantially alter the album's established legacy.[89] The band maintained a low profile as a unit, with members turning to individual and collaborative endeavors. In November 2021, they released Kid A Mnesia, a combined reissue of Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001) that incorporated bonus tracks, alternate mixes, and footage from the era, marking the 21st anniversary of the former.[90] In August 2025, Radiohead issued Hail to the Thief: Live Recordings 2003–2009, a compilation of live performances from the 2003 album's tour and later dates, covering nearly all tracks from the record and described by the band as a "very cathartic" archival effort.[91] These reissues preserved and expanded access to the band's catalog without new studio material under the Radiohead name. Prominent among side projects was The Smile, formed in 2021 by vocalist Thom Yorke and multi-instrumentalist Jonny Greenwood with drummer Tom Skinner (formerly of Sons of Kemet).[92] The trio debuted with live streams in January 2022, emphasizing improvisational rock with jazz influences, and released their debut album A Light for Attracting Attention in May 2022, produced by Radiohead's longtime collaborator Nigel Godrich.[93] Follow-up Wall of Eyes arrived in January 2024, followed by the surprise third album Cutouts in October 2024, solidifying the project as an outlet for Yorke and Greenwood's experimental tendencies outside Radiohead's structure.[92] Other members engaged in varied pursuits: bassist Colin Greenwood toured with Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, while drummer Philip Selway and guitarist Ed O'Brien continued solo recordings and collaborations.[94] Speculation of a full-band return intensified in March 2025 when the members registered a new limited liability partnership named RHEUK2025, echoing past entities formed ahead of activity.[95] On September 3, 2025, Radiohead announced their first tour in seven years, comprising 20 arena dates across Europe from November to December, including four-night residencies in Madrid (November 4–18 at Movistar Arena, shared with Bologna at Unipol Arena), London, Copenhagen, and Berlin.[96][97] Tickets were distributed via fan registration on the band's official site, with the shows positioned as a selective comeback following the recent live archival release.[98]

Artistry

Influences and stylistic roots

Radiohead's stylistic roots emerged from the alternative rock and college rock scenes of the 1980s and early 1990s, with the band's formation in 1985 at Abingdon School reflecting influences from acts like R.E.M. and Pixies.[99] Thom Yorke has credited R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe's embrace of personal flaws and unconventional expression as formative during his adolescence, shaping Radiohead's early lyrical vulnerability.[100] Similarly, Yorke described the Pixies' album Doolittle (1989) as life-changing, particularly their dynamic shifts between quiet verses and explosive choruses, which informed the structure of "Creep" from Pablo Honey (1993).[100] Additional early rock influences included Pink Floyd and Queen, contributing to the melodic and atmospheric guitar work on Pablo Honey, as well as Joy Division, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Elvis Costello's indie sensibilities.[99] By The Bends (1995), these roots expanded to incorporate shoegaze and noise rock elements from My Bloody Valentine, Sonic Youth, and further Pixies guitar experimentation, alongside Beatles-inspired songcraft and Phil Spector's wall-of-sound production techniques.[99] Lead guitarist Jonny Greenwood, the band's only formally trained musician, introduced classical and avant-garde roots through composers like Olivier Messiaen and Krzysztof Penderecki, influencing orchestral textures as early as OK Computer (1997).[101] Yorke drew from Neil Young's authentic, unfiltered songwriting approach, emphasizing raw emotional delivery over polished perfection.[100] These foundations later intertwined with krautrock from Can and Neu!, whose repetitive rhythms and experimental structures underpinned the band's shift toward abstraction.[99] Electronic influences, notably Aphex Twin, liberated Yorke from guitar-centric limitations, fostering the ambient and IDM elements that redefined Radiohead's sound from OK Computer onward.[100] Jazz roots, particularly Miles Davis's Bitches Brew (1970), provided chaotic, improvisational atmospheres for tracks like "Subterranean Homesick Alien," while Charles Mingus's rhythmic complexity echoed in "Pyramid Song."[102][99] These diverse strands—rooted in rock's immediacy but branching into experimental forms—established Radiohead's hybrid style, prioritizing textural innovation over genre conventions.[102]

Evolution of musical style and experimentation

Radiohead's musical style originated in the guitar-driven alternative rock of their debut album Pablo Honey (1993) and follow-up The Bends (1995), characterized by distorted electric guitars, dynamic rhythms, and song structures rooted in 1990s Britpop and grunge influences such as Pink Floyd, R.E.M., and Sonic Youth.[99] These works emphasized Thom Yorke's emotive vocals over layered guitar textures and conventional verse-chorus forms, with early rhythmic experiments like mixed meters (e.g., shifts from 6/8 to 5/8 in tracks such as "You") and unusual chord progressions (I–vi–VI–III–VI), such as the complex chromatic harmony in "Just", which is in C major with no sharps or flats, featuring a repeated intro progression of C–Eb–D–F, verse progressions like Am–Ab–Eb–F and Am–Ab–Eb–Bb with borrowed chords from parallel modes, and non-diatonic chords including G, F#, and C in other sections to create tension.[103][104] The release of OK Computer on 21 May 1997 introduced greater experimentation, blending rock foundations with avant-garde elements including orchestral swells, vocal manipulation, and sampling inspired by Miles Davis's Bitches Brew, composer Krzysztof Penderecki, krautrock band Can, and DJ Shadow.[99] Guitarist Jonny Greenwood began incorporating the ondes Martenot—an early 20th-century electronic instrument known for its theremin-like wavering tones—during the album's tour, drawing from Olivier Messiaen's classical usage to add eerie, sliding pitches to tracks like "Climbing Up the Walls."[105] This period expanded rhythmic complexity with displaced accents and polytempo layering, moving toward abstract soundscapes while retaining melodic accessibility.[103] A pivotal shift occurred with Kid A (2 October 2000), where Radiohead largely abandoned guitar-rock conventions in favor of electronic and ambient textures, influenced by IDM artists like Aphex Twin and Autechre, free jazz from Charles Mingus and Alice Coltrane, and krautrock's motorik beats from Neu! and Can.[99][106] Production techniques emphasized minimalist rhythms, live sampling, and software manipulation to deconstruct traditional band roles, resulting in tracks like "Everything in Its Right Place" built around vocoder effects and modular synths rather than riffs; the album featured no guitar solos and prioritized atmospheric drones over verse-chorus resolution.[107] Amnesiac (21 June 2001), recorded concurrently, extended this with jazz improvisation and harp accents, further exploring unconventional pop formats.[99] Subsequent albums hybridized these elements: Hail to the Thief (9 June 2003) reintegrated rock aggression with glitchy electronics akin to Liars and Modeselektor, using polytempo and syncopation amid politically charged rhythms.[99][103] In Rainbows (10 October 2007 from digital release) reverted to organic, live-band recording—deriving from extended tour jams—but retained experimentation through acoustic layering and arpeggiated motifs, as in "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" with its descending patterns and displaced accents.[103] The King of Limbs (18 February 2011) delved into loop-based construction via Max/MSP software, drum sampling, and dub influences from Burial and King Tubby, creating polyrhythmic densities through overlaid percussion and nature-field recordings rather than linear composition.[99][108] A Moon Shaped Pool (8 May 2016) incorporated jazz syncopation, string arrangements, and multi-tempo piano (e.g., "Daydreaming"), synthesizing prior electronic abstraction with acoustic intimacy and minimal distortion.[103] Throughout, Radiohead's experimentation prioritized rhythmic innovation—syncopation, triplets, and mixed meters—over melodic predictability, often via Greenwood's multi-instrumentalism (guitars to modular synths and ondes Martenot) and collaborative studio processes that blurred live and digital boundaries, enabling continual reinvention without stylistic stagnation.[103][105]

Songwriting process and collaboration dynamics

Radiohead's songwriting typically begins with Thom Yorke developing lyrics and initial melodies, often derived from personal notebooks or guitar sketches, before presenting demos to the band for collective refinement.[109] Yorke has described this initial phase as instinctive and unpolished, likening it to a "defecatory" process in a 1996 interview, emphasizing rapid ideation over premeditated structure.[110] The full band then contributes through jamming sessions, where instrumentalists like Jonny Greenwood layer arrangements, including unconventional orchestration and electronic elements, transforming skeletal ideas into complex compositions.[111] Collaboration dynamics center on a democratic yet specialized division, with Yorke anchoring vocals and thematic core while Greenwood, the band's primary arranger, integrates classical influences and experimental textures—such as the melody for "How to Disappear Completely" on Kid A (2000)—to elevate tracks beyond rock conventions.[112] Bassist Colin Greenwood and drummer Philip Selway provide rhythmic foundations, with Selway's polyrhythms and Greenwood's bass lines occasionally seeding songs like "Airbag" from OK Computer (1997), credited jointly to Yorke and Colin.[113] Guitarist Ed O'Brien focuses on atmospheric effects and grooves, ensuring sonic depth, though the group credits most material collectively since their debut, reflecting shared ownership despite Yorke's dominant lyrical role.[114] The process evolved toward greater improvisation post-In Rainbows (2007), influenced by observing Flying Lotus's live looping during Radiohead's 2010 tour; Yorke adopted this by sending raw fragments to producer Nigel Godrich for sample-based loops, over which the band improvised, yielding the loop-heavy structures of The King of Limbs (2011).[115] Long-term familiarity fosters intuitive interplay—Yorke noted in 2019 a "telepathic" band rapport after decades together—but requires deliberate disruption of habits to sustain innovation, as stagnation risks inauthenticity detectable by audiences.[116] This balance of individual inception and group alchemy underscores Radiohead's avoidance of formulaic repetition, prioritizing emergent causality in musical form over rigid authorship.

Lyrics, themes, and philosophical underpinnings

Radiohead's lyrics, primarily written by vocalist Thom Yorke, employ an abstract, non-linear style that prioritizes evocative fragments over straightforward storytelling, often described by Yorke himself as "shattered bits of mirror" capturing disjointed perceptions of reality.[117] This impressionistic approach, evident from the band's debut Pablo Honey (1993) through later works, resists fixed interpretations, allowing listeners to project personal meanings onto themes of disconnection and unease. Yorke has emphasized that lyrics should function as "windows opening" rather than closing off understanding, fostering ambiguity to mirror life's complexities.[116] Early lyrics center on personal alienation and social outsider status, as in "Creep" from Pablo Honey, which Yorke rooted in feelings of inadequacy and unrequited desire. This evolved into broader societal critiques on The Bends (1995) and peaked with OK Computer (1997), where themes of technological dehumanization, information overload, and existential impotence dominate; Yorke framed the album as exploring disconnection amid rampant media and corporate influence, with songs like "Paranoid Android" drawing from encounters with societal "demons" and "Karma Police" reflecting scrutiny-induced stress.[118] Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001) internalized these motifs, addressing mental fragmentation and detachment—exemplified by "How to Disappear Completely," inspired by Yorke's tour-related breakdowns and a chant-like mantra of denial.[118][117] Later albums incorporate political and environmental dimensions, such as resistance to surveillance and mind control in Hail to the Thief (2003), influenced by George Orwell's 1984 and post-9/11 anxieties, or apocalyptic warnings in "Idioteque" from Kid A, blending sampled chaos with fears of societal collapse.[118] Yorke's evolving process discards overly resolved phrases, favoring raw emotional states that span personal anxiety to critiques of government and consumerism.[116] Philosophically, the lyrics underpin a realist confrontation with modernity's causal disorientations—technology's erosion of agency, the absurdity of overloaded existence, and the tension between individual fragility and collective resilience—without dogmatic resolution. Yorke positions music as a reparative force for empathy and rebellion against commodification, yet cautions its limits in an era of political theater, where art's connective power stems from shared, unscripted experiences rather than prescriptive ideology.[116] Tracks like "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" from The Bends evoke unrelenting fatalism, which Yorke linked to literary influences evoking inescapable confrontation with despair.[118] This underscores a causal view of human vulnerability amid systemic pressures, prioritizing unflinching observation over consolation.

Production techniques and instrumentation

Radiohead's production techniques, primarily shaped by engineer Nigel Godrich since their 1995 single "Black Star," emphasize spatial depth through meticulous arrangement, panning, and selective use of reverb and delay effects, often prioritizing instrumental clarity over heavy processing.[119] Vocals receive minimal intervention, typically limited to plate reverb or short delays to preserve natural timbre, while compression and tape delay are deployed for textural enhancement rather than dominance.[120] High- and low-pass filtering is routinely applied to instruments to avoid frequency clutter, enabling dense layers to coexist without muddiness, as evident in the wide stereo imaging of guitar stems on tracks like those from Hail to the Thief.[121] Instrumentation evolved from standard rock setups—electric guitars, bass, and drums—on early albums like Pablo Honey (1993) to incorporate unconventional electronics post-OK Computer (1997). Jonny Greenwood prominently features the ondes Martenot, an early electronic instrument invented in 1928, which produces theremin-like glissandi and sine waves via a ring-controlled wire and keyboard; he first used it on Kid A (2000) for tracks such as "How to Disappear Completely," employing both original models and replicas like the French Connection for live performances to replicate its pure tones without fragility risks.[122] Modular synthesizers, particularly Analogue Systems units, entered Greenwood's arsenal around the Hail to the Thief (2003) era, providing resonant squelches and analogue sequencing integrated into songs like "The National Anthem," with their use persisting through live rigs into the 2010s.[123] For OK Computer, recording at Canned Applause Studios involved innovative tape manipulation, such as reversing guitar tracks to generate dissonant, alien textures in "Subterranean Homesick Alien," complemented by orchestral strings captured at Abbey Road Studios for swelling arrangements in "Exit Music (For a Film)."[124] The Kid A sessions adopted a collage-like assembly, building tracks incrementally from isolated loops and samples on laptops and software, eschewing traditional band recordings for electronic percussion via drum machines and Prophet-5 synthesizers, which yielded the album's glitchy, ambient pulses.[125] Later works like The King of Limbs (2011) leveraged live looping and digital manipulation, with Greenwood's laptop setups handling real-time processing during tours, including Max/MSP software for bespoke effects.[126] This shift facilitated Radiohead's hybrid of acoustic and synthetic elements, where guitars often undergo heavy effects processing to blend seamlessly with synth-generated beds.[127]

Reception and legacy

Critical reception and evolving assessments

Radiohead's debut album Pablo Honey (1993) received mixed reviews, often dismissed as derivative of grunge acts like Nirvana despite the breakout success of "Creep," which peaked at number 32 on the Billboard Hot 100. Critics such as those at Rolling Stone noted the band's potential but faulted the rest of the record for lacking cohesion beyond its hit single. The Bends (1995) marked an improvement, earning praise for stronger songwriting and Thom Yorke's emotive vocals, though it was still viewed as conventional alternative rock without the innovation that would define later works; retrospective analyses credit it with laying groundwork for the band's evolution. The release of OK Computer on May 21, 1997, propelled Radiohead to critical consensus as a landmark act, with near-universal acclaim for its thematic depth on alienation and technology, intricate arrangements, and tracks like "Paranoid Android." Rolling Stone hailed it as a "stunning art-rock tour de force," reflecting a shift from guitar-driven rock to orchestral and electronic elements that anticipated millennial anxieties.[128] The album's Metacritic equivalent in era-adjusted scores underscores this, often cited in polls as one of the greatest albums ever, influencing subsequent assessments of the band's willingness to transcend genre norms.[129] Kid A (October 2, 2000) represented a stark departure, abandoning traditional rock structures for electronic abstraction and drawing from influences like Aphex Twin and Miles Davis, which initially polarized listeners expecting OK Computer sequels. While NPR's Ken Tucker labeled it "anti-rock" for its minimal guitars and glitchy textures, Pitchfork awarded a rare 10.0, praising its reinvention amid post-9/11 unease, and it debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 despite fan backlash.[130] [131] Over time, retrospective reviews elevated it, with Metacritic user scores at 91% positive, viewing the risk as causal to Radiohead's enduring relevance in experimental music.[132] Amnesiac (2001), recorded concurrently, received similar acclaim for its jazz-infused paranoia but was critiqued as fragmented. Subsequent releases maintained high critical regard with variations: Hail to the Thief (2003) earned an 85 on Metacritic for its political urgency post-Iraq War, blending electronica and rock.[133] In Rainbows (2007), self-released via pay-what-you-want model, garnered widespread praise for its melodic warmth and production, with critics like those at Opus noting a return to accessibility without compromising experimentation.[134] The King of Limbs (2011) drew mixed responses, scoring 80 on Metacritic but faulted for brevity and repetitiveness in looped rhythms.[135] A Moon Shaped Pool (2016) restored favor, lauded for elegiac strings and introspection amid Yorke's divorce, achieving 88 on Metacritic.[136] Evolving assessments position Radiohead as pioneers of genre-blending and digital disruption, with legacy tied to causal innovations in production and release strategies rather than consistent commercial dominance. However, detractors argue post-OK Computer output veers into pretentiousness, prioritizing sonic novelty over memorable songs, as critiqued in forums and reviews decrying "egotistically dull" experimentation.[137] [138] Mainstream critical acclaim, while empirically strong (84% positive aggregate), reflects institutional preferences for "artistic" ambiguity, potentially inflating hype beyond empirical sales data where albums like Kid A succeeded commercially despite initial resistance.[139] This duality underscores Radiohead's influence on indie and electronic acts, yet invites scrutiny of whether reverence stems from genuine innovation or critic-band symbiosis.

Commercial performance and sales data

Radiohead's albums have collectively sold over 21 million copies worldwide, with approximately 9 million units in the United States and 5.3 million in the United Kingdom, according to aggregated sales data from music industry trackers.[4] This figure reflects pure album sales excluding streaming equivalents or compilations, though broader estimates including digital downloads and later releases place total record sales closer to 30 million by the early 2010s.[140] Despite shifts toward experimental electronic and ambient styles post-1997, the band sustained strong commercial viability, with multiple albums debuting at number one on the UK Albums Chart and Billboard 200. The 1997 album OK Computer marked Radiohead's commercial breakthrough, selling over 7.8 million copies globally and becoming their best-performing release.[34] It received RIAA platinum certification on May 6, 1998, for shipments exceeding 1 million units in the US, and five-times platinum certification from the BPI in the UK for 1.5 million units.[141][34] Earlier works like Pablo Honey (1993) earned RIAA gold status for 500,000 US shipments, driven largely by the single "Creep," while The Bends (1995) achieved RIAA platinum for 1 million units.[23][142] Subsequent releases maintained momentum despite unconventional promotion. Kid A (2000) debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 with over 207,000 first-week US sales and has sold more than 4 million copies worldwide.[143] In Rainbows (2007), released via a pay-what-you-want digital model, generated 3 million purchases within its first year, including 1.75 million physical CDs, outperforming the band's prior two albums in physical sales alone.[144][145] Later albums like A Moon Shaped Pool (2016) also topped the Billboard 200 and UK charts upon release. In 2025, OK Computer and The Bends experienced a sales resurgence, re-entering UK charts following viral TikTok traction for tracks like "Let Down," which debuted at number 91 on the Billboard Hot 100—Radiohead's first entry there since 2008.[146][147] This reflects enduring catalog value amid streaming dominance, though pure sales growth remains modest compared to peak eras.

Accolades, rankings, and industry recognition

Radiohead has received three Grammy Awards for Best Alternative Music Album: for OK Computer at the 40th Annual Grammy Awards on February 25, 1998; for Kid A at the 43rd Annual Grammy Awards on February 21, 2001; and for In Rainbows at the 51st Annual Grammy Awards on February 8, 2009.[148] The band has earned 18 Grammy nominations in total, including for Album of the Year (Kid A, 2001) and Best Rock Performance ("Paranoid Android," 1998), though it has not won in major categories like Album of the Year.[148] The group holds four Ivor Novello Awards, recognizing outstanding British songwriting: "Paranoid Android" won Best Contemporary Song in 1998; In Rainbows received Best Album in 2008; Jonny Greenwood earned an award for Best Original Score for There Will Be Blood in 2008 (as a band-associated composer); and the band collectively received the International Achievement Award in 2019 for their body of work.[149] Radiohead has also secured five nominations for the Mercury Prize—the most for any act, tied with Arctic Monkeys— for The Bends (1995), OK Computer (1997), Kid A (2000), Amnesiac (2001), and A Moon Shaped Pool (2016), but has never won.[150] Radiohead was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame on March 29, 2019, in recognition of its influence on rock music boundaries, with David Byrne of Talking Heads delivering the induction speech; only guitarists Ed O'Brien and Philip Selway attended to accept the honor.[151] The band's albums frequently rank highly in all-time lists: OK Computer placed third on Rolling Stone's 2020 edition of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time; Kid A ranked 29th on the same list; and In Rainbows appeared at 384th. In a 2012 BBC Music poll of critics, OK Computer was voted the greatest album of all time. These rankings underscore industry consensus on Radiohead's artistic impact, despite limited mainstream award wins relative to commercial peers.[152]

Cultural and musical influence

Radiohead's transition from guitar-centric alternative rock to incorporating electronic, jazz, and krautrock elements on Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001) advanced the boundaries of alternative rock, encouraging musicians to integrate experimental production techniques and abandon conventional song structures.[153] This evolution influenced artists across genres, with Grizzly Bear citing the emotional depth of tracks like "Let Down" from OK Computer (1997) as shaping their balladry, and tUnE-yArDs drawing from the sonic experimentation in "Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors" to expand their own sound explorations.[154] Death Cab for Cutie and Dinosaur Jr. have similarly referenced Radiohead's songwriting authenticity and guitar innovations as formative.[154] Irish guitarist Mark O'Leary has cited Radiohead's sonic experimentation and emotional depth, particularly from Kid A, as formative to his own fusion and improvisational work.[155][156] The band's emphasis on risk-taking and genre-blending, evident in OK Computer's fusion of progressive rock with electronica, inspired a wave of alternative acts to prioritize thematic cohesion and unconventional arrangements over mainstream accessibility.[157] Tracks like "Paranoid Android" defied radio-friendly norms by extending durations and incorporating abrupt shifts, setting precedents for artists to challenge industry expectations in the late 1990s and beyond.[153] This approach contributed to the diversification of alternative music into more atmospheric and concept-driven forms by the 2000s.[153] Culturally, OK Computer resonated as a critique of technological alienation and consumerism, with lyrics in songs like "Fitter Happier" portraying societal monotony and human disconnection in an increasingly mechanized world.[157] Its warnings about overreliance on technology—framed through themes of isolation amid constant connectivity—anticipated broader societal shifts toward digital dependency, influencing discussions on modernity's psychological toll.[158] Radiohead's surreal visuals and philosophical undertones further elevated alternative music's role as a medium for social commentary, prompting listeners and creators to engage with existential concerns beyond mere entertainment.[157]

Criticisms, detractors, and counter-narratives

Despite widespread critical acclaim, Radiohead has faced detractors who characterize the band as pretentious and overrated, with some arguing that their reputation stems more from hype than substantive innovation.[159][160] User reviews on platforms like Metacritic for albums such as Kid A (2000) frequently label the band as "pretentious" and Thom Yorke as a "douche," reflecting a sentiment that their experimental turns prioritize affectation over accessibility.[161] Similarly, forum discussions on sites like Head-Fi.org from 2003 onward list Radiohead among the "most overrated/pretentious bands," citing their perceived self-importance as a barrier to genuine appreciation.[162] Critics of Yorke's vocal style often describe it as whiny and grating, contributing to perceptions of the band's music as overly depressive or lifeless.[163][164] In Quora threads analyzing public disdain, respondents highlight how Yorke's falsetto and lyrical themes evoke a "pompous and pretentious" intellectualism that alienates listeners seeking emotional uplift rather than alienation.[165] Reddit discussions from 2014 echo this, attributing dislike to the music's "depressive and lifeless" quality, which some find unrelatable or excessively dour compared to more dynamic rock contemporaries.[166] The band's post-OK Computer (1997) evolution toward electronica and abstraction, as in Kid A and Hail to the Thief (2003), has drawn counter-narratives questioning its artistic merit, with some reviewers deeming albums like Hail to the Thief "disappointing" for lacking cohesion or reverting to rock without recapturing earlier strengths.[167] Detractors argue this shift reflects an elitist detachment, portraying Radiohead as adopting a "holier-than-thou" stance that dismisses mainstream appeal in favor of niche experimentation, a view amplified in online critiques labeling Yorke as elitist.[168] While mainstream outlets rarely issue outright negative assessments, fueling claims of inflated acclaim, these grassroots detractors maintain that the band's influence is overstated, with personal blogs and forums positing their work as "chilly" or "boring" rather than revolutionary.[169][160]

Business practices and innovations

Label transitions and independence efforts

Radiohead's contract with EMI, through its Parlophone subsidiary, expired after the release of Hail to the Thief on June 17, 2003, following the fulfillment of their multi-album obligations signed in 1991.[170] Negotiations for renewal broke down amid disputes over financial terms, with reports indicating the band sought a deal exceeding £10 million, which EMI declined under new management pressures post its 2007 acquisition by private equity firm Terra Firma.[53] [171] The band expressed dissatisfaction with EMI's handling of their back catalog and royalties, contributing to an acrimonious split that underscored tensions between established artists and major labels amid industry shifts toward digital distribution. In response, Radiohead pursued greater autonomy by self-releasing their seventh album, In Rainbows, digitally on October 10, 2007, via their official website, employing a "pay-what-you-want" model that allowed fans to download it for any price, including zero.[172] This marked their first major independent release, bypassing traditional label involvement entirely for the initial rollout and generating over 1.2 million downloads in the first week, with average payments around £4 per user based on band statements.[173] The experiment demonstrated viable direct-to-consumer economics, though it did not broadly disrupt label dominance as some anticipated, as subsequent data showed limited long-term emulation by other artists due to risks in revenue predictability.[174] For physical distribution of In Rainbows, Radiohead entered a non-exclusive licensing agreement with independent label XL Recordings on October 31, 2007, handling manufacturing and sales without ceding master ownership or full creative control.[175] This partnership extended to later releases, including The King of Limbs (February 18, 2011) and A Moon Shaped Pool (May 8, 2016), where XL managed physical and select digital territories while the band retained publishing and master rights through self-managed entities.[176] In 2016, the band's pre-2004 catalog transferred from Warner Music (which had acquired Parlophone) to XL, reflecting negotiated reclamation of distribution rights that preserved Radiohead's oversight.[177] [178] To facilitate ongoing independence, Radiohead routinely established limited liability partnerships (LLPs) or companies for each project, such as Ticker Tape Ltd (formed 2010, renamed from Make Bread Ltd) prior to The King of Limbs, enabling self-financing, direct fan engagement, and circumvention of conventional label advances or long-term contracts.[179] This structure, involving over 20 entities since their formation, allowed retention of masters and revenues, prioritizing artistic autonomy over label-backed marketing despite forgoing some upfront capital.[180] Such strategies empirically yielded higher per-unit earnings compared to major-label deals, as evidenced by In Rainbows' physical sales exceeding 3 million units globally under XL's limited role.[176]

Release models: Empirical outcomes of In Rainbows and beyond

Radiohead's seventh studio album, In Rainbows, released on October 10, 2007, via the band's website as a pay-what-you-want digital download, marked a departure from fixed-price models. Downloaders could enter any amount, including zero, for high-quality files. An analysis of 53,104 downloads by Oxford Internet Institute researchers, using ComScore data, found that 62% paid nothing, while 38% paid an average of approximately £4 (equivalent to about $8 at the time), yielding a low overall average payment per download.[181][182] Despite the prevalence of free downloads, the model generated significant initial revenue, with reports of $3 million from digital sales in the first week, driven by a subset of high-paying fans.[59] The release achieved over 1.2 million downloads in the first 48 hours, boosting visibility and fan engagement.[183] Physical editions followed on December 10, 2007, under a deal with XL Recordings, including standard CDs and a limited "Discbox" set priced at £40 ($80). Total sales reached 3 million units, with 1.75 million physical CDs and 100,000 Discbox sets, outperforming the combined physical sales of prior albums Hail to the Thief (2003) and Amnesiac (2001).[184][185] Pre-physical digital revenue exceeded the lifetime earnings of previous albums, per the band's publisher Warner Chappell, attributing success to the established fanbase rather than the pricing alone.[58] However, piracy via BitTorrent reduced potential digital income, as expected in open-access models.[186] Subsequent releases built on this hybrid digital-first approach, emphasizing direct-to-fan sales and limited physical variants. The King of Limbs (February 18, 2011) launched via the band's site at a fixed £6 for digital files, followed by a £30 "newspaper" physical edition with extras. It achieved strong initial digital uptake but faced piracy challenges and mixed reception, with physical sales bolstered by collector appeal.[187] A Moon Shaped Pool (May 8, 2016), surprise-dropped digitally via XL Recordings, sold 181,000 equivalent units in its U.S. first week, including 173,000 pure sales, Radiohead's strongest debut since 2003.[188][189] These models sustained commercial performance amid streaming's rise—Radiohead delayed In Rainbows availability on platforms like Spotify until 2016—prioritizing ownership and revenue control, though aggregate data shows declining physical dominance industry-wide.[190] Overall, empirical results indicate the strategies amplified short-term buzz and physical revenue for a loyal audience but did not broadly resolve digital devaluation, as average PWYW payments remained below traditional prices and free access encouraged substitution via unauthorized channels.[63]

Catalogue ownership, licensing, and economic strategies

Radiohead exited their contract with EMI in 2007 amid disputes over digital rights and back catalogue control, with EMI initially retaining licensing authority over the band's first six albums (Pablo Honey through Hail to the Thief) for an extended period.[171] The Parlophone/EMI-held pre-2004 catalogue later transferred to XL Recordings in April 2016, following Warner Music's acquisition of Parlophone and subsequent regulatory divestment of assets to independent entities like the Beggars Group-owned XL.[177] [191] This shift credited albums such as The Bends and OK Computer to XL for distribution, though without evidence of full masters transfer from the band, aligning with Radiohead's pattern of retaining core ownership via licensing arrangements.[178] Subsequent releases from In Rainbows (2007) onward operate under the band's independent imprint, Ticker Tape Ltd., formed in December 2010 for The King of Limbs and used for self-managed distribution.[192] Radiohead employs a strategy of incorporating specialized limited liability partnerships for each album cycle—such as Xurbia Xendless Ltd. for In Rainbows—to isolate liabilities, optimize tax structures, and preserve artistic and financial autonomy across their estimated 20+ corporate entities.[179] [180] Publishing rights remain largely self-controlled, with selective licensing; for In Rainbows, the band retained ownership of recordings and compositions while partnering with Warner/Chappell for an "all rights" digital exploitation model, bypassing traditional labels for direct fan access.[193] Licensing to XL extends to physical formats, streaming, and select territories for post-2007 works, emphasizing non-exclusive deals that avoid ceding perpetual control.[176] These approaches underpin economic strategies focused on diversified revenue beyond recordings, including high-margin live tours (which accounted for the majority of band income historically) and merchandise, while using innovative models like In Rainbows' pay-what-you-want digital release—yielding over £2 million in pre-physical sales and elevating subsequent catalogue streams by an estimated 73% in the following year.[63] Such tactics prioritize brand longevity and fan loyalty over immediate label advances, enabling Radiohead to forgo short-term payouts in favor of sustained royalties from controlled licensing and direct channels.[194][195]

Controversies and disputes

Radiohead's 1992 song "Creep" features a chord progression—G–B–C–Cm—that songwriters Albert Hammond and Mike Hazlewood alleged was substantially similar to the one in their 1974 composition "The Air That I Breathe," recorded by The Hollies.[196][197] Hammond and Hazlewood initiated a copyright infringement lawsuit against Radiohead, leading to an out-of-court settlement in which Radiohead acknowledged the influence by granting the songwriters co-writing credits and a share of royalties on "Creep," estimated at around 35–40% of publishing income.[196][197] The band has publicly stated that the progression was subconsciously borrowed during composition, with guitarist Jonny Greenwood confirming in interviews that they "ripped it off" without initial intent to obscure the source.[198] This settlement did not establish formal judicial precedent, as no trial occurred, but it underscored the legal vulnerability of specific chord sequences when combined with melodic and structural elements that evoke substantial similarity under copyright law, which protects original expressions rather than ideas or common progressions alone.[196] U.S. courts have historically dismissed claims over isolated chord progressions—such as in Newton v. Diamond (2008), where the Beastie Boys' sampling of a James Newton flute note was deemed non-infringing due to lack of protectable originality—but settlements like Radiohead's reflect pragmatic resolutions to avoid uncertain litigation outcomes.[199] In January 2018, Radiohead's publishers, Warner Chappell, sued singer Lana Del Rey for copyright infringement over her 2017 track "Get Free," claiming its chorus chord progression and vocal melody closely mirrored "Creep," particularly the lifted sections from "The Air That I Breathe."[200][196] Del Rey offered to credit Radiohead as co-writers and share 40% of "Get Free" royalties, but the publishers demanded 100% of publishing rights, leading to prolonged negotiations.[197] The dispute settled out of court by March 2018, with confidential terms; Del Rey stated the matter was resolved without admitting infringement, though subsequent releases of "Get Free" included partial credits to Hammond and Hazlewood but not Radiohead.[201] The Radiohead-Del Rey case, like the prior Hollies settlement, avoided precedent-setting rulings but highlighted inconsistencies in music copyright enforcement: Radiohead aggressively pursued protection for elements they had previously settled as derivative, illustrating how economic incentives drive preemptive claims in an industry where juries assess "substantial similarity" subjectively, often favoring settlements over trials to mitigate financial risks.[196][202] This chain of disputes exemplifies causal chains in musical borrowing, where uncredited influences propagate liability, yet courts rarely deem basic harmonic structures copyrightable absent additional original combinations, as reinforced in cases like Bridgeport Music v. Dimension Films (2005), which lowered thresholds for sound recording infringement but not compositions.[199]

Israel performances, BDS campaigns, and free speech debates

Radiohead first gained significant popularity in Israel in 1993 when their single "Creep" was frequently played by DJ Yoav Kutner on Israeli Army Radio, leading to three performances in Tel Aviv that year.[203] The band performed in Israel eight times between the 1990s and 2000, establishing a longstanding connection with local audiences before a 17-year hiatus.[204] Their return occurred on July 19, 2017, with a concert at Park HaYarkon in Tel Aviv featuring 27 songs, marking the longest set in 11 years and drawing large crowds despite international controversy.[205] The 2017 performance faced opposition from the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement, which urged artists to shun Israel as a form of protest against its policies toward Palestinians, viewing cultural engagements as complicit in "artwashing" alleged human rights abuses.[206] BDS activists, including Pink Floyd's Roger Waters, issued open letters and petitions calling on Radiohead to cancel, arguing that performing normalized Israeli actions; a "Radiohead Fans for Palestine" petition echoed this, framing the gig as support for apartheid-like conditions.[207][208] Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke rejected these demands in a June 2017 Rolling Stone interview, describing BDS calls as "offensive" and "mind-boggling," asserting that performing in Israel did not equate to endorsing its government and comparing such logic to boycotting the United States or Britain over their foreign policies.[207] Yorke argued that selective outrage ignored the band's history of shows in the region since the 1990s and accused boycotts of fostering division that benefits authoritarian leaders, stating, "Playing in a country doesn't amount to an endorsement of its government."[209][210] These events sparked broader debates on artistic freedom versus political activism, with proponents of BDS framing boycotts as ethical imperatives akin to anti-apartheid efforts, while critics, including Yorke, viewed them as infringing on free expression by pressuring musicians to adopt specific geopolitical stances.[211] Radiohead's defiance highlighted tensions between cultural diplomacy and sanction campaigns, as the band emphasized separating art from state endorsement, a position echoed in defenses that boycotts risk censoring dialogue in conflict zones.[212] In May 2025, similar pressures led to cancellations of Jonny Greenwood's UK concerts tied to collaborations with Israeli musician Dudu Tassa, intensifying scrutiny on Radiohead members' regional ties and prompting Yorke to issue a statement condemning violence in Gaza while rejecting blanket boycotts.[213] Following Radiohead's September 2025 tour announcement—their first in seven years—BDS renewed calls for global boycotts, citing Greenwood's Israeli performances as justification and demanding the band distance itself from such "complicity."[214][206] These ongoing campaigns underscore persistent free speech concerns, as cultural boycotts have increasingly targeted individual artists, raising questions about whether such tactics effectively advance causes or instead limit expressive autonomy in politically charged contexts.[215]

Internal band tensions and public persona critiques

Radiohead experienced significant internal tensions during several periods of their career, primarily stemming from prolonged studio sessions, creative divergences, and personal exhaustion. Following the exhaustive OK Computer tour in 1997, frontman Thom Yorke suffered a nervous breakdown and expressed a desire to quit the band due to the pressures of fame and constant public scrutiny.[216] [217] The recording of Kid A and Amnesiac from 1999 to 2001 proved particularly argumentative, with the band nearly splitting over tracklisting decisions and frustrations from extended time in the studio without progress.[218] [219] These conflicts arose as Yorke pushed for a radical shift away from guitar-based rock toward electronic and jazz influences, creating uncertainty among members about their contributions.[220] Further strains emerged after the Hail to the Thief tour in 2004, when the band grappled with whether to continue amid burnout and a sense of obligation rather than enthusiasm; Yorke later described this as a time when they "couldn’t work out whether we should be carrying on or not."[219] Yorke's combative personality has been cited as a key factor in these dynamics, contributing to internal strife during album production, though the group's egalitarian decision-making process—often involving votes on creative directions—helped mitigate outright dissolution.[221] By 2012, Yorke reiterated his frustration with fame, again contemplating leaving the band, though Radiohead persisted through side projects and periodic reunions.[216] Despite these episodes, no member has publicly confirmed irreparable "beef," and the band maintains a functional democracy, with Yorke's solo outlets like The Eraser (2006) serving as valves for ideas unfit for group collaboration.[219] [222] Public critiques of Radiohead's persona often portray the band—and particularly Yorke—as pretentious and aloof, with their experimental evolution from Kid A onward fostering perceptions of elitism among detractors.[137] Critics and online discourse have lambasted their music as overly complex and self-indulgent, exemplified by dismissals of OK Computer (1997) as a "pretentious mess" laden with clichés despite its commercial success of over 4.5 million copies sold worldwide.[159] This image is amplified by stereotypes of fans as miserable, introverted snobs who wield Radiohead's discography as intellectual markers, a trope evident in cultural memes associating the band with pretentious music appreciation.[223] [224] Yorke's reclusive demeanor and rejection of rock stardom—such as refusing to play "Creep" live post-1997 due to fatigue with its one-hit associations—have fueled accusations of arrogance, with some attributing the band's avoidance of mainstream promotion to a contrived anti-commercial stance.[225] [226] However, these critiques coexist with empirical evidence of Radiohead's influence, as their innovations in electronic textures and thematic depth on alienation have sustained critical acclaim, suggesting the pretentious label may reflect subjective resistance to their departure from conventional rock structures rather than objective flaws.[227] The band's low-key public presence, including minimal social media engagement and focus on artistry over spectacle, reinforces this narrative but aligns with their stated aversion to industry hype, as Yorke has articulated in interviews emphasizing creative integrity over accessibility.[165]

Band members and associates

Core members and roles

Radiohead's core lineup has remained unchanged since the band's formation in 1985 at Abingdon School in Oxfordshire, England, comprising Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood, Colin Greenwood, Ed O'Brien, and Phil Selway.[228][229] Initially operating under the name On a Friday, the group solidified this quintet as its permanent members upon signing with EMI in 1991 and adopting the name Radiohead.[228] Thom Yorke serves as the band's lead vocalist, rhythm guitarist, and primary keyboardist, contributing songwriting and arrangements across albums from Pablo Honey (1993) onward.[230][231] Jonny Greenwood, Yorke's frequent collaborator in composition, handles lead guitar duties, synthesizers, and unconventional instruments like the ondes Martenot, notably featured on OK Computer (1997).[230][229] Colin Greenwood provides bass guitar, anchoring the rhythm section with consistent low-end support throughout the band's discography.[230][231] Ed O'Brien contributes guitar textures, effects pedals, and backing vocals, often layering atmospheric elements in both studio and live settings.[230][231] Phil Selway rounds out the core as the drummer and percussionist, delivering intricate rhythms that evolved from straightforward rock beats to complex electronic-infused patterns on later works like Kid A (2000).[228][231] While primary roles are established, members frequently interchange instruments during recording and performances, reflecting Radiohead's experimental approach; for instance, Yorke and Greenwood often trade keyboard and guitar parts, and O'Brien has incorporated glitchy effects processing.[232] This fluidity has been a hallmark since the mid-1990s, enabling the band's shift from alternative rock to electronic and orchestral experimentation without lineup changes.[230]

Touring and session collaborators

Radiohead's live performances have periodically incorporated additional musicians to execute intricate arrangements, especially percussion elements that exceed the capabilities of the core quintet. Beginning with the The King of Limbs tour in 2011, the band augmented their lineup with Clive Deamer on second drums and percussion. Deamer, a session drummer previously associated with Portishead and Robert Plant, enabled the replication of the album's layered, looping rhythms through dual drumming setups.[233][234] This collaboration extended to the 2016 A Moon Shaped Pool world tour, where Deamer again supported Phil Selway, contributing to performances that blended electronic and orchestral textures with live percussion. Deamer's involvement marked the first consistent addition of a touring member beyond the five principal bandmates, facilitating extended polyrhythmic sections in tracks like "Bloom" and "Ful Stop."[235][236] His role also included occasional recording contributions starting in 2011.[237] In studio sessions, Radiohead has rarely relied on external guest musicians, preferring self-contained production with multi-instrumentalism among members and producer Nigel Godrich. A prominent exception is the 2001 track "Life in a Glasshouse" from Amnesiac, which features Humphrey Lyttelton and his band on trumpet, clarinets, and saxophones, arranged by Jonny Greenwood to evoke traditional jazz influences. Greenwood contacted Lyttelton in late 2000 specifically for this recording, resulting in a one-off session that contrasted the album's electronic leanings.[238][239] Later albums like A Moon Shaped Pool incorporated orchestral elements via Jonny Greenwood's arrangements performed by ensembles such as the London Contemporary Orchestra, but without named individual session collaborators.[240]

Side project overlaps and individual pursuits

The Smile, formed in 2021 by Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood alongside drummer Tom Skinner, represents a primary overlap in side pursuits among Radiohead's core members, enabling collaborative output independent of the full band. The project debuted with singles in May 2021 and released its first album, A Light for Attracting Attention, on May 13, 2022, followed by Wall of Eyes on January 26, 2024, and Cutouts on October 4, 2024; these works incorporate experimental rock elements akin to Radiohead's style but emphasize rapid iteration and live performance. [92] Greenwood has described the endeavor as a space for "fun and natural" creativity, distinct from Radiohead's more deliberate process. [92] Thom Yorke has pursued extensive solo endeavors, including the electronic album The Eraser released on July 10, 2006, and Anima on June 27, 2019, alongside film soundtracks such as Suspiria in 2018. [241] He also led Atoms for Peace, assembled in 2009 with producer Nigel Godrich, bassist Flea, drummer Joey Waronker, and percussionist Mauro Refosco to tour material from The Eraser; the supergroup issued Amok on February 26, 2013, blending improvisational jamming with structured electronica. [242] Jonny Greenwood has focused on orchestral composition, scoring films including There Will Be Blood (2007), Phantom Thread (2017, Oscar-nominated), and Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another (released September 26, 2025). [243] His solo album Bodysong accompanied a 2003 documentary, featuring avant-garde instrumentation. [243] Phil Selway released his debut solo album Familial on August 30, 2010, emphasizing folk-inflected songwriting, followed by Weatherhouse on October 27, 2014, and Strange Dance on February 24, 2023, which incorporates dramatic arrangements and broader production. [244] Ed O'Brien, under the moniker EOB, debuted with Earth on April 17, 2020, drawing from rock rhythms and electronic pulses developed during Radiohead hiatuses, with production emphasizing communal improvisation. [245] Colin Greenwood has engaged in supporting roles, co-producing and performing bass on Tamino's Sahar (2022), touring as bassist for Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds starting September 2023, and releasing the photographic collection How to Disappear: A Photographic Portrait of Radiohead in 2024, documenting 14 years of band activities. [246] [247]

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