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These Are My Twisted Words
These Are My Twisted Words
from Wikipedia

"These Are My Twisted Words"
Single by Radiohead
Released17 August 2009
Genre
Length5:31
LabelSelf-released
SongwriterRadiohead
ProducerNigel Godrich
Radiohead singles chronology
"Harry Patch (In Memory Of)"
(2009)
"These Are My Twisted Words"
(2009)
"Supercollider" / "The Butcher"
(2011)

"These Are My Twisted Words" is a song by the English rock band Radiohead. It was released via BitTorrent on 12 August 2009, possibly by Radiohead. On 17 August, Radiohead released it as a free download on their website. Several critics likened the song to krautrock.

Release

[edit]

On 12 August 2009, "These Are My Twisted Words" appeared unannounced on What.CD, a BitTorrent tracker.[1] A text file included in the torrent file contained ASCII art, a cryptic poem and a reference to a release date of 17 August.[2] Commentators including the Guardian and Rolling Stone speculated that Radiohead had leaked the song themselves following the unconventional pay-what-you-want release of their 2007 album In Rainbows.[3][4]

On 17 August, Radiohead released "These Are My Twisted Words" as a free download from their website and through a torrent file hosted by Mininova.[5] The download included several pieces of artwork by Yorke and the longtime Radiohead collaborator Stanley Donwood, with the suggestion to print them on tracing paper.[5] In a blog post announcing the song, the guitarist Jonny Greenwood said it had been recently completed and made no mention of the leak.[5] Radiohead performed "These Are My Twisted Words" on their 2012 King of Limbs tour.[1]

The text file included in the original torrent contained the phrase "Wall of Ice", triggering speculation that it was the title of an upcoming Radiohead EP.[6] The phrase "wall of eyes" later appeared in promotional materials for Radiohead's next album, The King of Limbs (2011).[7] More than a decade later, the title Wall of Eyes was used for an album by the Radiohead side project the Smile.[8][6]

Composition

[edit]

"These Are My Twisted Words" is composed in a 5
4
time signature.[9] It opens with a motorik beat from the drummer, Philip Selway, before Yorke's vocal enters.[10][11] Daniel Kreps of Rolling Stone noted a krautrock influence and likened the song to the In Rainbows track "Weird Fishes / Arpeggi".[4] Bill Bradley of Vanity Fair said it had a "signature eerie Radiohead sound".[12] Matthew Schnipper of The Fader described it as a "simple song" with "a plodding, stubborn forward spirit".[11]

Reception

[edit]

Brian Parks of PopMatters gave "These Are My Twisted Words" seven out of ten, describing it as "the most recent in a long line of unconventionally beautiful songs for which Radiohead is renowned".[13] Bradley of Vanity Fair wrote that "all the converted" would like the song.[12] However, Ryan Dombal of Pitchfork wrote that its "nauseous guitars, featherweight motorik beat and vaguely whiny lyrics almost read as parody" and concluded that it "isn't as enticing as its method of distribution".[10] In 2016, Rolling Stone included "These Are My Twisted Words" on its list of "20 insanely great Radiohead songs only hardcore fans know".[1]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
"These Are My Twisted Words" is a by the English band , self-released as a free digital single on 17 August 2009 via the band's official website and torrent sites. The track, one of the first completed from the band's ongoing recording sessions at the time, features a beat, swirling guitars, and exploring themes of disorientation and . It was accompanied by digital artwork created by band member and longtime collaborator , depicting eerie, twisted tree branches intended to be printed on . The song's release followed an intentional leak via BitTorrent on 12 August 2009, a strategy that mirrored Radiohead's experimental distribution methods used for their previous album In Rainbows in 2007. Guitarist Jonny Greenwood announced the track on the band's Dead Air Space blog, stating that Radiohead had been practicing it for potential inclusion in their summer 2009 festival appearances, expressing pride in its completion amid other unfinished material. Clocking in at just over five minutes, "These Are My Twisted Words" debuted live at the Frequency Festival in Austria on 21 August 2009, shortly after its official drop, and was later performed on the band's 2012 tour supporting their album The King of Limbs. Reception highlighted the song's atmospheric and introspective qualities, with critics noting its nod to influences and self-referential lyrics that evoke the band's signature blend of unease and innovation. As a standalone release outside of any full-length album, it stands as one of Radiohead's notable non-album tracks from the late , bridging their post- era experimentation with the rhythmic explorations that would define two years later.

Background

Context in Radiohead's discography

Following the release of their sixth studio album in 2003 under major label , parted ways with the label in 2007, marking a pivotal shift toward independent distribution. Their seventh album, , was self-released that October through the band's website as a digital download under a groundbreaking "pay-what-you-want" model, allowing fans to choose their payment amount, including zero. This approach not only bypassed traditional record company structures but also generated substantial revenue while reinforcing the band's control over their output. In the years immediately following In Rainbows, embarked on an extensive world tour in 2008 to promote the album, performing over 100 shows across , , and before concluding the cycle. By 2009, the band entered a touring hiatus, allowing members to pursue individual endeavors and experiment with new material outside the pressures of a full-length release schedule. During this period, guitarist continued his burgeoning film scoring career, building on his 2007 work for , while frontman explored electronic and solo ideas that would later inform side projects like . This downtime facilitated a looser creative process, resulting in sporadic, non-album outputs rather than a traditional album cycle. The band's output from 2007 to 2009 thus consisted primarily of In Rainbows itself, followed by limited additional material amid the independent era's flexibility. In July 2009, Radiohead released the standalone single "Harry Patch (In Memory Of)" as a free download, a somber tribute to the last surviving British veteran. Just a month later, in 2009, they issued another free digital single, "These Are My Twisted Words," initially shared via before an official download—exemplifying their evolving "stealth-leak" strategy for direct fan engagement. These tracks, alongside occasional B-sides and live recordings from the era (such as those on the 2008 release), represented a transitional phase, bridging the lush, guitar-driven sound of with the more rhythmically intricate experiments that would define their next album, , in 2011. "These Are My Twisted Words" in particular served as a non-album , recorded during earlier sessions but held back to test new distribution methods during this interim period of creative exploration.

Inspiration and development

"These Are My Twisted Words" originated during Radiohead's recording sessions in early 2009, following the band's tour, marking a period of experimental output after their album. The track was one of the first songs completed in these sessions, with the band expressing pride in the result and sharing it directly with fans ahead of their summer tour dates. The song developed as a standalone piece, not initially tied to a full album cycle, aligning with Radiohead's approach to spontaneous releases in the late 2000s. noted in the official announcement that it might not feature on a future record, emphasizing its independent nature. This decision reflected the band's strategy to engage audiences through free digital distribution, building on the self-release model of . Rhythmic elements drew from krautrock traditions, particularly the motorik beat associated with bands like Neu!, contributing to the song's hypnotic, driving pulse. Critics observed this influence in the track's featherweight percussion and cascading guitar lines, evoking the genre's repetitive, propulsive style.

Recording and production

Studio sessions

The recording of "These Are My Twisted Words" took place at Radiohead's studio in and other facilities, beginning in May 2009 under the production guidance of longtime collaborator . Sessions extended through the summer, spanning approximately May to August 2009 and overlapping with band members' individual projects. These efforts built on the band's experimental ethos to create layered, atmospheric textures. Key challenges during the sessions included refining the song's unconventional . Additional work occurred to polish the track amid the production's "noisy and chaotic" creative flux. By late summer, the song was completed, marking an early milestone in the sessions that would inform Radiohead's subsequent album .

Personnel and production techniques

The song features performances by Radiohead's core members: on vocals, guitar, and keyboards; on guitar, keyboards, and orchestration; on bass; on guitar and backing vocals; and Phil Selway on drums. Production was handled by longtime collaborator , who recorded and assembled the track, with additional engineering by Drew Brown and technical maintenance by the band's technician Plank. Key production techniques include a motorik drum beat, evoking krautrock influences through its steady, hypnotic rhythm. The track was recorded during 2009 sessions at various locations, including Godrich's facilities.

Composition

Musical structure and style

"These Are My Twisted Words" follows a standard rock song structure, comprising an introduction, two verses, two choruses, a bridge, and an outro, with a total duration of 5:31. The track features a 5/4 time signature in its guitar arpeggios and melodic lines over a 4/4 drum pattern, creating a polymetric effect that imparts a sense of unease and forward momentum, unusual for rock music. Central to the song's rhythm is a krautrock-derived beat, executed by the drums and bass, which establishes a relentless, hypnotic propulsion reminiscent of German . This steady, repetitive pulse underpins the composition, enhancing its trance-like quality while the odd accentuates rhythmic tension. The instrumentation emphasizes layered electric guitars treated with delay effects to create cascading, seasick arpeggios, complemented by swelling synthesizers and sparse keyboard orchestration arranged by . These elements build dynamically from subdued openings to more intense swells, blending foundations with electronic textures and experimentation to evoke a pervasive sense of disorientation. Production techniques, such as multi-tracked guitar overdubs, further amplify the hypnotic layering.

Lyrics and themes

The lyrics of "These Are My Twisted Words" center on a narrator's emotional disorientation and yearning, opening with the lines: "These are my twisted words / When I feel you still walking / I know I should not look down / But I'm so sick of just talking." , delivered in Thom Yorke's characteristic , convey a sense of and precariousness, evoking of standing on a rooftop edge as a for mental fragility and emotional vertigo. The chorus intensifies the theme of relational breakdown with repeated pleas: "When are you coming back? / I just can't handle it," underscoring desperation and the strain of absence in a personal connection. This motif of failed communication recurs through the inadequacy of itself, as suggested by the "twisted words" that fail to bridge the divide, culminating in the abstract image of a "wall of ice between us is getting thin," symbolizing thawing barriers amid alienation. Poetic devices amplify these themes, including the repetition of the "twisted words" phrase to emphasize linguistic and , alongside surreal, stream-of-consciousness elements that prioritize over linear narrative. Critics have interpreted the overall content as exploring confusion and inner turmoil, reflecting broader motifs of identity struggles and interpersonal disconnection without resolving into clear resolution.

Release

Initial leak

On August 12, 2009, the song "These Are My Twisted Words" leaked online via the private , appearing as a high-quality audio file accompanied by a cryptic containing abstract artwork and a listed release date of , 2009. The leak prompted immediate speculation that Radiohead had orchestrated it themselves, echoing their unconventional release strategy for the 2007 album In Rainbows, and the band's lack of any denial further fueled these theories among observers. Fans reacted swiftly, with the track spreading rapidly across online forums including At Ease—a prominent Radiohead community—and early Reddit discussions, where users debated its authenticity and speculated on its connection to upcoming material. Initial media coverage highlighted the surprise drop, with outlets like reporting on the burgeoning rumors and embedding the track for listeners just one day after the leak.

Official distribution and artwork

"These Are My Twisted Words" was officially released on 17 August as a free digital download on Radiohead's website and via a file hosted on . The band self-released the track under their own control through their label, bypassing traditional record labels and opting for no physical formats such as vinyl or CD. The torrent bundle contained the file of the song, along with accompanying digital artwork and additional materials. The artwork for the release was created by and the band's longtime collaborator , featuring abstract, monochromatic designs that convey a sense of isolation through icy, ethereal imagery reminiscent of overlays. These visuals were included in the digital download package, aligning with 's experimental approach to presentation in the digital era. Promotion for the single was notably minimalist, consisting primarily of an announcement on the band's Dead Air Space , which highlighted the track as one of the first completed from recent recording sessions. Due to its exclusively digital and free distribution model, "These Are My Twisted Words" did not enter official singles charts, reflecting Radiohead's continued rejection of conventional music industry metrics following their earlier pay-what-you-want model for .

Reception and legacy

Critical response

Upon its 2009 release, "These Are My Twisted Words" garnered mixed reviews from critics, who appreciated its atmospheric qualities while noting some structural shortcomings. commended its guitar-heavy sound with cascading arpeggios and a strong bass groove. described the track as featuring a featherweight beat and nauseous guitars, with vaguely whiny lyrics that felt less compelling than prior releases like . The overall consensus positioned "These Are My Twisted Words" as a solid B-side offering—intriguing in its unorthodox distribution but not a groundbreaking addition to 's catalog.

Live performances and cultural impact

"These Are My Twisted Words" received its live debut by on August 21, 2009, during their performance at the FM4 Frequency Festival in St. Pölten, . The song's arrangement highlighted the band's improvisational style, with layered electronic elements and dynamic shifts that evolved across performances. It appeared sporadically in setlists throughout their 2009 festival dates, including at and Reading Festivals, where it served as a fresh addition to their . During the King of Limbs tour in 2012, the track became a recurring deep cut, performed 16 times up to the end of that year, often eliciting strong reactions from dedicated audiences familiar with its standalone release. It was performed once during the 2017 tour supporting , where variations emphasized its atmospheric, experimental qualities. In 2025, amid their European tour—their first major run in seven years—the song reemerged in select shows, including the November 4 concert in , reinforcing its status as a fan-favorite rarity. Culturally, "These Are My Twisted Words" has maintained a devoted following. The original torrent distribution included a with the phrase "Wall of Ice," which fueled fan speculation about unreleased projects and has been noted as a possible callback in discussions of The Smile's 2024 album Wall of Eyes, a side project featuring Radiohead's and . This connection underscores the song's lasting influence on Yorke and Greenwood's endeavors. Among fans, it holds appeal through widespread covers and ongoing analyses in online music communities, sustaining discussions well into 2025.

References

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