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Radiohead, In Rainbows: A Review, Upon First Listen, Track-by-Track Style

Wed Oct 10, 2007 at 12:34:00 AM

You know, Radiohead, I was just about to go to sleep when I checked my email one last time. And lo and behold, the download code for your new CD, In Rainbows, popped up in my inbox. *sigh* I didn't need sleep anyway.

Since the rest of the blogosphere is racing right now to review Rainbows, I figure I'd be a sheep and do the same thing. Let's do a time-lapse chronicle of the proceedings. First listens, of course. While addled by fatigue. And I haven't checked YouTube or bootleg sites for which of these songs have been released before, so excuse me if some of this is old news. (I saw Radiohead in a high school auditorium in 1997, so I have cred.)

12:30 a.m.: Link shows up. Among the technical mumbo jumbo is the phrase: WE HOPE YOU ENJOY 'IN RAINBOWS'.

12:37 a.m. Zip file downloaded and unzipped. Fire up iTunes!

12:43 a.m. Fire up iTunes, take two. Had to get some carrots and water.

12:45 a.m. "15 Step" is the first song. Drum-n-bass beat that goes right into a curling guitar riff that's very "Paranoid Android"-style minimalist. Thom Yorke's sounding theatrical. Ooh, now his vocals feature some cool echoes soon after two minutes, things get very glitchy and staticky, but cinematic -- like a staticky television. Children(?) are heard crying in the background, sorta like a muted Go! Team song. Spooky organ outro. Overall could be an outtake from Yorke's solo record, and also very Amnesiac.

12:49 a.m. "Bodysnatchers." Holy crap, it's Sonic Youth. Super fuzzy, driving guitar and Yorke monotone singing, a la Thurston Moore. "I've no idea what I'm talking about," Yorke howls, in his upper, Wayne Coyne-like register. Wordless howling, as the music bends and builds around him, with some corrugated riffs layered atop the driving noise. Oh man, I bet this song is insane live.

12:52 a.m. A bit after two minutes, a bridge emerges, with guitar that's totally still SY's Dirty. Yorke's chanting; he's singing too fast for me to type. Yorke mumbles "ma ma ma ma ma ma" at the end -- you can just picture him shaking his head back and forth in that spastic way he does -- as clicking drums and then a huge wall of psych-distorto guitar ends the song. Awesome.

12:53 a.m. "Nude." Quiet strings rise up, as Yorke croons like an elderly ghost, and trip-hop beats throb. Is he saying, "Don't get bitter"? Keyboards pipe in now, somber keyboards, a la "Talk Show Host." This is totally a slow jam, albeit a haunted waltz in a cobweb-filled parlor.

12:56 a.m. Ooh, at 2:37, a big huge crescendo of strings. Yorke amps up the creaky crooning; one can picture him wearing a faded, dusty tuxedo, singing "Send in the Clowns" or something. Sad, mournful strings end the song -- vaguely Moby-ish.

12:57 a.m. Kind of a math-rocky beginning to "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi," insistent rhythms that are somewhat reminiscent of Minus the Bear, with plenty of warm keyboards boiling in the background. The first song I feel really moved by: Yorke sings, "Why should I istay here? Why should I stay? I would be crazy not to fall / Fall where you lead" (Is he saying leave?) Your eyes / They turn me."

1 a.m. Oh MAN this song is amazing. Now there are counter-harmonies around 2:30, and the song is building, ever so deliciously -- the rhythms are louder, the keys are louder and Yorke's coming to a conclusion. "I get eaten by the worm / And we're fishes / We're fishes," he says, suddenly turning into Jacques Cousteau. (I only mean this half-jokingly, as he sounds under water at this point.)

1:02 a.m. Suddenly the song is darker, more ominous -- like someone diving down into the depths of the ocean. That same rhythm from the start is slightly off, submerged -- riffing guitars, shimmering keys, clanging percussion. Awesome. First great song on the album.

1:05 a.m. "All I Need." Okay, so, this percussion sample totally makes me want to start singing Sublime's "What I Got." It's the kickdrum and the loping tempo, sue me. Very murky keys, ridged by some spooky, space-age, Gary Numan-like work. "I'm an animal, trapped in your hot car." (Did he really just say that?) "I'm in the middle of your picture."

1:07 a.m. Okay, there's some pretty xylophone now. "I'm an insect, just trying to get out..." and Yorke trails off. He's mumbling quite a bit on this album, hiding. The synths are joined by some clattering and static in the background -- all impeccably tasteful, despite the noise. "You're all I need, I'm in the middle of your picture." Oooh, some unexpected piano and crashing drums just came in, a minute from the end. Excellent. Yorke goes off into one of his wordless, huge croons. Fantastic ending. Makes me want to revisit the song again. On a roll.

1:09 a.m. "Faust Arp." Acoustic guitar, multi-layered Yorke vocal lines looping over one another, strings. Very majestic and regal, very orchestral -- but yet sort of Krautrock. Campfire Krautrock, cause of the guitars and cinematic strings. Very simple, but emotionally effective -- even if I have no idea what this song is about just yet.

1:11 a.m. "Reckoner." Sounds like Primal Scream's "Trainspotting" at the start, all factory-clanks and dank-underground percussion clashes. Yorke's in full-on falsetto mode here. The clanking is still going on, sounds like a factory. Good contrast, some delicate piano just came in, right below Yorke's doubled vocals. He sounds like an old woman, or like PJ Harvey on her new disc.

1:13 a.m. The surround-sound on this song is truly stunning -- right speaker has some salt-shaking percussion going on, left has the same stuff from the start. Oh wow more strings -- and they're darting and dipping and resolving their chords, similar to "Lucky." The dual-speaker clanking starts up again; I'm totally nodding my head. Yorke's still crooning; it's all very beautiful and very sad, although I can't pinpoint why.

1:16 a.m. "House of Cards." The simple guitar riff makes me want to sing Dinosaur Jr.'s "Start Choppin'" for some reason. Yorke (or someone) is in the corner mewling; now he's singing in the forefront, but still sounds like he's coming from down a long hallway, lots of echo. "I dont' want to be you friend / I just want to be your lover." (Holy crap, it's totally a Blackstreet song.) "Forget about your house and cars / [something muffled, unintelligible and obviously pivotal]." Dammit, Thom!

1:18 a.m. "Fall off the table, guess..." I give up. Strings again, some tick-tock beats, some roaring keys. Again, the production on this CD is beautiful -- crystal-clear, impeccable, even at high volumes. There are dynamics on the CD -- peaks and valleys, subtle silence and louder sections that are all pleasing to the ear. Even at 160 kbps. "Throw your keys in the bowl, kiss your husband goodnight / Forget about your house of cards / And I'll do mine." Later on: "Denial." I get it: The song's about how suburbia's perfect facade can crumble easily, right? And how Edward Scissorhands/Stepford Wives, etc. can't deal with it. Song's ending, all very creepy. It's a story-song. A bit too long, but okay.

1:22 a.m. "Jigsaw Falling Into Place." Yeah, that strummy guitar that's like "Paranoid Android." Which gets more forceful, driven by thick, strong beats -- also like that single. Yorke's humming atop the music -- like the band was looping his voice. He's back to his normal voice now, almost speak-singing, slam-poetry over the loops and riffs.

1:24 a.m. Cool distorto-bridge again, with some nifty guitar work. It's a lot louder now, there's a zippy guitar in the back. "The beat goes round and round," Yorke creaks. Instruments slip in, and you barely notice -- more insistent drums, cool guitar effects. Okay, a cool, almost jangly, psychedelic-pop bridge here -- sort of sounds like parallel-universe R.E.M. Matched by strings, and Yorke in his quirky croon. Those four minutes flew by; I need to listen again. Probably the poppiest thing on the album so far, even if, er, not much was discernible.

1:27 a.m. Last song, "Videotape." Just piano and voice. "When I'm at the Pearly Gates / This will be on the videotape, the videotape." Still spartan and sparse, Yorke somber in his singing. 1:25 in, a clap-trap rhythm starts in, like a clomping horse, and some gospel-hymn humming choir in the background.

1:29 a.m. This sounds like the soundtrack of someone heading for the gallows, or on a knowing death march. Could fit right in, again, on the new PJ Harvey album.

1:31 a.m. Oh, this is cool: Lots of percussion coming in from all sides, creating some unsettling rhythms and counter-rhythms -- but arranged very cleanly, so it doesn't sound chaotic, just unsettling. A stuttering hi-hat clatters, along with what sounds like someone swinging an axe in the right speaker. All above the piano.

1:32 a.m. And with that, it's over. Huh.

On this cursory listen, I already like this album more than Hail to the Thief. There's a quiet sadness and mournfulness to the music, less unnecessary noise and extravagance. It's a more welcoming, open album, without being poppy. It's hard to describe, since it's, well, Radiohead. It's not willfully weird, it sounds much more linear and straightforward -- but yet not pandering to any sort of modern conventions. Much more clicky, so yes, very reminiscent of Yorke's The Eraser. And much more rhythmic and keyboard-based, definitely few full-on guitar hooks. Heck, there's not a traditional "single" on here for radio.

It's like a treasure box of antiques, perhaps, or an old junk shop: There are lots of little quirky elements that will require multiple listens to uncover, lots of disparate elements thrown together, but so fleetingly that you can't really say they've ripped people off (well, besides themselves).

I want to listen again -- more important, I'm intrigued. It doesn't leave me cold; it didn't stab me in the heart the way Band of Horses just did. But there's a quiet, understated beauty to it that's welcoming and makes me want to explore more.

Okay, bedtime. Let the Googling begin as I post this!

-- Annie Zaleski


Category: Music, This Just In

54 Comments:

Simon C. says:

This is the best review of the first 90 minutes of the album being out. :)

W.Scoville says:

This is a wonderful review. I completely agree. Radiohead has done again... Killed Rock and Roll! Thank God!

Razzaq says:

I guess we all stayed up for this one :) Agree with you completely about liking it more than Hail to the Thief after this first casual listen.

zachary says:

you rock. i love you. marry me.

Thomas says:

"Don't get bitter" for Nude? Are you making a joke?

I didn't like your review. Comparison is another way of being incapable of writing actual description. But hey, at least you liked it. I think.

Terry Tibbs says:

- It's not "one of his wordless, huge croons"... it's the words "it's all wrong, it's all right".

- "Is he saying, "Don't get bitter"?" No. He's saying, "Don't get any... big ideas."

- It's not "one of his wordless, huge croons"... it's the words "it's all wrong, it's all right".

- "Is he saying, "Don't get bitter"?" No. He's saying, "Don't get any... big ideas."

Terry Tibbs says:

"Forget about your house and cars"

It's "Forget about your house of cards", funnily enough.

"Don't get bitter"

It's "Don't get any big ideas."

"Yorke goes off into one of his wordless, huge croons"

No, he's singing "It's all wrong, it's all right."

cr says:

this is only part 1
it's a 2 disc album \so really it's only halftime review -
but-
it's strait forward - more so than anything since O k with leftover bits of clik-pop
for nostalgia.
personally - i'd like to hear more real drums. like a live show
Videotape leaves me hungry.
I think once the second half is available then we will see complete picture, and my stomach will be satisfied.

alexis says:

what matters is that your beat pitchdork

alexis says:

the important thing is that you beat pitchdork

let's guess the rating now
8.3? 8.9? 9.4? Whatever. They'd shoot Beirut before they ever gave Rhead less an impeccable score

sacred cows

Paul Gee says:

Thanks Annie. I really enjoyed the review. You put it so well. I have heard Videotape before on From the Basement and this version with the stuttering drum beat is so much better. It makes me think of unions: marriage, the Army, war...

Frank Jewett says:

The opening minute of "Videotape" sounded like an instant classic, but tacky percussion way too high in the mix ruined it for me. I wish the band had treated "Videotape" with the same respect or indifference as "Nude" because "Videotape" would have flourished with a similarly stipped down arrangement.

"Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" and "Jigsaw Falling Into Place" were the highlights with the first having beautiful depth and the second having the sort of power that Radiohead seems to consciously eschew for fear that it will expose the impotence of all the techno soft rockers insecurely burbling, moaning, ticking in the corners.

The live bootleg of "Down Is The New Up" shows "In Rainbows" lacks power and soul. Radiohead have become caught up in their soundscapes and the only way they seem to see to get out is with offbeat, amateurish percussion. The intro to Reckoner sounds like a teenager trying to play his own version of Dave Brubeck's "Take Five", but the original kicks that faux jazz drum drivel to the curb.

I am looking forward to seeing these songs played live on actual instruments by human beings, hopefully with a bit of passion. A comparison of these "finished" tracks to last summer's live bootlegs suggests that Radiohead should be locked out of their studio until further notice.

Percussion is the new masturbation.

mike says:

I can't download this to listen until tonight. Killing me. Glad to hear this is better than HTTT, though.

JRo says:

Am I just reading it wrong, or did people not like Hail To The Thief? Cause I did. Big time.

I do hope In Rainbows is better than HTTT, because HTTT was awesome.

Kudos to AZ for staying up an extra hour plus for us.

mike says:

OK, listening now. Really like it.

eric says:

ditto and from the initial listen i like it better. but i'm into the moaning and the ambiance and stuff.

great review. i read it while listening to it at work this morning.

Sarah says:

Nice review, except for the comparison aspect. Not everything needs to be compared to something else. Other than that, nicely done.

i guess i should clarify that this isn't a review, per se -- it's first impressions of the record. i wouldn't ever review a record after having listened to it just once. and that explains why there are so many comparisons (something i wouldn't normally do). this was way more stream-of-consciousness than i would normally write.

that being said: "weird fishes/arpeggi" is still my favorite on the CD.

keggers says:

Nice play by play.

I like it thus far. It sounds a little more focused than some of their previous efforts. The first two songs really nailed it for me. I don't mind the electronic beats so much, because a lot of them were played on a real kit (or at least sampled from one). I am also a fan of the atmospheric stuff. I like how they kept Thom Yorke's voice up front in the mix on a lot of tunes... not as detached as it has been in the past.

Heh... Pitchdork. Funny stuff.

jaime says:

i usually hate reading other people's "at first listen" reviews, so i'll admit that i only skimmed this. but yr "bodysnatchers" / sonic youth connection is spot on. the beginning of "bodysnatchers" sounds EXACTLY like the beginning of "sleepin' around" on rather ripped. fo shizzle.

other points to make include:
1. you win the internet
2. radiohead win my heart
3. i should have gone to oxford

Ian Froeb says:

This album fucking rules this and all other universes -- known, unknown, imaginary and hypothetical.

Brooke says:

This is an awesome first-impressions review, Annie. Loved it. And ooh, the album is sitting on my desk. Time to listen.

Spencer says:

You should call it an "album" rather than a "CD". CD is the name of a format that an album can be in (and there are obviously others... LP, cassette, etc). Otherwise you might as well say "I'm going to the cinema tonight to watch a DVD". In this case you would say "film" because that is what it is regardless of the format it in (video tape, DVD, reel, etc). This is why "album" is a more correct way of referring to... an album.

jaime says:

additionally:

all praise idolator.com

"Track one sounds like FutureMope/ZoloftSounds."

Very atmospheric and droning in the best way possible. It was not particularly challenging to the listener in a direct way, although the challenge may present itself after several listens and closer inspection. Tracks 1+2 reminded me of sonic youth, and again again I was reminded of conic youth's "A Thousand Leaves" and "Rather Ripped" - which is great! I felt the album on first listen was somewhat lacking on dynamics and variety in tempo. There were definitely stand-out tracks, but it seemed much more like one long song for the most part, but this could have been intended - I just wasn't expecting it. This album deserves repeated listens, and to be spared from ultimate judgement until part 2 comes out.

Harper says:

"Campfire Krautrock."

!

Chris says:

The second disc is separate from the album. It should be seen more of a bonus disc.

laura says:

Oh man Annie, you've made me so excited for this album. I won't be able to listen to it until Thurs night, but I can't wait. I like that you described it as "a treasure box of antiques." You did a great job!

John Klee says:

"Radiohead = Radiodead"
another overyhyped band. That lastpile of crap (hail to the thief) was absolute balderdash. this sounds much the same.

Steven says:

I just listened to the download as I, track by track, read your commentary. Great job! This collection's a keeper. Thanks for your scope of knowledge.

Alan says:

I have only heard it once, so I will wait until at least 20 listens to start running my mouth before completely backtracking and realizing that everything in this album will take a little while to fully inhale. I wish I hadn't heard "Nude" so many years ago & already knew what was going to happen, But the production is very good and very beautiful. You can only wonder how long Radiohead will be able stay at the creative peak that they have been at it seems for well over 10 years, since "The Bends." I really loved HTTT & it seemed there were so many different moods and changes in that album. This is more similar to Amnesiac or Kid A in my opinion, but, I need more time. ******* I Truthfully Wanted To Chime In Right Now Because I Hardly Ever Post Blogs Or Whatever, But You Guys All Seem Very Cool & Have STRONG Opinions.. This Is A Bad Time & Way To Ask For Anyone To Check Out My Music At www.myspace.com/hedreamsawake - But, I am compared to Thom & Co. Soooo Much & I Would Love To Hear What You Guys Think Of My Music When You Are In This Very Rare & Special Mood Of Hearing & Talking About A New RH Album, I Promise That My Music Is VERY Great & Worth Checking Out.. I Am So Afraid To Say That I Think RH Have Done Everything They Can Or Could Possibly Do & This Album Just Doesn't Feel Strong Enough To Me, But, I Am Going To Give It A Little Time.. Thank You To Anyone Who Care's To Listen To My Music & Tell Me What You Think, This IS NOT SOME ASSHOLE BEGGING FOR LISTENERS, I Truly Believe Anyone Reading This Will Really Like What They Hear & Give Me Honest & Strong Feedback. I Will Be Around To See Everyone Bash The Hell Out Of Me.. This is the First Review & Blogs That I Have Read & Enjoyed Reading Since I Heard The Album For The First Time A Few Minutes Ago.. Thanks To All Of You For Helping Me Grasp What I Am Struggling To Fully Comprehend, I Truly Hope I Fall In Love With The Album 10 Fold Because I Am Truthfully Let Down (And Hanging Around) For The First Time EVER By Radiohead.. Life Is F#CKED Sometimes, I Know It Will Get Better, But HOW MUCH BETTER?? The Vocals & Lyrics Don't Feel Confident, Strong, Or Pondered Enough - Same Way I Felt With "The Eraser" & That Album Really Never Held Me Te Way I Wanted To Be Held. Damn, Sorry For The Novella Fellas.. Regardless, Thank You..

Azyx says:

John Klee, I'm glad you expressed this unholdable desire to let out your negative opinion.

As for the blogger, you compare songs to other songs far too much for me. "It sounds like so and so's so and so!" Apparently you think the album is completely unoriginal.

Motoflou says:

Great play-by-play, my friend.

I'm on my 2nd listen right now, and I'm really loving this album. Much better than HTTT. And in all honesty...it feels good to be a Radiohead fan again. I'd honestly kind of stopped listening, and went into this album with no expectations whatsoever.

!

Mike says:

Haha, I love how people can't even read someone's blog that was written in the middle of the night without bitching about it.

Guy says:

Well maybe I am just so out of touch with 'modern' music but in my opinion Radiohead get progressively worse and more 'far out there' with every song they release. Maybe I'm also a saddo for wanting to hark back to the days when Jonny Greenwoods's guitar roared and you could understand every word of the venom and angst that Thom Yorke sang. I am of course talking of The Bends and OK Computer - two albums that are frankly far superior than their offerings of the last ten years. Every three years or so I wait, hope for a return of the greatest rock band this country has produced but sadly upon every new release I realise that band left the building quite some time ago and isn't coming back. So I'm left asking myself - 'am I missing something?', 'is there a magic to their songs that only some people can appreciate ?' NO, their just not very good anymore. Goodbye Radiohead - it was the best (for a while).

Kill says:

Ah, I liked ur review, although you didnt make it as clear that you liked it or not, as i had hoped! This is a fucking BRILLIANT album, definitely up there with the best. And so what if you got a few lines from songs wrong a bit in your review, who gives a poop? I dont!

McLovin says:

Guy said "is there a magic to their songs that only some people can appreciate ?' NO, their just not very good anymore. Goodbye Radiohead..."

Wow...what a load of crap. I'm not going to defend every song they've put out, nor do I exalt a Radiohead album without listening to it just because I'm a fan - BUT - you've got to be the most self-centered person in the world if you think that your taste determines that Radiohead's music is complete trash.

Apparently they do have a "magic" to their songs that only some people can appreciate, because I've found an emotional connection to something from all their albums.

Some of us would rather a band progress and change rather than write OK COMPUTER PT. 2,3,4,and 5. Sure, that would have made you happy, but some of us actually desire something new and challenging.

Oh, and while I'm on a rant, can everyone stop with the pretentious "I heard Videotape live in July of 2005 and it was so much better..." That's BS and I'm calling it. I don't give a rat's ass what you think of some live performance. I'll take the recorded version, thank you very much. If I hear one more person complain about this compared to live renditions I'll scream - it's just like hearing the same crap about a movie based on a book. Just enjoy the damn thing will you? It's a Radiohead album and it rocks. "Nude" is worth the "price of admission" alone. That little saying is kind of lost on this particular album, I know, but I couldn't think of anything better at the moment.

timmy says:

why doesn't everyone quit over-analyzing the album and take it for what it is. New. Different.

I must say I strongly disagree with 90% of you. I think this album is their weakest since Pablo Honey... a real "Let Down". With the following disclaimer:

Radiohead is my favorite band

I would highly reccomend you consider the thoughts that I've posted on my myspace blog (click on my name above to go to my myspace page). October 10th was a sad, sad day.

I must say I strongly disagree with 90% of you. I think this album is their weakest since Pablo Honey... a real "Let Down". With the following disclaimer:

Radiohead is my favorite band

I would highly reccomend you consider the thoughts that I've posted on my myspace blog (click on my name above to go to my myspace page). October 10th was a sad, sad day.

sam says:

I ask you: what is so wrong with being poppy? (Because you mention the CD is warm and inviting "without being poppy") Do you forget "Fake Plastic Trees," or "Just," or "Karma Police," which are all "pop" songs with "pop" hooks? Eh, sorry for the rant, it just annoys me when people dismiss things as "poppy," while misusing the term.

Karen says:

Mesmerizing.....does leave you wanting more. The more you listen the better it gets! Impressive band. :)

so sam (if you see this), your comment was a bit confusing.

songs can be warm and inviting without being poppy, for sure -- cf. explosions in the sky, battles, etc. etc. and i never said there was anything wrong with being poppy -- i tend to like radiohead's pop songs the most. i love pop music in general; i have a radio show called International Pop Overthrow, on which i play sugary pop songs.

this particular album, to me, drew you in, without necessarily adhering to traditional pop structures. i like that. there's nothing wrong with that.

is that better/more precise?

again, i wrote this off the top of my head at 1 a.m. sheesh, cut me some slack.

Alan says:

I have heard the album 5 or 6 times now and it is starting to grow on me, Definitely some Amazing & Beautiful Moments And The Production is Absolutely Stunning. I would put it in the same little box as Kid A or Amnesiac, An Album That Never Strays Away From The First 20 Seconds Of The 1st Song.. Still Need To Hear It More, But, It's Really F#cking Good & They Should Be Extremely Proud Of Themselves..
The Pressure Just ON Themselves Alone Must Be Absolutely Gut-Wrenching & They Can't Make Everyone Happy, I Think They Made The Album That They Wanted To Make And Thats All That Really Matters..

mike says:

OT somewhat: it boggles my mind that people think of Kid A and Amnesiac as these unlistenable, experimental albums devoid of melodies. But it's easy to hear the melody and warmth in both LPs, and "Knives Out," "Pyramid Song" and "Idioteque" are among their very strongest.

HTTT seemed like an attempt to get back to basics, but perhaps too far in that direction. In Rainbows is a nice compromise.

Jro says:

I've been trying to buy the download for 2 days now and I can't get inrainbows.com to work properly.

Once I have a copy, I can chime in on this album, but I do want to give some attention to this pervasive attitude towards musicians who change up the formula that made them popular.

First, I am a huge huge Radiohead fan simply because they evolve and change and mutate from album to album (hell, sometimes within the same album).

Second, to think that because a band changes they're no longer good is archaic and obsolete thinking. People talk smack about Prince for the same reasons, people bad-mouthed Kings of Leon when "Because Of The Times" came out because they dared - DARED! - to use a different sound. How is that fair? As an artist you are trapped in a narrow box, no way to ever feel like you're growing creatively... and then, guess what? The band breaks up!

So kudos to Radiohead for keeping their shit together in the face of that and for continuing to do their own weird thing. I hope we have many many more records to come from these British kooks.

joshee says:

Nice album. No one will ever compare. They did destroy "videotape". I hope they swallow their pride and take out that crap-a-tap for the box set. "Reckoner is the best song on the album so far.

Sean says:

I've been listening to this album once or twice a day since I got the download link, and I must say that it gets better each time I listen to it. There are some moments of sublime beauty, where disparate emotions are pulled out of me and mashed together. A really good song, for me, always has this moment where everything just sort of gels for a few breaths, and I suddenly feel (despite being an atheist) that I'm not all alone in a completely cold, colorless universe. Nearly every one of the songs on this album has at least one of those moments of 'fusion' for me. It makes me feel grateful that I can sit there for a little bit, and be swept away by something truly special.

I agree with most of the assessments of "Reckoner," though I do wish they'd have had the other (faster, more guitar-driven' version on it as well. I wouldn't have been put out by two versions of a song ;)

Eric Nigg says:

This is a wonderful album! I feel that Amnesiac is my favorite Radiohead album and this is my second. Its a simpler, warm album. Its great...

Keegan says:

"Campfire Krautrock"- I smell the next Fujiya and Miyagi album burning like an overdone marshmallow.

Eddie says:

I think this album is destined to be a classic. Wonderful chord progressions, haunting, yet warm vocal melodies, interesting rhythms. Each song has a natural ebb and flow and nothing seems forced. They make it sound easy, and anyone who has ever written and recorded music can tell you that the greatest songs are always the ones that make songwriting sound easy. They are the ones that you listen to and all along the way think, "yeah, that's exactly how this song should be", and never even question that. Those songs also tend to be the most intense to write, and I give Radiohead much respect for putting that kind of creative intensity into every song on In Rainbows. On first listen, every song on this album is honest to the creative process. I wouldn't skip over a single track, which is more than I can say about most albums I've ever heard. Even Tool, my favorite band of all time, has about one track on each album that I don't care for as much as the others, and sometimes end up skipping. As for Radiohead, until now, I haven't been able to listen to a whole album straight through without getting bored in some spots since The Bends. In Rainbows truly shines and deserves at least a second listen had you not been grabbed by the first.

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