chasing rain_bows
âîïðîñû ãðóïïå çàäàâàë Mark Paytress
//
MOJO, ôåâðàëü 2008
:: àíãëèéñêèé
îðèãèíàë (c) mojo, 2008
:: ôîòîãðàôèè (õîòÿ çäåñü è îïóùåíû) (ñ) Kevin Westenberg, 2007
:: ðóññêàÿ âåðñèÿ (ñ) sad as chu yuan
Four years in the making, In Rainbows is both
tortured and triumphant... Here, for the first time, is the unexpurgated
inside story of the album that nearly destroyed RADIOHEAD and gave
the music industry a heart attack...
.
THEY WENT DEAF DURING THE SESSIONS. Imagined themselves
as the Monty Python team with guitars. Battled rat poison and, more
deadly still, their own desperately doubting ways. They thought thought
it was all over (it wasn't). Four studios, two producers, endless
tweaks and retakes followed. But now, four years on from 2003's Hail
To The Thief, Radiohead are back with a record that even they themselves
grudgingly admit has left them feeling "really excited and really
proud". That record is, of course, In Rainbows, MOJO's album
of 2007.
As well as shaking up the industry itself with its pay-what-you-want
model, it's an album that artfully distils the band's very essence
while at the same time avoiding the customary curses of cliche or
complacency. And then, of course, there's new eight new tracks on
the bonus CD Discbox edition available exclusively via the band's
own website which paints an even more panoptic picture. A picture
that will fully reveal itself during a week-long round of interviews
with all five members of Radiohead as they unravel the titanic tale
of their creative rebirth.
"I GUESS WE HAD HIGH EXPECTATIONS THIS TIME round," shrugs
Thom Yorke, in the quiet of a book-lined private room in The Old Parsonage
Hotel ("The Old Parsnip," jests Jonny Greenwood), an establishment
with the ambience of a country house on the outskirts of Oxford city
centre. In the relative tranquillity of the city Yorke still calls
home, he exudes a warm glow, one that's accentuated by the generous
stubble of an incipient beard. He's so relaxed, in fact, that he takes
MOJO for a short tour of the city centre at the end of our interview.
"Now that's where several students were executed by the locals,"
he says with a glint in his eye, while pointing at a blink-and-you'll-miss-it
bricked-out patch of Broad Street. Actually, the youthful-looking
Yorke blends in perfectly here; all that's missing is the college
scarf.
Back at the Old Parsnip earlier, Yorke unleashes the first of several
loud laughs that belie public perceptions of him as an arch, lemon-sucking
miserablist. We're talking about the difficult days of Hail To The
Thief. "Yeah, we knew that was a lower part of the curve,"
he says after a characteristic pause for thought, "and, yes,
we knew we'd carry on. But it felt very much that the branch had become
a twig - and that we could fall off the tree at any point!"
Yorke can laugh now, but on reflection the Hail To The Thief experience
almost brought Radiohead to their knees. Indeed, no one could have
foreseen the car crash ahead when, in July 2002, the band road-tested
the material for two months before decamping to Los Angeles in September
where they laid the basis of the album down in one two-week session.
"It was very much a reaction to the protracted recording of Kid
A," says drummer Phil Selway, referring to the three years it
took the band to follow-up 1997's standard-bearer, OK Computer. "It
was also a response to the excitement we'd rediscovered by playing
the Kid A material live. We wanted to capture that on record."
To some extent, it worked. Guitarist Ed O'Brien talked up the album's
"swagger" on its release, Yorke recalled how he wept when
he first heard the playback to There There, and the band proved that
they could do it without squirrelling themselves away for years and
hiring a stately home for inspiration - as they'd done for both OK
Computer and Kid A. But despite its intermittent brilliance (and There
There does sound like a spellbinding peak of sorts) and initial commercial
success, Hail To The Thief was a short-term compromise solution that
quickly proved to be no solution at all.
"We should have pruned it down to 10 songs, then it would have
been a really good record," says O'Brien. "Working on In
Rainbows, I was aware that we were making something that was really
engaging, that moved people again. and I don't think Hail To The Thief
consistently did that. I think we lost people on a couple of tracks
and it broke the spell of the record."
Colin Greenwood knew as much from the start. "I didn't want
three or four songs on there, because I thought some of the ideas
we were trying out weren't completely finished." Such as? "The
Gloaming. We played it live and it was cool. My brother [Jonny] sampled
each of the instruments on stage, cut them up then sent them back
into the mix. It was so exciting, like a live DJ show, and Thom performed
off of all of that. But it wasn't the same in the studio. For me,
Hail To The Thief was more of a holding process, really."
SITTING IN THE QUIET OF "PROBABLY OXFORD'S first and last London-style
private members' club" above the QI bookshop, guitarist Jonny
Greenwood, the most restless Radiohead member - "he has the patience
of an insect!" says Yorke - also concedes that Hail To The Thief
was a few songs too long. "We were trying to do what people said
we were good at," he admits. "But it was good for our heads.
It was good for us to be doing a record that came out of playing live."
If the suspicion that the record wasn't quite up to their usual standard
didn't break them, then a year on the road touring Hail To The Thief
very nearly did. After a short tour of Japan and Australia in April
2004, the band retreated back to their various young families. "It
was definitely time to take a break," says Phil Selway. "There
was still a desire amongst us to make music, but also a realisation
that other aspects of our lives were being neglected. And we'd come
to the end of our contract [with EMI], which gives you a natural point
to look back over at what you've achieved as a band."
Any suggestion that this 'natural' break was a cover for a more ruinous
rift within the group is rebuffed by O'Brien. The most relaxed band
member in person, he is also the one least bound by what might be
termed Radiohead-speak. "No, I didn't think the band would collapse.
I wasn't scared. You know, if it all collapses, it's only a fucking
band." But a livelihood, too. "Yeah, it's a living, it's
a very nice living. But we've all got nice houses. We're not gonna
starve. There are always other things we can do. But I wasn't ever
worried about it. The good thing that came out of it was confronting
things.
Confrontation they can do, but they don't really do compliments.
Mention Nick Kent's claim in this magazine in 2001 that they were
"the most important band in the world", and they'll pretend
they haven't heard what you've said. It is proof, if more is required,
that the group consider themselves the best judges of their work...
and, perhaps, of a little moth-eaten modesty. Wanna see Thom Yorke
in fits? Float a rhetorical 'top of your game' across the table and
watch his reaction. "Wait till you see the file of photos that
comes with the record box," he splutters. "Then ask yourself
whether we look like we're at the top of our game." MOJO reminds
him of a picture posted up on the group's Dead Air Space blog that
accompanied the October 1, 2007 announcement that the release of In
Rainbows was imminent. In it, Thom, Ed and Colin [!] hold mugs of
tea and look almost insanely happy. "OK, that was a good moment,"
Yorke concedes. "They do happen."
Good, often astonishing moments have dogged Radiohead during their
15-year recording career. The 1992 single, Creep, the stand-out on
what was otherwise a fairly humdrum indie-rock debut, Pablo Honey,
became such an alternative nation anthem that the band dropped it
from their set. 1995's The Bends marked a great leap forward, thanks
to stronger material, more sophisticated arrangements and growing
studio savvy. Next, OK Computer confirmed Radiohead's standing, prompting
- with some justification - all those "Pink Floyd for the '90s"
comparisons. Excepting Thom Yorke's misguided early recourse to blond
hair extensions, they were, after all, largely anonymous figures that
appeared to shun the usual temptations of the rock'n'roll lifestyle
in favour of a more considered, almost morbidly serious approach to
their music. Oh, and let's not forget Radiohead's Oxford to the Floyd's
Cambridge.
Although the genre has since been largely rehabilitated, the 'prog'
accusation became a stick with which to beat the band, especially
among the Britpop pack whose geezerish anthems grafted the sound of
The Beatles' Revolver onto the simple gratifications demanded by Loaded
Man. Just as they'd raised their game after being accused of being
"a pitifully lily-livered excuse for a rock'n'roll group"
in their early days, Radiohead again reacted wildly, deflecting the
"Is this the best record ever?" hype around OK Computer
by a hard-left turn in search of a new direction. It took the best
part of three years and resulted in two laptop rock albums, the stunningly
taut Kid A (2000) and its troubled twin, Amnesiac (2001).
The spur for this defiant dive into electronica was Thom. It was
mooted at the time that not everyone in the band was as fanatical
as he was about the fractured beats and alienated textures that he
had discovered after buying up the Warp Records catalogue. While Ed
O'Brien looked in vain for melodies, Phil Selway wondered whether
the laptop beats would put him out of a job. Hence, Hail To The Thief
- a let's-work-together bonding exercise, the effect of which, as
we have seen, threatened the band's unity more than at any other time
in their 20-year tenure. Cue Thom's solo album.
"YOU CAN'T GO ANYWHERE WITH THOM WITHout him having a laptop
and headphones on," says Jonny Greenwood. "It's been like
that for years, and he's still doing it. We drove to London yesterday
and he had his laptop out and his headphones on for the whole journey.
That's what he's like. Always filling notebooks, too..."
While Radiohead are definitely A Band in the sense that all five
musicians contribute greatly to the overall sound and character, it
is Yorke who is very much first among equals. From the beginning,
it's mostly been his demos that form the basis for each Radiohead
record, not least because he's the proverbial creative - totally unable
to switch off. He claims he's been "training" to change
all that. "But you'll have to talk to my missus - sorry, it's
Rachel, she hates being called that - to see if that's worked,"
he smiles. "Yes, it's true: I constantly have bits of paper in
my pockets, backs of envelopes, notebooks. But, you know, 95 per cent
of it doesn't get used."
Released in July 2006, Yorke's solo record, The Eraser, provided
an outlet for some of his excess creativity. Despite Thom's twig analogy,
there was, Radiohead insist, never a suggestion that he was abandoning
the band. Now portrayed as an itch that needed scratching, The Eraser
is a slow-burn melance of dislocated dance textures, piano-led moodsong
topped with melodies that grow deliciously with every listen. "Great
record, amazing singing," enthuses Jonny Greenwood. "He
had to get this stuff out, and everyone was happy that it was made.
He'd go mad if every time he wrote a song it had to go through the
Radiohead concensus. The combination of him, [producer] Nigel Godrich
and a few months seemed to get it all unblocked."
Yorke himself clearly appreciated the experience. "Actually,
I did learn something from it," he says. "It made me realise
that all the stuff I do on laptops gets me excited because I can hear
what I'm gonna do vocally. But unless I have a vocal in place, it's
a bit unfair to expect anybody else to understand what the fuck's
going on." For example? "I was playing bits of Black Swan,
six minutes of, er, mostly drivel, and Nigel's like, 'Bloody hell!
I'm not interested in any of this.' I said, I've been working on this
for ages. It's great. 'No it's not,' he says. But as soon as I put
the vocal on, he was like, 'OK, now it makes sense.' It reminded me
just how important the voice is."
And that realisation, as much as anything else, was to serve the
group well during two long, cold winters and one long touring summer,
in which time In Rainbows was painstakingly put together.
According to Jonny Greenwood, his own solo activities - two soundtracks,
Bodysong (2003) and There Will Be Blood (2007), as well as being BBC
composer in residence since 2004 - haven't had anything like the impact
on the band that Yorke's renewed vocal awareness has. "Er, I
don't think I've done one [a solo album]," he shrugs. "I
did music for a film but that's different to cobbling together 50
minutes of music with your name on it and expecting people to listen
to it. That doesn't interest me at all. If I've brought anything new
along, then I suppose I'm slightly less scared of asking violin players
to do stuff than I was..." And a scary dub habit. "I spent
six solid months listening to dub all day every day," he says.
"My wife still hasn't forgiven me."
The rest were publicly quieter but hardly immune from new influences.
Ed O'Brien feasted on Rip It Up And Start Again, Simon Reynolds' extensive
survey of post-punk, and found it remarkably liberating. "That
cemented a lot of the insecurities and boredom I was feeling about
music. I realised, Hang on a sec, this is where I come from, and that's
the stuff that still moves me. It's got melodies, it's got pop, it's
trying to do things a bit differently - and you don't have to work
so hard at it..."
Colin Greenwood, meanwhile, continued to feed his eclectic musical
interests, turning on to DJ Surgeon, encouraging fans to go out and
catch Scouse screwballs Clinic, and learning a bunch of Macca and
Motown ace James Jamerson basslines. Phil Selway joined Jonny Greenwood
in the fictional band The Weird Sisters in Harry Potter And The Goblet
Of Fire film. So far, so fragmented.
MID-FEBRUARY 2005: TWO YEARS AFTER FINISHing Hail To The Thief there,
Radiohead regroup at their Oxfordshire recording studio. Initially,
the prospects appeared favourable in terms of the music they set about
making. Speaking the following month, Jonny Greenwood enthused about
the "good songs" and the renewed hunger within the band.
He also said that early rehearsals had been "fun".
Ed O'Brien: "The moment Thom came in with the songs and the
lyrics, it was the first time in a long while that I felt really engaged
with the lyrics. I thought, These are great, these are moving me,
these are lyrics written by somebody who is engaging with the stuff
of life. That was exciting." While no one admits to anything
so simple as a gameplan, O'Brien probably expresses the band's collective
unconscious when he says, "I think ultimately we were looking
for 10 or 11 songs, a really concise body of work, with no fat."
Eight months later, on October 21, Thom Yorke posted an online bulletin
on Dead Air Space, a new blog page at radiohead.com. It was the first
of many, often fraught online updates he'd write over the next two
years, that give a good indication of the agonising that went into
the making of what became In Rainbows. Within two months, Yorke was
back again, after another difficult two-week session. This time, his
mood had darkened significantly. "We're splitting up. It's all
shit. We're washed up, finished," he write.
"There was this sense," admits O'Brien, "that we could
finish this all tomorrow and so what. But it felt like it would be
a shame to, particularly because when you got beyond all the shit
and the bollcosk, the core of these songs were really good."
"It was difficult to get back," Yorke says, "and because
things didn't move forwards for ages and ages, it grew more and more
tense. Things didn't really ease until we started to feel we had something
that had the emotional impact that we hoped the songs would have."
Colin Greenwood: "I suppose we were paying the price for not
taking the pain on Hail To The Thief. As this project progressed,
we realised there are no short cuts to the process being exciting
for us."
The initial high of February 2005 soon dispersed. Months of rehearsals,
followed by the band's own attempted to get some of the material down
in a studio, gave way to debilitating - and characteristic - self-doubt.
"There's been such a crisis of self-confidence in making this
record," Colin Greenwood blurts out, his face etched with discomfort
as he recalls the experience. "It's been... really... terrible,
you know." This man is not joking. Like his brother Jonny, Greenwood
thrives on the immediacy of a band playing together. His happiest
memory of the entire process was "when we reheased at our old
apple storage warehouse, a flattering room, which made everything
sound big and rocky." It didn't last long. Much of the next two-and-a-half
years were spent studio-bound.
In retrospect the problem appears both recurring and simple. Radiohead,
a five-piece rock band, desire to make music that refuses to be bound
by the limitations of their chosen genre. But movement away from the
traditional into the unexpected often results in a frustrating process
of distillation. "At the rehearsal room stage, things often sound
very standard," agrees Phil Selway. "The trick is to stick
with that, because it does ultimately get you to a much better place.
You must also be prepared to jettison the lot, too."
So they did. In December 2005 Mark 'Spike' Stent was asked to work
with the band in a bid to help them work through the material they'd
recorded and stockpiled. "He listened to the stuff we'd been
self-producing," says O'Brien. "These weren't demos, they'd
been recorded in proper studios [in autumn 2005], and he said, 'The
sounds aren't good enough.'"
Stent, known for mixing the likes of Bjork, U2 and Massive Attack,
took over the production of sessions from February through to April
2006. Early versions of Nude, Bodysnatchers and Arpeggi were among
the songs worked up, but he didn't last long. "It never really
took off," says O'Brien. "But he was good for us because
he galvanised the whole process," adds Selway. "That had
been missing up to that point." Thom Yorke was far from happy,
though. "I've been fucking tearing my hair out," he wrote
on the band's blog in March. "Furiously writing, working out
parts, cracking up."
Despite their singer's malaise, this first preparatory phase in the
making of In Rainbows came to a head during May and June 2006, when
the band toured Europe and the States, returning to the stage in August
for two weeks of festival appearances, forcing them to concentrate
on the material in hand. "That took us to the next phase,"
says Selway, "because if you're playing new songs live, you're
going to have to commit to some arrangements."
MAY 1, 2006. AS THOM YORKE AND JONNY GREENwood performed an acoustic
warm-up show at the Big Ask Live fundraiser for Friends Of The Earth
at Koko in Camden Town, produced Nigel Godrich watched from the audience.
Having worked with the band since 1004 and co-produced every album
since OK Computer, Godrich had been the fall guy in the band's initial
attempt to break out of what Colin Greenwood calls "the safe
zone". His return to the fold took a further three months. By
September 2006, says Selway, "We had prepared ourselves sufficiently
for that whole working process to come back together."
"Thing came together when Nigel started working with us again,"
nods Colin Greenwood, "because he was someone we knew when we
had to be accountable to. Before then it was pie in the sky."
All five members clearly hold Godrich in high esteem. "This
is someone who, when he was six, built a mixing desk out of yoghurt
pots and a black pen," laughs Jonny Greenwood. "And he's
still like that." Godrich's patience, diligence and evidently
obsessive interest in the music-making process make him an especially
ideal partner for Thom Yorke. “I can keeping going with something
for a very, very, very, very, very long time,” says Yorke, “until
eventually I’ll realise I’ve been listening to the same two bars for
hours. Nigel’s even more patient. We share that, and that’s one of
the tensions, one of the dynamics within the band.”
In a bid to bridge those tensions, and ease Godrich back into the
fold after three years, in October 2006 band and co-producer decamped
to a condemned Palladian country mansion, Tottenham House, outside
Marlborough in Wiltshire. After all, decamping to a stately home worked
for OK Computer and Kid A.
“It was literally an old country pile,” smiles Ed O’Brien, “huge
and crumbling at the seams and with a Capability Brown front acreage
that was astonishing. But the house had never properly functioned.
It was expensive to maintain, and Stanley [Donwood], who does all
our artworks, said the ley lines were not very forgiving.”
During their three-week stay, the band occupied a couple of rooms,
carefully avoided the rat pison, huddled together at nights in caravans,
and recorded the basis of Jigsaw Falling Into Place and a ferocious
take of Bodysnatchers, both of which ended up on the album. “You can
definitely hear the atmosphere of the place on that,” says Thom Yorke.
“We did loads of recording there, and three or four songs survived,
but Bodysnatchers is the one live track on the record where we’re
all playing together.”
According to Colin Greenwood, the rumoured haunted ambience of Tottenham
House imprinted itself into other parts of In Rainbows. “Nigel recorded
the smudges and fingerprints of those rooms and put them back into
the sound later,” he enthuses, “like the reverb on the House Of Cards
vocal. His computer is like a rattle bag. He can pick out any sound,
irrespective of where he recorded it, then map it on to a track we
recorded somewhere else. Amazing.”
A second pre-Christmas bonding session away from home, at the grand
Halswell House outside Taunton in Somerset, proved less fruitful.
“It was along way home and we missed out families,” says Colin Greenwood.
“We didn’t achieve much there, so in the new year, we started to record
in our own studio.”
By then, several sessions has also taken place at Nigel Godrich’s
Hospital Studio in London’s Covent Garden. There, in December 2006,
Thom Yorke felt the first real glimmer of achievement. “We were looking
for something that had a real effect on us, an emotional impact, and
that happened when we were doing Videotape and I was semi kicked out
of the studio for being a negative influence. Stanley and I came back
a bit worse for wear at about 11 in the evening and Jonny and Nigel
had done this stuff to it that reduced us both to tears. It completely
blew my mind. They’d stripped all the nonsense away that I’d been
piling onto it, and what was left was this quite pure sentiment.”
In complete contrast to the incendiary 21st century rock’n’roll of
Bodysnatchers, Videotape is spellbinding in its morbid, haunting simplicity,
and at its centre is Yorke’s extraordinary voice. It set the tone
for much of In Rainbows.
For many, though, Yorke’s vocal on Nude, another key album cut, shines
brightest. “Ten years ago, when we first had the song, I didn’t enjoy
singing it because it was too feminine, too high.” He says. “It made
me feel uncomfortable. Now I enjoy it exactly for that reason – because
it is a bit uncomfortable, a bit out of my range, and it’s really
difficult to do. And it brings something out in me…”
Yorke’s new found vocal confidence might well be an outward manifestation
of a change in his creative habits. The man who once complained that
he was consumed by “mental chatter” has been working on himself. “I’m
able to switch off now. Whereas five or six years ago, I absolutely
couldn't. I never switched off ever." Mental chatter is, he claims,
"to the detriment of work. One of the reasons this record has
worked for me is that I've been trying to reduce how mcuh I work.
The fact that I'm a dad too means I don't spend an entire afternoon
in front of a piano. Now I have to be a lot more focused when I work."
But, ever the doubter, he's not entirely convinced by his own argument.
"Hmm, I'm not sure that's true. Maybe that's all nonsense."
This aspiration to locate a purity of expression is clearly evident
in much of In Rainbows - from the spacious, stripped down production
on several tracks to what seems to be more impressionistic, but obviously
personalised lyrics. Yorke raises an eyebrow. "Really? Well,
Reckoner is very much like that. It's what sticks that I'm after and
that happened a few times while making this. I try and do that thing
where it's sort of automatic, that whatever comes out comes out and
try not to censor it too much."
Yorke is certainly striving to find a new creative methodology. "The
more you absorb yourself in the present tense, the more likely that
what you write will be good," he says. "Especially in this
fucking town, where everybody's sitting in front of their fesks for
far too long, endlessly sweating over words that don't ever get heard.
People are obsessive in this city and work becomes an end in itself."
Given the three-year gestation period for In Rainbows, and Radiohead's
long-term 'no pain, no gain' attitude towards their work, his words
come as a surprise. "There's no point in writing notes and notes
and notes and notes," he continues, repeating words as he does
habitually. "The polar opposite of that is Michael Stipe, who
absorbs himself in other people and the life around him, and that's
where he gets his ideas. I'm not like that, but I absolutely understand
why he does it. Neil Young claims he writes lyrics and doesn't go
back to them. If he does, he says, the worse they become. But my God,
that's scary. I mean, Faust Arp is the exact opposite of that, pages
and pages and pages and pages and pages and pages until eventually,
the good ones stick."
Whatever his method, Yorke's colleagues certainly believe their main
man is on a roll. "I'm lucky because I'm working with a songwriter
who I consider to be a peer of all those great soulful songwriters,"
says Colin Greenwood. "And Thom's singing, his phrasing, and
his timing are just sublime. Listen to the way he sings around the
beat on Nude and 15 Step. I don't hear anyone who can do it like that,
so instinctively, and in perfect takes."
Yorke has not been alone in upping his game. Phil Selway and Colin
Greenwood are surely the most inventive rhythm section working close
to the rock mainstream. Multi-instrumentalist Jonny Greenwood brings
a classically inspired serenity to several tracks, including celeste
on Weird Fishes and the Discbox cut, Go Slowly, as well as sweeping
string arrangements on Faust Arp and Arpeggi.
Typically, perhaps, Ed O'Brien is the only one who'll actually admit
that the project's success was crucial to Radiohead's survival. "One
of my mantras throughout the recording was, This is the last time
I'm doing this. I'll never summon up the energy to do this again.
So I'm going to put everything I can into it. I think everyone felt
the same. This might be the last time. I really, really believed that."
O'Brien also harboured a secret desire to confirm the band's place
in history. "I never felt we were one of the great bands, up
there with The Smiths or R.E.M., you know. In my view, we've made
three really great records, The Bends, OK Computer and Kid A. What
we needed was another great record just to seal it."
JANUARY 2007. AFTER SEEMINGLY CHASING THEIR OWN shadows for two years
Radiohead repaired once again to their own Oxfordshire bolt hole.
"Once we got back into our studio, we re-recorded a lot of the
songs," says Colin Greenwood. "But that was the period when
it really came into its own."
Despite struggling with certain rhythm tracks, one song that particularly
benefited from an early 2007 refit was the In Rainbows opener, 15
Step. "The original version came out of bits assembled in the
computer," says Yorke, "and we were happy with that. Then
we worked out how to play it live and the song ended up being something
else again. We needed to push it as far as we possibly could. We're
always looked for ways to get out of our safe zone."
As anyone who's mouthed along to No Surprises or Karma Police knows,
no one does 'epic' quite like Radiohead. Or, more accurately, like
Radiohead used to. "That was a big issue on this record,"
admits O'Brien. "Arpeggi, for example, is a song that's obviously
epic in scope. But every time we tried to do it, and fought against
it being big, it didn't work. The problem is that you've got to convince
people that big doesn't mean stadium. I think we do big music well;
it's kinda natural to us. But the problem with big music is the connotations
that come with it, all that candles and stadium stuff. But epic is
also about beauty, like a majestic view, and what we did on this record
was to allow the songs to be epic when they have to be."
In truth, Radiohead could have been the biggest stadium band of their
generation. Yorke disagrees. "Actually, I can't do it, and that's
why we're not," he says. "I'd have blown my brains out."
Yorke's guarded approach to stardom is something which the rest of
the band have used to their own benefit, allowing them to work in
a mannger that involves a pronounced sense of self-regulation.
"Yeah, Thom is very wary of that and rightly so," nods
Ed. "It's served us well. But equally you can stifle things if
you don't allow things to just let be. If you just let things evolve,
there'll always be a twist. What I like about this record are the
times when we just let the song evolve and develop its own character."
Eventually, as far as the troubled genesis of the album went, the
evolution could go no further. A deadline was imposed for the start
of July 2007. Colin Greenwood: "When we'd finished all the songs,
we played them to our managers, and Chris [Hufford] said, It sounds
like you'd just made this overwordy book. He was right."
At a band meeting at Yorke's house, in late summer, the production
of one mastered 10-track CD was greeted with a huge sigh of relief.
It took its In Rainbows title from a lyric on Reckoner - a song that
had mutated entirely during the sessions. Each track on the album
had to earn the approval of all five members. "I was just relieved
that we didn't muff up the arrangements, which is what you often feel
when you finish a record," says Jonny Greenwood. "And as
it's the first record where, a month later, I'm still listening to
my six favourite songs, I think that's a good sign."
"The first time we all sat down and felt that it had worked
was when we finalised the tracklisting and had the finished CD,"
adds Phil Selway. "It was only at that point that we completely
believed that we'd made the record that we wanted to."
Indeed, the handful of tracks that didn't make the final cut were
not rejected for reasons of quality. "All those songs were in
the running for the main album," says Ed O'Brien, "but for
one reason or another, they didn't fit. In fact, each of us made strong
cases for a few of those songs going on In Rainbows." Jonny Greenwood
was disappointed not to win the argument for Go Slowly, while the
spine-rattling Last Flowers, Yorke's trump card, was turned down as
it had been taped for The Eraser and felt slightly alien in the In
Rainbows context.
All the hard listening done to get this far had almost destroyed
Colin Greenwood's ears. "I used headphones incorrectly a couple
of times and lost much of my hearing for two months," he says.
"That affected me profoundly. I thought I'd lose a lot of my
top end, but it came back over time." He wasn't alone. "Thom
had the same experience making this record. He'd use these same 'closed'
headphones and they destroyed his top end. It's terrible, it turns
you off music."
Compensation came in the form of the finished master. "I was
really excited and proud," says Yorke. "But at the same
time, I desperately wanted to get the fuck away from it as fast as
possible, because once I've played it all the way through and seen
that finally it makes sense, that's absolutely it for me. You only
have a few days where you do, Yeah, we got something right, thank
fuck for that. Then it's time to do something new."
That wasn't long in coming. Right at the beginning of the album sessions,
early in 2005, Radiohead knew they were out of contract with EMI,
and were in no hurry to renew. The takeover of the company by Terra
Firma, a private equity firm, in May 2007 sealed it.
"They just didn't feel like they were in a very healthy position,"
says Jonny Greenwood. "Every couple of years you'd hear, Oh,
there's a new person in charge. He used to work for a toothpaste company,
or he used to run pensions. You'd think, What's that got to do with
music? It’s not like that at XL." XL Recordings, part of the
Beggars [Banquet] Group, secured the European rights to In Rainbows
in the autumn, largely in the basis of Thom Yorke’s favourable experiences
with the label when it handled The Eraser.
The idea of making In Rainbows available first via download had been
germinating for some time, certainly as far back as a time when EMI
were still hoping to re-sign the band. According to Phil Selway, the
management company first suggested it. It obviously appealed to the
band’s desire to make their material available more quickly, rather
than groan through yet another three-month record company ‘lead time’.
And it tickled Thom Yorke’s iconoclaustic tendencies. “It’s the art
school thing. I have a fundamental distrust of, er, everything” he
says laughing loudly. “I’d much prefer to kick the dust up.”
And that, in a few words, is exactly what happened on October 10,
2007, now forever known as Radiohead Day. There was little warning.
At midnight on September 30/October 1, Jonny Greenwood bashed out
a short, simple message onto Dead Air Space from his kitchen at home.
“Hello everyone. Well, the new album is finished, and it’s coming
out in 10 days. We’ve called it In Rainbows.
Love from us all.
Jonny.”
A link led to the In Rainbows site, where forager soon discovered
that they were being invited to name their own price for the download.
Although Courtyard Management have yet to release firm statistics
of their own, it has strongly refuted the results of one survey which
suggested that 62 per cent of those who downloaded the album chose
to pay nothing at all for it. Although they profess little knowledge-or
even interest even-in the financial implications of the download approach,
the band are fascinated by the art/commerce debate it’s stirred up.
“We weren’t giving the record away,” says Colin Greenwood. “We were
saying, What is it worth? Music is one of the only commodified art
forms where when you walk into a store and records by Dylan, Roxette,
Klaxons or The Hives are the same price. Does that mean they’re all
as good as each other? Is there a way to say, by how much you pay,
how good or bad something is? It’s good that the whole experience
has got people asking those kind of questions.”
"There was a big risk that if nobody gave any money at all,
technically speaking we'd lose a fortune," Yorke insists, "and
I don't just mean the recording costs but the cost of paying for the
physical process of sending the downloads out. At 4p to 6p a time,
that's a lot of money when you add it up. Besides, we had no idea
whether we'd get a load of shit for it."
Instead, the reaction, which made front pages across the world, and
prompted much debate on the business pages, was almost overwhelmingly
positive - and hailed as a revolution in the way major bands sell
their music. "It's really not that radical," Yorke reckons.
"The only thing that was radical about it was that we were prepared
to give something away that one might not normally consider in our
position. But we never saw it as giving away. It has a worth regardless
of whetehr you make people pay for it or not. As Chris [Hufford] said
all along, this would have meant fuck all if the songs were rubbish."
FOR YORKE, THE BIGGEST THRILL WAS MAKING A cultural impact "while
sitting at home doing eff all. That's cool, I'm down with that! But
it's not gonna happen very often. If we had our nuclear warhead, then
I'm afraid that was it."
As Jonny Greenwood's simple announcement grew, virus-like, into an
international story, it became obvious that In Rainbows was a taste
of things to come. Record labels shuddered at the thought of other
out-of-contract artists going the same route; fans found themselves
thrilled at the prospect of downloading a new record knowing that
hundreds of thousands of others were doing so at the same time. Radiohead
Day was a remarkable event, but the band express no desire to go it
alone and run their own record company. "The experiment was good,
but we don't wanna be spending the rest of our career in meetings
discussing Portuguese shop displays," says Jonny Greenwood. "It's
rehearsing and writing and being back in the studio where we're happiest,
really," he says.
Neither do the band carry any guilt at cutting out the middleman
to pocket the lion's share of the money earned from the download.
Of course, they're acutely aware that the big money comes from touring
and merchandising, and Yorke accepts that the Radiohead brand has
been "elevated" by the entire episode. Ed O'Brien plays
down the idea that Radiohead Day was ever intended as an "industry
bashing event" and is more candid. "We've been putting money
into our merchandise arm, W.A.S.T.E, for 10 years now and they've
built it up into a really good little company. So we thought, Let's
make use of it."
Hence Discbox, a lavish 12-inch square box-set of CD and vinyl editions
of In Rainbows, an exclusive second disc containing eight new songs
(see panel), photographs, artwork and lyrics - all in a book-stule
package. Manufactured in a strictly limited run, Discbox sells for
?40 (estimated sales to date: 80,000). But it's not the only Radiohead
box set on offer this winter - EMI have just released Radiohead, a
similarly-priced package with all seven of the band's Parlophone albums,
complete with MP3s of the same material and a limited edition USB
stick to carry then around on.
"Isn't it nice?" says Thom Yorke, affecting his best Peter
Cook voice. "No, I'm not really annoyed, and anyway there's nothing
we can do about it. If the choice is to dwell on that, or make a sign
of the cross and walk away into the light, I'm gonna choose the latter."
"It could have been far worse," admits Jonny Greenwood,
"like a cheesy greatest hits with the worst photo of Thom with
big hair on the cover." Well, that's probably next Christmas,
Jonny...
Not that Radiohead are opposed to the idea of seeing their work in
the high street. "We're really excited about the shop release
of In Rainbows," says Jonny Greenwood. "When I'm in Sainsbury's
and I see all the CDs stakced up, in a way I still want to be part
of all that." But will shops want a Radiohead album that's been
in free circulation for two months now? "That's a good question.
Once again, nobody knows. It feels like we've been in that situation
a lot recently. And I like it that way."
When it comes to hard and fast conclusions about the long-term ramifications
of Radiohead Day, Yorke says, "I don't think it changes things
a great deal. I mean, everyone says that the structure of the music
business is imploding, so that's nothing to do with us. All we did
essentially was give out a glorified leak date."
And taken at least some of the control into their own hands. "Well,
it would be nice if what we did was free up artists and musicians
to think, I don't have to sign my name in blood, maybe I can do this
in a different way. But that's about it. All we did was respond to
a particular situation, and it was the logical thing to do, captain.
We saw it as the best way to get the music we'd worked so hard on
heard by the most people."
OUR ALLOTED TIME IN THE OLD PARSNIP HAS LONG been exceeded, and the
room needs to be vacated. "Are you rushing off?" Yorke says,
before he offers to play Oxford City Guide. As one often chastised
for his po-faced intensity, he's more feet-on-the-ground than most
song-and-dance men. He expresses concerns about the band's tour later
this summer. "That messes with my mind quite a bit from the environmental
point of view," he sighs, "but if you do it in bite-sized
chunks, that might be all right." If the campaigning Thom Yorke
is less obviously present on the latest album - though House Of Cards
and 4-Minute Warning on the second disc are informed by apocalyptic
thoughts - his activism can be found all over Dead Air Space.
Oh, and one more thing - bearing in mind that one of the most startling
images on In Rainbows involves Mephistopheles reaching up to snatch
the singer away from the pearly gates at the commencement of Videotape
- working in such a commercialised art form, does Thom Yorke really
feel as if he's sold some of his soul to the devil? "When I was
at college, I was completely anti the idea of the tortured artist
in the corner with his solitary canvas that then gets puts on the
wall to be revered. I was absolutely into the idea that there's no
artefact at all, that there was just the reproduction, the aura of
the original. I mean, you go to the Louvre, and there's the Mona Lisa
in a bloody shrine. What's the point of that? The true art of the
20th century is art that's reproduced. You don't put it in a church
or a gallery. You put it in a book or on a CD or on TV. So, no, I
don't think I've sold my soul at all.
"But I think it's perfectly natural to be obsessed by the idea
of selling out, or compromise, or losing it. I think that's totally
natural. I mean, you could see that happening to Kurt Cobain really
fast. That's because the place you write from is not the public cheesy-peezy
person, it's the one that's left when all that crumbles. So it's difficult,
but I guess because of the nature of the people that we all are, no
one's ever really swallowed it whole."
Really? Not ever? "Well, I think it's human nature to want to
get lost in it and believe that you're wonderful. But I went the other
way too fast and assumed that absolutely all of it - and we're talking
about the OK Computer era - was all bullshit, including me. I'd regularly
stop midway through a song and think, I don't mean a fucking word
of this, I'm off. Which, I guess, is the polar opposite of someone
like Marc Bolan. But it's a product of the same thing. You're always
trying to deal with the fact that you're a small crumbly piece of
stuff when you write these songs, and maybe that's why the songs are
good. So you're always taking one poison or another. Perhaps that's
what makes carrying on so hard. You make a record, you wake up and
start writing something new, and everything crumbles again."