Showing posts with label Radiohead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Radiohead. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 September 2018

Ranking 'OK COMPUTER's tracklist from best to worst

11 months ago I made a blog post where I ranked the tracklist of Radiohead's 1995 classic 'The Bends'.

Frankly it wasn't great, I hadn't really listened to the second half of the album enough to fully justify placing a song like 'Sulk' higher than 'Blackstar', and so on. However, 1997's 'OK Computer' is a different story, it's my second favourite album of all-time and I've listened to it dozens of times. Here, I'm going to rank the songs from my least favourite to my favourite, although keep in mind that there arent really any weak tracks here.


12. Fitter Happier

Perhaps the only easy choice I had to make on this list, 'Fitter Happier' is surely doomed to come in last place on almost every 'OK Computer' ranking simply because it's a two-minute robot-voice interlude rather than a legitimate song. With that said, it works perfectly as an atmospheric interlude, especially when compared with some of the more boring or pointless interludes on 'Kid A' ('Treefingers') and 'Amnesiac' ('Hunting Bears'), as while those serve as ambient mood setters, 'fitter happier' actively chills the listener with it's Orwellian lyrics and gloomy soundscape that arguably predicts the more experimental landscapes created on the band's next album.

11. The Tourist

'The Tourist' is the only song on 'OK Computer' that I hesitate to call great, and while I usually get won over by the end, it's not a doubt I experience with any of the other tracks. While some of my favourite radiohead songs are some of their slowest ('Nude', 'How To Disappear Completely', 'Pyramid Song'), 'The Tourist' often feels like it's playing in slow-motion, giving it the effect of a lullaby. As such it works well as album closer, aided by the lyrics circling back to join up with 'Airbag', but it's inflated runtime and unchanging chord chord sequence are the only parts of the whole album that grate on me.

10. Climbing Up the Walls

This is Radiohead at their creepiest, with a soundscape of of rattling chains, scrathy violins, bird screeches and a rasping bassline all topped with Thom Yorke's murky and unsettling delivery of lyrics like 'Open Up Your Skull'. After the second chorus the creepiness explodes into a brilliantly incomprehensible mess of instrumentation, before ending with a demonic scream. It's puzzling that this sits so well with the tonally opposite 'No Surprises' in the tracklist, but somehow it works. As for why 'Climbing Up the Walls' isn't higher up, it's simply because although I admire Radiohead's attempt at making something creepy, it appeals to me less than most of the other songs which inspire less surface-level emotion.

9. Electioneering

I would hesitate to call any song on one of the most-critically acclaimed albums of all time underrated, but if i had to it would be 'Electioneering'. People seem to frequently name this song as the worst on 'OK Computer', because of it's more energetic and upbeat tone, but as someone who initially couldn't stand most of 'OK Computer', this is the song that single-handedly got me through those hectic first few listens. Aside form being one of Radiohead's better attempts at a grungy sound - I like this more than a fair bit of 'The Bends' - this song injects a much needed boost of momentum into the album right when it's in danger of becoming stale. It doesn't fit in perfectly, and it's not as ambitious as many of the other tracks, but IT HAS A COWBELL.

8. Lucky

I always feel like I should like this a bit more than I do. Several people and publications I know have listed this as one of the very best Radiohead songs. It's certainly an incredible achievement, creating one of the bleakest atmospheres on the record during the verses with the heavy bass and sparse guitar line, before lifting off into a chorus with one of the more memorable Radiohead riffs. My problem is with the transition to the chorus not sounding quite as powerful as I think it could and not really liking the 'We are standing on the edge' post-chorus section. That said, this is the first of the 8 standout tracks of the album in this ranking, so from here on out I believe every song is a 9-10/10.

7.  Subterranean Homesick Alien

'Subterranean Homesick Alien' sounds both blissful and bleak at the same time, and is highly accessible compared to the songs surrounding it, with some of the cleanest production and most straightforwardly narrative lyrics on the album. Johnny Greenwood's guitar sounds like a waterfall for most of the runtime, and despite the lyrics about 'Living in a Town, where you can't smell a thing', the impression I get from the song is one of lying in a field at sunset, watching cows drifting up into distant UFOs.

6. Exit Music (For a Film)

'Exit Music' was the last song on the album that I fell in love with, I found the intro too sparse and unsettling to really engage with the rest of the song at first. Over time I've come to appreaciate this intro, a sharp change from the dense soundscapes offered up by the first three tracks, and focusing more on the intro led me to appreciate how great the build-up of this song is. First it's just Thom and his guitar, then a spooky robotic choir comes in, a sound I still haven't heard since, before we get one of the all-time great bass-drops in rock, as the song climaxes in a terrifying frenzy of everything getting louder with Thom Yorke shouting 'NOW WE ARE ONE' over it all.

5. Airbag

Even though it can be enjoyed easily as a standalone track, it's impossible to imagine any other song opening 'OK Computer' other than 'Airbag', with that immediately stark riff instantly putting the listener into the melancholy mood that much of the album carries. The layers of instrumentation are so dense here that it's easy to get lost within the choirs, programmed and acoustic percussion, razor-edge guitars and stuttering bass. The song never feels almost five minutes long, even despite a breakdown that uses record scratching, which is an impressive achievement.

4. Karma Police

 

I love 'Karma Police'. I've learnt it on guitar (Even though it uses less of the instrument than any other song on the album), I've memorised the lyrics, I've watched the video more than any other Radiohead video. While much of 'OK Computer' is sincere, 'Karma Police' has a layer of irony smeared over it, which makes it the funniest song on the album, especially when combined with the 'You've Got A Friend In Me' piano roll of the chorus. However, this fun transforms into something transcendental during the outro, where the murderous daydreams of the narrator are replaced with reality, helped enormously by the three note motif that starts off on a cello and moves up in pitch, being sang by a choir of Thom Yorkes all singing 'Ah-ah-ahh', until they are drowned out by white noise, in one of Radiohead's best outros.

3. No Surprises


Under the childlike, high pitched guitar melodies and relaxed vocal delivery of 'No Suprises' lies a restless, suffocating anxiety that never really quite comes out. The music video to the song, where a tank of water gradually fills up around Thom Yorke's head conveys this brilliantly, as well as nailing the hynotic nature of the repetitve riffs and vocal melody. Unlike other songs on 'OK Computer', 'No Surprises' doesn't build up to an explosive climax, instead the most passionately sung line being 'Such a pretty house, such a pretty garden', harking back to the depressing suburban materialism of 'Fake Plastic Trees'. For me, this is one of the most deeply affecting Radiohead songs, perfectly summing up feelings of mind-numbing boredom and uselessness with the opening line, 'A heart that's full up like a landfull'.

2. Paranoid Android



 Two years ago this would have easily been my number one, and even now it's still a close-call between this and my actual number-one pick. This was the second Radiohead song I ever heard (After 'Street Spirit (Fade Out)'), and as such I have a long personal histroy with the song, from initially disliking all but the central 'bit with the riff' to also enjoying the intro, to enjoying the whole song, to having my mind blown by the details. It seems obvious now, but I remember how amazed I was when on my umpteenth listen I realised that a robotic voice was faintly saying 'I MIGHT BE PARANOID BUT IM NOT AN ANDROID' during the first part of the song, or when I realised that part of what made the outro so disturbing to me were the disorted screams that fit so well into the cacophony of Johnny Greenwood's insane soloing, Colin's propulsive bass and Phil Selway's passionate drumrolls, with Ed O'Brien presumably also doing something great. It's the 'Boheiam Rhapsody' of the 1990s, a song I have sub-consciously ripped off myself and an all-round classic.

1. Let Down

'Let Down' is both an inappropriate and appropriate title for not only my favourite song from 'OK Computer' but my favourite Radiohead song, and as such one of my all-time favourite songs. In one sense, this song is the furthest thing you could get from a let-down, it's a perfect song with dense yet never clumsy production, some of the finest lyrics Yorke's ever written and is perfectly structured. In the other sense, 'Let Down' so perfectly sums up the feeling of being let down that you feel as if no other song ever needs to be written on the topic. Something about the melodies in the song manage to simaltaneously crush you, like the 'bug in the ground' described in the lyrics, yet at the same time the chorus manages to be just upbeat enough to add a glimmer of hope to the song. The reason the song resonates so deeply with me is that it one perhaps the song I depended most upon during my time travelling to and from a school I dreaded along dreary motorways and broken streets on a grimy bus, usually under pale white skies - in short a situation that looked and felt a lot like the album cover of 'OK Computer', and one which is perfectly described by 'Let Down'. 'One day I am gonna grow wings' would be an overly cheesy line in most songs, but I needed it back then, and judging by the universal love for 'OK Computer', thousands, maybe even millions have needed it too.

Tuesday, 24 October 2017

Ranking 'The Bends' tracklist from Worst to Best

I'm yet to have indulged on my love of Radiohead on this blog, and I really need to get back into the habit of posting stuff I actually enjoy instead of complaining about Royal Blood. So without further ado, here is my attempt to rank all 12 songs on Radiohead's 1995 album 'The Bends'. (List is based on personal enjoyment, so keep that in mind).


12. Bullet Proof... I wish I was
Something has to be last place, and while it's by no means a bad song, 'bullet proof...' is easily the most passable effort on the album. It's a minimalist, hazy acoustic number, and after 'High and dry', 'Fake Plastic Trees' and '(Nice dream)' it wasn't really necessary for another. It also breaks the flow of more upbeat numbers, stopping them having a greater cumulative effect. It's still better than nearly everything on 'Pablo Honey' though.

11. High and Dry
Radiohead is generally a bleak band (Other than 'In Rainbows' and 'the King of Limbs'), and this is possibly their most popular bleak song. It's also one of my personal least favourite Radiohead creations, even though I still think it's good by alt-rock standards. It's a very calm, almost sleepy song that sounds utterly defeated. The problem with that, at least for me, is that Radiohead have made much, much better songs that fulfil the exact same qualities, namely 'No Surprises' and even 'Fake Plastic Trees' just a track later - which might be my biggest problem, as it also makes this stretch of the album feel dreary and unending.


10. Black Star
A fairly enjoyable alt-rock song that has been massively overshadowed recently by the David Bowie album of the same name. The best aspect is probably the unbelievably catchy post-chorus riff that strangely enough sounds like something from 'The Rise and fall of Ziggy Stardust'.

9. The Bends
Easily the most upbeat song on the album, and also arguably the most rock-radio-friendly song here (Despite the fact it was never one of the albums 6 singles.). Despite - or maybe because of - it's fairly dated 90s rock aesthetic, it has a surprisingly large amount of fans, and I personally know two people who hold it as their favourite Radiohead song. Perhaps this is because it's immediately catchy and doesn't contain most of qualities that non-fans usually attack Radiohead for - the sadness and slow-pace of the songs, and the 'whininess' of Yorke's voice. It's also one of the few Radiohead songs where the lyrics suggest a positive relationship with a woman (At least until 'In Rainbows'), so maybe people appreciate that too? 

8. Bones
If we're looking at upbeat alt-rock numbers from the album, 'Bones' is IMO a far greater experience than 'The Bends'. The song is positively roaring for it's 3 minute run-time, and the chorus is one of the biggest ear-worms on the album. It's also a notable wake-up after the (Brilliant) dreariness of 'Fake Plastic Trees', and doesn't stick around long enough for it's melodrama or repetition to become annoying.

7. (Nice dream)
This song can tend to feel like an interlude to me, mainly thanks to the parenthesis given to it's title, but it's one of Radiohead's prettiest tunes, with calming strings on the chorus and Thom Yorke giving one of his most minor performances, at least until the song explodes at 2 and a half minutes into a tone-ruining but awesome breakdown of screaming guitars. 

6. Sulk
This song has risen above at least two others simply through the power of the way Yorke sings 'Sometimes you SUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUlk' in the chorus of this song, which is also one of the most uplifting, although not necessarily upbeat Radiohead songs. The breakdown even reminds me a bit of the first Foo Fighter's album, which is no bad thing. The first classic song here.

5. My Iron Lung
The meaty bass on this immediately gives it an uncomfortable chugging rhythm like a strained heartbeat that fits well with the lyrics about failing body parts. The song is a response to 'Creep', and as such borrows the same smoky, nocturnal atmosphere, and improves on it vastly with a 'chorus' that is essentially a freak out of screaming guitar and screaming Yorke. The 'If you're frightened' bridge is also one of the most-attention grabbing moments on the album. Overall, it's a great piece of music, and I'm surprised it doesn't get brought up more than it does. 

4. Planet Telex
The track that opens your album is the most important for world-building, and Radiohead realised this for the first time with 'Planet Telex', a song which feels distinctly otherworldly thanks to the howl of wind at the beginning and then the tremolo guitar line which goes atomic once the vocals begin. It sets up the lyrical themes of the album through the chorus of 'Everything/everyone is broken', and in all is the first sign that Radiohead could produce a killer opening track (See also: 'Everything in it's Right Place', '2+2=5', '15 Step' and of course 'Airbag').

3. Just
My favourite of the more alt-rock leaning songs on the album, this has everything you could want - memorable lyrics, one of the best music videos of all-time, a cool chord sequence and of course completely insane solos. I also love the way the song plays with atmosphere, feeling at once catchy and upbeat, but also feeling like something horrible is happening, helped by Yorke's saliva-drenched delivery of the final chorus and the weirdly unsettling breakdown.



2. Fake Plastic Trees
This is maybe Radiohead's all-time most depressing song, at least for the first 2 and a half minutes, and perhaps because of this it took a long time to grow on me. I was initially turned off by just how downtrodden it is, especially coming right after 'High and Dry', but all it took was a single deep listen on a long bus ride and everything came together. The climax is perfect, a crescendo of despair, almost anger so strong that when the song recedes back to the acoustic sound of the first half you really do feel as 'worn out' as Thom sounds. The lyrics are also some of the best on any song in the 90s, creating an ultra-depressing world version of the world where everyone is old and decaying, yet still obsessed with looking shiny and perfect.



1. Street Spirit
Whenever Halloween rolls around the same goofy songs come up that relate to the event through having the name of some horror movie cliche in the title ('Monster' by the automatic) or by having a spooky video ('Thriller'). But if you want to soundtrack your Halloween with a legitimately unsettling, spine-chilling playlist, just listen to 'Street Spirit (Fade Out)'. Strangely this was the first Radiohead song I ever heard, and I initially avoided it due to how unsettling it was straight from the intro, where greenwood's guitar sounds like a strange piano leading the listener down the steps of a never ending spiral staircase. Then the lyrics begin and you're transported onto a dark suburban street, which starts pouring with rain when the drums begin. Apologies for the pretentious description, but that is what I picture when I listen to this masterpiece. It also works incredibly well as an album closer, maybe as their best album closer (Which is saying something.), because it serves as the most complete realisation of the album's themes of paranoia and loneliness.