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1[[quoteright:343:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/radiohead_group_6426.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:343: I'm a reasonable man; get off my case. [[note]] On bed, clockwise from top: Ed, Jonny, Colin, and Philip. At doorway: Thom. [[/note]]]]
3
4[floatboxright: Influences:
5+Music/{{REM}}, Music/TalkingHeads, Music/SiouxsieAndTheBanshees, Music/TheBeatles, Music/{{U2}}, Music/DJShadow, Music/MilesDavis, Music/EnnioMorricone, Music/{{Queen|Band}}, Music/ThePixies, Music/FrankZappa, Music/ElvisCostello, Music/JeffBuckley, Music/JoyDivision, Music/{{Magazine}}, Music/TheSmiths, Music/SonicYouth, Music/TheBeachBoys, Music/PhilSpector, Music/ScottWalker, Krzysztof Penderecki, Music/{{Autechre}}, Music/AphexTwin, Music/{{Can}}, Music/{{Neu}}, Music/UnderworldBand, Music/CharlesMingus, Alice Coltrane, Music/OlivierMessiaen, Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}, Music/NeilYoung, Music/{{Bjork}}, Music/CrowdedHouse, Music/{{MIA}}, Spank Rock, Liars, Music/{{Burial}}, Modeselektor, Music/{{Cardiacs}}, Music/HappyMondays, Music/BoardsOfCanada...
6Influenced:
7+Music/{{REM}}, Music/DavidByrne, Music/{{Beyonce}}, Music/{{Drake}}, Music/{{Muse}}, Music/{{Coldplay}}, Music/KanyeWest, Music/GrizzlyBear, Music/{{Travis}}, Music/AltJ, Music/SnowPatrol, Music/DavidBowie, Music/TameImpala, Liars, Music/StevenWilson, Music/ArcadeFire, Music/{{Elbow}}, Music/{{Foals}}, Music/OneRepublic, Doves, Music/ThirtySecondsToMars, Music/{{Mogwai}}, Music/EverythingEverythingBand, Music/{{Panchiko}}, Music/Deadmau5, Music/RedVox...
8]
9
10->''"High up above, aliens hover,\
11making home movies for the folks back home\
12of all these weird creatures who lock up their spirits,\
13drill holes in themselves, and live for their secrets."''
14-->-- "Subterranean Homesick Alien"
15
16Radiohead is an AlternativeRock group from [[UsefulNotes/{{Britain}} England]], often regarded among the most consistently acclaimed and influential bands in the world since the 1990s.
17
18They formed in 1985 as an Music/ElvisCostello-influenced {{new wave|Music}} band called On a Friday, this being the only day of the week the band members were allowed to rehearse at the private school they all met at. After signing to Creator/{{EMI}}, they changed their name to Radiohead ([[TitledAfterTheSong taken from the name of a]] Music/TalkingHeads [[Music/TrueStories song]]) and blended in with the alt-rock scene of the early '90s. Eventually, the style of their early albums (''Music/PabloHoney,'' ''Music/TheBends'') [[GrowingTheBeard would give way to more ambitious sounds]] that incorporated echoey, operatic rock (''Music/OKComputer'') and [[AvantGardeMusic experimental]] [[ElectronicMusic electronica]] (''Music/KidA,'' ''Music/{{Amnesiac}}'') [[TakeAThirdOption before eventually finding something of a happy medium]] (''Music/HailToTheThief'' and beyond). Long story short, every album is a NewSoundAlbum.
19
20The band is known for their anti-establishment lyrics and, since ''Kid A,'' rejecting many of the standard promotion forms of the industry. Most notably, the band opted to promote ''Kid A'' (which was highly anticipated after the success of ''OK Computer'') with a series of one-minute-long videos featuring snippets of each song from the album. Furthermore, the group opted to allow fans to name their own price for the right to download their album ''Music/InRainbows'' online off of their website.
21
22The members have also put out solo work. Singer/principal songwriter/frontman Thom Yorke has released three albums and additionally did scoring work for ''Film/Suspiria2018''. Guitarist Jonny Greenwood, the only classically trained musician of the group, has found considerable independent success as a film composer, most notably serving as the {{associated composer}} of Creator/PaulThomasAnderson from ''Film/ThereWillBeBlood'' onward. Drummer Philip Selway [[StepUpToTheMicrophone began pursuing a career as a singer-songwriter]] in 2010, whilst guitarist Ed O'Brien released his solo debut as EOB in 2020.
23
24The members are additionally affiliated with separate bands. Thom was part of a group called Atoms for Peace that was active between 2009 and 2013 (reuniting briefly in 2018), working alongside people such as Music/RedHotChiliPeppers bassist Flea and frequent Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich. He also formed another group called The Smile with Jonny and jazz drummer Tom Skinner in 2021.
25
26Their artwork is also [[SurrealHorror quite weird]]. The website of the man responsible for most of that artwork, Stanley Donwood, is just as [[http://www.slowlydownward.com/ odd]].
27
28Aside from the collective band's social media ([[https://twitter.com/radiohead Twitter]], [[https://www.instagram.com/radiohead/?hl=en Instagram]], [[https://www.facebook.com/radiohead/ Facebook]]), all of the members ([[https://twitter.com/thomyorke Thom,]] [[https://twitter.com/JnnyG Jonny,]] [[https://twitter.com/philipselway Philip,]] [[https://twitter.com/colingreenwood Colin]], [[https://twitter.com/EOBOfficial Ed]]) have Twitter accounts, with varying degrees of updates. In addition, [[https://www.instagram.com/thomyorke/ Thom]] and [[https://www.instagram.com/eobofficial/ Ed]] have individual Instagram accounts.
29
30Radiohead were inducted into the UsefulNotes/RockAndRollHallOfFame in 2019.
31----
32
33!! Band members:
34
35* Thom Yorke: Vocals, guitar, keyboards, "laptop"
36* Jonny Greenwood: Guitar, keyboards, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ondes_Martenot ondes Martenot,]] "laptop"
37* Colin Greenwood: Bass
38* Ed O'Brien: Guitar, backing vocals
39* Phil Selway: Drums
40----
41
42!! Non-members who have had a major impact on Radiohead's sound and image:
43
44* Nigel Godrich: Producer of every album since ''OK Computer'' and has been involved with the band since he was hired as a mixing engineer for ''The Bends.'' Considered to be so important to the band's sound that he is regarded as the sixth member, similar to how George Martin was one of the numerous people given the title of "[[Music/TheBeatles The Fifth Beatle]]".
45
46* Stanley Donwood: Artist responsible for every Radiohead-related piece of artwork (album covers, liner notes, posters) since the 1994 ''My Iron Lung'' EP. Yorke often collaborates with Donwood, usually under pseudonyms such as "Dr. Tchock."
47----
48
49!! Discography:
50!!!Studio Albums:
51[[index]]
52* ''Music/PabloHoney'' (1993)
53* ''Music/TheBends'' (1995)
54* ''Music/OKComputer'' (1997)
55* ''Music/KidA'' (2000)
56* ''Music/{{Amnesiac}}'' (2001)
57* ''Music/HailToTheThief'' (2003) [[/index]][not to be confused with [[HailToTheThief the trope of the same name.]]][[index]]
58* ''Music/InRainbows'' (2007)
59* ''Music/TheKingOfLimbs'' (2011)
60* ''Music/AMoonShapedPool'' (2016)
61[[/index]]
62
63You can now vote for your favourite Radiohead album by heading over to the [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/crowner.php/Sandbox/BestAlbumRadiohead Best Album crowner.]] You can also vote for your Radiohead track through the [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/crowner.php/Sandbox/BestSongRadiohead Best Song crowner!]]
64
65!!![=EPs=]:
66* ''Drill'' (1992)
67* ''Itch'' (1994)
68* ''My Iron Lung'' (1994, doubles as the single for "My Iron Lung")
69* ''Running from Demons'' (1997, doubles as the Japanese release of their single "No Surprises")
70* ''Airbag / How Am I Driving?'' (1997, doubles as the single for "Airbag")
71* ''COM LAG (2plus2isfive)'' (2004; consists mostly of ''Hail to the Thief'' [[BSide B-sides]])
72
73!!!Other tidbits:
74* "Pop Is Dead" (1993 non-album single)
75* ''Film/MeetingPeopleIsEasy'' (1998 {{rockumentary}})
76* ''I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings'' (2001 LiveAlbum)
77* ''In Rainbows: Disk 2'' (2007; bonus disc included with the special edition of ''In Rainbows''; tropes for it are featured on the main album's page)
78* ''Radiohead: The Best Of'' (2008 GreatestHitsAlbum made without the band's permission; the only one they've received)
79* ''TKOL RMX 1234567'' (2011 RemixAlbum)
80* ''[=MiniDiscs [Hacked]=]'' (2019 compilation of ''OK Computer'' outtakes, released officially after a leaker tried to hold them for ransom)
81----
82
83!! '''''This is what you get when you trope with us:'''''
84
85* TwoPlusTortureMakesFive: The title of "2 + 2 = 5," which is a direct reference to ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour''.
86* AffectionateParody: "Permanent Daylight" is commonly believed to be a parody of Music/SonicYouth.
87* AfterTheEnd: The "Pyramid Song" video.
88* AlbumTitleDrop:
89** A barely audible one for ''Pablo Honey'' appears in the song "How Do You?" -- the album was named after part of a PrankCall by the comedy group The Jerky Boys, and the relevant quote ("Pablo, honey? Please come to Florida!") appears as SpokenWordInMusic near the end of the song.
90** Near the start of "Everything in Its Right Place," you can hear a distortion of Thom's voice saying "Kid A" twice. [[MindScrew It sounds the same played backwards, too.]]
91** "2 + 2 = 5" has "All ''hail to the thief,'' all hail to the thief, but I'm not."
92*** In a lesser sense, "The Gloaming" is also this. ''HTTT'' was actually slated to be released under the title of ''The Gloaming,'' but the band found the title to be "too [[ProgressiveRock prog rock]]" and instead picked a line from "2 + 2 = 5." The original title was relegated to an EitherOrTitle for the album.
93** "[[TitleTrack The Bends]]" drops the same title of the album in its chorus.
94** If you listen carefully, in the bridge of "Reckoner," you can hear soft voices in the background singing "in rainbows."
95** "A moon shaped pool" can be heard in the backing vocals for "Identikit."
96* AllDrummersAreAnimals: Averted with Philip Selway, who is more subdued in style and personality than this trope suggests. His drumming focuses much less on manic energy and hard-hitting solos than it does on rhythm and texture. In fact, he's released two solo albums consisting of soft ballads that are quite light on percussion.
97* AndIMustScream: The video for "There There" ends with a screaming Thom [[{{Transflormation}} getting turned into a tree]]. The face sticks.
98* AnimatedMusicVideo: "Paranoid Android," "Pyramid Song," "Go to Sleep," "There There" ([[RogerRabbitEffect partially]]), "Burn the Witch" (claymation), and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iNjNr2HKSA a lot of ''Kid A'''s "blips."]]
99* ArcNumber:
100** 10 for ''In Rainbows:'' A ten-letter title, ten tracks, tens prominent in the album art and in promotional material, and was announced ten days before release. All of this indicates a link to ''OK Computer,'' released ten years before ''In Rainbows.'' A popular theory is that the two albums are companion pieces, released ten years apart; this culminated in the "[[http://puddlegum.net/radiohead-01-and-10/# 01 and 10]]" playlist.
101** 15 also seems to be a minor one, appearing in several songs such as "15 Step," "Climbing Up the Walls," and "Just."
102* ArcWords: Interestingly enough, the lyrics for most tracks on ''Kid A,'' ''Amnesiac,'' and ''Hail to the Thief'' became this. Lyrics from all three albums appeared cryptically (and usually slightly altered) in the Radiohead website's "maze" section; phrases that would appear in ''Amnesiac'' and ''Hail to the Thief'' appeared in the ''Kid A'' [[EasterEgg hidden booklet;]] certain lines from ''Amnesiac'' showed up in the ''I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings'' case.
103* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence:
104** The ending of ''Kid A''. The final track, "Motion Picture Soundtrack", has an angelic atmosphere (what with the harps and such) and bows out on the line "I will see you in the next life." Additionally, the HiddenTrack that plays after this is considered to represent that "next life".
105** The ending of the "Pyramid Song" music video, [[spoiler:after the protagonist, apparently the sole survivor of an [[WorldWreckingWave Earth-wrecking flood,]] commits suicide to rejoin his family.]]
106* AudienceParticipationSong:
107** Everybody sings along to the second verse of "Idioteque."
108** The audience supplies the claps for "We Suck Young Blood."
109** The audience regularly sings the "for a minute there, I lost myself" section of "Karma Police" just as loud, if not louder, than Thom does. Here's an example from [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESYEod6c12E Glastonbury in 2003.]]
110** "Creep," of course.
111** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DdePOKIIWAg&t=9m21s Weird Fishes.]]"
112* AutoTune:
113** In "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box."
114** For "Pulk / Pull Revolving Doors," Thom spoke the words and applied autotune with ridiculous pitch-shifting settings.
115** Used in "Codex (Illum Sphere RMX)" and "Little by Little (Caribou RMX)."
116* BoxedSet: After Radiohead acrimoniously parted ways with Creator/ParlophoneRecords and Creator/CapitolRecords during the interim between ''Music/HailToTheThief'' and ''Music/InRainbows'', the labels retaliated by putting out an eponymous box set to compete with the special edition of ''In Rainbows'', much to the band's anger. The set contains all six studio albums that Radiohead released while under Parlophone & Capitol, plus the LiveAlbum ''I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings''.
117* BSide:
118** The ''My Iron Lung'' EP consists of outtakes from ''Pablo Honey.''
119** ''Airbag / How Am I Driving?'' has B-sides from ''OK Computer.''
120** The semi-bootleg CD set ''Towering Above the Rest'' contains every B-side they made before ''In Rainbows,'' along with live performances, remixes, soundtrack contributions, collaborations, covers, side projects, and combinations thereof.
121** Continuing the trend, the band released a 12" single of "Supercollider" and "The Butcher," two ''King of Limbs'' B-sides, for Record Store Day 2011.
122** Quite a few ("Talk Show Host," "Cuttooth," "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy") are more popular with the fans than some of the songs released on the albums.
123* BandOfRelatives: Jonny and Colin are brothers.
124* BearsAreBadNews: The [[http://i.imgur.com/3OROfIV.gif Modified Bear]] logo for ''Kid A.'' The backstory ups the dread: they are "genetically modified" teddy bears bent on [[OmnicidalManiac killing everybody.]]
125* BigYes: The children's choir shouting "YEAH!" on "15 Step."
126* BittersweetEnding: Quite a few of the albums end on a bittersweet note:
127** ''OK Computer'' ends with the one-two TearJerker punch of "Lucky" and "The Tourist,'' which provide a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel and resolve the tension and fear that pervades the rest of the album.
128** ''Kid A'' ends with the emotionally charged, beautiful-sounding "Motion Picture Soundtrack" and a hidden track that seems to represent Heaven or "the next life."
129** The final song on ''In Rainbows'' is "Videotape," which, despite being a heartbreakingly sad song, ends with the lyrics: "Today has been the most perfect day I've ever seen."
130** ''A Moon Shaped Pool'' closes with longtime fan-favorite "True Love Waits" [[note]]Which had been played live for 21 years before ending up on a studio album tracklist![[/note]]. [[http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/radioheads-a-moon-shaped-pool-album-is-a-haunting-stunning-triumph-20160508 This]] review from Magazine/RollingStone notes:
131--->One can only guess at how this love song of gentleness and intimacy reads two decades later, but the effect is like stumbling upon an old love letter years after a relationship has grown cold. Where there was once a hint of redemption in its devastating refrain, "Just don't leave" now sounds like the longest (and saddest) goodbye.
132* {{Bizarrchitecture}}:
133** The "Daydreaming" video, which has Thom walking through doors that lead him to locations that are uncharacteristic of the doors that led him there. Examples include him leaving a dark hallway and entering a forest, and him going out of another dark corridor and onto a beach.
134** A similar thing is done with the "Lift" video, which has an elevator that transports to places uncharacteristic of the ones preceding them, including a WhiteVoidRoom, a room where the elevator is part of the ceiling, and [[spoiler:[[MindScrew another elevator]]]].
135* BodyHorror:
136** The video for "There There." It's quite excruciating to see Thom [[{{Transflormation}} turned into a tree.]]
137** The video for "Like Spinning Plates", which centers around a strange machine with a complex number of parts and functions that is ultimately revealed to have [[spoiler:a pair of horrifically conjoined babies being ripped apart]].
138* BookEnds:
139** ''OK Computer'' might begin and end with a car crash. "The Tourist," which closes the album, contains references to high-speed travel, and the chorus consists of "hey, man/idiot, slow down"; "Airbag," the opener, describes relief at surviving a car crash.
140*** The music video for "Karma Police" begins and ends with a shot of the empty back seat of a 1976 Chrysler New Yorker.
141** "A Punchup at a Wedding" begins and ends with sections where Thom sings "no" repeatedly.
142* BreadEggsMilkSquick:
143** "Molasses" surreptitiously slips in mentions of genocide and starving waitresses throughout the otherwise harmless-sounding lyrics.
144*** [[FridgeBrilliance It's probably a reference]] to the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Molasses_Disaster Boston Molasses Disaster.]]
145** "Morning Bell" is also a great example, as the lyrics sound completely harmless, then all of a sudden: "Cut the kids in half..." Another case of fridge brilliance, since the song is actually about [[spoiler:divorce]].
146** These lines from "Myxomatosis":
147--->They were cheering and waving\
148Cheering and waving\
149Twitching and salivating like with myxomatosis
150* BreatherEpisode:
151** "Treefingers" has this role on ''Kid A,'' serving as an {{ambient}} interlude sandwiched between a depressing ballad that concludes the first half of the album and a straight-up hard-rocker that kicks off the second half.
152** The music video for "Lift" serves as this after the other two singles taken from the 2017 reissue of ''OK Computer''. All of them are [[SurrealMusicVideo Surreal Music Videos]], but instead of being distressing or melancholic, it's lighthearted, borderline comical, and full of nostalgic {{Mythology Gag}}s.
153* BritishTeeth: Thom. He even says he was nicknamed "Jack-o-Lantern" in high school due to missing nine teeth.
154* BrokenRecord:
155** "And the rain drops, and the rain drops, and the rain drops, and the rain drops, and the rain drops, and the rain drops" ad infinitum. ("Sit Down. Stand Up")
156** "[Wo]-men first and the children, -men first and the children, -men first, -men first and the children" in "Idioteque."
157** "Everything in Its Right Place." All of it.
158** "I'm a reasonable man, get off my case, get off my case, get off my case" from "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box."
159** "You have not been paying attention, paying attention, paying attention" from "2 + 2 = 5."
160** "Phew! For a minute there, I lost myself, I lost myself" in "Karma Police".
161** A lot of the lyrics in "The Gloaming" are repeated.
162* BrownNote: The music video for "Just" begins with a man lying down in the middle of the street and refusing to budge. As people gather, they ask him silently -- the video is subtitled -- why he's lying there. After repeatedly refusing to answer, he finally caves in. The camera zooms in on his mouth as he's speaking, but with the subtitles suddenly removed, [[TheUnReveal the audience has no idea what he's saying.]] The final scene of the video is of all the people around him lying on the ground in the same posture, his words presumably having had the exact same effect on them as on him.
163** The closeup has him repeating: "God help me, I'll tell you." It's implied that he's actually saying it as the band leans out the window behind which they've been performing to see what's up. (They, of course, are not affected.)
164* TheBusCameBack: Chieftain Mews, a character played by Nigel Godrich in the ''Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time'' DVD released in 2004, came back in a couple of videos the band made on their [=TikTok=] account.
165* CallAndResponseSong: "Give Up the Ghost" is a weird form of this in a sense.
166* CallBack:
167** The RapidFireNo MadnessMantra in "A Wolf at the Door" may be a callback to "A Punch Up at a Wedding."
168** "Life in a Glasshouse," the final track on ''Amnesiac,'' contains the line: "packed like frozen food and battery hens." This creates [[BookEnds a nice sort of symmetry]] -- the first track is "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box."
169* CarefulWithThatAxe:
170** Thom's rather unsettling [[MetalScream distorted shriek]] at the end of "Climbing Up the Walls."
171** From "2 + 2 = 5":
172--->[[MadnessMantra YOU HAVE NOT BEEN PAYING ATTENTION YOU HAVE NOT BEEN PAYING ATTENTION]] [[BrokenRecord YOU-HAVE-NOT-BE-EN-PAYING-ATTENTION-]]''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis PAY-ING-AT-TEN-TION!]]''
173** Thom's yell at the beginning of "Cuttooth."
174** Thom belts out another one toward the end of "Bodysnatchers."
175** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXUBE_wiPtU this]] ''memorable'' live performance of "Anyone Can Play Guitar," at the second verse Thom takes the "anywhere" in the "and I don't see no confusion anywhere" line and ''screams'' it, before just violently screaming at the camera. The zooms on his face don't help.
176* CelebrityIsOverrated: "Life in a Glasshouse" portrays life in the very public eye as not dissimilar to a domestic prison.
177* {{Cloudcuckooland}}: Namedropped in "Like Spinning Plates."
178* ClusterFBomb: The chorus of "Black Swan" on ''The Eraser'' (in absence of a solo page) repeatedly states "this/that/you are fucked up, [[TheyJustDontGetIt fucked up."]]
179* CommonTime: Most of their songs, including the oddly-swung "Pyramid Song." Try counting the beats. However, there are a lot that avert this, too; see UncommonTime below.
180* ConceptAlbum: Of the "central theme" variety as opposed to the "story arc" variety, though they often take pains to make sure their album tracklist has an emotional flow, if not a narrative one.[[note]]This doesn't stop some people from trying to read story arcs into the albums.[[/note]] The band doesn't like the term and actively rejects comparisons to ProgressiveRock, but the fandom uses it anyway. The current verdicts are as follows:
181** ''The Bends'' doesn't fit as neatly into an emotional arc as later albums, but there are definite undertones of body-related anxiety and physical problems.
182** ''OK Computer'' is often designated as such, due to its overarching themes of paranoia and alienation, along with heavily futuristic and ScienceFiction-tinged imagery. The opening and closing tracks can also be read as BookEnds (see above entry), strengthening the argument.
183** ''Kid A'' and ''Amnesiac.'' Hoo boy.
184*** The theorizing stems mostly from Thom's suggestion that the former could be about the first human clone, but he denies any intentional narrative.
185*** The two albums are clearly counterparts with similar themes (they were recorded at the same time). It doesn't hurt the theory that the genetically modified bear characters recurred throughout the "blips" for ''Kid A'' and ''Amnesiac,'' and a track on ''Amnesiac'' was named after them ("Hunting Bears").
186*** Thom has said that "something traumatic" happened during ''Kid A'' and that ''Amnesiac'' is "trying to piece together what has happened."
187*** Both albums feature artwork of forest fires; for ''Kid A'' it's in the distance, while ''Amnesiac'''s perspective is from within the forest.
188** ''Hail to the Thief'''s political overtones certainly invite speculation, as well as the use of [[EitherOrTitle cryptic subtitles]] and numerous references in interviews to the rise of the far right in Western politics.
189** ''The King of Limbs'' is named after an ancient tree near Oxford, and many of the song lyrics and titles ("Bloom," "Morning Mr. Magpie," "Lotus Flower") make references to the natural world.
190** More contentious is ''A Moon Shaped Pool.'' Some fans listen to it in light of Thom's divorce and interpret it as a breakup album in the vein of Björk's ''Vulnicura.'' Others are less eager to view it as such, citing that the divorce in question was amicable.
191* CountryMatters: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDT70X31T2c Thom reserved this for a heckler at a live performance,]] where he merely told them off by saying: "Shut up, you cunt."
192* CoverVersion: Quite a few rare and appropriately eclectic ones, including Music/CarlySimon's "Nobody Does It Better," Glen Campbell's "Rhinestone Cowboy," Music/NeilYoung's "Cinnamon Girl," and Music/TheSmiths' "The Headmaster Ritual."
193** Radiohead themselves were covered by Diego Luna in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheBookOfLife.'' Despite the film taking place in 1920, sensitive guitarist Manolo uses "Creep" as his IWantSong, albeit InTheStyleOf Mexican ''norteno'' or ''cojunto'' music.
194* TheCoverChangesTheMeaning: Thom has been known to sing an eerie, slowed-down version of the chorus of Music/{{REM}}'s "It's the End of the World as We Know It" as an intro to "Everything in Its Right Place." He does ''not'' sound fine.
195* CreatorCameo: The band [[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/32/Paranoid_Android_video.png appears in animated form]] in the "Paranoid Android" video.
196* CreepyCrows: The "There There" video has Thom steal an enchanted coat and some boot-like SprintShoes, awakening some crows who chase and peck at him. After Thom's ultimate punishment for the theft turns him into a tree, the crows victoriously perch on his branches.
197* CreepyMonotone: "Fitter Happier." It's also a MachineMonotone.
198* CustodyBattle: "Morning Bell" from ''Kid A'' is about divorce, with a suggested solution being "cut the kids in half". The line itself is likely a reference to [[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Kings%203:16-28&version=NLT 1 Kings 3:16-28]], which is about the custody of a child, but not in the context of divorce.
199* DarkerAndEdgier: The lyrical and sonic content of ''The Bends'' was generally much darker and sadder than those of ''Pablo Honey''. From ''Kid A'' onwards, the band ventured into even more bleak territory.
200* DarkReprise:
201** "Bloom (Mark Pritchard RMX)" for "Bloom" and "Separator (Anstam RMX Part II)" for "Separator (Anstam RMX)."
202** A stranger case; "Hunting Bears" comes off like this for "I Might Be Wrong" on ''Amnesiac'' since the two are very similar but don't follow each other on the album. See SiameseTwinSongs below for more.
203* DeliberatelyMonochrome:
204** The videos for "Street Spirit (Fade Out)," "Jigsaw Falling Into Place," and "Lotus Flower."
205** The cover art for ''A Moon Shaped Pool'' and "These Are My Twisted Words" is black, gray, and white.
206* DerangedAnimation: The "Paranoid Android" video! It was made by the creator of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_(TV_series) Robin.]]
207** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iNjNr2HKSA Any of the ''Kid A'' blips]] could qualify for this. They're either downright horrifying or simply weird.
208* DeusAngstMachina: ''The Bends'' is an album that goes on and on about the emptiness, pain, and futility of life. [[SubvertedTrope However]], [[AnAesop the last line on the album proposes]] [[ThePowerOfLove a solution]] (although, with given context, it sounds more futile and desperate than calming).
209-->''Immerse your soul in love.''
210* DigitalPiracyIsEvil:
211** Their 2001 album ''Amnesiac'' was leaked before its release, which angered the band; however, they were only upset [[SubvertedTrope because they hadn't set the final mix yet.]]
212** An unmastered version of ''Hail to the Thief'' was leaked onto the internet. Nigel Godrich was a bit disappointed because the release was far from finished. But Jonny Greenwood:
213--->"Shame it's not a package with the artwork and all, but there you go. I feel bemused, though, not annoyed. I'm glad people like it, most of all. It's a little earlier than we'd expected, but there it is."
214* DigitalPiracyIsOkay:
215** ''Kid A'' was available for streaming from their website before its official release, and their 2007 album ''In Rainbows'' was released for sale on a "pay what you want" system [[note]]This was partially done as a response to the premature leaks of ''Amnesiac'' and ''Hail to the Thief.''[[/note]], but they later indicated that they would not pursue it further.
216** When bootlegs of early live performances of ''Kid A'' songs made their way to the internet, the members of the band were both surprised and pleased when fans at concerts already knew the words to new songs that had only been played once or twice previous. Colin Greenwood told a [[Creator/TheBBC BBC]] reporter:
217--->"We played in Barcelona and the next day the entire performance was up on Napster. Three weeks later when we got to play in UsefulNotes/{{Israel}} the audience knew the words to all the new songs and it was wonderful."
218** Radiohead also forced their American label, Capitol Records, to back down from lawsuit threats against fansites that posted Radiohead lyrics.
219** The band has not only approved but contributed audio masters to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_in_Praha two]] [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiohead_for_Haiti different]] fan-filmed concert [=DVDs=], provided they are not to be sold for profit.
220** Guitarist Ed O'Brien is the only member of the band involved in the Featured Artists Coalition, an anti-piracy group. However, he also notes that he is tolerant of the "passive" pirates who really only download music to listen to it. He's really mostly against the shadier bunches who try to make money off of artists.
221** Following the leak of over 16 hours of ''OK Computer''-era material, the band decided to respond by making all the material legally acquirable for a short time on their Bandcamp, with all proceeds going to an environmentalist group.
222* DissonantSerenity: "I Will," which has Thom singing in his trademark "pretty voice" about the horrible effects of war on children.
223* DownerEnding: ''The Bends'', already a very emotional album, closes with "Street Spirit (Fade Out)," an extremely depressing track that laments the futility of life as a whole.
224* DrivenToSuicide:
225** The character in the video for "Pyramid Song." [[spoiler: He does {{ascend to a higher plane of existence}}, though.]]
226** "No Surprises" is maybe about this.
227** "Bullet Proof... I Wish I Was" alludes to this with the line "lead, fill the hole in me".
228** Referred to only implicitly in "Codex" (with the lyrics talking about jumping off a cliff and drowning in the waters below), but to equally eerie effect.
229* {{Dubstep}}: ''The King of Limbs'' has shades of the James Blake / Music/{{Burial}} variety.
230* EarlyBirdCameo: The band is well-known for debuting early versions of songs years or even ''decades'' before they receive official releases, with "True Love Waits" arguably being the most famous example, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzyOfQeK-bY debuting live in 1995]] before finally being recorded and rearranged on ''A Moon Shaped Pool''.
231* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Pablo Honey'' is probably the weirdest Radiohead album in that it's not weird at all; likewise for ''Drill'', the EP before it.
232** The demos the band released in TheEighties when they were still known as On a Friday [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3OS_YkO_Io take]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGN5qUZPC-o this]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIyOCeKkV-4 even]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEDMVukRwsg further.]] Music/ElvisCostello was a huge early influence on Thom, and boy, does it show.
233* EasterEgg:
234** ''OK Computer'' has a mock-advertisement hidden on the inside of the case, on the inside of the right spine.
235** Early pressings of ''Kid A'' had an extra booklet of art and text hidden under the CD tray; these pressing typically featured a black tray instead of the clear ones later pressings used, so as to better hide the fact that the booklet was there.
236* EchoingAcoustics:
237** Thanks to Nigel Godrich, ''OK Computer'' is really spacey-sounding.
238** "Talk Show Host," a B-side to "Street Spirit (Fade Out)," another song produced by Nigel Godrich.
239** Used extensively on ''Hail to the Thief'', such as with Thom's vocals in "The Gloaming" and "Scatterbrain."
240** ''The King of Limbs'' has its instrumentation and Thom's vocals given an echo for a more conjunctive atmosphere where all of the soundscapes just sort of melt into one another.
241*** There's a different sort used in "Separator," where Thom's vocal track is duplicated and the two tracks play with a slight delay between both. This same technique is used in "Bloom", although not as extensively.
242* EitherOrTitle: Every song on ''Hail to the Thief.'' Even the album itself has an alternate title: ''The Gloaming.''
243* ElevatorButtonsMash: In the "Lift" music video, Thom is riding an elevator when a little girl comes in and pushes all of the buttons. As a result, he stops on every floor and interacts with a bunch of strange characters (some of which come from previous Radiohead videos).
244* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: Described in "Decks Dark," with what might be a ShoutOut to ''Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy''.
245--> ''Then into our life there comes the darkness''
246--> ''There's a spacecraft blocking out the sky''
247--> ''And there's nowhere to hide''
248--> ''You run to the back and you cover your ears''
249--> ''It's the loudest sound you've ever heard''
250--> ''And all we trapped rag doll cloth people''
251--> ''We are helpless to resist''
252* EpicRocking:
253** "Supercollider" is Radiohead's longest completed studio song, clocking in at 7:02.
254** "These Are My Twisted Words", "Paranoid Android", "The National Anthem", "How to Disappear Completely", and "Daydreaming".
255** The original version of the B-side "Cuttooth" was evidently much longer than the final cut (by how much, nobody knows).
256** The original demo of "There There", released as a studio B-side of "2 + 2 = 5", runs for 7:45.
257** "Everything in Its Right Place" also frequently extends well beyond its normal running time when performed live; the version included on ''I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings'' runs for 7:42, and there are longer ones. A performance on a particularly well-regarded 2000 bootleg of the band in Berlin stretches almost to ten minutes (although some of that is applause from the audience, who really loved the song).
258* EstablishingCharacterMoment:
259** "Fake Plastic Trees" was this for the band as a whole. The themes of decay, alienation, and pollution, the falsetto vocals, the operatic [[TearJerker tear jerkiness,]] and the accompanying SurrealMusicVideo would all become part of the band's SignatureStyle in the years to come.
260** Then came "Everything in Its Right Place," deliberately designed to be the EstablishingCharacterMoment of the post-''OK Computer'' Radiohead (manipulated vocals, emphasis on rhythm over melody, uncommon time signatures, etc.).
261* EvenTheGuysWantHim: Thom Yorke. This is ironic since he doesn't scream "sex symbol"...but [[StupidSexyFlanders even straight men lust after him.]]
262** There's a term for it: [[http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=thomosexual Thomosexual.]]
263** Same could be said for Jonny Greenwood, who would probably be considered more of a "sex symbol" than Thom.
264* EvenTheSubtitlerIsStumped: The lyric booklet for ''Hail to the Thief'' gives up on trying to understand what's said toward the end of "2 + 2 = 5" and just says:
265-->EEZEPEZEEZEPEEZE NOT.
266* EveryoneWentToSchoolTogether: They met at Abingdon School in Oxfordshire [[LongRunner when they were teenagers.]]
267* EverythingIsAnInstrument: Jonny Greenwood has wielded an FM radio and an analog TV during live performances of "The National Anthem." He typically samples those sounds in tandem with a Korg Kaoss Pad.
268* ExecutiveMeddling: InUniverse; the basis of "Myxomatosis:"
269-->''It got edited, fucked up''\
270''Strangled, beaten up''\
271''Used as a photo in Time Magazine''
272* FaceCam: The "Jigsaw Falling Into Place" [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GoLJJRIWCLU music video,]] which features footage taken from cameras mounted on helmets that each band member is wearing as they play.
273* FadingIntoTheNextSong:
274** From ''OK Computer:'' The beeps at the end of "Airbag" set the tempo for "Paranoid Android," and the sirens at the end of "Karma Police" trail off into "Fitter Happier." There's also a split second where the end of "Exit Music (For a Film)" and the beginning of "Let Down" overlap.
275** From ''Kid A:'' The phasing synth sound at the end of "Kid A" continues into the very beginning of "The National Anthem;" "Optimistic" has a split-second overlap with "In Limbo;" and the chirping noises at the end of "Idioteque" lead into "Morning Bell."
276** All of the tracks on ''I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings'' fade into each other, since it's a live album.
277** From ''COM LAG:'' The cheering in "2 + 2 = 5 (Live at Earls Court, London, 26/11/03)" fades into the amp fuzz at the beginning of "Remyxomatosis."
278** From ''The King of Limbs:'' A sample of birdsong allows "Codex" to fade into "Give Up the Ghost."
279** From ''A Moon Shaped Pool:'' "Decks Dark" directly transitions into "Desert Island Disk", and "Tinker Tailor..." just barely fades into "True Love Waits."
280* FakeLoud: An odd example. "Climbing Up the Walls" consists of two of Thom's vocal tracks layered over each other. The one that's mixed lower is clipped and distorted in this manner, but it's actually much quieter than the Thom's other vocal track, which is more clean and melodic.
281* FakeOutFadeOut: "I Might Be Wrong" fades out toward the middle, but returns with a quiet instrumental section.
282* FanVid: Lots, most notably the ones made for the official Aniboom video contest.
283** Some fan-made music videos ("[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRrr1GbhbAA Idioteque]]" "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvBPCm25z4I A Wolf at the Door,]]" and "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lstDdzedgcE 2 + 2 = 5]]" most notably) are so popular that the fans consider them to be the ''actual'' video for the song. It helps that of those three songs, only two ever had any official video made, and both were {{performance video}}s.
284* {{Foreshadowing}}:
285** The band claim that either the first or last song on each album hints at the sound of the next album.
286** The melody of "Where I End and You Begin"'s climax appears earlier in the song as the bassline.
287%%* FourTemperamentEnsemble: Thom is choleric, Ed is sanguine, Jonny is melancholic, Colin and Phil are phlegmatic.
288* GainaxEnding: Their music videos tend to have these, reasonably.
289** "Street Spirit" ends with Thom jumping up into the air in slow-motion and never coming back down.
290** "Just" ends with the man lying on the sidewalk finally telling everyone why he's lying there. [[NothingIsScarier We never do]] [[TheUnreveal clearly see what he said,]] but apparently [[BrownNote it impelled everyone to lie down on the ground with him.]]
291** "Karma Police" has a man being chased by a car with Thom sitting in the backseat. Once the man finds out that the car has a gas leak, he takes out a match and lights up the gas trail. The car starts backing away but eventually gets consumed in flames shortly afterwards. The camera turns to look back to the backseat -- and Thom isn't there.
292** "There There" has a particularly disturbing one. [[SpaceWhaleAesop Remember, kids,]] don't put on golden clothes that you find in the woods, [[BodyHorror or else you'll turn into a tree.]]
293* GenreBusting: They don't stick with any particular sound, instead meandering around the spectrum.
294** They started out with straightforward AlternativeRock on ''Pablo Honey'' and ''The Bends''.
295** Working with Nigel Godrich, they then moved to a more stadium-friendly sound on ''OK Computer''...
296** ...followed by avant-garde influenced electronica and jazz on ''Kid A'' and ''Amnesiac,'' having tired of melody (at least, Thom did) and needing to do something radically different from their earlier work.
297** They then decided on a dark, heavy-hitting mix of everything they'd done so far on ''Hail to the Thief''.
298** They lightened their sound considerably on ''In Rainbows'' while still retaining their weirdness...
299** ...and, in turn, retained that warmth while adding more beats and brass on ''The King of Limbs.''
300** Their discography currently culminates in a bleak, twinkling, string-driven sound on ''A Moon Shaped Pool.''
301* GenreRoulette: A staple of theirs, considering their unconventional GenreBusting:
302** ''Amnesiac.'' It's got electronica ("Packt Like Sardines in a Crushed Tin Box," "Pulk / Pull Revolving Doors," "Like Spinning Plates"), rock ("I Might Be Wrong," "Knives Out"), and jazz, ranging from modern styles like the piano-driven "You and Whose Army?" and the cool jazz-y "Dollars and Cents" to a New Orleans-style dirge in "Life in a Glasshouse;" the Music/CharlesMingus-influenced "[[http://www.greenplastic.com/radiohead-lyrics/amnesiac/pyramid-song/ Pyramid Song]]" also counts.
303** ''Hail to the Thief'' has a fairly eclectic blend of styles as well. It even includes some HipHop elements, particularly noticeable in the drums and semi-spoken choruses of "Myxomatosis" and the near-rap "A Wolf at the Door." There are also some relatively straightforward rock songs, like "2 + 2 = 5" and "There There."
304** ''The King of Limbs'' is probably the only album in existence that contains a dubstep song, a dance song, a piano ballad, a folk song, and a rock song, one right after the other.
305** ''A Moon Shaped Pool'' has, in addition to a mix of string-driven rock and electronica, a folk song with Spanish-influenced guitar and a bossa nova song.
306* GratuitousPanning:
307** "Four Minute Warning" has the guitars panned to one side and the drums to the other, with the vocals in the middle.
308** The guitar during the first section of "2 + 2 = 5" is panned entirely to one side.
309** "MK 1" consists of ambient piano panned to the left side and a wall of harmonizing Thoms panned to the right side.
310** "Give Up the Ghost" has a distorted wall of Thoms singing "in your arms" in the lower right side.
311** "The Gloaming" begins with a strange downward-swooping electronic noise that begins in the right channel before gradually shifting to the center.
312** "Separator" has random loops of Thom's voice fading in and out panned into the channels.
313** "Electioneering": the guitar is heavily panned over to the right.
314** "Present Tense" has delayed voices repeating Thom's lyrics panned into the right.
315** "Scatterbrain" has its guitar panned to the right.
316* GreasySpoon: In the American version of the "High and Dry" video.
317* GreatestHitsAlbum: [[SubvertedTrope The band actually refused to release one,]] [[DoubleSubversion but upon their departure]] from Creator/ParlophoneRecords, ''Radiohead: The Best Of'' was released [[EnforcedTrope without their cooperation.]] As [=AllMusic=] put it: "a best-of Radiohead compilation is similar to a DVD containing somewhat thoughtfully picked scenes from films made by a specific director."
318* GriefSong: "True Love Waits" has overtones of grieving in the way that it is presented on ''A Moon Shaped Pool,'' though in previous live performances, it came across as a relatively straightforward love song.
319* HappilyMarried: Thom to Rachel Owen for 23 "highly creative and happy years" before separating in 2015 on amicable terms, and currently to Italian actress Dajana Roncione.
320* HeManWomanHater: The quietly furious "Nude" is directed at one of these.
321* HeterosexualLifePartners:
322** Arguably, Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich.
323** Thom and Stanley, as well.
324---> Thom: I met [Stanley] first day at art college and he had a better hat and suit on than me. That pissed me off. So I figured I'd either end up really not liking this person at all, or working with him for the rest of my life.
325** Thom and Jonny, to the point where [[RealPersonFic they've got a frightening amount of slash written about them.]]
326* HeWhoFightsMonsters: Referenced in "Bangers + Mash:"
327-->If you stare into the dark / the dark will stare back / back into your [[LargeHam SOUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUL.]]
328* HiddenTrack: ''Kid A'' has one at the very end, nested within the 7-minute "Motion Picture Soundtrack", seeming to represent the "next life" referenced in the song's final line. [[WordOfGod The band has stated]] that the song and hidden track aren't supposed to be isolated (such as how streaming services did).
329* IHaveManyNames: Thom goes by a variety of {{stage name}}s when collaborating with Stanley Donwood on the artwork and packaging. These names include Zachariah Wildwood, Dr. Tchock, Tchocky, and The White Chocolate Farm.
330* ImAHumanitarian: Cannibalism is a [[AuthorAppeal somewhat recurring idea]] in their songs. Thom has even admitted that he has a "cannibal thing."
331** The end of "Where I End and You Begin":
332---> I will eat you all alive and I will eat you all alive...
333** "Knives Out" also has cannibalistic imagery ("he's bloated and frozen / still, there's no point letting it go to waste").
334* IncrediblyLongNote:
335** The bridge of "Creep" ends with several ("She runs, run, run, ''RUUUUUUUUUUN''!"), but it gets even more impressive with [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2M9aeMBV1w one very memorable live performance]].
336** Also from ''Pablo Honey'': Thom hits a high B and Bb in "You", and also holds a high A at the end of "Stop Whispering".
337** Sometimes achieved artificially during the intro to live versions of "Everything in Its Right Place" in which Jonny loops and manipulates Thom's voice.
338** Thom has a lot of them in "Bloom".
339* IndecipherableLyrics:
340** "Kid A" invoked this. Thom sang into a vocoder, heavily distorting his voice and obscuring the lyrics.
341** Also, for the first half of "Like Spinning Plates." The lyrics were sung and recorded normally; the recording was played backwards and Thom mimicked the sounds on that recording, which was then ''also'' played backwards to uncanny effect. The chorus utilizes both a standard recording and a sung backwards-played forwards recording.
342** "Feral."
343*** The most likely interpretation, via translating the Japanese lyric book that came with that version of ''[[Music/TheKingOfLimbs TKOL]]'', is "i'm not yours / you're not mine / it's all fine / please don't judge". [[note]]Given the need to translate it, some words vary depending on your lyric source.[[/note]]
344** The [[LastNoteNightmare ending]] of "Daydreaming", which has distorted, backmasked voices chanting something unintelligible. [[SubvertedTrope Fans have reportedly confirmed that Thom is sing-muttering "half of my life."]]
345* {{Instrumentals}}:
346** "Treefingers" and "Hunting Bears," which also serve as interludes.
347** Their first instrumental, "Meeting in the Aisle," was a B-side to ''OK Computer.''
348** "Little by Little (Shed RMX)."
349* IntentionallyAwkwardTitle: "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy." Yeah.
350* IntercourseWithYou:
351** "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy" ''sounds'' like this, from the title to the moaning vocals to the "UH-ah" when the drums come in. [[SubvertedTrope It's actually about government corruption.]]
352** "Pearly*" is a very dark example. Thom described it as "a dirty song for people who use sex for dirty things."
353* IWantSong:
354** "The Bends," though according to the band, it's tongue in cheek.
355--->"I wanna live, breathe... I wanna be part of the human race."
356** "Dollars and Cents" is a cross between this and a VillainSong, with Thom alternating between the roles of a corrupt cynic and an idealist.
357** "Bullet Proof... I Wish I Was" is an incredibly bleak song about someone who suffers from emotional weakness over the big and small things in life and wants nothing more than to be stronger.
358* KidsRock:
359** "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy" features distorted samples of a children's choir doing vocal exercises.
360** The Matrix Music School children's choir also provides the '''"YEAH!"''' on "15 Step."
361* KillerTeddyBear: The modified bears.
362* LargeHam: Despite the subtlety and darkness of most Radiohead songs, Thom enjoys indulging himself in hamminess occasionally, particularly in "Bangers + Mash", "2 + 2 = 5" and live performances of "Idioteque."
363** The band's early performances in particular tended to be rather over the top. One time Thom started randomly screaming and then jumped in a pool. [[note]] His clunky Doc Martens almost caused him to drown; he also almost grabbed onto a live wire in an attempt to pull himself out. [[/note]]
364* LastNoteNightmare:
365** "Karma Police," which concludes with high-pitched guitar feedback (which then peters out into a low-pitched buzz and a couple of piano chords).
366** "Climbing Up the Walls." Not just Thom's horrifying MetalScream, but the last 25 seconds of ominous noises and sounds.
367** Every song on ''Kid A'' has one of these, save "Treefingers" and "Motion Picture Soundtrack."
368** ''Hail to the Thief'' as an album has this, ending with the creepy "A Wolf at the Door." [[note]] In fact, Thom Yorke has explicitly compared the album to a nightmare, with "A Wolf at the Door" signifying waking up and finding out that the real world has become worse than the nightmare (hence the themes of the song).[[/note]]
369** Inverted with "Bullet Proof... I Wish I Was," which starts with about 13 seconds of creepy noises.
370** The beautiful ballad "Daydreaming" ends with sinister, distorted, backmasked chanting voices.
371* LighterAndSofter:
372** ''In Rainbows.'' Played with in that while some songs are no less angsty than those on previous albums, the overall sound is lighter, especially on "Reckoner."
373** ''The King of Limbs'' was deliberately done this way. Ed O'Brien has described it as retaining some of the "warmth" of ''In Rainbows,'' and in 2012 remarked that from ''OK Computer'' all the way through to ''Hail to the Thief'' the band had been in a dark place. Though that gave them a lot of creativity, it killed them as human beings and wore them down very quickly.
374** Live versions of "Everything in Its Right Place" are much less morbid and emotionless than the studio version. "Kid A" applies as well for the same reason, though Thom's use of a vocoder in post-''The King of Limbs'' live performances to achieve the same effect on his voice as in the studio version counterbalances this somewhat.
375* LimitedLyricsSong:
376** "Pyramid Song" has one verse that is later repeated.
377** "The National Anthem" is almost six minutes long but only consists of these lyrics:
378--->''Everyone, everyone around here''\
379''Everyone is so near/has got the fear''\
380''It's holding on''\
381''It's holding on''
382** "Everything in Its Right Place" has five lines repeated throughout:
383--->''Everything''\
384''In its right place''\
385''Yesterday I woke up sucking on a lemon''\
386''There are two colors in my head''\
387''What is that you tried to say?''
388* ListSong:
389** "Fitter Happier" comes across as a demented checklist ("at a better pace / slower and more calculated / [[BreadEggsMilkSquick no chance of escape]]").
390** "Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors" has an autotuned Thom listing different types of doors.
391* LonelyPianoPiece:
392** The ''OK Computer'' B-side "How I Made My Millions".
393** ''A Moon Shaped Pool''[='=]s piano rearrangement of "True Love Waits".
394** "Codex" also has a very isolated sound to it, although brass does accompany it later on.
395* LongRunnerLineUp: The band has never changed members ever since they changed the name to Radiohead in 1991 - or even further back, once Jonny joined On a Friday a few years after the band's formation. At most, Clive Deamer was added as a touring drummer alongside Phil Selway.
396* LoopedLyrics: "Everything in Its Right Place," "Kid A," "The National Anthem," and the outro of "Where I End and You Begin."
397* LosingAShoeInTheStruggle: The "There There" music video entangles Thom's stolen boots in vines during his attempted escape from the forest, slipping them off of his feet. When he tries to continue running, his bare feet [[{{Transflormation}} take root instead...]]
398* LoudnessWar: Every post-''OK Computer'' album is a victim. ''OK Computer'' brickwalls in the louder parts. ''The Bends'' is mastered loud by 1995 standards, but is quiet by today's. (Note that some of the albums are horribly clipped and others are not. ''Amnesiac'', ''Hail to the Thief'', and ''A Moon Shaped Pool'' audibly clip almost constantly, while ''OK Computer'', ''Kid A'', and ''I Might Be Wrong'' might as well not have any clipping at all. ''In Rainbows'' and ''The King of Limbs'' are somewhere in the middle: some tracks are badly clipped, while others seem to have been compressed without any distortion). A rare exception in the band's discography is the "Supercollider"/"The Butcher" single, which doesn't seem to have had any dynamic range compression applied whatsoever; the songs are respectively [=DR11=] and [=DR10=] and sound great. Of course, the band went right back to this trope with their subsequent "The Daily Mail"/"Staircase" single.
399* LyricalDissonance: Common throughout Radiohead's discography, here of the "pretty music, harsh lyrics" variety. [[note]]Thom dislikes how "pretty" his singing voice sounds because it causes this seemingly regardless of what he sings about.[[/note]]
400** "No Surprises" is the go-to example here. The music is soft, gentle, nursery rhyme material; the lyrics are replete with images suggesting alienation and pollution, not to mention lines about jobs that slowly kill you and carbon monoxide poisoning.
401** "Knives Out" is a catchy little song about cannibalism.
402** "I Will" is an acoustic song featuring soft vocals about women and children being bombed in bunkers. Yorke has also described it as [[TranquilFury the angriest song he's ever written]].
403** "Cuttooth" is a beautiful, upbeat, [[{{Shoegazing}} shoegaze-y]] track with lines like "I build you up to pull you down / tie you to your feet and watch you drown / a little bit of knowledge will destroy you."
404** The first part of "The Daily Mail" sounds like a lullaby, despite lyrics about corruption and scathing attacks on the newspaper of the title. [[ZigZaggingTrope Then this trope is kicked to the curb with the second part]], which is essentially a RoaringRampageOfRevenge in musical form.
405** If you get past the OminousMusicBoxTune vibe, "Kid A" has a very beautiful, sweet instrumental. It just so happens to have dark and cryptic lyrics that are fed through a vocoder.
406** "15 Step" is a very warm and upbeat song about a failed love that uses metaphors connected to hanging, with instances such as the line revolving around the TitleDrop ("15 steps, then a sheer drop").
407* MadEye: Thom had 5 surgeries as a child to correct a paralysed left eye, and the last one was botched and left him with a drooping eyelid.
408* MadnessMantra:
409** "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box:"
410--->I'm a reasonable man, get off my case, get off my case, get off my case
411--->I'm a reasonable man, get off, get off, get off my case.
412** "Where I End and You Begin:"
413--->I will eat you all alive, and I will eat you all alive, and I will eat you all alive, and I will eat you all alive,
414--->And there'll be no more lies, and there'll be no more lies, and there'll be no more lies, and there'll be no more lies.
415** "Idioteque" probably qualifies.
416** "Kid A" (the song, not the album) consists, for the most part, of Thom muttering: "standing in the shadows at the end of my bed" over and over through a vocoder.
417** "Sit Down. Stand Up." "THE RAINDROPS THE RAINDROPS THE RAINDROPS THE RAINDROPS."
418** The last thirty or so seconds of "Morning Bell" feature Thom mumbling: "walking, walking, I'm walking, walking, walking."
419** "Everything in Its Right Place" uses it to very offsetting and nigh-ironic effect.
420* MetalScream: Thom delivers a heavily distorted one at the very end of "Climbing Up the Walls."
421** There's a less obvious one at the end of "Paranoid Android." It's fed through a guitar amp (or something along those lines) and is nearly buried beneath the concluding riffs.
422* MinimalisticCoverArt: For ''[[http://sleevage.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/amnesiac_standard.jpg Amnesiac.]]'' It's taken to an extreme with the [[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/64/Limited_edition_album_Amnesiac_by_Radiohead.jpg deluxe edition,]] which ''is'' the red book pictured on the cover; the title is printed on the spine.
423* MisogynySong: Inverted by "Nude" and "Pearly*," which mock and criticize sexism.
424* MoodWhiplash:
425** Occurs within "My Iron Lung" between the quietly grim verses and distorted choruses.
426** On ''OK Computer:''
427*** "No Surprises," a calm and emotional song led by a xylophone, is put right after "Climbing Up the Walls," an extremely harsh and disturbing song based around insanity and paranoia.
428*** Additionally, the creepy dystopian interlude "Fitter Happier" is followed by "Electioneering", the most straightforward hard rock song on the album.
429** ''Amnesiac,'' due to the [[GenreRoulette various genres utilized]] and the overall atmosphere of fear and confusion, has a lot of this. The paranoid, jittery "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box" is followed by the smoother, sadder "Pyramid Song," which is then followed by the nightmarish "Pulk / Pull Revolving Doors," and so on.
430** On ''A Moon Shaped Pool'', the upbeat opening track, "Burn the Witch," is followed immediately by the slower, softer "Daydreaming." The ultra-smooth "Desert Island Disk" is followed by the dark and panicky "Ful Stop," which is then followed by the much slower and more melancholy "Glass Eyes."
431* MotorMouth: Thom in "A Wolf at the Door."
432* TheMovie: ''Meeting People Is Easy,'' a critically acclaimed rockumentary that follows the life of Radiohead as they embark on their ''OK Computer'' tour across the world, mixing live performances with clips of the band members doing interviews, radio station intros, and group photos.
433** A lesser known and rarer one is ''The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time,'' which mostly compiled fan-made music videos for ''Hail to the Thief''-era tracks, as well as odd, slightly surreal low-quality clips of Radiohead doing mock interviews and playing unreleased material.
434* MundaneMadeAwesome: The band has a penchant for making even the most uninteresting lyrics sound absolutely incredible.
435** The lyrics of "Pearly*". As an example:
436--->How'd you get your teeth so pearly?\
437[...]\
438Vanilla milkshakes from Hard Rock Cafes.
439** The climax of "Exit Music (for a Film)" is probably the most awesome way someone could imagine the phrase "Now we are one in everlasting peace" being sung.
440** "Everything in Its Right Place" manages to designate a segment of the song where the only sung lyric is "Yesterday I woke up sucking on a lemon", and it still sounds fantastic.
441** The climax of "You and Whose Army?" centers around two lines ("We ride tonight" and "Ghost horses") and is still flooring.
442* MyGreatestFailure:
443** A lot of the band members have remarked that ''Hail to the Thief'' in particular was an album they wish they could have gone back to; Thom, Ed, and Colin all seem to agree that the album was filled with too many songs and not edited well enough, which was in part a result of their more spontaneous recording process.
444** ''Pablo Honey'' seems to go without saying (although Jonny, curiously, has come to think of it as underrated).
445* MythologyGag: The video for "Lift" is chock-full of these as the different experiences Thom makes during his elevator ride[[note]]A shopping trolley from "Fake Plastic Trees"; several messy trees from "There There"; Robin from "Paranoid Android"; the dancers from "Street Spirit"; floor 3 being on the side wall as a call-back to "Climbing Up the Walls" from the third album[[/note]].
446* NewSoundAlbum: ''Kid A'' takes the cake, but really, every album is a NewSoundAlbum. They don't so much depart from the formula as just not have one.
447* NippleAndDimed: The video for "Paranoid Android" featured cartoon nipples which had to be covered up for the US release. The band seemed confused that the censors balked at the cartoon nudity, but had no trouble at all with the scene in which a man accidentally cuts his own limbs off.
448* NonAppearingTitle: So many. "Idioteque," "Paranoid Android" [[note]]''almost'', if you listen to the robotic backing vocals[[/note]], "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box," "Cuttooth," "Talk Show Host," "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy," "Codex," "Worrywort," "Motion Picture Soundtrack," "Exit Music (For A Film)," etc. That's not to say that the titles have nothing to do with the lyrics or music; the association is just a little roundabout (or a lot).
449* NonMammalMammaries: The fish in the "Paranoid Android" video. Strangely enough, that's the only humanoid feature that fish has.
450* NoPeripheralVision: Textbook example in the video for "Just," where a character accidentally stumbles upon another character lying on the ground ''directly in front of him.''
451* NoTitle: The HiddenTrack that concludes ''Kid A'', officially. It's simply named "Untitled" on streaming services.
452* ObligatoryBondageSong:
453** A case could be made for the first verse of "Sulk:"
454--->You just sit there and sulk, sit there and bawl\
455You are so pretty when you're on your knees\
456Disinfected, eager to please.
457** "Pearly*" is a clearer and probably more unsettling instance of this trope, especially with the final lines that are either "Darling, use me" or "Darling hurts me".
458* ObsessionSong:
459** "All I Need:"
460---> "I am the next act / waiting in the wings / I am an animal / trapped in your hot car / I am all the days / that you choose to ignore."
461** Also "Climbing Up the Walls," which is about an ImplacableMan stalking his victim... [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation Or something.]]
462** "Where I End and You Begin" starts off as a basic (for this band) love song with some dark themes of disconnection. [[FromBadToWorse It then gets]] much [[ImAHumanitarian weirder.]]
463* OminousMusicBoxTune:
464** "Kid A," which has one of the band's softest instrumentals. Of course, the lyrics are cryptic and a little horrifying upon further reflection.
465** "No Surprises" also qualifies, even though it uses a xylophone. The lyrics describe depression, overwork, pollution, among other things.
466* OneDimensionalThinking: The man being chased by the car in the "Karma Police" video. [[spoiler: And later the car itself.]]
467* OneLiner: Thom often delivers them as a way to introduce songs live. Given the band's [[SurrealHumor sense of humor,]] they are often very strange.
468* TheOner:
469** The "No Surprises" video. The continuous 57 seconds during which Thom Yorke is underwater was done by speeding up the track Thom is miming to as his face becomes totally submerged, then editing the footage to slow it down for the full minute. The making of this video is featured in ''Film/MeetingPeopleIsEasy,'' which shows Thom's frustrations with being unable to do the shot correctly for several takes.
470** The "Man of War" video [[PlayingWithATrope plays with this]] in that the sequence of events are choreographed to be a singular long take, but it regularly alternates between two different versions of itself, one taking place during the daytime and another at night, [[spoiler:with elements exclusive to each eventually bleeding into one another]].
471* OurMinotaursAreDifferent: The Crying Minotaur, the super-deformed logo and mascot for the ''Amnesiac'' era. Considerably scarier depictions of bulls also factor into ''Amnesiac''-era artwork.
472* ParanoiaFuel: InUniverse examples.
473** Invoked ''heavily'' throughout "Climbing Up the Walls", as its narrator is strongly implied to be a personification of paranoia, fear, and anxiety.
474--->''Either way you turn,\
475I'll be there.\
476Open up your skull,\
477I'll be there.''
478** "Life in a Glasshouse" invokes this from the CelebrityIsOverrated angle, stating how confining vast amounts of fame can be for celebrities by means of privacy-breaching paparazzi, constant media scrutiny, and the self-imprisonment that comes with [[StepfordSmiler constantly keeping up a nice and clean image]].
479--->''Well, of course I'd like to sit around and chat,\
480But someone's listening in.''
481* PatterSong: "A Wolf at the Door" is a DarkerAndEdgier take.
482* PerishingAltRockVoice: Thom tends to this.
483* PermaStubble: Thom had this for a while, although it's become a fully grown beard since ''In Rainbows.''
484** [[ZigZaggingTrope Everyone else's facial hair seems to be in flux.]]
485* PhraseSaladLyrics: It's not so much the word choice as it is the connection between two unrelated statements that throws the listener for a loop.
486** See "Morning Bell:"
487--->Where'd you park the car?
488--->Where'd you park the car?
489--->Clothes are on the lawn with the furniture
490--->And I might as well
491*** Of course, right after that, it's outright {{word salad|Lyrics}} with the nonsensical phrase "sleepy jack the fire drill."
492* PissTakeRap:
493** The post-chorus section of "The Bends," [[SpringtimeForHitler which like most of the song was intended as a joke,]] [[GoneHorriblyRight but ended up being written too well for anybody to notice.]]
494** A much grimmer example is "A Wolf at the Door."
495* PrecisionFStrike:
496** The famous, strategically-placed "you're so fucking special" in "Creep."
497** The line "dance, you fucker" in "A Wolf at the Door."
498** "Thinking About You:" "[...] 'cause I'm playing with myself [...]"
499** "Myxomatosis" also applies ("It got edited, fucked up").
500** A couple occur in "Talk Show Host:" "If you want me / fuckin', well, come and find me" and a bit later "fucking come on and break the door down."
501** The single swear on ''OK Computer'' is in "Fitter Happier" ("that's driven into / frozen winter shit").
502* PopStarComposer:
503** Jonny, who has scored all of Creator/PaulThomasAnderson's films from ''Film/ThereWillBeBlood'' onwards, and even garnered an Oscar nomination for ''Film/PhantomThread''. Beyond that, he's also scored ''Bodysong,'' ''Literature/NorwegianWood,'' ''Film/WeNeedToTalkAboutKevin,'' and ''Film/YouWereNeverReallyHere''. He's also collaborated with avant-garde Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki.
504** Thom also became one when it was announced that he was doing the score for the ''Film/{{Suspiria|2018}}'' remake.
505* {{Portmanteau}}: Idiot + discotheque = "Idioteque."
506* PostRock: ''Music/KidA'' and ''Music/{{Amnesiac}}'' dabble in this genre.
507* PunctuatedForEmphasis: The choruses of "Myxomatosis."
508* RaceFetish: The girl in "Pearly*" has a "sweet tooth for white boys." It's not played for titillation; it's almost played for horror - see RealLifeWritesThePlot below for an explanation.
509* RapidFireNo:
510** "A Punchup at a Wedding (No No No No No No No No)". The song begins, furthermore, with Thom singing 42 consecutive "no"'s.
511** After the chorus of "A Wolf at the Door," there's a section that has Thom doing nothing but this.
512* RealLifeWritesThePlot:
513** Rumor has it that "Pearly*" was inspired by a Japanese girl who prostituted herself in order to get Radiohead tickets, much to Thom's horror.
514** ''Hail to the Thief'' followed both 9/11 and the birth of Thom's son and has very, very heavy political overtones. For specific song examples, "I Will" was inspired by a news scene of a bunker full of women and kids being bombed during the first Gulf War; "Sail to the Moon" was reportedly written in five minutes for Thom's son.
515** In addition, "A Punchup at a Wedding" was inspired by Thom getting extremely upset after reading a very negative and caustic review of an Oxford show that was intended to be a homecoming concert (this seems to have been at least partially because the review bashed the band's fan base as well).
516* RearrangeTheSong:
517** "Morning Bell" is re-arranged on ''Amnesiac'' as, appropriately, "Morning Bell / Amnesiac", with more emphasis on atmospherics than rhythm.
518** The B-side "Fog" was re-arranged live on piano and titled "Fog (Again)."
519** "I Will", which appears in ''Meeting People is Easy'' and on ''Hail to the Thief'' as an acoustic guitar song, was attempted as an electronic song for the ''Kid A'' sessions that was subsequently reversed and turned into "Like Spinning Plates".
520** "True Love Waits," formerly an acoustic song only played live, was rearranged for piano on ''A Moon Shaped Pool.''
521** For the BBC series ''Blue Planet II'', "Bloom" was rearranged into an orchestral song (with the assistance of Music/HansZimmer) titled "(Ocean) Bloom".
522* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech:
523** "Nude" is one directed at {{He Man Woman Hater}}s.
524** "A Punchup at a Wedding" is one directed at a [[TakeThatCritics critic]] who wrote a particularly scathing review of the band's homecoming show.
525** "Just" is one towards a SmallNameBigEgo friend of Thom's.
526* RecurringRiff: On ''Amnesiac,'' "Hunting Bears" reprises elements of "I Might Be Wrong."
527* {{Recut}}: Thom wrote up a considerably shorter alternate tracklisting for ''Hail to the Thief'' (which omits "Backdrifts", "We Suck Young Blood", "I Will", and "A Punchup at a Wedding").
528-->1. There There
529-->2. The Gloaming
530-->3. Sail to the Moon
531-->4. Sit Down. Stand Up.
532-->5. Go to Sleep
533-->6. Where I End and You Begin
534-->7. Scatterbrain
535-->8. 2 + 2 = 5
536-->9. Myxomatosis
537-->10. A Wolf at the Door
538** [-Their original track numbers are 9, 8, 3, 2, 5, 6, 13, 1, 12, 14.-]
539* RecycledLyrics:
540** The lines "I don't know why I feel so tongue-tied / I don't know why I feel so skinned alive" are included in both "Cuttooth" and "Myxomatosis." Additionally, "Cuttooth" was a track that was supposed to be on ''Amnesiac'' but was held off for unknown reasons.
541** The phrase "staring up inside of me" is used in "Inside My Head" (a B-side to "Creep") and later used in "Bullet Proof... I Wish I Was."
542** A very early, rare demo called "Ed's Scary Song" (which is just Thom and Ed goofing off with an organ and chanting lyrics) contains the seeds of several later songs. The lyric "I live a wallpaper life of playing guitar in a band" would be altered and used in "Cuttooth," and "Standing in the shadows at the end of the bed" would be used in "Kid A." There are also several lines that point ahead to "Everything in Its Right Place:"
543--->He was a good man
544--->And he said he was the best
545--->Even when life spat in his face
546--->He put everything back in its right place.
547* RedOniBlueOni: [[SiblingYinYang Played with in the case of the Greenwood brothers]]. Personality-wise, Colin is the red, known for being chatty, energetic, and excitable. The shy, soft-spoken, and self-deprecating, Jonny, on the other hand, is the blue. On stage, the roles are flipped. Colin becomes the blue, keeping close to Phil's drum kit to focus on the groove, whereas Jonny becomes the red, and thrashes his guitar dramatically, with his limbs and hair flailing around.
548** Also works in terms of comparing the guitar styles of Jonny and Ed. Jonny's punchy, aggressive, and almost percussive guitar style is the red, while Ed's subtle, textured, and ethereal guitar sounds would be classified as blue.
549* RemixAlbum: ''TKOL RMX 1234567'' is a compilation of remixes from ''Music/TheKingOfLimbs''--with many of them remixed by the same musicians who inspired the style of the original album.
550* RockstarSong: Satirized on "Anyone Can Play Guitar", which mocks the "rock star" image and mythos; particular ire is given towards the lingering influence of Music/TheDoors and the constant pressure for rock musicians to draw from frontman Jim Morrison.
551%%** Given [[DarkerAndEdgier a dark twist]] with "Myxomatosis."
552* {{Rockumentary}}: ''Film/MeetingPeopleIsEasy,'' which focuses on the ''OK Computer'' era and the band's gradual burnout during their world tour. It [[TrueArtIsAngsty tends toward the artsy side.]]
553* RoomFullOfCrazy: The artwork, especially from ''OK Computer'' to ''Hail to the Thief.''
554** The hidden booklet that came with early pressings of ''Kid A'' deserves [[http://www.actsofvolition.com/include/feature/radiohead/ special mention.]]
555* RougeAnglesOfSatin: Thom has terrible typing skills. Sometimes this makes things weirder; sometimes, as in Thom and Nigel's 2013 Reddit AMA, it makes things funnier.
556** This was apparently how "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box" got its name. It fit the song so nobody bothered to change it.
557* {{Sampling}}:
558** "Idioteque" samples "Mild und Leise" by Paul Lansky and "Short Piece" by Arthur Krieger. The Lansky sample was so vital to the song that the band sent him a letter telling him they'd sampled him for the track and wanted to make sure it was okay with him.
559*** The song's [[UncommonTime bizarre beat]] and the background chirps were reportedly created by playing a ton of records all at the same time (creating white noise) and feeding them through a drum machine.
560** "Kinetic" samples the drums from "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down" by Music/MilesDavis.
561** "Dollars and Cents" samples an Alice Coltrane song for the bass.
562** There's a very well-hidden sample in "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy." The recurring downward melody appears to be played by a keyboard or distorted string instruments -- but if you speed the song up, it's revealed to be a loop of a choir doing vocal exercises.
563** "Give Up the Ghost" and "Codex" feature sampled bird noises, which [[FadingIntoTheNextSong serve to transition from the former to the latter.]]
564* SanitySlippageSong: "Climbing Up the Walls."
565* SceneryGorn: Parts of the ''Kid A'' artwork, the blips especially. Stick figures bleed to death in the snow, their corpses are tossed into pools of blood, distant fires rage across frigid mountainous landscapes, and there is a strong implication that [[JustBeforeTheEnd the world is falling to pieces.]]
566* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: The narrator in "Cuttooth" proclaims:
567-->I will leave my wallpaper life
568-->and run away to the foreign legion
569-->as the tanks roll into town.
570* SelfBackingVocalist: Thom does this on a lot of songs.
571* SensoryAbuse: In "Just," at one point the guitar gets so high in pitch that at its most intense, it's an earsplitting screech (achieved by Jonny using his Whammy effects pedal to shift the pitch of the note a full two octaves higher than normal).
572* ShoutOut:
573** The band's name is a reference to the Music/TalkingHeads song "Radio Head", from the album ''Music/TrueStories''.
574** "Anyone Can Play Guitar" has Thom sarcastically proclaiming that he wants to be [[Music/TheDoors Jim Morrison]].
575--->"FAT. UGLY. DEAD."
576** The title of "Subterranean Homesick Alien" to Music/BobDylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues."
577** "Paranoid Android" to [[Franchise/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy Marvin the Paranoid Android.]]
578** "Banana Co." to ''Literature/OneHundredYearsOfSolitude.''
579** "Optimistic" briefly references ''Literature/AnimalFarm.''
580** They have a song titled [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour "2 + 2 = 5"]].
581** ''The Bends'' was dedicated to the then-recently deceased Creator/BillHicks.
582** "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy" references Music/AlGreen's "So Glad You're Mine."
583** Thom mentions [[Series/DoctorWho the TARDIS]] in "Up on the Ladder."
584** ''Kid A'''s working title was ''No Logo'' after a seminal anti-globalisation text by Naomi Klein. The band refused to allow any advertising on the tour for the album.
585** The ending of the video for "Burn the Witch" is a big, long homage to ''Film/TheWickerMan1973'' that's also animated in the style of ''WesternAnimation/CamberwickGreen''.
586** "Exit Music (for a Film)" is inspired by ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'', stemming from an idea Thom got while watching the [[Film/RomeoAndJuliet1968 1968 adaptation]] as a teenager (what would've happened if the two ran away the morning after they consummated their marriage), and was specifically written for use in the [[Film/WilliamShakespearesRomeoAndJuliet 1996 adaptation]] (in which it was [[MeaningfulName literally exit music]] played in the credits).
587** Their fan club, W.A.S.T.E., is a reference to Creator/ThomasPynchon's ''Literature/TheCryingOfLot49''. It stands for "'''W'''e '''A'''wait '''S'''ilent '''T'''ristero's '''E'''mpire"; Tristero (or Trystero; it's spelt both ways at different places in the novel) is one of two rival mail companies in what may be an ancient conspiracy, an elaborate hoax played on the novel's narrator by her ex-boyfriend, a hallucination of the novel's narrator, something else entirely, or all of the above (because it's Pynchon and he loves nothing more than a good MindScrew).
588** The pool of blood in the interior artwork for ''Kid A'' is a reference to the comic ''Shadowplay'' by Creator/AlanMoore, in which Olympic swimming pools full of blood are used as visual shorthand for the number of victims of CIA atrocities; one pool equals 20,000 people dead.
589** Upon the death of Creator/BobEinstein, Jonny [[https://pitchfork.com/news/jonny-greenwood-pays-tribute-to-curb-your-enthusiasms-bob-einstein-dead-at-76/ revealed]] that he uses "[[Series/CurbYourEnthusiasm Marty Funkhouser]]" as a fake name in order to check into hotels.
590* ShrinkingViolet: Jonny Greenwood, by his own admission. His brother even said (years ago) that he dislikes interviews because he thinks he comes across as an idiot. From a [[http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/11/magazine/jonny-greenwood-radioheads-runaway-guitarist.html?pagewanted=all New York Times article]]:
591--> "He doesn't like talking to cameras -- throughout the session at Alvernia, a representative of the studio kept trying to pull him away to tape a five-minute Q and A for a video press kit, and he did everything he could to get out of it, short of faking a nosebleed."
592* ShutUpKirk: The "manipulator" character in "Dollars and Cents" overpowers the voice of the "free man" during the chorus.
593-->"Why don't you quiet down?"
594* SiameseTwinSongs:
595** "The Tourist" and "Airbag" from ''OK Computer.'' They tell a coherent story together but are placed in reverse order, [[BookEnds with "The Tourist" at the end of the album and "Airbag" at the beginning.]]
596** "Fitter Happier" is basically an extended spoken-word outro to "Karma Police."
597** A very strange version of this trope would be "Hunting Bears" / "I Might Be Wrong." They flow perfectly into each other, are in the same key, have the same tempo, and harmonize perfectly when played on top of each other... But they don't follow each other on ''Amnesiac.'' Instead, "Hunting Bears" serves as more of a DarkReprise of "I Might Be Wrong," or an intro to "Like Spinning Plates."
598** The first track on Disc 2 of ''In Rainbows,'' "MK 1," is essentially a continuation of "Videotape", recycling some of its ambient elements.
599* SillyRabbitIdealismIsForKids: In "Dollars and Cents," Thom plays the roles of a corrupted cynic and an idealist, and eventually [[ShutUpKirk the cynic overpowers the idealist.]]
600* SingerNameDrop: "Lift" has one.
601-->"We've been trying to reach you, Thom."
602* SingleStanzaSong: Radiohead are quite good at using only a few lines to get their point across.
603* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism: One of the most cynical mainstream bands, with a relentlessly grim and gloomy view on life and an obsession with alienation, depression and loneliness. (barring, perhaps, the appropriately titled "Optimistic," "Desert Island Disk," and the entirety of ''The King of Limbs'').
604* SmallNameBigEgo: Thom has come to view the band's behavior during the ''Pablo Honey'' era as this, being at a time when the success of "Creep" made them feel like they were on top of the world despite the fact that A: they had only one hit single by that point, and B: it was their ''debut'' single, with plenty of room to trip up immediately after. Particular mention goes to Thom's attempts to play himself up as a British Music/KurtCobain and the infamous MTV Beach House 1993 performance, both of which factor into the ''Pablo Honey'' era's OldShame status for the band and for Thom especially. Thom went on to describe himself during that point as "unbearable," stating that "as soon as you get any success you disappear up your own arse."
605* SoloSideProject: All members except Colin have released solo work during the band's time together.
606** Thom's got three albums (''The Eraser'', ''Tomorrow's Modern Boxes'', ''Anima'') under his belt alongside an EP (''Spitting Feathers''), as well as remixes of other artists, a contribution to the ''Literature/{{Twilight}}'' soundtrack, and a soundtrack all of his own (''Film/Suspiria2018'').
607** Jonny has done work with the BBC as a composer in residence, and has done the soundtracks for ''Literature/NorwegianWood,'' ''Film/ThereWillBeBlood,'' ''Bodysong,'' and ''Film/WeNeedToTalkAboutKevin.''
608** Phil has released two albums (''Familial'' and ''Weatherhouse'') and an EP (''Running Blind'').
609** Ed became the latest member to embark on a solo career with his album ''Earth''.
610* SomethingSomethingLeonardBernstein: Thom's singing is often a hypnagogic mumble, but when the slurring is hard enough, only a few words can be understood. Particularly bad cases are "Myxomatosis", "Pyramid Song", and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oz7d6IL2cYc live performances of "2+2=5"]].
611* SongStyleShift:
612** Most famously, the multi-sectioned "Paranoid Android."
613** Halfway through "Sit Down. Stand Up," the slow-burning mood piece transforms into an insanely fast Music/AphexTwin-like composition with Thom's layered voice chanting about raindrops.
614** Also in "The National Anthem," where the brass suddenly enters and it becomes a free jazz jam.
615** The outro of "Optimistic" takes a similarly jazzy turn.
616* SopranoAndGravel: Thom manages to achieve this effect [[SelfBackingVocalist with himself]] in "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy," which has two vocal tracks: one is a typical falsetto, but the other is substantially deeper.
617* SpokenWordInMusic:
618** "Fitter Happier" has a computer doing the vocals.
619*** There's also a repeated sample from a movie in the background, along with some other unsettling noises.
620** Also "Pulk / Pull Revolving Doors" (See entry under AutoTune).
621* SpoofAesop: The liner notes of ''OK Computer'' are filled with tongue-in-cheek cutouts from self-help books and instructions on how to make friends. The effect was described by David Cavanagh of ''Uncut'' as similar to being "lifestyle coached by a lunatic." Even a plug for the band's official website is followed by a suggestion that the listener "take a nice walk in the sunshine instead".
622* SpringtimeForHitler:
623** Supposedly, the guitar "crunches" just before the chorus of "Creep" were an attempt by a very disgruntled Jonny Greenwood to ruin the song. It wound up being one of the most distinctive parts... [[ZigZaggingTrope And then people started disliking it after it got waaay too much exposure compared to the rest of their material.]]
624** The post-chorus PissTakeRap section of "The Bends" was written as a joke but ended up being too well written for anyone to notice.
625* StepfordSmiler: The subject of "Life in a Glasshouse," implying great suffering in the privacy-lax and prison-esque [[CelebrityIsOverrated celebrity lifestyle]] beneath the nice-looking surface.
626-->''She is putting on a smile\
627Living in a glasshouse.''
628* StopAndGo: "Just."
629* StudioChatter:
630** At the beginning of "2 + 2 = 5:"
631--->'''Jonny:''' We're on.
632--->'''Thom:''' That's a nice way to start, Jonny.
633** Heavily reverbed studio chatter can be heard in the background of "Where I End and You Begin," most notably Thom repeating: "Check... Check."
634** "Climbing Up the Walls" contains clips of what is apparently studio chatter pitch shifted and buried among the insect noises and violins. The song must be slowed down before it can even be noticed at all, and even then it's hard to make out what is being said (it seems to be "We're playing... Ready?" though it also sounds rather like "Amazing... Amazing.")
635** "Down is the New Up" opens with Thom distantly exclaiming "Uh!" before the song begins.
636** At the beginning of "Polyethylene (Parts 1 & 2)," someone says "go" before the song starts.
637* The ending of "India Rubber" incorporates the sounds of the band talking and goofing around between takes, as layered over the verse music - the most distinctive bit is a short clip of Jonny laughing, which is looped to unnerving effect.
638* SubduedSection:
639** "Morning Bell" has a brief one where all of the instruments die out except for the drums and keyboard while Thom sings.
640** "You and Whose Army?" starts with one, consisting solely of Thom singing over a wall of harmonizing Thoms, and then picks up the pace later on.
641* SubliminalSeduction:
642** "Exit Music (for a Film)" includes reversed samples of children playing.
643** The intro to "Everything in Its Right Place" features a distorted voice saying [[AlbumTitleDrop "Kid A."]] [[MindScrew It says the same thing when you play it backwards.]]
644** "Codex" begins with a single sung note by Thom [[EchoingAcoustics drenched in reverb]] and played in reverse, so the reverb is heard first as it builds up before the snippet of Thom's voice comes in.
645** "Daydreaming" has a reversed and slowed-down sample of Thom's voice at the end of the track, to Lynchian effect.
646** "The Numbers" ends with a reversed recording of people shaking shakers and laughing underneath the concluding notes.
647* SubvertedKidsShow: The video for "Burn The Witch" openly emulates the cheery, pastoral classic British children's show ''Camberwick Green'' while also heavily drawing from ''Film/TheWickerMan1973''. [[https://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/may/16/radiohead-copyright-burn-the-witch-video-trumpton The combination was subversive enough, and the emulation strong enough, to earn the band a lawsuit.]]
648* SurrealMusicVideo: The band absolutely loves this trope, as shown in the videos for "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBH97ma9YiI Karma Police,]]" "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJ1iMQA0egc Knives Out,]]" "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUzW-fDNEJ0 There There,]]" and "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_qMagfZtv8 Just,]]" among many others.
649* TakeThat:
650** The "kicking screaming Gucci little piggy" line in "Paranoid Android" was directed at an [[RichBitch obnoxious, wealthy, coke-addled woman]] who threw a tantrum in a bar Thom Yorke was in after someone spilled wine on her Gucci outfit.
651** "Electioneering" is a rant against politicians who will say or do anything to get elected.
652** "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy" is one against corrupt bankers. [[WordSaladLyrics Sort of.]]
653** "Trans Atlantic Drawl" seems to be one against tabloids.
654** Hard Rock Cafe and Magazine/TimeMagazine get one in "Pearly*" ("Vanilla milkshakes from Hard Rock Cafes") and "Myxomatosis" ("It got used as a photo in Time Magazine"), respectively.
655** "Pop Is Dead" is a scathing one towards pop music as a whole, describing it as constantly running on fumes and portraying the lifestyle of its artists as ostentatious and self-destructive. The song additionally alludes to the urban legend that Music/MichaelJackson's radical change in appearance at the time was the result of plastic surgery, joking about a pop star who got "so many facelifts, his face flew off."
656** "The Daily Mail" at [[UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers guess who.]]
657* TakeThatCritics: "A Punch Up at a Wedding (No No No No No No No No)" is about a critic who wrote an extremely negative review of the band's Oxford show and tore into the band and audience. Thom admits he shouldn't have let it get to him:
658--> I mean, one of the biggest days in my life. Obviously for all of us. And this... Whoever this person was, just tore it to shreds. And they just tore the audience to shreds [...] This person managed to totally and utterly ruin that day for me forever. And it really shouldn't have done, and I should be bighead enough to just ignore it. And there was a lesson there, which I have I learned now. But I just didn't understand why someone, just because they had access to a keyboard and a typewriter, could just totally write off an event, that meant an awful lot to an awful lot of people. And there'd been just no answering back, no nothing, that was it, the end of the story.
659* TearsOfJoy: Thom Yorke said he "blubbed his eyes out" after hearing the final mix of "There There."
660* TitledAfterTheSong:
661** They're named after the Music/TalkingHeads song [[Music/TrueStories "Radio Head"]]. Talking Heads frontman Music/DavidByrne expressed bemusement at this during his inauguration of the band at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2019, noting how he'd always dismissed that piece as a "Tex-Mex ditty."
662** In turn, Creator/RianJohnson named ''Film/KnivesOut'' after the ''Amnesiac'' song. The movie and the song aren't related; he just thought "Knives Out" sounded like a great name for a whodunit.
663* TitleOnlyChorus: "(Nice Dream)."
664* TitleTrack:
665** "Kid A" and "The Bends."
666** Subverted with "Palo Alto", which was originally called "OK Computer".
667** "Airbag," "No Surprises," and "My Iron Lung" are this for their respective [=EP=]s.
668* TranquilFury:
669** "I Will," an anti-war song described by Thom as the angriest thing he's ever written (on an album full of angry songs!), is sung quite softly, uses a single guitar, and has no percussion.
670** "Nude" is a ReasonYouSuckSpeech towards {{He Man Woman Hater}}s that doubles as one of the band's most beautiful songs.
671* {{Transflormation}}: This is Thom's punishment for stealing enchanted clothing from the woods in the music video for "There There."
672* TruckDriversGearChange: "Sulk" ascends from G to A for its guitar solo and final chorus.
673** Inverted in "Cuttooth;" after Thom's opening scream, his vocals shift down a step and remain there for the rest of the song.
674* TrueCompanions: Two decades on, the band has never had a member change. Ed said it best:
675--> "...Even if we disbanded tomorrow, I would still consider them to be my brothers."
676* TheSomethingSong: "Pyramid Song." [[SubvertedTrope It's got nothing to do with pyramids.]] [[note]]It was originally called "Egyptian Song," which does in fact have something to do with the lyrics. It refers to an Egyptian philosophy of reincarnation and becoming one with everything. Apparently the lyrics were inspired by artwork of the Egyptian underworld and Thom's fascination with "time as a cyclical force." Another relation to pyramids might be the hovering "pyramid hotels" that are present in many of the ''Kid A'' / ''Amnesiac'' blips at the time.[[/note]]
677* UncomfortableElevatorMoment: The music video for "Lift" puts a [[SurrealMusicVideo surreal, impressive spin]] on this simple idea. Not only does said awkward moment extend for four minutes, but it involves a slightly troubled Thom sharing an elevator (or lift) with a variety of increasingly odd people[[note]]including his girlfriend and daughter, a group of bald businessmen, a very small person, a dog, and [[MythologyGag a man dressed as Robin from the "Paranoid Android" video]][[/note]] that are transported by the elevator to increasingly odd locations uncharacteristic of the last. The video ends with [[spoiler: the elevator opening to show [[MindScrew the interior of another elevator]], where another Thom is standing inside with their back to the camera. Thom (and the camera) enter the other elevator, only for it to be revealed that neither person standing there are actually Thom. The camera then turns around to show the real Thom, who is still standing in the first elevator as the door closes]].
678* UncommonTime: A lot.
679** ''Pablo Honey'': "You" has three measures of 6/8 followed by one measure of 5/4.
680** ''OK Computer'':
681*** "Paranoid Android" has some bars (near and during the chorus) in 7/4 (actually alternating three bars of 7/8 with one of 8/8).
682*** "Let Down" has a guitar part in 5/4 and the rest of the instruments in 4/4.
683*** "The Tourist" alternates between 9/8 and 10/8.
684** ''Kid A'':
685*** "Everything in Its Right Place" is in 10/4.
686*** "Idioteque" is some bizarre hybrid of 7/8, 6/8, 4/4, and 10/8.
687*** "Morning Bell" is in 5/4.
688** ''Hail to the Thief'':
689*** "2 + 2 = 5"'s intro is in 7/8.
690*** "Go to Sleep" alternates between 4/4 and 6/8.
691*** Depending on how you count it, "Sail to the Moon" has as many as 30 or 40 time signature changes, though it's such a subdued song that you might not notice. It's easily Radiohead's most extreme deployment of this trope. [[http://pastebin.com/Hf04Q6Ym Take a look.]]
692** ''In Rainbows'': "15 Step" is in 5/4.
693** ''The King of Limbs'': Some of "Codex" shifts between 5/4 and 4/4.
694** ''A Moon Shaped Pool'': "Desert Island Disk" is in 7/4.
695** They do this on their b-sides, too. "The Trickster" has one bit in the chorus that skips a bunch of beats, making it something like two bars of 4/4 followed by a bar of 3/4 followed by four bars of 4/4. "Permanent Daylight" switches between 4/4 and 3/4 (or 6/4) frequently (the exact pattern is two bars of 4/4 followed by three of 6/4 or six of 3/4). "India Rubber" has several segments with two bars of 4/4 followed by two of 3/4. "Polyethylene" has a ton of time signature changes, including bits alternating 9/8 and 4/4, bits alternating 10/4 and 4/4, bits alternating 4/4 and 3/4, and so on. "I Am Citizen Insane" is in 10/4. "4 Minute Warning" switches between 6/4, 4/4, and 5/4. "These Are My Twisted Words" is in 5/4 with drums playing a polyrhythm of 4/4. "The Daily Mail" has one segment with one measures of 2/4 followed by two measures of 4/4.
696** Notably averted with "Pyramid Song," which can be written in common time; it just has a very unusual rhythm.
697** Also averted by "Myxomatosis," which sounds like it's in uncommon time due to the irregular cymbal hits and unusual synth pattern, but it's really in 4/4.
698* VaporTrail: In the "Karma Police" video, [[spoiler:this is how the man being chased by the car gets the best of it]].
699* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: ''Hail to the Thief'' as a whole was motivated by this -- it directly followed both 9/11 and the birth of Thom Yorke's son. Clear-cut examples from the album include "A Wolf at the Door" and "I Will."
700* VillainSong: A good portion of "Dollars and Cents:"
701-->We are the dollars and cents
702-->and the pounds and pence
703-->and the mark and yen, and yeah,
704-->why don't you quiet down?
705-->we're gonna crack your little skulls
706-->we're gonna crack your little souls.
707* VocalEvolution: Compare Thom's singing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVcrnb-4T_E in 1993]] to his singing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfOa1a8hYP8 in 2011.]]
708* WaxingLyrical: To promote ''The King of Limbs'''s retail release, Stanley Donwood and Thom went out and distributed copies of a newspaper called ''The Universal Sigh,'' a lyric taken from the album's intro track "Bloom."
709* WhatCouldHaveBeen: InUniverse; "Exit Music (for a Film)" was inspired by an idea that a 13-year-old Thom got while watching the 1968 Franco Zeffirelli adaptation of ''Film/{{Romeo and Juliet|1968}}'' that he cried his eyes out over: What would've happened if Romeo and Juliet had escaped the morning after they consummated their marriage?
710* WitchHunt: "Burn the Witch".
711* WordSaladHorror: ''Dead Children Playing'' (a book of Stanley Donwood's art) has it in spades.
712** Thom's quite good at producing it as well.
713* WordSaladTitle:
714** ''OK Computer.''
715** All the ''Hail to the Thief'' tracks, especially with their alternate titles in parentheses.
716* YouAreWorthHell: The TwistEnding of "Fake Plastic Trees". Most of the song is a dirge on [[StepfordSmiler the melancholic inauthenticity of modern life]], calling out the life of a plastic surgeon, the town he lives in, and even the "love" the narrator shares with a girl as being [[CrapsaccharineWorld superficially pleasing, but ultimately hopelessly artificial and exhausting]]. However, with the song's final lines, the narrator strongly implies that [[LoveMartyr he ultimately still craves true love and intimacy from the "fake" girl in question]], and is willing to make sacrifices to "be who [she] wanted" just to be with her, strongly implying that one way or another, [[BittersweetEnding he too will become "fake" just for a chance at happiness]].
717* YouCantFightFate: "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" talks about how life is futile and how we will all die in the end anyway. [[AnAesop The song proposes that the only way to get through a life like this is to "immerse your soul in love."]]
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