Season’s greetings! I’ve been away
for a couple of days visiting family for Christmas. When Sheila and I take a
road trip it is our tradition to each choose four CDs to take with us. Here are
the CDs that I chose to take this time:
·
Frank Turner “Tape
Deck Heart”
Sheila chose these four:
- The Who “Meaty
Beaty Big and Bouncy”
- Soundtrack “Saturday Night Fever”
- The Pogues “If I Should Fall from Grace with God”
- Tom Waits “Mule Variations”
The trip was over before we got to
Sharon Jones and Tom Waits. While on a ferry I also took the opportunity to
just sit and listen to my next album up for review. I would have preferred
Sharon Jones or Tom Waits.
Disc 815 is….Kid A
Artist: Radiohead
Year of Release: 2000
What’s up with the Cover? Computer generated mountains?
Sound waves? A landscape depicting the terrain on Thom Yorke’s home planet?
How I Came To Know It: I knew about Radiohead dating
back to their debut album because of my friend Greg, but it was another friend
(Anthony) who introduced me to this album years ago when I was visiting him in
Vancouver. I remember really disliking it back then and over the years very
little has changed.
How It Stacks Up: We have seven Radiohead albums (all of them
except 2011’s “King of Limbs”). Of the seven I really dislike three of them. “Kid
A” is one of those, but benefits from me disliking two others even more, so I’ll
rank it fifth. Since this is (mercifully) my last Radiohead review, here is the
full recap:
- The Bends: 4 stars (reviewed back at Disc 316)
- Pablo Honey: 4 stars (reviewed back at Disc 223)
- OK Computer: 3 stars (reviewed back at Disc 541)
- In Rainbows: 2 stars (reviewed back at Disc 597)
- Kid A: 2 stars (reviewed right here)
- Hail to the
Thief: 2 stars (reviewed back
at Disc 214)
- Amnesiac: 1 star (reviewed back at Disc 432)
Ratings: 2 stars
“Kid A” is the album where Radiohead made a
conscious decision to fundamentally change their approach to music. I like to
think of it as the album where they decided that they would rather be clever
than listenable.
Ideally you can be both clever and listenable, but “Kid
A” pushed that theory past its limits. The album descends into electronica mood
music. These are occasionally punctuated by groovy beats, which I enjoyed, and
jazz constructs, which I did not.
The production fades in and out of clarity, and
gives you the feeling that you’re listening a radio station at the edge of its
broadcast range, with the signal sometimes being disrupted by static, and
sometimes coming through clearly. A few songs in I wasn’t sure which I
preferred – I guess I was hoping it would cut out entirely.
There is so much I want to like about Radiohead.
Clearly these guys understand music: how it is constructed, how melody works
and how to blend different sounds in new and interesting ways to your ear. On “Kid
A” they take traditional rock and R&B constructions and then deconstruct
them into something new. Unfortunately, while this can be intellectually
interesting, it doesn’t make for listenable music.
A good example is the third song on the album, “The National Anthem.” It starts off with
a pretty solid groove, and after the two meandering and mostly pointless tracks
that precede it, gave me some hope that things were about to get better. That hope
was quickly dashed as the song progressed, as it worked in fuzzy jazz trumpet.
The fuzzy trumpet then slowly morphs into screechy jazz trumpet before becoming
fuzzy again. Then the song was over, leaving me wonder what the hell was the
point.
The next track “How
To Disappear Completely” has a beautiful atmospheric structure that evokes
a genuine feeling of disconnect and isolation. Like “A National Anthem,” this song is about six minutes long and feels
like it should end after about four, but at least the song genuinely made me
feel something.
Obviously embarrassed that they had just made a proper
song with human feelings, Radiohead retreats almost immediately back into the
alien landscape of their minds with “Treefingers.”
I assume this is music that a planet of tree people would play for one another
when they want to relax – kind of like people playing whale sounds to help them
sleep. “Treefingers” didn’t help me
sleep or relax – it made me fidget, as I resisted the urge to break the Odyssey
rules and skip to the next song.
The most appropriately titled track on the album is “Idioteque” which I assume is the kind of
dance club where the songs from “Kid A” would be played. With its pseudo-beat
box sound, it is hard to tell if Radiohead is deliberately mocking its audience
for dancing to this stuff, or are just having a hard time knowing how to make
Terrans happy. At least the Dead Milkmen had the common courtesy to include
lyrics on “Instant Club Hit” that
made it clear they have no respect for people who will “dance to anything.” With
Radiohead you get the feeling they are just a bunch of aliens that have put is
in a cage and are piping in different sounds to see how we’ll react.
When “Kid A” came out most critics loved it, and I
can understand why. It displays a skill and understanding of musical forms that
is impressive. So impressive, it made it impossible for me to honestly give it
only 1 star. I really wanted to, though.
Best
tracks: How To Disappear Completely
1 comment:
I tried on a few occasions to get into Radiohead. Gave all their albums a few listens. Couldn't do it. As much as I wanted to like it I just could not do it.
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