Amnesiac
Best
song: Pyramid Song
Worst
song: Hunting Bears
Overall
grade: 6
My
fiftieth post on this site (fifty! Can you believe it? It seems like such a
huge number in such a short space of time) focuses on ‘Amnesiac’, a record that
was Radiohead’s fifth album, which, with one of its tracks, took the band to fifty
combined tracks on albums. The fifth track is entitled ‘I Might Be Wrong’ which
subsequently went on to title the band’s live album, no song breaks the five
minute mark, and it was released on the fifth of the month by a band that has
five members. So the number five, and certain multiples of it, are very
relevant to the album. And originally I was going to give it a grade of 5 and
say, hey look! It’s meant to be. But then I was listening to this thinking
about what I was going to write here and I realised that I always forget how
good this album is, and to pull my gimmick with the number five would be a
complete lie.
The
basic deal with this album was that during the sessions for ‘Kid A’ the band
recorded a huge number of songs which they thought were good enough to be on an
album, but they couldn’t sequence them into a decent double, so they sequenced
them into a single album and then put all the other good songs out separately,
a year later. And that is where the main problem lies. The actual songs here
are, for the most part, just as brilliant as what you can find on ‘Kid A’. It’s
just that the cohesion isn’t there in the same way. The whole is exactly equal
to the sum of its parts, rather than greater than, as the absolute best albums
usually are.
Beginning
track ‘Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box’ is controversial, completely
electronic, built up exclusively of tape loops and autotune used to such excess
that it lampoons the use of the technique in mainstream music. It’s weirder
than anything that came before and it’s pretty easy to imagine someone getting
a minute or two into this song and switching it all off. But wait! Next comes ‘Pyramid
Song’, and even as electronics patter around the main piano line it retains its
status as accessible with a capital A. Radiohead were experimental, sure, but
in their hearts they were all about the balladry, and this one’s beautiful, the
rare song that a casual listener can enjoy the overall effect of and the
intense listener can appreciate the complexity of.
‘I
Might Be Wrong’ is a shock because it’s hardly electronic at all, I mean, you
can actually hear a guitar! Does anyone else ever wonder what Johnny Greenwood
actually did during the session for these albums? Was he really involved in
writing and arranging or did he sit at the back of the studio playing Tetris,
eating custard creams and waiting to be called upon? Anyway, even if this was
the only song here to feature him (it’s not) it would be worth it. It’s a
stunningly unpredictable song. Just listening to it gives me a thrill.
I
love the whole idea behind ‘Morning Bell/Amnesiac’ – the fact that the band
recorded different versions of a song and put them out on completely separate
albums. I’d really like to see more of that; in that the best version could be
the album track and then the alternatives could be included as bonus tracks. It’s
fascinating to see the different directions the band considered going with the
same material. In this case I think the previous ‘Morning Bell’ is superior,
but that doesn’t stop me putting the two side by side, enjoying them both and
then comparing notes.
Calling
it filler would be going too far, but I never fall in love with ‘Hunting Bears’.
I think Thom Yorke’s vocals are such an important part of the Radiohead sound,
and this, being an instrumental, doesn’t have them. It’s well made and it
features a combination of the electronics and guitars that I like a lot, but it’s
not the only song to do this (‘Knives Out’, anyone? That’s another great
moment, almost a more mature version of something off ‘The Bends’) and as such
it’s just superfluous to requirements.
More
songs! It feels like there are so many songs here, so much going on throughout.
I’m hugely into ‘Like Spinning Plates’ which is one of my favourites here. Its
long instrumental intro is very disorientating while the drone of the vocal
half makes the whole thing completely hypnotic, an effect caused by its
backwards recording. The band could use that power for evil, trying to control
our minds by changing ‘While you make pretty speeches I’m being cut to shreds’
to ‘Give me your bank details and pin code and let me just borrow your car’.
‘Pulk/Pull
Revolving Doors’ is the one people skip because it doesn’t add anything to your
opinion of it on subsequent listens, and final track ‘Life in a Glass House’ is
great at the beginning but disappoints me at the end as I’m not a fan of the dissonant
trumpet that’s going on there. A let down of an ending to an excellent record.
Radiohead
are one of my favourites and this album is just as good as most of their
discography. If you liked ‘Kid A’, you’d be a fool not to get this too. If you
really didn’t like ‘Kid A’ for whatever reason then it’s probably valid for you
to skip this, or at least don’t pay money for it until you’re sure that you
like it.
Here’s
to tripling the number of posts on this site by the end of 2013.
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