HIGH AND DRYDespite all the hoo-hah I hear on campus about the new Radiohead album (well, admittedly something this page is contributing to), it's worth pointing out that OK Computer, their most successful album ever, has only sold 1.7 million copies in the U.S. So I guess it's a certain segment of the population-hipster-wannabe college students?-who are the ones generating all the buzz.
Which brings up the interesting question of influential groups. Not many people own an album by the Fall, yet so many bands cite them as an influence. The same thing probably applies to Sonic Youth and Kraftwerk (although both are probably more popular than the Fall), and to even more obscure bands like 23 Skidoo. Would you rather be best-selling or influential? Answers on a 3 by 5.
SINGLED OUT
Apparently the band plans to release a few albums soon in a short space of time and free themselves from contractual obligations so that they can go on to release more songs and short EPs as and when they feel songs should come out. That's good news,I feel. After all, why should the release of an album be a sacred event? Why should it be that we think of artists as producing music not continually but rather in fitful starts and stops?
Plus, it becomes so hard to make any true judgements about an album once it's surrounded by all this buzz. I wonder how many people who're currently proclaiming Kid A's use of electronic instrumentation as groundbreaking would say the same if they hadn't known the identity of the musicians before listening to the album? Take the audio equivalent of the Pepsi Challenge!
I don't know-if I were a successful musician, I'd be tempted to release albums or singles under a false identity in order to see how well they're released independent of any fame. (That's not a completely original thought: it's a trick artists as diverse as Eric Clapton and Basement Jaxx have employed.) But maybe that's just me being neurotic.
INSTANT KARMA
DOWNLOAD
I recognize, of course, that radio is a very different format from MP3: there's the music-on-demand aspect, for one, and there's the fact that MP3s are full recordings while to get a proper recording off radio requires immaculate timing as you hit the "record" button.
Maybe it'll all be redundant. I met a record company executive who claims that what the music industry has planned for the future of recorded music will blow MP3 out of the water. (Although my BS meter was wavering between TRUTH and MORE HOT AIR THAN A RICHARD BRANSON BALLOON.)
CONCERT NEWS
Also today, Enon opens for the Flaming Lips. (Question: the Flaming Lips' version of "She Don't Use Jelly," while hilarious and probably one of the most well-known of their songs, is unrepresentative of their sound. How many other bands are there which have been stereotyped by being associated with a specific song?)
Read more in Arts
Ladies Man Gets Surefire LaughsRecommended Articles
-
Future Shock: 'Kid A'On Tuesday Radiohead released Kid A, the followup to their much-acclaimed 1997 album, OK Computer. Frontman Thom Yorke told a
-
1971 Rock In ReviewW hat is it about journalists that they must always assess, always evaluate? It seems as though rock critics have
-
High Hopes for RapCYPRESS HILL IV Cypress Hill Ruffhouse/Columbia As depressing as it is to admit, it is a sad fact of life
-
Tracksof the best songs from two import albums (the Fabulous Poodles' Mirror Star or a combination of album cuts and
-
BACH CANTATA CLUB TO PERFORM HERE TONIGHTThe Fogg Art Museum will be the scene of a concert by the Bach Cantata Club this evening, with G.
-
Top 5 Albums of the SummerBy NATHANIEL NADDAFF-HAFREY and ERIC L. FRITZ Crimson Staff Writers Junior Boys: “So This is Goodbye” At risk of taking