Packt Like Sardines in a Crushed
Tin Box
Pyramid Song
Pull/Pulk Revolving Doors
You and Whose Army?
I Might Be Wrong
Knives Out
Amnesiac/Morning Bell
Dollars and Cents
Hunting Bears
Like Spinning Plates
Life in a Glass House
Amnesiac
or Limited Edition!
Released 06/04/2000 UK, 06/05/2000 US & Canada
Produced by Radiohead and Nigel Godrich.
Most of the tracks on Amnesiac were written and recorded during
the Kid A sessions. The band has always viewed their work from
these sessions as two separate albums, but steered away from
releasing a double album. Colin Greenwood said in a recent interview,
"We had that group of songs to make one record, and the other
ones are left over. It's that we had, say, 23 songs and we wanted
to have around 47 minutes of music, so we chose the best combination
out of that number (for 'Kid A'), and the rest are waiting on
the bench, waiting to be picked for the next team line-up. It
is a combination of like, more conventional, perhaps, but also
more dissonant stuff. But it continues on from 'Kid A'. It was
all done in the same recording period. It is all a whole."
Notes:
When asked what Amnesiac will sound like in an interview before
the album's release, Thom replied, "If you look at the artwork
for Kid A...well, that's like looking at the fire from afar.
Amnesiac is the sound of what it feels like to be standing IN
the fire."
Amazon review
More song-driven and acoustic than Kid A, Radiohead's Amnesiac
isn't quite "Kid B," but it is unquestionably cut from the same
far-out cloth, as the band revels in fascinating quirks and
abject nihilism. It's also the first time in Radiohead's career
that a new record hasn't meant a complete shift in artistic
priorities. Surely, however, regardless of which was released
first, they both deserve recognition; after all, Amnesiac, like
Kid A, is an amazing piece of work.
Only lightly augmented with electronics, songs like "You and
Whose Army?" and "I Might Be Wrong" almost sound like they came
from a typical five-piece rock band. You may even believe the
band still employs a guitarist after hearing Jonny Greenwood's
wistful surf-guitar lead on "Knives Out" or his subtle but noticeable
contributions to the anticapitalist rant "Dollars and Cents."
But inevitably, the band continually shifts gears, moving into
Boards of Canada territory on "Like Spinning Plates" and delivering
dark, bass-laden oddities like "Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors,"
a fuzzed-out piece of avant-garde techno that could just as
easily be on an Autechre or Aphex Twin record. The song's half-sung,
half-spoken vocal was laid down by either a heavily distorted
Thom Yorke or, just perhaps, a loquacious microwave oven. Either
way, the music always has momentum, regardless of whether propelled
by man or appliance. Radiohead as a band understand how to make
rock interesting again, and in the end, that's all they set
out to do when they recorded Amnesiac, as well as Kid A. It's
more than can be said for the bad frat-punk, teen-pop and soulless
techno that currently rules the charts, and for that alone,
Radiohead's astonishing exploration of 21st-century anguish
deserves credit.