Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. OK Computer turned 20 this year, which Radiohead celebrated with a reissue of their acclaimed album. Today, the band have shared a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Radiohead circa 1997. (Photo: Kevin Mazur/WireImage) “It was just the noise that was going on in my head for most of a year and a ...
When Radiohead was making “OK Computer” — its classic album released 25 years ago, on May 21, 1997 — there was, of course, lead singer Thom Yorke fronting the band and longtime producer Nigel Godrich ...
When Radiohead released their third album, “OK Computer,” on May 21, 1997, they were a band that a typical indie-rock fan would know—but maybe not well. The band’s single “Creep,” from their 1993 ...
OK Computer is where everything changed for Radiohead. Their 1993 debut album, Pablo Honey, was spotty, bland and tentative; its 1995 follow-up, The Bends, was a major leap forward. Who was sure which ...
When Pitchfork rolled out their “O.K. Computer Week” in March, they didn’t just inexplicably share a string of features about Radiohead’s landmark record three months ahead of the album’s 20th ...
Radiohead‘s OK Computer turns 20 this June and in a new Rolling Stone cover story, the band looks back at the forces that inspired the record, its surprise success and lasting impact on rock music.
Mysterious posters have been popping up in cities around the world, featuring black text on a white background with a theme of “more fear” and “1997 2017” at the bottom. What does it mean? A lot of ...
Radiohead will include three previously unreleased songs – “I Promise,” “Lift” and “Man of War” – on OKNOTOK, a new release celebrating the 20th anniversary of their 1997 landmark LP, OK Computer.
To celebrate the 20th anniversary of “OK Computer,” Radiohead is releasing a special edition of the album. Called “OKNOTOK 1997-2017,” the deluxe release features remastered audio of the original ...
Radiohead revolutionized alternative rock when it released “OK Computer” in 1997. Now, 20 years later, the Oxford, England, band’s landmark album still sounds like the future of rock ‘n’ roll. Well, ...