Anticipated for over four years, and suddenly announced in the first days of October on the website http://www.inrainbows.com/, the seventh album of Thom Yorke and company is released - for now, in digital download only - creating a media storm and total upheaval in the world of the music industry.

The album is indeed released without the support of any label or major whatsoever, and potential buyers are even offered the opportunity to decide the price to pay. Additionally, a luxurious discbox is sold - also through the aforementioned website - a set of 2 CDs and 2 vinyl records (with the option to download the digital version of the album for free) for 40 pounds, about 60 euros, which will be sent to buyers around the first week of December. This operation is also carried out without the involvement of any distributor.

In short, a true revolution in record management, but then again, the Radiohead have accustomed us to revolutions for an immemorial time, although until today, those "seismic shifts" were always solely on an artistic level. No one expected such a move, least of all the record companies, who paradoxically are praising the policy of the world's most famous Oxfordians, citing it as an example of a forward-looking perspective of what the future of the recording industry could be. In short, to cut to the chase, Radiohead jumped on the train of those opportunities that the majors let pass by, getting bogged down by the delays of cumbersome and obsolete management by the "politicians" of the record. And perhaps the data leaking these days show them as the real winners with - as is rumored on the web - almost over 10 million downloads in just one day.

But what about the most anticipated rock album in the last four years?

"In Rainbows" could not fail to surprise. But this was predictable. Let's say that in their "being innovative," "being above all conventions," "being super partes," Radiohead were predictable. An album that opens with a tribal synth and distortions plus an almost jazz guitar riff and Thom's voice warm and fascinating as ever. And halfway through, an organ outlines almost epic suggestions and nocturnal images. It's "15 Step" and it's a pleasure to find the old friends awaited. They're still the same, yes. Then suddenly the fuzzy guitar of "Bodysnatchers" breaks the ecstasy, and suddenly the Radiohead return to rock, the psychedelic, obsessive type of tracks like "National Anthem". A mantra of sounds, echoes, and almost spectral vocalizations. Chaos.

The delicacy of ancient masterpieces like "Exit Music", "Lucky", and "Pyramid Song" returns with "Nude", the third track. Minimal opening, but the "crescendo" is announced, and the finale is goosebump-inducing. Tight rhythms, dry drums, and acoustic guitar open "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" which unfolds in a suffering but more conventional singing (always in their way). Halfway, the track slows down and then resumes in a continuous succession of emotions, almost in a loop. "All I Need", the fifth track, is almost a ballad close to the more accessible stuff of "OK Computer" ("Karma Police", "No Surprises"). The voice is almost projected into a heavenly dimension, electronic sounds of a gentle xylophone paint the sound background that eventually fully envelops the singing, as if it were being sucked up by the instruments. "Faust Arp" is one of the most intense songs on the album. Obsessive singing over a marvelous string carpet. Almost bucolic the general atmosphere. It almost feels like hearing echoes of Arthur Lee and his Love that in the 60s revolutionized pop. "Reckoner" with its almost industrial rhythm is embellished by a light acoustic guitar and the falsetto voice that draws a beautiful melodic line of extraordinary emotional impact. Perhaps together with the preceding track, they reach unique peaks of suggestion. We are at levels of "Paranoid Android", to put it plainly.

The eighth track "House Of Cards" starts almost jazzy, but perversion is at the door. The voice once again weaves obsessive plots, and the arrangements become increasingly psychedelic, with almost spectral background echoes. The contradiction in the commonality. Much more conventional the intro of "Jigsaw Falling Into Place", which is almost pure pop, with a delicate and enveloping singing that becomes gradually obsessive in a formidable crescendo and closes with a beautiful choral arrangement. The album closes with "Videotape" with its soft and enveloping textures, halfway through almost taken by an obsessive synth and an increasingly intense piano that beautifully closes the 42 minutes of music of "In Rainbows".

A curious note: the tracks are all rather short compared to the average of the band's latest productions. This too is a "break in the mold" for a band that to define as epoch-making would be almost offensive. Radiohead are a thousand miles above everything and everyone. They have surpassed the physicality of music and have once again given us indescribable sensations. Listening to them makes everything seem so unreal. They are the therapy against the ugliness of our existence.

Tracklist Lyrics and Videos

01   15 Step (03:58)

How come I end up where I started?
How come I end up where I went wrong?
Won't take my eyes off the ball again
You reel me out, then you cut the string

How come I end up where I started?
How come I end up where I went wrong?
Won't take my eyes off the ball again
First you reel me out, and then you cut the string

You used to be alright
What happened?
Did the cat get your tongue?
Did your string come undone?
One by one
One by one
It comes to us all
It's as soft as your pillow

You used to be alright
What happened?
Etcetera, etcetera
Fads for whatever
Fifteen steps, then a sheer drop

How come I end up where I started?
How come I end up where I went wrong?
Won't take my eyes off the ball again
You reel me out, then you cut the string

02   Bodysnatchers (04:02)

I do not
Understand
What it is
I've done wrong
Full of holes
Check for pulse
Blink your eyes
One for yes
Two for no

I have no idea what I am talking about
I am trapped in this body and can't get out
Ooooohhhh

You killed the sound
Removed backbone
A pale imitation
With the edges sawn off

I have no idea what you are talking about
Your mouth moves only with someone's hand up your ass
Ooooohhhh

Has the light gone out for you?
Because the light's gone out for me
It is the 21st century
It is the 21st century
It can follow you like a dog
It brought me to my knees
They got a skin and they put me in
They got a skin and they put me in
All the lines wrapped around my face
All the lines wrapped around my face
Are for anybody else to see
Are for anybody else to see
I'm a lie

I've seen it coming
I've seen it coming
I've seen it coming
I've seen it coming

03   Nude (04:15)

Don't get any big ideas
They're not gonna happen
You paint yourself white
And fill up with noise
But there'll be something missing

Now that you've found it, it's gone
Now that you feel it, you don't
You've gone off the rails

So don't get any big ideas
They're not gonna happen
You'll go to hell
For what your dirty mind is thinking

04   Weird Fishes/Arpeggi (05:18)

In the deepest ocean
The bottom of the sea
Your eyes
They turn me
Why should I stay here?
Why should I stay?

I'd be crazy not to follow
Follow where you lead
Your eyes
They turn me
Turn me on to phantoms
I follow to the edge of the earth
And fall off

Yeah, everybody leaves
If they get the chance
And this is my chance

I get eaten by the worms
And weird fishes
Picked over by the worms
And weird fishes
Weird fishes
Weird fishes

I...I hit the bottom
Hit the bottom and escape
Escape

I...I hit the bottom
Hit the bottom and escape
Escape

05   All I Need (03:49)

I'm the next act
Waiting in the wings
I'm an animal
Trapped in your hot car

I am all the days
That you choose to ignore

You are all I need
You're all I need
I'm in the middle of your picture
Lying in the reeds

I am a moth
Who just wants to share your light
I'm just an insect
Trying to get out of the night

I only stick with you
Because there are no others

You are all I need
You're all I need
I'm in the middle of your picture
Lying in the reeds

It's all wrong, It's all right
It's all wrong, It's all right
It's all wrong, It's all right
It's all wrong, It's all right
It's all, it's all

06   Faust Arp (02:10)

One two three four

Wakey wakey
Rise and shine
It's on again, off again, on again
Watch me fall
Like dominoes
In pretty patterns
Fingers in the blackbird pie
I'm tingling, tingling, tingling
It's what you feel, not what you ought to
What you ought to
Reasonable and sensible
Dead from the neck up

I guess I'm stuffed, stuffed, stuffed
We thought you had it in you
But no, no, no
For no real reason

Squeeze the tubes and empty bottles
And take a bow, take a bow, take a bow
It's what you feel, not what you ought to
What you ought to
The elephant that's in the room is
Tumbling, tumbling, tumbling
Duplicate and triplicate
And plastic bags
And duplicate and triplicate
Dead from the neck up

I guess I'm stuffed, stuffed, stuffed
We thought you had it in you
But no, no, no
Exactly where do you get off?
Is enough, is enough
I love you but enough is enough
Enough of that stuff
There's no real reason

You've got a head full of feathers
You're gonna melt into butter

Loading comments  slowly

Other reviews

By Lennox

 This album is a masterpiece.

 "In Rainbows" shouldn’t be listened to, it must be lived.


By joe strummer

 "In Rainbows" is thus, beyond its musical value, an album that will certainly be remembered.

 A uniform, compact work, without any significant qualitative drop. An operation of full substance, without any avant-garde pretentiousness.


By Stephen Write

 "In Rainbows" (the title of their new album) will be available for download starting October 10 at the price of... well, the novelty is that you decide the price.

 The final judgment on "In Rainbows" is very positive, even if the expectations for this album were enormous and therefore a bit of disappointment in certain aspects is physiological.


By Fatal

 An album I would define as intimate.

 Thom Yorke is the absolute protagonist in all the tracks. His voice, cleaner than ever, dominates everywhere.


By Breus

 In Rainbows does not appear to be particularly lavish in post-production, nor is it lavish with an extraordinarily inspired writing. But perhaps this is its strength.

 The atmosphere is pervaded by a mood that is certainly not sunny, at best nostalgic.