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The post Radiohead’s The Bends Was a Sophomore Record No One Saw Coming: Classic Album Review appeared first on Consequence. One of my favorite anecdotes about the creation of The Bends ...
A look at Radiohead making a collection of short films to promote their 2003 record 'Hail to the Thief', how strange they were and the DVD they made of them.
The Bends contains some of the songs most beloved by the band’s faithful. Here are our choices for the Top 5 on the album. If you only know Radiohead post-OK Computer, you might be surprised at ...
This is a record where Radiohead indulged in somewhat conventional songwriting and recording methods. That’s not to say The Bends is devoid of inspiration or inventiveness; quite the contrary.
His gripes seem wholly justifiable. It’s May 1992 – just under three years before Radiohead will release The Bends. The Drill EP, which is currently languishing in EMI’s warehouses, is the group’s ...
Glenn Fosbraey does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
When Radiohead were laying down tracks for their second long player, The Bends, throughout 1994, there was no doubting they were under pressure. The group’s record label, Parlophone, was desperate to ...
blending the primal power of axe-heavy Radiohead albums (think “The Bends” blended with “In Rainbows”) with the songwriting precision of post-punk sprinkled with the experimentation of ...
There was a time in the early to mid-2000s when naming The Bends as your favourite Radiohead album was like opting for chicken korma from the takeaway menu, while the gourmands decided between the ...