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Kid a radiohead discography
Kid a radiohead discography





kid a radiohead discography
  1. #Kid a radiohead discography archive#
  2. #Kid a radiohead discography full#
  3. #Kid a radiohead discography free#

Music is always full of repetition (“repetition legitimises”) and I guess that’s why we’re disagreeing about where to draw the line here, but some music is more built on “rhythmic repetition” than others. Karma police is definitely not rhythmic in that way, in fact excusing no surprises not one track is overly repetitive in its rhythms. No surprises is a track with a lot of repetition, but otherwise I wouldn’t say climbing up the walls really fits with its big breaks between beats (I’m struggling to word this well but I don’t think it’s a track that people would describe as “rhythmic”, whilst a lot of people would describe most of Kid A that way). Your examples on okc shows I probably haven’t worded my stuff ideally. HtTF also has moments of repetition, but it never feels like it’s “king” - many tracks drag, and the repetition used is often temporary. I’ll also say that yes, 15 step is heavily based upon rhythm, but the album as a whole has more guitar driven grooves and the songs typically drive to an eventual second/different chorus. You also ignored my point of the second half album run. The National Anthem is undisputedly built upon heavy rhythmical repetition, and to argue that the variation in the rest of the arrangement means it has average repetition is disingenuous. I’m saying the songs are heavily built on repetition, more than any other radiohead album (bar tkol). I think you believe that I think the album solely exists as a repetition exhibit, which is not what I was trying to state. I think you’re being a little obtuse, espescially with the national anthem. That's why we have tons of electrics, dissonance, uncanny harmonies and genre blends.

kid a radiohead discography

To me Kid A is all about going away from conventional music writing. The only album with clear big emphasis on repetitive rhythm is tkol and it explore it way deeper than kid a Same with In Rainbows, 15 steps literally build around 5/4 groove, iconic ambiguous syncopation on videotape, drums on weird fishes that some people love so much (it goes for like two minutes straight). You can say same thing about songs on okc, Climbing up the walls with clear repetitive drum, no surprises with guitar pattern that sits on the same chords and chorus just became even more repetitive, airbag with cello part and drum loop, vocal accents on the weak beat in karma police. HTTT is more repetitive to the point that it became a meme with those raindrops and no-nos Repetition is not core of that song, it's just glue for Avant Garde installation.

#Kid a radiohead discography free#

National Anthem uses bass line not for repetition itself, but to hold everything together, because it's chaotic and FULL of variation and not just regular variation, but FREE JAZZ IMPROVISATION. How is Kid A based on rhythmical repetition? Based on what tkol then? Radiohead Not For Profit (live performances)īuy/Sell/Trade Ticket Thread (Tomorrow's Modern Boxes)

#Kid a radiohead discography archive#

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Kid a radiohead discography