Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich Reddit Ask Me Anything Recap
Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich answered questions today about Atoms For Peace during an AMA (Ask Me Anything) session on Reddit earlier. Nigel posted the following message on twitter moments ago, “You can ask us anything but we reserve the right to not answer ;)”. Read the questions and answers below.
You can now steam AMOK in full!
Reddit questions: (This is unedited and the text is just as Thom and Nigel typed it on Reddit)
When asked about the recording sessions at Third Man Records studio in Nashville during last Summer Thom replied:
We was at AJck Jack Whites places… we now have two unfinished tracks, one of which is identikit. Its nice there, red and black and white nshit.
err, we work slower than him (umderstatement)\
hi everyone
They were asked about recording and production:
Im a big fan of autotune
How do you feel about the amok leak? And music piracy in generalHow do you feel about the amok leak? And music piracy in generalSomeone asked if there would be an Atoms For Peace From The Basement and about unreleased Radiohead songs:
No plans for FTB..
I like all 50 of the new radiohead songs
this is obviously nigel
They were asked about AMOK being leaked online yesterday:
Well.. unsurprised?
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Radiohead’s The King Of Limbs was released 2 years ago today
Radiohead’s eighth studio album The King Of Limbs was released two years ago today. The album was announced on February 14th (Valentine’s Day) on the bands website. The King Of Limbs was originally set to be available to download on the following Saturday (February 19th), though it was released one day early with a message posted by Ed O’Brien on Radiohead’s website. “It’s Friday… It’s almost the weekend…It’s a full moon…. You can download ‘The King of Limbs’ now if you so wish! Thank you good people for waiting … Have a great weekend wherever you are….”
Photo: Artwork featured on Radiohead’s website announcing The King Of Limbs on February 14th, 2011.
The King Of Limbs was recorded in Los Angeles, CA at a house owned by Drew Barrymore. The album, produced by long-time Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich was not recorded in a traditional method to that of their previous album In Rainbows. The King Of Limbs showcases Radiohead sampling their owns instruments and recordings with turntables and software written by Jonny Greenwood. The album was described by Thom Yorke as an expression of “physical movements” and “wildness” and is thought to be named after a tree of the same name in Savernake Forest in Wiltshire(United Kingdom). Radiohead did not give any details or discuss the album until almost eight months after it’s release.
Photo: Thom Yorke during The King Of Limbs recording sessions.
Although no singles were released from The King Of Limbs, there was a music video released for “Lotus Flower”. The video contains footage of Thom Yorke singing and dancing to the song in black-and-white. The video was directed by Garth Jennings and choreographed by Wayne McGregor and became an instant meme on the internet and as of this post has 21,720,064 views on YouTube. Watch below.
Tracklisting for The King Of Limbs:
Colin Greenwood revealed earlier this month that Radiohead would be heading into the studio in September to begin work on a follow up to The King Of Limbs.
Today also marks the 2 year anniversary for this website. I want to thank everyone who has visited and helped contribute to the site!!
Thom Yorke will be on BBC Radio 6 today with Steve Lamacq to discuss Atoms For Peace and AMOK. BBC Radio 6 will be streaming AMOK in full for the first time throughout the day today. You’ll be able to stream it online here.
Atoms For Peace will release their debut album AMOK on February 25th (Feb 26th in the U.S.) and can be pre-ordered through XLRecordings, Amazon, and iTunes.
Photo: The King Of Limbs tree in Savernake Forest. Photo by Ben Symonds.
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Thom Yorke Interviewed by Esquire Magazine ‘What I’ve Learned’
Thom Yorke was interview back in December by Esquire Magazine on various thing’s he’s learned over the years. The interview is titled ‘What I’ve Learned’ and the entire interview will be available in this month’s issue of Esquire Magazine. Thom will be releasing an album with his other band, Atoms For Peace later this month.
Thom Yorke:
If you’re going to be a vegetarian, you really do have to like lentils. Otherwise you’re fucked.
It’s much better to attempt to trust people until they prove you wrong.
I only started singing because I couldn’t find anybody else to sing. Everybody I asked was a bloody idiot.
Twenty thousand people can all look like one big mush, but actually it’s really interesting how you can walk onstage and within ten minutes feel what their vibe is.
When we first started supporting R.E.M., there were some gigs we played where people were ordering chicken dinners, and that kind of fucked with my head.
I was in hospital a lot when I was a kid ’cause I was born with my left eye shut, and they had to take muscle from my ass and graft it to make a muscle that would open the eyelid. So I had four or five operations, starting when I was very young. I must’ve started complaining by the time I was five. “Look, you’ve got to do it,” my parents said. “If you go, we’ll buy you whatever you want, okay? What do you want?” I said, “I want a red tracksuit.” And they got me a red tracksuit, tops and bottoms, and I was happy to go back to the hospital even knowing that I was going to go under the general anesthetic, wake up, and throw up everywhere. I loved that red tracksuit. I wore that red tracksuit until it looked so small that it was ridiculous on me.
When I was a student, my bank used to cut off my credit card all the time. I could never seem to stop bouncing checks. I was always on the phone with the bank. It was a very satisfying day after I signed a big record deal, when I went to the bank and paid off all my debts. The banker came across the desk to shake my hand and I told him to fuck off. How did he react? I think he was quite used to it.
Every time I go to the ATM and it asks how much I want, I say, “Give the most you can give me.”
My grandfather would come to our house in the countryside, borrow one of our bikes, and disappear. He’d come back after dark and we had no idea where he’d been. If he ran into anybody, he’d just ask where the good nightclub was. He did that right up into his nineties.
I was sitting with my son the other day and his friend, who’s eleven, and I said, “Okay guys, do the math. Work out how many seconds you’ve got left.” Took ’em a while, but they got there.
Kids teach you to lighten up, which for me was very handy because I wasn’t very light at the time. They were a blessing for that.
It takes a long time for an audience to relax on Monday nights.
Build gaps in your life. Pauses. Proper pauses.
Getting everything you want has nothing to do with anything.
If we were going out and just playing the hits and shit, then I would feel very differently about things. But we’re playing new things, and some of it’s very difficult to play, actually. The idea that twenty thousand people come and watch us do some of this music that’s pretty bonkers and certainly not on the radio… that’s a good thing, man. We played in Phoenix, and Ed and I came offstage and looked at each other. Did you see that?
I can’t imagine twenty years ahead because I’m sort of here right now.
Read more over at esquire.com
Atoms For Peace will release their debut album AMOK on February 25th (Feb 26th in the U.S.) and can be pre-ordered through XLRecordings, Amazon, and iTunes.
Listen to AMOK in full next Monday, February 18th on BBC Radio 6
Thom Yorke will be on BBC Radio 6 next Monday, February 18th with Steve Lamacq to discuss Atoms For Peace and AMOK. BBC Radio 6 will be streaming Atoms For Peace AMOK in full for the first time throughout the day on Monday. You’ll be able to stream it online here.
Colin Greenwood interview on BBC Radio 6
Radiohead’s Colin Greenwood was interview on BBC Radio 6 yesterday and said that Radiohead would be getting back together at the end of the Summer. In an interview earlier this month he revealed that Radiohead will be entering the recording studio in September to begin work on their next album. He also discusses his recent trip to South Africa as the Global Ambassador for Children’s Radio Network. Listen to the interview below.
Atoms For Peace AMOK billboard in Los Angeles, CA.
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Thom Yorke Interview with Les Inrocks and watch a live performance of Judge Jury and Executioner
Thom Yorke was recently interviewed by Les Inrocks about Atoms For Peace’s forthcoming album AMOK, which will be released later this month. The interview is in French and was translated by Andrew M. (Thanks Andrew!).
A very long interview with Thom Yorke
Thom Yorke returns with the new album from his super-group Atoms for Peace and he has agreed to give us a long interview, transcribed in its entirety, where he explains all to us.
The album cover of Amok is quite sombre and apocalyptic…
There is also a humorous aspect. We spoke with Stanley Donwood about it, and we decided that we wanted to carry things on from where we left them with The Eraser. It’s a good way of creating a link between the two albums, without having my name put on the sleeve. Originally, this all comes from the very first “newspapers” in the 16th Century, which were just engravings. They were incredible objects, on which were written major events of the time, natural disasters, hangings, battles, and all in a very raw manner. We thought that this form of representation was ideal to depict a sort of nightmare, but in a way that was so outrageous that it became almost a cartoon. Equally, it’s a way of saying things without giving the impression that we’re preaching.
You have worked at the heart of Radiohead for years, you have released a solo album, and now you find yourself in a group that is not Radiohead… what effect does finding a new group have? And how does that change Radiohead?
Even I don’t know how to define Atoms for Peace. It’s a group because we play together on stage and we share ideas. On the album, however, it’s mainly myself and Nigel who get involved, using and producing the elements created in a group. In Radiohead, things progress much more collectively and directly. Atoms for Peace is something more shapeless, more flexible than an actual band.
What I love about the project, then, is that I don’t know what it is, and I don’t want to know what it is. It’s more of a process that Nigel and I lead the majority of. I throw ideas out there, and the others respond to them; we don’t see each other very often as both Radiohead and the Red Hot Chili Peppers are on tour. It’s actually quite strange. We managed to run into each other a couple of weeks ago, and I was almost relieved: “Ah, it’s still there…” (laughs).
This is a way of doing something new for you – is it a bit of excitement that you need?
Yes. It’s the variety that I love. The strange mix between what I like in dance music and the very human skills of these technically gifted musicians is what I love. It’s the space between the two that I like, and I get the impression that I have yet barely explored it. I always try to not engage myself too much, to retain a certain degree of minimalism, so that it doesn’t become a sort of “performance”. Without doubt, it’s the major point of this project: managing to conserve the emptiness, the mechanism of dance music, whilst at the same time keeping it human. Once again, it’s the major point, but I have only just begun my explorations and I get the impression that there’s some way for me to go to find the perfect balance.
Did you feel the need to change your approach towards music?
I did for this album. The project was fed by what happened to us: we were on tour with The Eraser and Atoms for Peace took root in this particular energy, things happened naturally and we met up in the studio for three days to record some stuff. Just to amuse ourselves, just to capitalise on this strange energy that we found, collectively. I then wrote a lot of stuff on this basis, which is something new for me.
How would you describe this “strange energy” that you speak of?
That came as a part of our own individual personalities, and a part of the particular aesthetic on which we base ourselves. We don’t “jam” at all. Instead we follow fairly strict patterns instinctively. When I took these elements to write the follow-up, I thought about only using little bits of our recordings. I was mistaken, however, and certain of the initial long sections can be found almost intact on the album.
And how did these first recordings sound?
It’s difficult to say, the process was different for each of the pieces. I remember a quite frenetic beat that I thought was impossible to use as the base of a piece, then suddenly Flea put his bass underneath it and there it was, it was exactly what we were looking for. It humanised everything, we looked for the balance between the organic and the mechanic with Atoms for Peace. Undoubtedly in a way that seems a bit strange, I think that disco has been one of the first music genres to look for
and find this balance. It’s often based on the very first beat-boxes, with drummers following an extremely strict set of synthetic rhythms, but everything is humanised by the voice, the arrangement and the instruments. It’s something that I also find in Afrobeat. When I mix, I tie together bits that sound like they’re from the same universe, that have a similar sound, then I add a bit of Afrobeat and it generally works perfectly, it gives life to the entire room; it can have a groove of a similar nature, but the human being always turns it around, breathing life into something that pure electronic music just doesn’t have.
Is it fair to say that you’ve changed your philosophy as far as your voice is concerned for Atoms for
Peace?
Not really, no. I often don’t want to force myself to imitate something; I want things to remain natural for me. What we have all wanted is for things to remain natural for us, even though we’re exploring a particular aesthetic. […] I would love to be able to tell stories like Fela [Kuti] does, but it’s not me, I will never be that. I do things my own way and I have to accept that, it’s my instinct.
Why did you choose Flea? The choice doesn’t seem obvious at first glance.
No, it doesn’t, does it. However, I felt that certain basslines on The Eraser needed him to be able to exist on stage. And it’s a recurring joke with Nigel about my basslines: he said that I imitate Flea when I write them. He said to me that Flea should play them, so that it would be Flea imitating Thom Yorke imitating Flea.
You talked about them earlier, but with regard to your lyrics, have you tried something new?
Not really. I just wanted to remain instinctive, and not try and give a certain meaning to everything that I wrote. Generally, my lyrics arrive quite early on in the process, especially with Radiohead.
You say that Amok isn’t an album for clubs, but it is influenced by dance music…
Let’s say that it’s more an album for a person to listen to individually, as opposed to in a collective environment. An album to listen to in a car rather than in a club. An album to listen to in your headphones, one that lets you dance in your head, which is what I’m doing all the time… (laughs)
What will people’s reactions be when they listen to Amok?
I don’t know. It could be a great surprise to some people. I hope that they’ll be patient with it…
You do have a passion for dancing, don’t you?
Yes, absolutely. I’ve always gone to clubs, alone, since I was 15 years old. Dancing, in my case, is a meditative act, something quite intimate. I can’t stop myself; when I re-watch old Radiohead videos, I don’t remember, I ask myself why I move like that. I’m not really conscious of what’s going on. It’s a physical need.
What’s the future like for Atoms for Peace?
It can only be open: everyone has other obligations; it’s difficult to get everyone together. We’re going to try and get together to play some concerts this year […] We’ll see, I want to continue it, but I don’t know what form it will take. […] I am conscious of everything that can be said about my dalliances in electronic music, but if people want to hear me sing with an acoustic guitar, the songs are already out there! (laughs)
And Radiohead? What are your plans?
The plan is to get together again, some day. We’ve given ourselves a year off before that time though. It’s the first break that we’ve had, and it’s strange to say that, because we’ve never really been a very fast group…
AMOK will be released on February 25th (Feb 26th in the U.S.) and can be pre-ordered through XLRecordings, Amazon, and iTunes.
Radiohead’s Colin Greenwood revealed in an interview last week that Radiohead will be entering the recording studio in September to begin wok on their ninth album.
XL Recording uploaded a new Atoms For Peace video yesterday. Watch Atoms For Peace perform ‘Judge Jury and Executioner’ at the Fuji Rock Festival back from August 1st, 2010.
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Details announced for Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich Atoms For Peace Launch Shows
Details have been announced for the Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich shows that were announced earlier this week. The shows are for the launch of the upcoming Atoms For Peace album AMOK. Thom described the shows on twitter as “Me and Nigel out and about with two turntables and a microphone”.
Thom and Nigel will appear at London’s Oval Space on February 22nd with Actress and Throwing Snow. Then on March 8th, they will appear at Berlin’s club Berghain with Shed and Anstam. The third and final date will be at Le Poisson Rouge in New York on March 14th, with special guest still to be announced. For more information and to order tickets check out the links posted over at the XL Recordings website.
AMOK will be released on February 25th (Feb 26th in the U.S.) and can be pre-ordered through XLRecordings, Amazon, and iTunes.
Listen to Atoms For Peace ‘Default’
Listen to Atoms For Peace ‘Judge, Jury, and Executioner’
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