Hail to the Thief
Hail to the Thief | ||||
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Studio album by Radiohead | ||||
Released | 9 June 2003 | |||
Recorded | September 2002 – February 2003 | |||
Studio | Ocean Way Recording, Hollywood; Canned Applause, Oxfordshire, England | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 56:35 | |||
Label | ||||
Producer |
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Radiohead chronology | ||||
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Singles from Hail to the Thief | ||||
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Hail to the Thief is the sixth album by the English rock band Radiohead, produced by longtime Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich. The final album released under Radiohead's recording contract with EMI, it was released on 9 June 2003 by EMI subsidiary Parlophone Records.
Following Radiohead's albums Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001), which incorporated jazz, classical and electronic influences, Hail to the Thief features more traditional rock instrumentation but retains electronic elements such as drum machines, synthesisers and digital manipulation. To avoid the protracted recording sessions of previous albums, Radiohead recorded Hail to the Thief quickly, focusing on recording live takes rather than overdubs. Songwriter Thom Yorke wrote many of the lyrics in response to the War on Terror and the resurgence of right-wing politics in the west.
Despite a high-profile internet leak ten weeks before its release, Hail to the Thief debuted at #1 in the United Kingdom and at #3 in the United States, and is certified platinum in the UK, the US and Canada. It produced three charting singles: "There There", "Go to Sleep" and "2 + 2 = 5". The album received positive reviews and was the fifth consecutive Radiohead album to be nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album.
Background
With their previous albums Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001), Radiohead replaced their earlier guitar-led rock sound with a more electronic style.[5] On tour in 2000 and 2001, the band learned how to perform the electronic music live, combining synthetic sounds with conventional rock instrumentation.[6] Songwriter Thom Yorke said: "Even with electronics, there is an element of spontaneous performance in using them. It was the tension between what's human and what's coming from the machines. That was stuff we were getting into." He stated that Radiohead did not want to make a "big creative leap or statement" with their next album.[6]
In early 2002, after the Amnesiac tour had finished, Yorke sent his bandmates CDs containing demos of songs he was considering for Radiohead's sixth album.[7] The three CDs, titled The Gloaming, Episcoval and Hold Your Prize, comprised electronic music and piano and guitar sketches.[8] Radiohead had tried to record some of the songs, such as "I Will" and "A Wolf at the Door", in the joint sessions for Kid A and Amnesiac, but were not satisfied with the results.[7] The band spent May and June 2002 arranging and rehearsing the songs before performing many of them on their tour of Spain and Portugal in July and August.[7]
Recording
In September 2002 Radiohead moved to the Ocean Way Recording studios in Hollywood, Los Angeles with producer Nigel Godrich and artist Stanley Donwood, who have both worked with the band since their second album, The Bends (1995).[9] The location was suggested by Godrich, who had used the studio to produce records by Travis and Beck and thought it would be a "good change of scenery" for Radiohead.[10] Yorke said: "We were like, 'Do we want to fly halfway around the world to do this?' But it was terrific, because we worked really hard. We did a track a day. It was sort of like holiday camp."[6]
Radiohead had created Kid A and Amnesiac through a years-long process of recording and editing that drummer Phil Selway described as "manufacturing music in the studio".[11] For their next album, the band sought to capture a more immediate, "live" sound.[7][12] Yorke told MTV: "The last two studio records were a real headache. We had spent so much time looking at computers and grids, we were like, that's enough, we can't do that any more. This time, we used computers, but they had to actually be in the room with all the gear. So everything was about performance, like staging a play."[13]
Most electronic elements were not overdubbed but recorded live in the studio.[14] Greenwood used the music programming language Max to sample and manipulate the band's playing in real time,[14] and continued to use modular synthesisers and the ondes Martenot, an early theremin-like electronic instrument he first used on Kid A.[15][16][17] After using effects pedals heavily on previous albums, he mostly used clean guitar sounds to see if he could "come up with interesting things" without effects.[18]
Radiohead tried to work quickly and spontaneously, avoiding procrastination and over-analysis.[7] Yorke was forced to write lyrics differently, as he did not have time to rewrite them in the studio;[19] for some songs, he returned to the method of cutting up words and arranging them randomly he had employed for Kid A and Amnesiac.[20] Greenwood said: "We didn't really have time to be stressed about what we did. We got to the end of the second week before we even heard what we did on the first two days, and didn't even remember recording it or who was playing things. Which is a magical way of doing things."[21] The approach protected against the tension of previous sessions; O'Brien told Rolling Stone that Hail to the Thief was the first Radiohead album "where, at the end of making it, we haven't wanted to kill each other."[22]
Inspired by the Beatles, Radiohead tried to keep the songs succinct.[22][23] The opening track, "2 + 2 = 5", was initially recorded as a studio test, and was finished in two hours.[7] Radiohead struggled to record "There There"; after rerecording it in their Oxfordshire studio, Yorke was so relieved to have captured the song he wept, feeling it was the band's best work.[7] Radiohead had attempted to record an electronic version of "I Will" in the Kid A and Amnesiac sessions, but abandoned it as "dodgy Kraftwerk";[24] instead they used components of this recording to create "Like Spinning Plates" on Amnesiac.[7] For Hail to the Thief, the band sought to "get to the core of what's good about the song" and not be distracted by production details or new sounds, settling on a stripped-back arrangement.[7]
Radiohead recorded most of Hail to the Thief in two weeks,[13] with additional recording and mixing at Radiohead's studio in Oxfordshire, England in late 2002 and early 2003.[7][25] In contrast to the relaxed Los Angeles sessions, which Godrich described as "very fruitful",[10] mixing and sequencing the album created conflict. Yorke said: "We had massive arguments about how it was put together and mixed. Making it was a piece of piss, for the first time it was really good fun to make a record ... but we finished it and nobody could let go of it. 'Cause there was a long sustained period during which we lived with it but it wasn't completely finished, so you get attached to versions and we had big rows about it."[26] Godrich estimated that rough mixes from the Los Angeles sessions were used for a third of the final album.[10]
Lyrics and themes
I was listening to a lot of political programs on BBC Radio 4. I found myself – during that mad caffeine rush in the morning, as I was in the kitchen giving my son his breakfast – writing down little nonsense phrases, those Orwellian euphemisms that [the British and American governments] are so fond of. They became the background of the record. The emotional context of those words had been taken away. What I was doing was stealing it back.
Thom Yorke, Rolling Stone (2003)[6]
Hail to the Thief's lyrics were influenced by what Yorke called "the general sense of ignorance and intolerance and panic and stupidity" following the 2000 election of US President George W. Bush.[25] He took words and phrases from discussion of the unfolding War on Terror and used them in the album's lyrics and artwork.[6] He denied any intent to make a "political statement" with the songs,[6] and told the Toronto Star: "I desperately tried not to write anything political, anything expressing the deep, profound terror I'm living with day to day. But it's just fucking there, and eventually you have to give it up and let it happen."[27]
At the time the father of an infant son, Yorke adopted a strategy of "distilling" the political themes into "childlike simplicity".[25] He took phrases from fairy tales and folklore, such as the tale of Chicken Little,[8] and children's literature and television he shared with his son, including the 1970s TV series Bagpuss,[7] whose creator Oliver Postgate is thanked in the liner notes.[15] Parenthood made Yorke concerned about the condition of the world and how it could affect future generations.[28] Jonny Greenwood felt Yorke's lyrics expressed "confusion and escape, like 'I'm going to stay at home and look after the people I care about, buy a month's supply of food'."[24]
Yorke also took phrases from Dante's Inferno, the subject of his partner's PhD thesis.[29] Several songs, such as "2 + 2 = 5", "Sit Down Stand Up", and "Sail to the Moon", reference Christian versions of good and evil and heaven and hell, a first for Radiohead's music.[30] Other songs reference science fiction and horror, such as the wolves and vampires of "A Wolf at the Door" and "We Suck Young Blood", the reference to the 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four in "2 + 2 = 5", and the allusion to the giant of Gulliver's Travels (1726) in "Go to Sleep".[31]
Yorke has described Hail to the Thief variously as expressing "a general fear of the future, that it's being jeopardised, that it's difficult to do very much about, because things have been set in motion that seem unstoppable";[24] "frustration and powerlessness and anger, and the huge gap between the people that put themselves in control and the people that allegedly voted for them";[32] and "the conflict between being incredibly angry and being so tired you just want to give up."[23]
Title and subtitles
The album liner notes give the album's full title as Hail to the Thief (Or, The Gloaming).[33] Each track also has a subtitle, an idea Radiohead took from Victorian playbills showcasing moralistic songs played in music halls.[34] Radiohead struggled to name the album;[7] they considered titling it The Gloaming (meaning "twilight" or "dusk"), but this was rejected for being too "poetic"[24] and "doomy"[6] and so became the album's subtitle.[33] Other titles considered included Little Man Being Erased, The Boney King of Nowhere and Snakes and Ladders, which became the subtitles for the songs "Go To Sleep", "There There" and "Sit Down. Stand Up" respectively.[8][20]
The phrase "hail to the thief" was used by anti-George W. Bush protesters during the controversy surrounding the 2000 US presidential election as a play on "Hail to the Chief", the American presidential anthem.[35] Yorke described hearing the phrase for the first time as a "formative moment" for the album.[6] Radiohead chose the title partly to "state the bleeding obvious ... that the most powerful country on earth is run by somebody who stole an election",[36] but also in response to "the rise of doublethink and general intolerance and madness, and feeling very much like individuals were totally out of control of the situation that somehow it was a manifestation of something not really human."[7] The title also references the theft and leak of the album before its completion, which Colin Greenwood felt "fragments and atomises the whole idea of a produced piece of music."[34] Yorke worried the title might be misconstrued as referring solely to the US election controversy, but his bandmates felt it "conjured up all the nonsense and absurdity and jubilation of the times."[6]
Artwork
Hail to the Thief's artwork was created by Stanley Donwood, who has created the artwork for every Radiohead release since The Bends.[9] The cover art, titled "Pacific Coast", is a road map of Hollywood with words and phrases taken from Los Angeles's roadside advertising, such as "God", "TV" and "oil", in place of buildings.[37] Donwood said: "Advertising is designed to be seductive and attractive and, in a lot of ways, it's very beautiful. But there's something unsettling about being continually sold something. I liked taking the elements of roadside advertising out of context because it removes the imperative and just goes to the essence of it – the pure heart of advertising."[38] Other words in the artwork were provided by Yorke, taken from political discussion surrounding the War on Terror.[9] Among them is the phrase "burn the witch", the title of a song Radiohead worked on during the Hail to the Thief sessions but did not complete until their ninth album, A Moon Shaped Pool (2016).[39]
Comparing it to the more subdued palettes of his prior Radiohead artworks, Donwood described the cover's bright, "pleasing" colours as "ominous because all these colours that I've used are derived from the petrol-chemical industry ... None of it is natural. It essentially comes from black sludge. We've created this incredibly vibrant society, but we're going to have to deal with the consequences sooner or later."[38] Essayist Amy Britton interpreted the artwork as an allusion to the Bush administration's "road map for peace" plan for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.[40] Joseph Tate, likening the art to the paintings of French artist Jean Dubuffet, found it depicted a "homogenized and heavily regimented" portrayal of "capitalism's glaring visual presence: an oppressive sameness of style and color that mirrors globalization's reduction of difference."[41] Other artworks included with the album refer to cities including New York, London, Grozny, and Baghdad.[42] Early editions contained a fold-out road map of the cover.[9]
Composition
Hail to the Thief features less digital manipulation and more conventional rock instrumentation than Radiohead's previous two albums, making prominent use of live drums, guitar and piano. Yorke's voice, heavily manipulated on Kid A and Amnesiac, returned to the front of the music undisguised.[7] Several tracks, such as "2 + 2 = 5", "Sit Down Stand Up" and "There There", use the "Pixies-like" quiet-to-loud building of tension Radiohead had employed on previous albums.[43]
Though Yorke described Hail to the Thief as "very acoustic",[25] he denied that it was a "guitar record".[12] The album retains electronic elements such as synthesisers, drum machines and sampling,[44][45] and Jonny Greenwood and Yorke are both credited with playing "laptop" on the album;[15] some tracks, such as "Backdrifts" and "The Gloaming", are predominantly electronic. Spin reviewer Will Hermes found that Hail to the Thief "seesaws between the chill of sequencers and the warmth of fingers on strings and keys."[44] Despite its dark themes, Radiohead saw Hail to the Thief as a "sparkly, shiny pop record. Clear and pretty."[46] O'Brien felt the album captured a new "swaggering" sound, with "space and sunshine and energy".[22]
The opening track, "2 + 2 = 5 (The Lukewarm)", is a rock song that builds to a loud climax.[29] "Sit Down. Stand Up (Snakes and Ladders)", an electronic song, was influenced by the jazz musician Charles Mingus.[7] "Sail to the Moon (Brush the Cobwebs Out of the Sky)", is a lullaby-like piano ballad with shifting time signatures alluding to the Biblical story of Noah's Ark,[47] and was written "in five minutes" for Yorke's infant son Noah.[48]
"Backdrifts (Honeymoon is Over)", is an electronic song about "the slide backwards that's happening everywhere you look."[7] "Go to Sleep (Little Man being Erased)", begins with an acoustic guitar riff Colin Greenwood described as "1960s English sort of folk". "Where I End and You Begin (The Sky is Falling In)", is a rock song with "walls" of ondes Martenot and rhythm section influenced by 1980s band New Order.[7] Yorke described "We Suck Young Blood (Your Time is Up)", as a "slave ship tune"[20] with a "freeform jazz nightmare" break, and is "not to be taken seriously."[24] With ill-timed, "zombie-like" handclaps,[49] the song satirises Hollywood culture and its "constant desire to stay young and fleece people, suck their energy."[20]
"The Gloaming (Softly Open our Mouths in the Cold)", is an electronic song with "mechanical rhythms" that Jonny Greenwood built from tape loops.[7] Greenwood described it as "very old school electronica: no computers, just analogue synths, tape machines, and sellotape."[14] Yorke felt the song was "the most explicit protest song on the record ... I feel really strongly that it's about the rise of fascism, and the rise of intolerance and bigotry and fear, and all the things that keep a population down."[25] "There There (The Boney King of Nowhere)", is a guitar-led rock song with layered percussion building to a loud climax. It was influenced by krautrock band Can,[20] Siouxsie and the Banshees[50] and the Pixies.[7][24]
Yorke described "I Will (No Man's Land)" as "the angriest song I've ever written",[7] with lyrics inspired by news footage of a bomb shelter containing children and families being destroyed in the first Gulf War.[20] "A Punchup at a Wedding (No No No No No No No No)", is a funk-influenced song that expresses the helplessness Yorke felt in the face of chaotic world events: "Like a punchup at a wedding, nobody knows what's going on, it's just a riot."[7] For "Myxomatosis (Judge, Jury & Executioner)", a song built on a driving fuzz bassline,[51] Radiohead sought to recreate the "frightening" detuned keyboard sounds of 1970s and 80s new wave bands such as Tubeway Army.[7]
Jonny Greenwood described "Scatterbrain (As Dead as Leaves)" as "very simple and sort of quite pretty, but there's something about the music for me, the chords for me, where it never quite resolves."[7] The NME described the album's final track, "A Wolf at the Door (It Girl. Rag Doll.)", as "a pretty song, with a sinister monologue over the top of it"; Greenwood likened its lyrics to a Grimms' fairy tale.[24] Yorke described the song's placement at the end of the album as "sort of like waking you up at the end ... it's all been a nightmare and you need to go and get a glass of water now."[7]
Promotion and release
According to critic Alexis Petridis, Hail to the Thief's marketing campaign was "by [Radiohead] standards ... a promotional blitzkrieg".[52] In April 2003, promotional posters spoofing talent recruitment posters appeared in Los Angeles and London with slogans taken from the lyrics of "We Suck Young Blood". The posters included a phone number spelling the phoneword "to thief", which connected callers to a recording welcoming them to the "Hail to the Thief customer care hotline".[53] In May, planes flew over the 2003 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in California trailing Hail to the Thief banners.[52]
Yorke asked Bagpuss creator Oliver Postgate to create a music video for lead single "There There", but Postgate, who was retired, declined. Instead, a stop-motion animation video was created by Chris Hopewell.[8] The video debuted on the Times Square Jumbotron in New York on 20 May 2003, and received hourly play that day on MTV2.[54] In June, Radiohead relaunched their official site, featuring digital animations on the themes of mass-media culture and 24-hour cities.[55] In the same month, Radiohead launched radiohead.tv, where short films, music videos and live webcasts from the studio were streamed at scheduled times. Visitors late for streams were shown a test card with "1970s-style" intermission music.[55] Yorke said Radiohead had planned to broadcast on their own television channel, but this was cancelled due to "money, cutbacks, too weird, might scare the children, staff layoffs, shareholders."[56] The material was released on the 2004 DVD The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time.[57]
Hail to the Thief was released on 9 June 2003. The CD was printed with copy protection in some regions; the Belgian consumer group Test-Achats received complaints that the album could not be played on some CD players.[58] A compilation of Hail to the Thief B-sides, remixes and live performances, COM LAG (2plus2isfive), was released in April 2004.[59]
Internet leak
On March 30, 2003, ten weeks before release, an unmastered version of Hail to the Thief containing unfinished tracks was leaked online.[60] Jonny Greenwood wrote on Radiohead's official forum: "We're kind of pissed off about it, to be honest ... Work we've not finished, being released in this sloppy way, ten weeks before the real version is even available ... It's not [downloaders] I'm pissed off about, it's just the situation I guess. It's stolen work, fer fuck's sake."[61] [sic] Colin Greenwood said the leak was "like being photographed with one sock on when you get out of bed in the morning," but expressed dismay at the cease-and-desist orders sent by label EMI to radio stations and fan sites playing the leaked tracks, saying: "Don't record companies usually pay thousands of dollars to get stations to play their records? Now they're paying money to stations not to play them."[62]
EMI decided against moving the album's release date earlier to combat the leak. EMI's vice president of new media Ted Mico said: "The leak did allow us to be in the press continually for the last 10 weeks. We're confident people will buy this record."[54] The leak partly influenced Radiohead's decision to self-release their next album, In Rainbows (2007), via a pay-what-you-want model, terming it "their leak date".[63]
Reception and legacy
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Aggregate scores | |
Source | Rating |
Metacritic | 85/100[45] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [64] |
Entertainment Weekly | A−[65] |
The Guardian | [52] |
Los Angeles Times | [66] |
NME | 7/10[67] |
Pitchfork Media | 9.3/10[47] |
Q | [68] |
Rolling Stone | [69] |
Spin | A[44] |
Uncut | [70] |
Critical reception
Hail to the Thief has a score of 85 out of 100 on review aggregate site Metacritic, indicating "universal acclaim".[45] Neil McCormick, writing for the Daily Telegraph, called Hail to the Thief "Radiohead firing on all cylinders, a major work by major artists at the height of their powers."[71] Andy Kellman of AllMusic wrote that Radiohead had "entered a second decade of record-making with a surplus of momentum."[64] Chris Ott of Pitchfork wrote that Radiohead had "largely succeeded in their efforts to shape pop music into as boundless and possible a medium as it should be," naming the album "best new music".[47] Writing for New York, Ethan Brown said that Hail to the Thief "isn't a protest album, and that's why it works so well. As with great Radiohead records past, such as Kid A, the music – restlessly, freakishly inventive – pushes politics far into the background."[72]
The NME's James Oldham saw Hail to the Thief as "a good rather than great record... the impact of the best moments is dulled by the inclusion of some indifferent electronic compositions."[67] Alexis Petridis of The Guardian wrote that while "you could never describe Hail to the Thief as a bad record", it was "neither startlingly different and fresh nor packed with the sort of anthemic songs that once made [Radiohead] the world's biggest band."[52] Robert Christgau of The Village Voice felt that while its melodies and guitar work are "never as elegiac and lyrical" or "articulate and demented" as those of OK Computer, he felt it "flows better"[73] and later awarded it a one-star "honourable mention".[74] In 2010, Rolling Stone ranked Hail to the Thief the 89th best album of the 2000s, writing that "the dazzling overabundance of ideas makes Hail to the Thief a triumph."[75]
Hail to the Thief was the fifth consecutive Radiohead album to be nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album.[76] The album earned producer Nigel Godrich and engineer Darrell Thorp the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Engineered Non-Classical Album.[77]
Commercial performance
Hail to the Thief peaked at number one in the United Kingdom and stayed on the chart for fourteen weeks.[78] In the United States the album entered at number three in the Billboard 200, selling 300,000 copies in its first week,[79][80] more than any other Radiohead album.[81] By 2008 it had sold over a million copies in the US.[82] The album is certified platinum in the UK,[83] Canada[84] and the US,[85] and gold in Australia[86] and France.[87]
Band opinions
Radiohead have been critical of Hail to the Thief. In a 2006 interview with Spin, Yorke said: "I'd maybe change the playlist. I think we had a meltdown when we put it together ... We wanted to do things quickly, and I think the songs suffered."[88] In 2008, O'Brien told Mojo he felt Radiohead should have cut the album to ten tracks and that its length alienated some listeners. In the same interview, Colin Greenwood said he felt several songs were unfinished and that the album was "more of a holding process".[89] In 2013, Godrich told the NME: "I think there's some great moments on there - but too many songs. I think that's kind of agreed amongst the camp these days but at the time it was just what happened ... As a whole I think it's charming because of the lack of editing. But personally it's probably my least favourite of all the albums ... It didn't really have its own direction. It was almost like a homogeny of previous work. Maybe that's its strength."[10]
Reissues
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
The A.V. Club | A-[90] |
Pitchfork Media | 8.6/10[43] |
In 2007, Radiohead left EMI, parent company of Parlophone, after failed contract negotiations. EMI retained the copyright to Radiohead's back catalogue.[91] After a period of being out of print on vinyl, EMI reissued a double-LP of Hail to the Thief on 19 August 2008, along with albums Kid A, Amnesiac and OK Computer as part of the "From the Capitol Vaults" series.[92] On 31 August 2009 Hail to the Thief was reissued on CD in a 2-CD "Collector's Edition" and a 2-CD 1-DVD "Special Collector's Edition". The first CD contains the original studio album; the second CD collects B-sides and live performances previously compiled on the COM LAG (2plus2isfive) EP (2004); the DVD contains music videos and a live television performance. Radiohead had no input into the reissue and the music was not remastered.[93]
Pitchfork named the "Collector's Edition" "best new reissue" and highlighted "Gagging Order" as the best B-side included in the bonus material.[43] The The A.V. Club wrote that the bonus content was all "worth hearing, though the live tracks stand out."[90]
Track listing
All tracks written by Radiohead (Colin Greenwood, Jonny Greenwood, Ed O'Brien, Phil Selway and Thom Yorke).
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "2 + 2 = 5" (The Lukewarm.) | 3:19 |
2. | "Sit down. Stand up." (Snakes & Ladders.) | 4:19 |
3. | "Sail to the Moon." (Brush the Cobwebs out of the Sky.) | 4:18 |
4. | "Backdrifts." (Honeymoon is Over.) | 5:22 |
5. | "Go to Sleep." (Little Man being Erased.) | 3:21 |
6. | "Where I End and You Begin." (The Sky is Falling in.) | 4:29 |
7. | "We suck Young Blood." (Your Time is up.) | 4:56 |
8. | "The Gloaming." (Softly Open our Mouths in the Cold.) | 3:32 |
9. | "There there." (The Boney King of Nowhere.) | 5:25 |
10. | "I will." (No man's Land.) | 1:59 |
11. | "A Punchup at a Wedding." (No no no no no no no no.) | 4:57 |
12. | "Myxomatosis." (Judge, Jury & Executioner.) | 3:52 |
13. | "Scatterbrain." (As Dead as Leaves.) | 3:21 |
14. | "A Wolf at the Door." (It Girl. Rag Doll.) | 3:21 |
Total length: |
56:35 |
"Collector's Edition"/"Special Collector's Edition" Disc 2 | ||
---|---|---|
No. | Title | Length |
1. | "Paperbag Writer" | 3:58 |
2. | "Where Bluebirds Fly" | 4:31 |
3. | "I Am Citizen Insane" | 3:33 |
4. | "Fog (Again)" (Live) | 2:18 |
5. | "Gagging Order" | 3:36 |
6. | "I Am a Wicked Child" | 3:06 |
7. | "Remyxomatosis" (Cristian Vogel RMX) | 5:10 |
8. | "There There" (First Demo) | 7:45 |
9. | "Skttrbrain" (Four Tet Remix) | 4:25 |
10. | "I Will (Leaked Version)" (mislabelled "Los Angeles Version"[94]) | 2:23 |
11. | "Sail to the Moon" (BBC Radio 1's Jo Whiley's Live Lounge, 28/05/03) | 4:11 |
12. | "2 + 2 = 5" (Live at Earls Court, London, England, 26/11/03) | 3:35 |
13. | "Go to Sleep" (Zane Lowe, 08/12/03) | 3:32 |
"Special Collector's Edition" DVD | ||
---|---|---|
No. | Title | Length |
1. | "There There" | |
2. | "Go to Sleep" | |
3. | "2 + 2 = 5" | |
4. | "Sit Down. Stand Up" | |
5. | "2 + 2 = 5" (Live at Belfort Festival) | |
6. | "There There" (Live on Later... with Jools Holland, 27/05/03) | |
7. | "Go to Sleep" (Live on Later... with Jools Holland, 27/05/03) | |
8. | "2 + 2 = 5" (Live on Later... with Jools Holland, 27/05/03) | |
9. | "Where I End and You Begin" (Live on Later... with Jools Holland, 27/05/03) |
Personnel
Adapted from the Hail to the Thief liner notes.[15]
|
Production
|
Charts and certifications
|
Singles
Song | Peak position | ||
---|---|---|---|
US Alt. [108] |
UK [109] |
CAN [110] | |
"There There" | 14 | 4 | 1 |
"Go to Sleep" | 32 | 12 | 2 |
"2 + 2 = 5" | 17 | 15 | — |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.
References
- Notes
- Sources
- Bendat, Jim. Democracy's Big Day: The Inauguration of our President 1789–2009. iUniverse Star, 2008. ISBN 978-1-58348-466-1.
- Britton, Amy. Revolution Rock: The Albums Which Defined Two Ages. AuthorHouse, 2011. ISBN 1-4678-8710-2.
- Forbes, Brandon W. Radiohead and Philosophy: Fitter Happier More Deductive. Open Court, 2009. ISBN 0-8126-9664-6
- Tate, Joseph. The Music and Art of Radiohead. Ashgate Publishing, 2005. ISBN 978-0-7546-3980-0.
- Footnotes
- ↑ Lecaro, Lina (6 May 2004). "Coachella 2004". LA Weekly. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
- ↑ Harvilla, Rob (25 September 2003). "Radiohead Rorschach". Houston Press. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
- ↑ "Radiohead - Hail to the Thief". Retrieved 8 May 2016.
- ↑ Promo Only: Modern Rock Radio (January 2004) at AllMusic. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
- ↑ Reynolds, Simon (July 2001). "Walking on Thin Ice". The Wire. Retrieved 17 March 2007.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Fricke, David (26 June 2003), "Bitter Prophet: Radiohead's Thom Yorke lifts the veil on "Thief"", Rolling Stone
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 "Radiohead Hail to the Thief – Interview CD" (Interview). 2003. Promotional interview CD sent to British music press.
- 1 2 3 4 Q, July 2003
- 1 2 3 4 "MAPS AND LEGENDS". NME. 29 April 2003. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 Lucy Jones (7 June 2013). "Hail To The Thief' Is 10 - Revisiting Radiohead's Underrated Masterpiece". NME. Retrieved 29 June 2013.
- ↑ Radiohead Warm Up". Rolling Stone magazine, 24 May 2002.
- 1 2 "'Exclusive: Thom on new Radiohead album'". NME. 5 October 2002.
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