The Phnom Penh Post

Radiohead defies hackers, releases trove of stolen music

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ALTERNATIV­E rock legends Radiohead on Tuesday released an 18-hour trove of private recordings from their 1997 album OK Computer after getting hacked by someone seeking a ransom of $150,000 for the music.

The genre-banding English musicians uploaded the 1.8gigabyte collection of recording session outtakes and rare live performanc­es on their radiohead.bandcamp.com website.

The songs can be accessed online for free.

The group is also selling downloads of an album of the 18 hacked MiniDiscs for £18 ($22.90) and donating the proceeds to the Extinction Rebellion environmen­tal campaign group.

“We’ve been hacked,” frontman Thom Yorke’s wrote on the website.

“It’s not v interestin­g,” he added. “As it’s out there it may as well be out there, until we all get bored and move on.”

Guitarist Jonny Greenwood later tweeted a statement saying the hack occurred last week.

“Someone stole Thom’s minidisk archive from around the time of OK Computer, and reportedly demanded $150,000 on threat of releasing it,” Greenwood wrote.

“So instead of complainin­g – much – or ignoring it, we’re releasing all 18 hours on Bandcamp i n aid of Extinction Rebellion,” he wrote.

News of the hack f i r s t emerged on a Radiohead discussion page of the Reddit website last week.

“This is a bit of a doozy,” a user identified only as u/santicol wrote.

The user described how someone claiming to have the archive came in contact with a “well known leaker” and offered them previews of the tracks.

“They were asking upwards of $150,000 for the entire set, at $800 per studio track and $50 per live track,” the Reddit user wrote.

‘Awkward and challengin­g’

T he c ol le c t ion i nclude s demo versions of OK Computer music and a few songs that never made the cut.

T he c r it ic a l l y-ac c l a i med a lbu m e a r ne d Rad iohead t heir f irst Grammy and was followed by a world tour that gave t hem l a st i ng i nter nationa l fame.

Its best selling single was Karma Police – one of the most instantly-recognisab­le tunes of the 1990s and a staple of parties for the subsequent 20 years.

“The leaker seems to be well known in some spaces and has a history of trading in very rare/high profile material,” the Reddit user wrote.

Radiohead were formed in 1985 and debuted their genrebendi­ng hit single Creep in 1992. They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March.

“It can be awkward and challengin­g sometimes,” band songwriter Philip Selway said at the induction ceremony.

“But I guess that’s what kept us all interested for the past three decades.”

R a d i o h e a d h a v e c a mpaigned passionate­ly for environmen­tal causes and feature songs about climate change.

They stopped using disposable cups on tour in 2008 and began filling their tour buses with biofuels.

Activists from Extinction Rebellion – a fast-growing movement founded last year by British academics – want world government­s to slash greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2025.

Their highly-disruptive but peaceful protests brought parts of central London to a standstill for 11 days in April and saw police make more than 1,000 arrests.

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AFP ?? Thom Yorke of the British band Radiohead performs in Chicago last year.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AFP Thom Yorke of the British band Radiohead performs in Chicago last year.

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