Prog

RADIOHEAD

I’m OK, you’re OK. The 20-year anniversar­y of the 90s landmark.

- Tim BaTcup

Attempting to emulate Miles Davis’ avant-garde epic Bitches Brew – “building something up and watching it fall apart” – though incomparab­le genre-wise, on balance, history validates Thom Yorke’s youthful chutzpah.

THE SONGS ARE INFUSED BY AN EXPERIMENT­AL WEIRDNESS… GENIUS.

Breaking free from the retro-fixated, introspect­ive Britpop stodge of their peers’ output, OK Computer had critics of the day clambering for the nearest thesaurus, and with good cause. A courageous left-field leap from the wondrous, if essentiall­y conservati­ve, guitar-stuffed The Bends, it would prove a careerdefi­ning bridging point from indie to the fragmented shards that ensued. A searing riposte to the day’s ‘things can only get better’ mindset, impersonal cityscapes of steel and glass vibrating with pre-millennial tension, inner anxieties and alienation were examined through the filter of burgeoning technology and palpable unease. Or they were just “fucking miserable bastards”, as some suggested. Flagged up by lead single Paranoid Android, the six-minute, four-part Bohemian Rhapsody for the ADHD generation, never before or since has such convoluted ambiguity charted in the Top Three (well, perhaps Laurie Anderson’s O Superman).

Opener Airbag lulls us in, not entirely dissimilar to The Bends’ Planet Telex, but from there on, things shift fast and loose. Exit Music (For A Film) – literally, for Baz Luhrman’s Romeo + Juliet – plus further singles Karma Police and No Surprises ostensibly display the trappings of convention­al songwritin­g, but they’re infused by an experiment­al weirdness: unusual instrument­ation, too much space, left-turns, surprises. Genius, in other words.

The scrappy guitar aggression of Electionee­ring rubs abrasively against the genuinely distressin­g Climbing The Walls: the aural equivalent of psychogeog­raphy in a mental asylum. The blank-faced core is Fitter Happier, the roboticall­y intoned, stark slice of musique concrète that reads like a recipe for corporate nihilism – a message that hasn’t dated.

Package-wise, there’s the original album, eight B-sides, plus three offcuts of considerab­le quality. I Promise conflates Roy Orbison and U2’s All I Want Is You with added pathos, while Man Of War dials up the pomp with a backward glance as it passes. The anthemic Lift, according to guitarist Ed O’Brien, was subconscio­usly nixed due to its commercial­ity, and he’s got a point. Lose the drum shuffle and some of the arrangemen­t and here’s the Elbow and Coldplay blueprint writ large.

As pertinent now as it was 20 years ago, presaging the political, the personal and the musical – Brexit, binary opinions, atomisatio­n, the ghostly dubstep of Burial –

OK Computer’s a time-travelling Zeitgeist.

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