UNCUT

Wall Of Eyes XL

9/10 Yorke, Greenwood and Skinner match Radiohead for challenges, surprises and beauty.

- By Wyndham Wallace

WERE Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood to insist that both The Smile’s debut album, 2022’s A Light For Attracting Attention, and this surprising­ly expeditiou­s follow-up were the direct successors to Radiohead’s last broadcast, 2016’s A Moon Shaped Pool, it’s doubtful many would query them. A…er all, despite Ed O’brien, Colin Greenwood and Phil Selway’s vital contributi­ons to the quintet’s long-term success, Yorke and the younger Greenwood have long been Radiohead’s dominant forces. Creatively, they’re so idiosyncra­tic – especially with drummer Tom Skinner’s role here so discreet, if unquestion­ably intricate – that common ground between The Smile and Radiohead is inevitable.

As much as we anticipate reinventio­n when musicians adopt an alias, this isn’t why The Smile exists. Greenwood, simply put, was writing proli„cally during the pandemic, and since not all of Radiohead were available while Skinner was – he’d already worked with Greenwood on his 2012 score to The Master – the trio teamed up to see where things might lead. Consequent­ly, ‘Kid B’ exhibits little interest in distinguis­hing itself from ‘Kid A’: both bands trade in warped melodies, tricksy time signatures, unfamiliar structures, and unpredicta­ble, inspired tangents, albeit rarely so much that they appear intellectu­ally aloof. They even dress in matching clothes, with Stanley

Donwood and Yorke handling the artwork for each.

Sure, each band sounds a little di erent, with The Smile arguably more spontaneou­s, occasional­ly a smidge more post-punk, a tad sparser and sometimes a bit rawer, especially on this second album. That’s perhaps thanks to Nigel Godrich’s replacemen­t as producer by Sam Petts-davis, Yorke’s Suspiria co-producer, but developmen­t is what we’ve come to expect from Radiohead too: a group that’s always changing, always adapting, playing to their present strengths. No wonder it’s so hard to tell the two of them apart. The Smile’s cheerful choice of nom de plume was less a declaratio­n of intent than a practical way of acknowledg­ing a new constellat­ion.

Of course, it makes commercial sense to blur the bands’ identities too, casting The Smile less as spino than regenerati­on, like a new Doctor Who, emerging from the same gene pool with equal gravitas. It makes artistic sense as well, allowing them to „ll the space le… by Radiohead’s absence while exploiting that global brand’s freedoms. Certainly, none of the grand fanfares or bitterswee­t symphonies usually preceding the return of megastars heralded Wall Of Eyes, which was largely written on tour. Instead, it was introduced by the breathtaki­ngly arranged “Bending Hectic”, eight minutes of hushed vocals and tortured guitar strings, smoothed early on by featherlig­ht violins which ultimately catapult „lthy, doom metal chords into the mix.

Wall Of Eyes begins, too, not with a crowd-pleasing anthem but a „nespun, chie‹y acoustic title track whose initial impression­istic smudge only li…s, like a ghostly mist, upon repeated plays. Even when additional e ects edge in and sky-scraping strings descend, their in‹uence is more eerie than reassuring. A 5/4-time signature, despite its samba feel, is bookish too – in contrast to the brattish 5/4 of “You’ll Never Work In Television Again” (from A Light For Attracting Attention), or In Rainbows’ mesmeric, cantering “15 Step” – and, as the song begins disintegra­ting around him, Yorke counts each beat aloud. Still, both are in keeping with Wall Of Eyes’ character, which revels in that welcome but vanishing concept, the album as an entity of its own. This is, in essence, worldbuild­ing music, with its stylistic breadth and digni„ed restraint remarkable.

Not that there aren’t moments of relative abandon. Somewhat gentler than “Bending Hectic”’s violent coda, “Read The Room” opens with intertwine­d, sinewy guitar lines, Yorke wailing like a peevish child over a hiccupping rhythm before a le… turn into post-rock ri age and, later, early Verve-like shoegazing. “Under Our Pillows” begins with further spiky guitars and another 5/4 rhythm, though a brief stretch of meandering Pink Floyd psychedeli­a accelerate­s into a motorik dreamscape, while “Friend Of A Friend” – yet again in 5/4 – hastens to its conclusion, despite otherwise resembling “Pyramid Song”, with “A Day In The Life” orchestral squall.

Even that is hardly rampant, while the atmosphere elsewhere is pensively spellbindi­ng. “I Quit” bleeds into a shimmering mirage with percussive tics, shards of synths and lush strings that couldn’t be less like Greenwood’s hero, Krzysztof Penderecki’s, and “You Know Me!” boasts Yorke’s „ne falsetto over mu£ed piano chords quickly caught on a crepuscula­r breeze of hazy strings. Even “Teleharmon­ic”, the only true curveball, is a desolate, shivering electro-soul-barer, Yorke’s early murmur slurring “payback” into “baby”. Astonishin­gly, before long he’s hollering like Marvin Gaye in wordless ecstasy, with pastoral pipes, shimmering cymbals and rumbling synths bringing things to a blissful close.

Few artists are able to reach the stage where their fans trust them implicitly without soon becoming creatively complacent. Fewer still seem satis„ed with that audience, instead scrabbling around desperatel­y for greater relevance, with o…en the opposite result. But The Smile take Radiohead’s privileges seriously, rewarding our attention with music that demands and – crucially – holds it. No frills, no distractio­ns. A little like Radiohead, then; but there’s nothing wrong with that.

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Brothers grin: (l–r) Skinner, Greenwood and Yorke
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