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Recently Played

Daydreaming - A Moon Shaped Pool by Radiohead
A Moon Shaped Pool | Radiohead
Duration
6:24
Duration
6:24
There, There - Hail to the Thief by Radiohead
Hail to the Thief | Radiohead
Duration
5:23
Duration
5:23
I Might Be Wrong - Amnesiac by Radiohead
Amnesiac | Radiohead
Duration
4:53
Duration
4:53
Planet Telex - The Bends by Radiohead
The Bends | Radiohead
Duration
4:19
Duration
4:19
Bring You Back - The Ways We Separate by Beacon
The Ways We Separate | Beacon
Duration
4:16
Duration
4:16
Juice - Juice - Single by Noviembre
Juice - Single | Noviembre
Duration
1:51
Duration
1:51
Kusanagi - In Return (10 Year Anniversary Edition) by ODESZA
In Return (10 Year Anniversary Edition) | ODESZA
Duration
3:28
Duration
3:28
Kilo - Submersible by Passafire
Submersible | Passafire
Duration
4:19
Duration
4:19
Submersible - Submersible by Passafire
Submersible | Passafire
Duration
4:27
Duration
4:27
Superman - Hang-Ups by Goldfinger
Hang-Ups | Goldfinger
Duration
3:05
Duration
3:05

Recently Added

Hail to the Thief
Hail to the Thief
Radiohead
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
SWAG
SWAG
Justin Bieber
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2
Tracks
2
Dirty Jersey
Dirty Jersey
Hub City Stompers
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
Casual - Single
Casual - Single
Chappell Roan
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
Pink Pony Club - Single
Pink Pony Club - Single
Chappell Roan
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
I Had Some Help (feat. Morgan Wallen) - Single
I Had Some Help (feat. Morgan Wallen) - Single
Post Malone
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
Form
Form
Corre
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
Evil Empire
Evil Empire
Rage Against the Machine
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
The Battle of Los Angeles
The Battle of Los Angeles
Rage Against the Machine
Tracks
2
Tracks
2

Recommendations

Heavy Rotation Mix - The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
Heavy Rotation Mix
The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
Favorites Mix - The songs you love. The more you use Apple Music, the better the mix. Refreshed every Tuesday.
Favorites Mix
The songs you love. The more you use Apple Music, the better the mix. Refreshed every Tuesday.
Get Up! Mix - Whether it’s a weekday morning or Saturday night, get going with this personalized mix of upbeat music. Refreshed every Monday.
Get Up! Mix
Whether it’s a weekday morning or Saturday night, get going with this personalized mix of upbeat music. Refreshed every Monday.
Chill Mix - Songs to help you relax and unwind. Updated every Sunday.
Chill Mix
Songs to help you relax and unwind. Updated every Sunday.
New Music Mix - Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
New Music Mix
Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
Radiohead Essentials - As hard as it is to believe now, Radiohead’s “Creep” didn’t hit until nearly a year after its 1992 release, eventually recasting the Oxford ensemble as inheritors to the kind of alternative anthem championed by U2. The worldwide success of this disarmingly intimate ode to alienation would have proven a fluke if the band hadn’t repeated the trick with 1995’s “Fake Plastic Trees,” a strummed then string-swept daydream through eerily glossy surfaces both human and otherwise. Even then, few could have predicted the dystopian scope and artistic ambition of 1997’s <i>OK Computer</i>, which later made it onto Apple Music’s 100 Best Albums list. Heralded by the gorgeous yet outright ominous “Paranoid Android” and still another generational lost-soul ballad in “Karma Police,” that record announced Radiohead as The Beatles of their era, in terms of balancing both commercial and critical success with emboldened experimentation.

Free to transform at will from song to song, the band began a new era with 2000’s <i>Kid A</i>, releasing no singles and embracing abstract electronics on opener “Everything in Its Right Place” and “Idioteque.” If their next few albums seemed to shrug off commercial concerns entirely, they still yielded such indelible turns as 2001’s stumbling piano amble “Pyramid Song,” 2003’s quiet-turned-loud “There, There,” 2009’s anti-gravity phantom “All I Need,” 2011’s squelching “Lotus Flower,” and 2016’s urgent “Burn the Witch.” All explored anew while deepening the alchemy between unmoored singer/lyricist Thom Yorke, shape-shifting guitarist Jonny Greenwood, and the other players. No wonder Radiohead still remain the high-water mark for bands who can do exactly what they want and still enjoy a decades-spanning audience.
Radiohead Essentials
As hard as it is to believe now, Radiohead’s “Creep” didn’t hit until nearly a year after its 1992 release, eventually recasting the Oxford ensemble as inheritors to the kind of alternative anthem championed by U2. The worldwide success of this disarmingly intimate ode to alienation would have proven a fluke if the band hadn’t repeated the trick with 1995’s “Fake Plastic Trees,” a strummed then string-swept daydream through eerily glossy surfaces both human and otherwise. Even then, few could have predicted the dystopian scope and artistic ambition of 1997’s <i>OK Computer</i>, which later made it onto Apple Music’s 100 Best Albums list. Heralded by the gorgeous yet outright ominous “Paranoid Android” and still another generational lost-soul ballad in “Karma Police,” that record announced Radiohead as The Beatles of their era, in terms of balancing both commercial and critical success with emboldened experimentation. Free to transform at will from song to song, the band began a new era with 2000’s <i>Kid A</i>, releasing no singles and embracing abstract electronics on opener “Everything in Its Right Place” and “Idioteque.” If their next few albums seemed to shrug off commercial concerns entirely, they still yielded such indelible turns as 2001’s stumbling piano amble “Pyramid Song,” 2003’s quiet-turned-loud “There, There,” 2009’s anti-gravity phantom “All I Need,” 2011’s squelching “Lotus Flower,” and 2016’s urgent “Burn the Witch.” All explored anew while deepening the alchemy between unmoored singer/lyricist Thom Yorke, shape-shifting guitarist Jonny Greenwood, and the other players. No wonder Radiohead still remain the high-water mark for bands who can do exactly what they want and still enjoy a decades-spanning audience.
Hang-Ups
Goldfinger
Tracks
14
Tracks
14
Reggae - null
Reggae
Firefly - Single
Ganjacat & Passafire
Tracks
1
Tracks
1
Sunburn - Single
The Elovaters
Tracks
1
Tracks
1

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