Alternative rock (modern rock) band from Oxfordshire, England (United Kingdom).
The name Radiohead comes from the
Talking Heads song, Radio Head, from the
True Stories album.
Formed by school friends in 1986, Radiohead did not release their first single until 1992’s
Drill EP. The cathartic
Creep, from the debut album
Pablo Honey (1993), became a worldwide hit as grunge music dominated radio airwaves.
Radiohead were initially branded as a one-hit wonder abroad, but caught on at home in the UK with their second album,
The Bends (1995), earning fans with their dense guitar atmospheres and front man
Thom Yorke’s expressive singing. The album featured the hits
High & Dry,
Just and
Fake Plastic Trees.
The band’s third album,
OK Computer (1997), propelled them to greater attention. Popular both for its expansive sound and themes of modern alienation, the album has been acclaimed by critics as a landmark record of the 1990s, some critics go as far to consider it one of the best of all time.
Kid A (2000) marked further evolution, containing influences from experimental electronic music.
Hail To The Thief (2003) was seen as a conventional return to the guitar and piano-led rock sound. After fulfilling their contract with EMI, Radiohead released
In Rainbows (2007) famously via a pay-what-you-want model. Their latest album,
A Moon Shaped Pool, was released in May 2016.
Radiohead’s original influences were cited as alternative rock and post-punk bands like
The Smiths,
Pixies,
Magazine,
Joy Division and
Siouxsie & The Banshees, who Thom Yorke claims inspired him to become a performer, and
R.E.M. (with lead singer of the band, Thom Yorke, referring to himself as an ’R.E.M. groupie’).