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Vozick-Levinson of Entertainment Weekly called the song "a gorgeous anti-war ballad" and wrote: "Needless to say, it's very much worth any Radiohead fan's pound, regardless of the exchange rate." [ 12 ] NME named the track one of the ten best of the week and called it an "elegiac", "affecting, slow-burn statement" that "rather than hectoring ...
I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings is a live album by the English rock band Radiohead, released on 12 November 2001 in the UK by Parlophone and a day later in the US by Capitol Records. I Might Be Wrong comprises performances of songs from Radiohead's albums Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001), recorded during their 2001 tour.
In 1992, the band played over 100 shows across most of the United Kingdom. The year ended with a highly negative review of Radiohead's live show in the NME, in which writer Keith Cameron wrote "Radiohead are a pitiful, lily-livered excuse for a rock 'n' roll group." [14] Radiohead played a few dates in the UK in January 1993. [15]
Radiohead, "I Might Be Wrong" (2001) Gorgeous, moody ballads and artful rock dodges mark this document of Radiohead's touring behind "Kid A" and "Amnesiac."
Radiohead debuted "Cut a Hole" on the King of Limbs tour in 2012. [81] The song builds gradually to a climax, with "menacing" lyrics about a "long-distance connection". [ 81 ] NME described it as "an atmospheric, shifting gloomathon" with a "head-flung-back vocal from Thom, climaxing with some of his highest notes since OK Computer ".
Chris DeVille of Stereogum picked "Spectre" as one of the week's best songs, writing that it was "beautiful" and a reminder that "Radiohead still have life left in them". [17] After "Writing's on the Wall" won the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song the following week, DeVille wrote that "Spectre" was "the more masterful of the two tracks ...
The song was included on the special edition of the greatest hits album Radiohead: The Best Of (2008) and the Kid A Mnesia reissue. [95] [96] An audio live version, recorded on 15 November 2000 for broadcast on BBC Radio 1's Evening Session, [97] was included on the Kid A "Special Collectors Edition" reissue in 2009. [98]
In 2016, Radiohead released "True Love Waits" as the closing track on A Moon Shaped Pool, rearranged as a minimal piano ballad. It received positive reviews, with critics naming it among the greatest Radiohead songs, and Pitchfork named it among the greatest songs of the decade. Several critics felt the long wait made the studio version more ...