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For example non-free use rationales, see Wikipedia:Use rationale examples. This tag should only be used for covers of audio recording releases. Either of the following may be helpful for stating the rationale: Template:Album rationale or Template:Non-free use rationale album cover.
This template is to help users write non-free use rationales for non-free album covers and other music cover art as required by WP:NFC and WP:NFURG. Include this in the File page before the {{ Non-free album cover }} template, once for each time you insert the album cover art image into an article.
The show was released free online that December as Radiohead for Haiti, and included a performance of the King of Limbs track "Lotus Flower" by Yorke on acoustic guitar. [14] In February, at a benefit concert in aid of the Green Party , Yorke performed songs including "Separator" (then titled "Mouse Dog Bird") and "Give Up the Ghost". [ 15 ]
Considered one of the best and most influential albums in the history of Latin American rock music, with many calling it the best album to ever come out of South America. [56] [57] Al Borde's Top 250 albums of Ibero-American Rock: #2 [58] Rolling Stone Argentina's "The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock": #9 [59]
Reviewing Kid A in 2000, NME's Keith Cameron wrote that the song sees Radiohead's "return to the big ballad template, as massed strings swoon and Yorke's voice soars transcendentally for the first time". [106] The Rolling Stone critic David Fricke wrote that the song "moves like an ice floe: cold-blue folk rock with just a faint hint of heartbeat."
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 soulful pop songstress is known for her powerhouse vocals and expertly delivered covers of popular songs, and during her latest Kellyoke session on The Kelly Clarkson Show, she tried her hand ...
"15 Step" features syncopated drumming and a "smooth" guitar line. [5] [6] The song is written in 54 time, [7] with a "stuttering" pattern played on a drum machine. [8] [9] "15 Step" begins with a 40-second "mulched-up" drum introduction reminiscent of songs on Kid A, [6] before a "blissful" guitar line and a bass line reminiscent of "Airbag" on OK Computer enter.