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A Moon Shaped Pool was the fifth Radiohead album nominated for the Mercury Prize, making Radiohead the most shortlisted act in Mercury Prize history. [124] At the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, A Moon Shaped Pool was nominated for Best Alternative Music Album and Best Rock Song (for "Burn the Witch"). [125]
The song is a piano ballad with strings arranged by the Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood. It was released as a download on 6 May 2016 as the second and final single from Radiohead's ninth studio album, A Moon Shaped Pool, accompanied by a music video directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.
A Moon Shaped Pool: Nominated [17] [18] Best Live Act: Radiohead Won Best Sync Usage The Accountant Official Trailer Nominated Marketing Genius: Radiohead Disappears From the Internet Nominated Video of the Year "Daydreaming" Nominated 2018 Best Re-issue OK Computer OKNOTOK 1997 2017: Nominated [19] Marketing Genius Nominated 2022: Best Re ...
A Moon Shaped Pool: Nigel Godrich 2016 [45] "Decks Dark" A Moon Shaped Pool: Nigel Godrich 2016 [45] "Desert Island Disk" A Moon Shaped Pool: Nigel Godrich 2016 [45] "Dollars and Cents" Amnesiac: Nigel Godrich Radiohead 2001 [49] "Down Is the New Up" In Rainbows Disk 2: Nigel Godrich 2007 [36] "Electioneering" OK Computer: Nigel Godrich ...
"Burn the Witch" was the lead single from Moon Shaped Pool. It was released as a download on 3 May 2016 on Radiohead's website and on streaming and digital media services. [28] [29] A 7-inch single, with the 2015 song "Spectre" as the B-side, was released exclusively in independent record stores on May 13 in the UK and soon after ...
Chuck D was an angry, articulate Black man, and a force for change. He stood for, and shaped, a revolution, and everyone listened. And it was great music, not at all bitter medicine. BGJ. 57 Tom Petty
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 ...
But it's somehow cooler for Radiohead to have written a song that wasn't used." [6] Radiohead's producer, Nigel Godrich, said the experience was a "real waste of energy" and that it disrupted work on A Moon Shaped Pool. [7] Greenwood said Radiohead were free to finish and release "Spectre" as they wanted, and so "that side of it was really ...