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Exit Music: Songs with Radio Heads is a tribute album to British band Radiohead released in 2006 on Rapster Records and Barely Breaking Even Records. The album features reworked songs from Mark Ronson , Alex Greenwald of Phantom Planet , Sia , Matthew Herbert , Sa-Ra , The Cinematic Orchestra , RJD2 and many others.
The films comprise music videos, live performances, webcast footage from Radiohead's studio and videos submitted by fans. [3] It includes a performance of "Morning Mr Magpie" by Thom Yorke on acoustic guitar, a song later released on Radiohead's 2011 album The King of Limbs .
Note: The "lost overture" to King Kong (1933), which first premiered on the channel Turner Classic Movies in 2005 and was released on DVD that same year, is in fact a montage of music recordings from the film spliced together for that specific release. There was no overture in the original release.
Radiohead 21:30 - 23:45 The xx 19:30 - 20:30 ... Exit Music (For a Film) 8. ... the village and the festival team the traditional year off" until Glastonbury Festival ...
"Let Down" is a song by the English rock band Radiohead, from their third studio album OK Computer (1997). It was released as a promotional single in September 1997, and reached number 29 on the US Modern Rock Tracks chart. It was included on Radiohead: The Best Of (2008).
The first music video for "High and Dry" featured Radiohead performing at the Vasquez Rocks outside Los Angeles. [8] For the American market, Radiohead's American record label, Capitol, commissioned a new video inspired by the 1994 film Pulp Fiction, set in a roadside diner. After MTV objected, the video was edited to remove a shot of an ...
The revamped version, dubbed "Nosferatu X Radiohead," marks the debut of "Silents Synced," a series that marries classic silent films with alternative rock: “Nosferatu” will be followed by ...
Glazer was unsatisfied with his "Karma Police" video, saying he had "missed emotionally and dramatically". He made the "Rabbit In Your Headlights" video as a companion, and felt he achieved what he had failed to with "Karma Police". [5] The video stars Denis Lavant as a man walking along a road in a tunnel, muttering. He is struck by several ...