Ben Ward

Radiohead Live

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I can’t think of many reasons to travel to Blackpool. On the face of it, there are many reasons to stay well away. Sea-front vendors that dispense nipple tassels is a good one. Stepping over used condoms on the steps to the sea wall is another and encounters with drunkard youths trying to buy Es from every pedestrian they pass makes three.

However, there is one band on this earth with the pull to defy student budgeting and repulsive locations. They are Radiohead and on Friday night they were the best band in the world.

Blackpool marks the start of the UK leg of Radiohead’s current tour, having already taken in Amsterdam and Copenhagen. It concludes later in the summer with some festival appearances. As best I can tell, they’re following the same formula as they did before the release of Hail to the Thief; playing a number of smaller theatres now before the album comes out and following up with a larger venue tour in the Autumn.

Green Plastic has the set list, which contained a good mix of old and new, going back as far as 1993’s Black Star from the Bends. Obviously Pablo Honey didn’t feature and notably there was nothing from Amnesiac.

‘Emotionally intense’ is a good phrase to have about when you review Radiohead. Indispensable in fact. You laugh (Ed and Jonny messing with their drums before ‘There There’), you smile (Jonny Greenwood trekking across the stage to join in backing vocals on ‘Black Star’) and you get lifted to moments of complete sing-along euphoria (many times). But in an instant you can be laid bare by something entirely different.

‘Exit Music’. A glorious piece of stark, ghostly, heart wrenching brilliance. People just don’t know what to do when Radiohead play this song. The moment the solo guitar is recognised there’s a cheer, which fades to leave just Thom Yorke’s voice. At first, a few try to sing along, but they’re too loud and they stop. A few more try to clap in time, but it feels so awkward that after a only few bars they stop too. Some individual at the back shouts ‘Go on Thom!’ just to break the terrifyingly frozen audience. Thousands of people standing perfectly still in absolute silence. Watching. Listening. Shivering as they’re consumed by a song that’s bigger than every one of us.

For me, ‘Exit Music’ is worth a £35 ticket on its own. Then they played Paranoid Android. I like the word ‘juxtaposition’ about now.

The new songs are also sounding excellent. It’s not a massive shift from Hail to the Thief, but it’s Radiohead making more great music having learned and evolved just a little bit more. There’s a good mix of styles and I particularly liked ‘Bangers n’ Mash’ and ‘15 Step’. Both have a great rocking beat. Radiohead you can dance to, fancy that. ‘Big Ideas’ is also magnificent.

There was something there to please every Radiohead fan, Thom was on great form and you can’t help but appreciate the effort that goes into these shows as entire instruments are brought on and off for the benefit of one song.

I think Stuart may be emotionally damaged from having lost his Radiohead virginity, but he did manage to gasp something about ‘a near religious experience’.

If you’ve got a ticket for Wolverhampton or London this week, I envy you. Radiohead are just so good right now. Willy Mason makes for excellent support too. Enjoy.

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  1. Good review Ben. I was at Wolverhampton last night and they were just too good. We got There There as the last track and blimey (you know what I wanna swear ;)) it was just mind blowing.

    The drummer really stood out for me, he is amazing.

  2. I also meant to mention that exactly the same thing happened with the audience when he sang Exit Music.

    I was a bit gutted he didn’t do Like Spinning Plates, that would have to rank as my favourite Radiohead track, if I didn’t like them all equally.

    maybe I should write a proper review ;)

  3. Ben

    There There is fantastic live. Johnny and Ed playing those drums is just… fabulously entertaining.

    The thing with Radiohead is that you inevitably don’t hear a song that you’d have liked to. They do mix up the set night-to-night too, which leads to frustrating moments when you hear that they played a particular song the next night. Then again, it’s always at the expense of something else so the uncertainty is nice in a way. There’s certainly nothing that I wouldn’t want to hear, and everyone has a different favourite song so it’s probably for the best!

    I do long to see them do You and Whose Army? though.

  4. “I do long to see them do You and Whose Army? though.”

    ah, now then.. yes… got that. I am 99.9% sure they did that!

  5. stu

    I’ve only seen them about 10 times the last time being in the early 90’s supporting kingmaker or james. The voice was of course beautiful and as already remarked upon the drumming stood out. The rest was rather un-inspiring, bands that seem to ignore their roots always seem to miss the point as to why they made it in the first place. The new songs were good though not mind blowingly great and they seem to believe the press that O.K is the greatest album of all time….it aint. Better than most bands? of course they are and at least the other 2-3000 people enjoyed it…oh well maybe i’ll enjoy them more in 2020!!!!!!!!!!

  6. Hey Ben – long time no speak. I realized today that by now you had probably seen radiohead and written a review on here, and it seems I was correct. Great review, and I am, obviously, extremely envious. (I’d have LOVED to see them play Black Star!) Had i remembered which day you were going to see them, I’d have phoned you and made you stay on the line so i could hear the whole gig. But alas, ‘twas not so. Hopefully I’ll see you sometime this summer so you can tell me more. (Mind you, it still annoys me that they never play Creep…)

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