SOUNDTRACK: RADIOHEAD-The King of Limbs: From the Basement (2011).
The TV channel Palladia has been showing this BBC production since it became available. And it’s scheduled to be broadcast a few more times in the next couple of months.
From the Basement is a show in which (very cool) bands play in this recording studio (presumably in the basement of wherever it is recorded). The show is filmed in HD and the sound is fantastic. The Wikipedia page gives some context for the show–it was originally designed as a program to showcase several bands playing a few songs. Several of these episodes aired (the Wikipedia page gives details). The show was created by Nigel Godrich, Radiohead’s producer. Thus, it makes sense that Radiohead have now done live sessions shows for their last two albums.
So this is a recording of The King of Limbs. I’m not sure if the album had come out by then, but this is basically the complete album and two extra songs: “The Daily Mail” and “Staircase.”
The session sounds amazing. There’s a brass section for a number of songs, there’s two drummers (both completely bald, which is kind of neat to see), and you get to see Thom Yorke up close (sometimes a little too close) on all kinds of instruments. I feel a little bad for Jonny Greenwood as it seems like Thom plays most of the guitar parts (unless Jonny is on keyboards too–it’s not always clear who is playing what).
I liked King of Limbs, but I must say that this live recording brings much more depth to the album. While the band sounds tight as a drum, paradoxically, they also seem looser in their overall feel. They seem like they’re really enjoying themselves. It doesn’t have the same vibe as a concert (they’re not playing off the crowd or improvise at all), rather it has a feeling of jamming with friends–trying to get a perfect take, without the tension of fretting about the perfect take. It’s really a great show and worth watching for any fan of Radiohead.
[READ: September 5, 2011:] ” What Have You Done”
I had a hard time getting into this story. It’s about a man named Paul. Paul is headed home to visit his family in Cleveland and he is more than a little apprehensive about it. He deliberately hasn’t been home in about ten years, so this is quite a chore for him. And it is quite clear from the outset that Paul is something of an asshole. We don’t really learn why in the beginning (and that’s why the story was hard for me to get into–more on that)–he’s just sort of accepted as an asshole and that his family will give him shit.
And that’s what families do, this idea is in no way new. But what’s is odd about the story is that we don’t really have any context for Paul’s attitude. We seem to jump into the story with him feeling like an asshole and assuming that his parents will treat him like crap. That they won’t believe anything he says and that they’ll give him a hard time. Indeed, when he finally gets to his parents’ house (and his sister and her husband are there) he is so aggressively defensive that he’s quite unlikable. And yet we still don’t know if he is defensive or if they are nasty. Paul seems to flare up at anything anyone says and yet we don’t know if he has a right to.
The crazy thing is that Paul’s major fault seems to be that he’s fat. Quite a bit is made of the fact that he is fat. And he seems to be so very lonely–hateful of his family and resentful of his sister’s happiness–that when we finally learn the truth about him and what he’s been up to these last ten years, it’s hard to believe it’s really true. His family doesn’t believe him, and the only reason we do is from a phone call that comes in to him. But he’s so paranoid, it’s hard to know what to believe.
Despite my not really liking these aspects of the story, I really enjoyed the way the last half came together. I’m still not sure what to make of Paul (paranoid, self hating, or an actual asshole); we never learn who is at fault for the family split, and yet clearly someone finds him lovable. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the climax of the story quite a bit. I’m just not entirely sure what I’m supposed to believe about this family.
I also really enjoyed the title of the story which comes across as both an accusation and a question and which really highlights the intentional confusion of the story.

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