Mark: Let me get this quote right… Jonny, a quote in an interview said: “We were never teenagers,” and I was thinking about that…
Thom: Oh, for god’s sake…
Ed: [laughing loudly]
Thom: he’s worse than his brother.
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Mark: Let me get this quote right… Jonny, a quote in an interview said: “We were never teenagers,” and I was thinking about that…
Thom: Oh, for god’s sake…
Ed: [laughing loudly]
Thom: he’s worse than his brother.
“It was a bright sunny Saturday morning in May 2000 when I opened my e-mail and saw a letter with the subject ‘Message for Paul Lansky.’ The letter began ‘My name is Jonny Greenwood, and I play and write music as a member [of the] UK band Radiohead.’ The letter went on to describe, quite apologetically, how a phrase from an ancient electronic piece of mine, mild und leise, had made its way into a song on the band’s new CD. Jonny had come across an old LP of the piece in a used-record shop on the band’s last tour of the USA and used it as source material during an improvisation session … He seemed quite anxious to assure me that they were not the sort to take things without asking, and went to some lengths to explain his musical interests and influences, which seemed to intersect in interesting ways with mine. He wondered how I would feel about the possible ‘…association with a [dread phrase] rock group… We are (I hope) as far from being a stereotypical rock group as it is possible to be. … I didn’t want us to remain an anonymous English group assuming they sample your music and let someone else deal with it’ … A few weeks later a delightful package arrived with several Radiohead CDs, another long letter from Jonny, including a picture of his analog synthesizers, a tape of the part of the improvisation session involving mild und leise, and ‘Idioteque’. I sat down and listened with great interest.”
— Paul Lansky, “My Radiohead Adventure” (via oneweekoneband)
“‘Thom has this amazing ability to affect the environment of emotions around him,’ Says Colin Greenwood, 32, who has known Yorke since they were both twelve, taking classical guitar lessons at Abingdon School near Oxford. Chris Hufford, one of Radiohead’s three managers, agrees. He describes Yorke as ‘incredibly charismatic. In the old days, when he entered a room and he was pissed off, everybody knew it. And he didn’t have to say anything.”
— an article about Radiohead in Rolling Stone Magazine from 2001
2008, Hot Press
Interviewer: Just before I go, what’s been the most rock & roll moment of the band’s career?
COLIN: My favourite night was one of the HotPress’ Awards. That was a fucking brilliant night. With Tim from Ash. He came up and he asked us if we liked rock and roll music or something – and then he went to his room and vomited everywhere. It was really cool. That was my most rock and roll thing. It was really great. Oh, and one time Ed met this….
PHIL: ENOUGH, GREENWOOD! ENOUGH! (Laughs)
2008, Hot Press
Interviewer: When you first started out, the NME called you a ‘lily-livered excuse for a rock band’
PHIL: And they were right!
COLIN: Oh, I don’t know about that! There were some good shows!
PHIL: Yeah, there were some good shows. But we were kind of aspirational, really.
COLIN: So people were putting us down for trying to be better than we were at the time? Fuckers! It was probably another bunch of public schoolboys writing it.
PHIL: It was Keith Cameron.
COLIN: Not that you remember!! Haha!
PHIL: Not that it doesn’t…..BURN DEEP!!!!
“‘Thom has this amazing ability to affect the environment of emotions around him,’ Says Colin Greenwood, 32, who has known Yorke since they were both twelve, taking classical guitar lessons at Abingdon School near Oxford. Chris Hufford, one of Radiohead’s three managers, agrees. He describes Yorke as ‘incredibly charismatic. In the old days, when he entered a room and he was pissed off, everybody knew it. And he didn’t have to say anything.”
— an article about Radiohead in Rolling Stone Magazine from 2001
Lucky You Thom.
““He was quite distant during that. It was kind of odd. He was in orbit. His place was on the stage. And when he was off stage, he was not there at all. Occasionally, after a few drinks, he would be alright. But generally he was a little bit strange. Obviously now, I totally understand it.””
— ―Thom Yorke describes his impressions of Michael Stipe in 1995 (via neurosisucker)
Here you go…
important
found these again…
LINDA EVANGELISTA and ROBERT DEL NAJA arrive at Kate Moss's 31st birthday party held at Kate’s farm house 2005/01/15
he’s wearing the same eye makeup in the interview sets for collected. i’m guessing he had a super late night and just went straight over without changing his costume (it’s safe to assume the interviews were shot pretty far in advance) ‘cause there is no way he truly believed he could try it on the daily.
it-girl-rag-doll:
Vijijiji had a dream that Thom and Phil switched places.
Surely that’s not a TSA-approved item.
the sign that made Thom laugh <3 <3 <3