Entry tags:
428 - Radiohead - Kid A
Adding slide guitar and a violin doesn't make a rock band a alternative country or Americana band. Adding a horn section doesn't turn your rock band into a jazz fusion band. Adding sequencers and a more atmospheric sound doesn't make your rock band electronic or ambient. That isn't an issue with Kid A.
The tracks on the album weren't rock songs with electronic elements thrown in. They were equally influenced by the likes of Seefeel, Aphex Twin, and the Autechre just as much as Pink Floyd, Joy Division, and R.E.M. Pop song framework is mostly gone, but the use of guitar riffs, lyrics that hint at a verse/chorus structure that was broken into bits, and keeping tracks between 3-5 minutes differentiate this music from what you'll hear on NPR's Echoes or Hearts of Space.
I must admit that I enjoyed Kid A quite a bit. The more I listened to it (and with headphones), the more I enjoyed songs I previously noted I was unimpressed with. I really love "National Anthem" and its use of free jazz styled horns. "Treefingers" sounds like a Brian Eno or Harold Budd track to me. I was prepared to be bored from sad-sack overkill or too-spacey music. There was just enough variety to the sounds of the tracks to keep me from being distracted from the music and yet the whole album had a good, consistent musical atmosphere to it. However, I'm not certain I would listen to the album much if I bought a copy. I don't really have any times where I sit around and brood with music anymore. In my teen and first half of my 20's this may have gotten more attention from me. Now, it just doesn't fit into what I dedicate my music-listening time to hear and feel. Kid A doesn't have the humor or optimism that brightened Eno's Another Green World's sleepier second half.
Songs I knew I liked: None
Songs I didn't know but now like: "Kid A," "National Anthem," "Treefingers," "Optimistic," "Idioteque" (which took a few listens before I really embraced it), and to a lesser extent "Motion Picture Soundtrack"
Songs I can go the rest of my life without hearing again: "In Limbo," "Morning Bell," and (untitled final track) weren't displeasing as much as they made no impression on me at all.