LONDON (Hollywood Reporter) - They turned the music sales model on its head, but indie rockers Radiohead won't be repeating their decision to let fans choose what to pay for their downloads, frontman Thom Yorke told The Hollywood Reporter.
British experimental rock band Radiohead kicked off their U.S. tour Monday night at West Palm Beach's Cruzan Amphitheatre -- and despite front man Thom Yorke declaring at one point, ''Sorry about that. We obviously did not practice that enough,'' the group put together a tight two-hour set that drew from all of the band's seven albums, except for 1993's Pablo Honey, which had the hit Creep.
British experimental rock band Radiohead kicked off its U.S. tour Monday night at West Palm Beach's Cruzan Amphitheatre -- and despite front man Thom Yorke declaring at one point, ''Sorry about that. We obviously did not practice that enough,'' the group put together a tight two-hour set that drew from all of the band's seven albums, except for 1993's Pablo Honey, which gave us the hit Creep.
Modest Mouse must be the busiest rodents since the dress-makers in Cinderella . In the February 7 issue of Rolling Stone (the one with Thom Yorke on the cover), frontman Isaac Brock revealed a whole bunch of post- We Were Dead activity to the "Smoking Section" column.
As the sweltering heat subsided, nightfall set the stage for Justice's raw electronica to conclude Coachella, the first big music festival of the summer. Luckily for music fans of all genres, it was also the first of many festivals to come.
Lost in all the hubbub over Radiohead's pay-what-you-want experiment with "In Rainbows" was what an excellent album it is, easily the band's most accessible since 1997's "OK Computer."