Radiohead heading into the studio.....

Cropduster84Cropduster84 Posts: 1,283
edited March 2008 in Other Music
'The more I studied religions the more I am convinced that man never worshipped anything but himself.' - Sir Richard Francis Burton
Post edited by Unknown User on

Comments

  • SoonForgotten2SoonForgotten2 Posts: 2,245
    Hopefully they will road test some of the material on their upcoming tour.
    <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jmgphotos/sets/72157600802942672/">My Pearl Jam Photos</a>

    <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jmgphotos/4731512142/&quot; title="PJ Banner2 by Mister J Photography, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1135/4731512142_258f2d6ab4_b.jpg&quot; width="630" height="112" alt="PJ Banner2" /></a>
  • ledveddermanledvedderman Posts: 7,761
    I remember Thom saying how big of a fan he was of the In Rainbows distribution process, and that it shouldn't be a shock if they quickly record a couple of songs then post them online.

    Nice.
  • Cropduster84Cropduster84 Posts: 1,283
    I remember Thom saying how big of a fan he was of the In Rainbows distribution process, and that it shouldn't be a shock if they quickly record a couple of songs then post them online.

    Nice.

    Wish Pearl Jam started doing this....
    'The more I studied religions the more I am convinced that man never worshipped anything but himself.' - Sir Richard Francis Burton
  • ledveddermanledvedderman Posts: 7,761
    Wish Pearl Jam started doing this....

    No doubt. 10C could learn a few things from the way Radiohead has been doing business.
  • leethalleethal Posts: 134
    I can definitely see Pearl Jam doing something similar in the future. Radiohead are pioneers, god bless them. I would never want 'albums' to become extinct as an artform. However, 3 or 4 songs released online with no distribution would be ideal for bands like Pearl Jam/ Radiohead etc. If anything it would allow more room to be creative. A nice thought
  • whulmefwhulmef Posts: 176
    As far as "albums becoming extinct as an artform," I misread and thought you meant the music not being released in hard form and just online as possibly going extinct. Meaning, in 50 years the music that was just released online would be forgotten about and become very rare and hard to find. The Wilco ep More Like the Moon was released this way, and I find that it is kind of dissappearing, as though in 20 years it won't even be apart of their catalogue.

    One of my history teachers was talking about how with most communication today going through emails and phones, we will not have as good a record of what happened now and what our culture was like years from now. A lot of what we know in history is due to letters people wrote to each other. For those of you watching the John Adams documentary, from what I heard David McColough got a lot of the information from Abigail's letters.
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