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The king of limbs [sound recording] / Radiohead.

By: Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: 82756505766 | TBD RecordsTICK001CD | Ticker TapePublication details: [S.l.] : Ticker Tape Ltd : TBD Records, p2011.Description: 1 sound disc : digital ; 4 3/4 inSubject(s):
Contents:
Bloom (5:15) -- Morning Mr. Magpie (4:41) -- Little by little (4:27) -- Feral (3:13) -- Lotus flower (5:00) -- Codex (4:47) -- Give up the ghost (4:50) -- Separator (5:20).
Radiohead.Summary: Radiohead's much-anticipated eighth studio album is the follow-up to their seven-time Grammy-nominated In Rainbows. Produced by longtime collaborator Nigel Godrich. The King of Limbs, named after a spooky tree in Wiltshire's Savernake Forest, has a somber sound. The song Codex is a beautiful piano ballad with string arrangements performed by the London Telefilmonic Orchestra.
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Dr. James Carlson Library CD POP/ROCK Radiohead Available 33111006636183
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

After a brief return to earth to deliver the tart, focused In Rainbows, Radiohead drift back into the ether with The King of Limbs. Like In Rainbows before it, the actuality of The King of Limbs is purposefully somewhat obscured by the hullabaloo surrounding the album's surprise release -- announced for a Saturday release on a Monday, shifted to a Friday -- and in the case of KOL, such clamor is needed. Wispy and ephemeral, shimmering skin draped over the barest of bones, The King of Limbs doesn’t deliberately lack a solid foundation, songwriting traded for sound construction. Masters of mood that they are, Radiohead digitally weave stuttering, glitchy loops of drums and guitars with real instruments, Thom Yorke’s mournful moan and keening falsetto acting as a binding agent, creating an alluringly dour atmosphere. Despite a pair of intellectually funky moments -- “Morning Mr. Magpie” and “Little by Little,” grouped together at the beginning, giving the album a slight hint of momentum that quickly fades -- this is rather monochromatic and not too far removed from the territory Radiohead began etching out with Kid A. Where that icy 2000 effort had the bracing chill of the new, The King of Limbs is familiar -- not commonplace, but carrying a certain inevitability as its eight songs slowly unspool. There are no surprises in the floating textures, no delight in the details, no astonishment in how the band navigates intricate turns: this is the sound of Radiohead doing what they do, doing it very well, doing it without flash or pretension, gently easing from the role of pioneers to craftsmen. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Compact disc.

Bloom (5:15) -- Morning Mr. Magpie (4:41) -- Little by little (4:27) -- Feral (3:13) -- Lotus flower (5:00) -- Codex (4:47) -- Give up the ghost (4:50) -- Separator (5:20).

Radiohead.

Radiohead's much-anticipated eighth studio album is the follow-up to their seven-time Grammy-nominated In Rainbows. Produced by longtime collaborator Nigel Godrich. The King of Limbs, named after a spooky tree in Wiltshire's Savernake Forest, has a somber sound. The song Codex is a beautiful piano ballad with string arrangements performed by the London Telefilmonic Orchestra.

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