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| Kid A (2-10" LPs) | 
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| Artist: Radiohead Label: Capitol Records Category: Music
List Price: $25.98 Buy New: $19.81 You Save: $6.17 (24%)
New (30) from $19.81
Avg. Customer Rating: 2033 reviews Sales Rank: 5343
Format: Limited Edition Media: LP Record Discs: 2 Tracks: 10 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 10.8 x 10.6 x 0.3
UPC: 724352775316 EAN: 0724352775316 ASIN: B00004YLIU
Release Date: September 2, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping
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Amazon.com's Best of 2000 How is it that Kid A's opening track, laden with an electronic vocal stuttering "bleh, bluh-bleh bleh bluh" is the most fascinating statement made in rock & roll this year? Because somehow, even when Radiohead blathers and blips nonsense, it's profound. The band's future-perfect musical grammar may be hard to decipher, and the melody is even more subliminal, but the journey traveled with Radiohead reveals them to be not only rock music's greatest adventurers in 2000, but teachers as well. --Beth Massa
Amazon.com With every record, Radiohead jump off higher and higher cliffs, daring fans to take the plunge in their artistic feats of derring-do. The journey from that scratchy bit of raw guitar angst in "Creep" (from 1993's Pablo Honey) to any song on Kid A amounts to a high-wire act that few, if any, bands in popular music have ever attempted. It's hard to believe both records come from the same planet, much less the same band. Likewise, the grandiose, Pink Floyd-esque thematic scope of 1997's extraordinary OK Computer is nowhere to be found here. Quiet, contemplative, and less confrontational, it opens with a lack of bombast, as "Everything in Its Right Place" builds tension with ghostly voiceovers, a dry pulse, and a shadowy organ motif. That tension appears over and over on Kid A. On "How to Disappear Completely," the unsettled, atonal keyboard waxing in the background offsets the plaintive Thom Yorke vocal, and on "Idioteque," detached, inorganic rhythms make the melody's despondent aimlessness that much more nerve-racking. Throughout, Radiohead fearlessly explore dissonance and structure, melding twisted, Brian Eno-meets-Aphex Twin sonic landscapes with utter discontent in the world around them. They may sometimes overreach, letting artsy ambition prevent them from giving us the arena rock-god goodies. But their commitment to restless creativity also yields pleasures that don't fade but instead become more resonant upon repeated listenings. If OK Computer was rock's most relevant expression of millennial angst, Kid A is the opposite; it's the 21st century's first record that sounds like the future, barely caring what that Y2K fuss was all about and much more worried about what the hell we're all supposed to do now. --Matthew Cooke
Album Description 180 Gram/Audiophile pressing Two 10" discs in gatefold jacket Printed sleeves
Album Description UK version of their highly anticipated fourth album with a limited edition 'special booklet'. 10 tracks including, 'Everything In It's Right Place','Kid A' and 'The National Anthem'. 2000 release. Standard jewel case.
Album Details The Most Anticipated and Uniquely Marketed Album of the New Millenium. Eschewing Most of their Conventions, Radiohead have Reinvented their Music from the Ground Up. Their Approach Has Been Hailed as Having Produced the First Masterpiece of the Year. While it May Take Some Time to Absorb, Repeated Listenings Yield Deep Aural Pleasure.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2028 more reviews...
A great, but very self-conscious, electronic album May 10, 2004 225 out of 236 found this review helpful
When Radiohead released the 2000 album KID A, many people were puzzled. There was hardly a guitar to be found on the whole album. Radiohead traded in the claustrophobic, dense melodicism of OK COMPUTER for a much more electronically twinged sound. People didn't know how to react. Some loved it. Others wished they'd return to the sound of 1997. I'm glad made KID A, though I do not believe it is a wholly successful album. KID A is self-consciously difficult and avant-garde, whereas OK COMPUTER never felt forced, but developed according to its own internal laws and rhythms.The biggest problem with KID A is that, because OK COMPUTER proved to be one of the biggest records of the 1990s, a Gen X DARK SIDE OF THE MOON, Radiohead felt they had to come up with another genre shattering record. THE BENDS still held Radiohead in a pop status, albeit a very mature sounding pop band. With OK COMPUTER, they had been pushed over the brink, where the commercialism of music, a la Britney Spears, is regarded with scorn. In a word, they became one of the major bands in rock music producing worthwhile, lasting music. They graduated to elite status, where rock critics faun over them and college intellectuals, when speaking of current bands with as little distaste as they can muster, speak of a band called Radiohead that has a very intellectually stimulating record about a computer. This process begun as early as THE BENDS, for it is on that record, and the numerous B-Sides of that project (a full album in itself), that Radiohead proved themselves far above their peers. With OK COMPUTER, they cemented their reputation as a post-modern musical force to be reckoned with. OK COMPUTER also established Radiohead as one of the best guitar-rock bands of the 1990s. The music on OK COMPUTER is tight, muscular, densely layered, and wonderfully executed. OK COMPUTER, much like DARK SIDE OF THE MOON, presents a very English view of reality, and like its predecessor, OK COMPUTER finds the world dehumanizing and cruel. There is a wistful voice throughout OK COMPUTER, wishing to retreat into a world of isolation because everything has gone so dreadfully wrong. The entire LP announced to the world that a major, landmark album has just arrived. So how do you follow up a record like OK COMPUTER? Floyd followed up DARK SIDE with WISH YOU WERE HERE, which is tunning in its own right. The Beatles followed up SGT. PEPPER, the ultimate high watermark in highly valuable, artistic rock music, with the vast double album THE BEATLES. (For an aside, I find THE WHITE ALBUM much more musically satisfying than SGT. PEPPER. This reviewer does not wholly agree with the general public perception of SGT. PEPPER.) Well, the answer's simple, really. To throw out the guitars and get into electronic music. Radiohead now has a reputation that it must uphold. So KID A is the result. Where COMPUTER used music as a catharsis, an aural equivalent of Orwell's 1984, KID A was now more interesting in constructing challenging, `artistic' music, not because they have something to say, but because that is what is expected of them as an avant-garde band. And that is the real problem with KID A. OK COMPUTER never sounds forced; that record plays like a stunning document of post-modern ansgt in modern rock and roll trappings, albeit very English rock and roll trappings. KID A, on the other hand, sounds like the band is trying to be live up to a reputation set up for them by themselves and by public perception, as the premier intellectual rock band living in a technological and ideologically bankrupt world. KID A, although musically very far afield from Radiohead's previous work, is the next logical step in the career that OK COMPUTER predestined them for, because the very fact that KID A exists shows people that Radiohead has risen above mere commercialism and is into making real music, wherever their muse follows them.. All that being said, as for the music on KID A, I find it very highly rewarding. Radiohead, while trying to develop a stylish, `hip' sequel to their critical smash, did manage some genius songwriting here. Although you have to be open to electronic music to begin with, in KID A you will find that the whole album stands up as a very solid album with a lot of good songs on it. It's a very good electronic album from a rock and roll band, and a great addition to Radiohead's catalogue. It's just KID A is a self-conscious stab at trying to be `different,' where OK COMPUTER is a natural, organic statement of a world view. P. S. One controversy sparked by Radiohead's move into electronic music is people unfamiliar with electronic music are claiming it to be pure genius while people who are very heavily into techno, etc, say Radiohead's KID A is not as musically rewarding as, say, the Aphex Twins or other major musical electronic groups. While not being familiar with electronic music, I will say KID A has a lot of great electronic music, though I wish they would have cut "Treefingers," which as far as I'm concerned is little more than a dead-weight instrumental.
"Kid" is A+ November 18, 2004 150 out of 163 found this review helpful
In the year 2000, Radiohead ditched its former "real" rock sound for Pink-Floydian, electronic post-rock. The result was "Kid A," where they relearned everything they knew about music from scratch. Some people loved it. Some didn't get it, and felt it was "pretentious." But there's one undeniable thing -- this chilly, eerie collection is a marvelously complex piece of work. An ominous keyboard melody and gibberish vocals open the album in "Everything In Its Right Place," sounding a bit like a possessed radio. Then the fuzz and hums kick in, adding a spacey dimension to an already strange melody. A drum melody kicks in in the title track, followed by the ghostly rock of "National Anthem" and unearthly lament of "How to Disappear Completely." Another "real" rock song kicks in with the darkly desperate "Optimistic," flanked by a pair of softer, eerie songs. "Idioteque" throws all the rules out the window with sharp percussion backed by weird waves of sound and Thom Yorke's high vocals. And finally it ends on the same note it began -- a stately organ -- in the harp-accented "Motion Picture Soundtrack." In a musical world where anything that has a guitar can be called "rock," it's difficult to find music that is really creative. It's even harder to find a band that is willing to take risks, and expand their art. But those things can be found in Radiohead, and the evidence is in "Kid A" -- whether listeners think it's a wild success or a pretentious failure, it has to be admitted that it takes guts to try out something this different. Thom Yorke's vocals are often described as whiny, but they are suited to the music here. Sometimes it's as little as backing "ooh oohs," and sometimes he's lamenting about ice ages and suicidal cries of "This isn't happening/I'm not here." Do the lyrics make sense? Not at first glance, at least -- they're more like a part of the music than lyrics in themselves. And hoo boy, the music. Few bands do panoramic electronic soundscapes as Radiohead does here, scratched with wailing voices and eerie noises. More ordinary instruments are included, but add to the strange atmosphere rather than grounding it -- razor-sharp percussion, mellow organ, rippling harp strings, and subtle, swelling strings. The Radiohead of "Kid A" is looking at a bleak, cold place, but not one that is ugly or alienating. Instead, you just want to sink into it and experience its beauty, no matter how cold or bleak it is. A true modern classic.
Daring, Original, and most of all...TRUE November 10, 2000 112 out of 119 found this review helpful
Radiohead is a group constantly in evolution, challenging it's listeners everytime by pushing the artistic envelope with every album. With "Pablo Honey," you had a band that was using friendly pop songs with the indie-grunge sound of the early '90s. "The Bends" took it a step further, with the exploration of the 'concept album,' emphasizing the keyboards more and using the beats and the guitars to truely start to create an atmosphere. "OK Computer" entered Roxy Music/Pink Floyd territory, exploring more of that mysterious spacey air with a cartload of heavy guitars. What set "OK Computer" apart from every other Radiohead album is that it brought about an overall theme through Yorke's vocals--slow, quiet desperation at an over-materialistic world where work was literally killing you. But "Kid A" is entirely different, smoothed with techno groves that would make you think of Aphex Twin or Kraftwork, then covered with a sheet of Pink Floyd. But with the slow, almost sometimes quiet mood of the songs, Yorke and crew give you an entirely new message on this album--Surrender. The angst of "OK Computer" is gone forever, replaced with a sense of slow decay, not giving a damn about the world anymore. Songs like "Everything in it's Right Place," gives you a good example, with simple electronic keyboards driving a continous note with little pause; Yorke's fractured vocals, saying "Everything...Everything...Everything..." cry out in muted sadness continuously, interupted by a record stopping and going, leaving him to sing out of tune terribly. The next song--the title track--with its simple, lonely lullabyish keys, sounds like one thinking of their childhood, yearning for a long-gone innocence when things weren't so clear I have to agree that "Optimistic" is the most up-front and radio-friendly track on this album, since all the other songs are too sonically different and by far out of place on modern-rock radio. But in my opinion, "Kid A"'s best achievement is "How to Disappear Completely." I don't know how to decribe it, other than it's brilliant! Yorke's lonely vocals set back against an accoustic guitar and eerie keyboards can make anyone's hair stand up. The song also fits into much of the album's artwork, where a faintly drawn scene of a post-apocolyptic office hallway shows, covered with icey cave-like stalagmites. It's the complete opposite of "OK Computer." Instead of the imagery of endless, inhuman, windowless cubicles, circled by a world where people work and live like corporate drones, we have a place where everything has come to pass. The companies are gone, the workers have disappeared, and the world that they used to inhabit is decaying. "This isn't happening," Yorke sings chillingly Of all the descriptions of this album, it can be quickly summed up as an album that breaks the commercial barriers of pop and returns it to anti-pop. Instead of 'N Sync dancing around with plastic smiles or Limp Bizkit moshing and being angry about nothing, Radiohead is a group with purpose, bringing fans with them on a journey where neither knows where it's going.
"Kid A" is beyond anything likely to be heard for years... June 14, 2002 87 out of 102 found this review helpful
IF YOU THOUGHT "KID A" WAS AMZINGLY BRILLIANT, CLICK "YES" ON THE "HELPFUL?" THINGY BELOW. IF NOT, THEN CLICK "NO". LET'S TALLY UP THEM VOTES FOR THE GREATEST ALBUM TO HIT SOCIETY IN YEARS!!!
Let's cut the crap... October 8, 2000 74 out of 133 found this review helpful
Bottom line: This is an experimental album with no actual "songs" in the traditional sense. There are very few melodies (when there are even vocals), mostly just out-of-key muttering. The "horn-section" of which people are writing is maybe 20 brass/woodwind instruments droning in different keys and time-signatures for about three minutes. So why do people like it? My guess is below.The reviews must be very confusing to someone who has not heard this album. For the most part it is either a five star rating or a one star - "Unbelievable!" or "The Worst Album Ever." I think this is easily sorted out. On several of the positive reviews you will read things like, "I've always been a Radiohead fan - forever. I still don't know what to think of Kid A, but I gave it five stars anyway..." Translation: "Having always been a Radiohead fan, I'm too embarrassed/scared to go along with my common sense and agree that this album is absolute drivel." You might also read, "It's not like anything else out there!" Granted. But that doesn't make it good or even listenable. 49 minutes of a cat screeching is unlike anything out there, but I wouldn't pay 13 bucks for it (again). Lastly, you will read, "If you jumped on the bandwagon with Ok Computer, don't even go near this one..." Translation: "You just wouldn't 'get it' like us real fans would. We're alternative, nobody understands us, etc., etc., etc. We haven't even taken the trouble or the time to decide if we actually like it, we just assumed we would and gave it five stars. Meanwhile, we'll just smile condescendingly and wink at each other as we watch the neophytes struggle with it." Let's be honest - if an unknown band released this album you would think it was a joke -literally, a joke. But Radiohead does it and it's considered genius. It's one of those albums.
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