Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak
Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak

Radiohead - Amnesiac CD Collector's Edition 2xCd Digipak

Secondhand 1 available
R500.00
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Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Bob Shop ID
650651928

Genre: Pop/Rock

Styles: Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, Indie Electronic, Experimental Rock

Amnesiac (Collector's Edition)

CD! - Original album

CD2 - Extra and Live tracks

Tracks 9-14 recorded live at Canal+ Studios 28 - 04 - 01

Track 15 taken from 'I Might Be Wrong - Live Recordings'

Comes in a tri-fold (6-panel) digipak picture sleeve complete with an 28-page picture booklet.

AllMusic Review

Amnesiac Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Faced with a deliberately difficult deviation into "experimentation," Radiohead and their record label promoted Kid A as just that -- a brave experiment, and that the next album, which was just around the corner, really, would be the "real" record, the one to satiate fans looking for the next OK Computer, or at least guitars. At the time, people bought the myth, especially since live favorites like "Knives Out" and "You and Whose Army?" were nowhere to be seen on Kid A. That, however, ignores a salient point -- Amnesiac, as the album came to be known, consists of recordings made during the Kid A sessions, so it essentially sounds the same. Since Radiohead designed Kid A as a self-consciously epochal, genre-shattering record, the songs that didn't make the cut were a little simpler, so it shouldn't be a surprise that Amnesiac plays like a streamlined version of Kid A, complete with blatant electronica moves and production that sacrifices songs for atmosphere. This, inevitably, will disappoint the legions awaiting another guitar-based record (that is, after all, what they were explicitly promised), but what were they expecting? This is an album recorded at the same time and Radiohead have a certain reputation to uphold. It would be easier to accept this if the record was better than it is. Where Kid A had shock on its side, along with an admirably dogged desire to not be conventional, Amnesiac often plays as a hodgepodge. True, it's a hodgepodge with amazing moments: the hypnotic sway of "Pyramid Song" and "You and Whose Army?," the swirling "I Might Be Wrong," "Knives Out," and the spectacular closer "Life in a Glasshouse," complete with a drunkenly swooning brass band. But, these are not moments that are markedly different than Kid A, which itself lost momentum as it sputtered to a close. And this is the main problem -- though it's nice for an artist to be generous and release two albums, these two records clearly derive from the same source and have the same flaws, which clearly would have been corrected if they had been consolidated into one record. Instead of revealing why the two records were separated, the appearance of Amnesiac makes the separation seem arbitrary -- there's no shift in tone, no shift in approach, and the division only makes the two records seem unfocused, even if the best of both records is quite stunning, proof positive that Radiohead are one of the best bands of their time.

5099969710322

Parlophone, 2009

Country: EUROPE

Good condition; cardboard cover slightly shelf-worn

C09


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