Thom Yorke: no more free Radiohead albums
When Radiohead have their fans download In Rainbows for free close year, many commentators declared that the band's decision could potentially reinvent the music industry. However, for future releases they testament believably un-reinvent it, as Thom Yorke has admitted."I think it was a one-off response to a particular office," Yorke told the Hollywood Newsperson this week. "It was unity of those things where everyone was request us what we were loss to do."
Is that wholly it takes for Yorke and his bandmates to turn the industry model on its head? That everyone merely ask them: "What are you loss to do?"Spell the band's determination was non the earth-shattering rotation that more or less pundits described it as, it has for certain left an impression on the industry. We have since seen similar experiments by Ennead In Nails and the Charlatans, not to mention a raft of near-instant album releases by the Raconteurs and Gnarls Barkley. And, of course, Coldplay's newly vocal, Violet Hill, was released this week as a free download.Nonetheless, it now seems that Yorke would rather put the djinny back in the bottle, releasing Radiohead's time to come albums in the oil production, traditional way. "I don't cogitate it would have the saami import now, if we choose to render something aside once more. It was a import in time," he said.
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They surely wouldn't win as many headlines. Perchance Radiohead were more interested in having their discover in the history books, disdain Yorke's anti-celebrity stance?
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