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OK Computer (Music)

 OK Computer (Music)
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 OK Computer (Music)
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OK Computer (Music)
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OKComputer
 OK Computer (Music)
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OK Computer is the third album released by Alternative Rock band Radiohead, released in Japan on 21 May 1997 through EMI & Parlophone Records and in the UK 26 days later through Parlophone alone. Like previous albums, the US release was handled by Capitol Records. Upon its release, the album reached number one in the UK and number 21 in the US, becoming Radiohead's international Breakthrough Hit.The band recorded OK Computer with the intent of presenting a less introspective sound than what they'd done on their previous album The Bends, exchanging its personal lyricism and downbeat melodies for a more aggressive, sociopolitical approach. OK Computer initiated a shift away from the popular Britpop genre of the time to the more melancholic, atmospheric style of alternative rock. This new sound would be prevalent in the next decade (corroborated by the fact that it released just a few months before Oasis' Be Here Now, widely considered the Genre-Killer for Britpop), and also initiate the band's shift away from their original guitar-heavy approach and into the more experimental territory of their later work.The album's lyrics and artwork emphasize Radiohead's views on rampant consumerism, social alienation, emotional isolation, and political malaise; in this capacity, OK Computer is often interpreted as having prescient insight into the mood of 21st century life. In that sense, the album is often considered a Spiritual Successor to Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon. While Radiohead detested such comparisons, they similarly felt a strong sense of Artist Disillusionment that would result from the album's success, resulting in the even more experimental electronica and jazz directions of their next two albums.In 2017, the band commemorated the 20th anniversary of OK Computer with OKNOTOK, an expanded and remastered re-release containing both the original 1997 album and an additional disc of bonus material, namely the B-sides for its associated singles plus the previously unreleased songs "I Promise", "Man of War", and "Lift", which themselves were released as singles with their own music videos to promote the re-release.On a final note, the album's world tour — and more specifically the band's growing ennui and burnout from their newfound superstardom — became the subject of the rockumentary Meeting People is Easy, directed and filmed by Grant Gee, who also directed the video for "No Surprises".OK Computer was supported by four singles: "Paranoid Android", "Karma Police", "Lucky", and "No Surprises", all of which were radio hits.
 OK Computer (Music)
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2023-07-21T04:29:15Z
 OK Computer (Music)
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2023-07-21T04:29:15Z
 OK Computer (Music)
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_22093e9b
type
New Sound Album
 OK Computer (Music) / int_22093e9b
comment
New Sound Album: The album took the spacey but driving style of alt-rock the band had introduced on The Bends, and proceeded to take it up to eleven with additional Progressive Rock elements, more intricate production, and more elements drawn from other genres.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_22093e9b
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_22093e9b
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 OK Computer (Music)
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OK Computer (Music) / int_22093e9b
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2562da69
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Great Escape
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2562da69
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Great Escape: "Exit Music (For a Film)" describes one inspired by Romeo and Juliet (having originally been featured in the 1996 film adaptation), describing what would've happened if they tried to escape the morning after consummating their marriage.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2562da69
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OK Computer (Music) / int_2562da69
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2588feac
type
Winged Humanoid
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2588feac
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Winged Humanoid: "Let Down:"
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2588feac
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OK Computer (Music) / int_2588feac
 OK Computer (Music) / int_29a39f6
type
Easter Egg
 OK Computer (Music) / int_29a39f6
comment
Easter Egg: The CD release has some text hidden on the inner tray art, on the inner right edge, which reads as follows: The deluxe edition release of OKNOTOK features a cassette mixtape that starts with "Zx Spectrum Symphony", a track that appears to be incoherent electronic gibberish. However, putting the tape into a ZX Spectrum computer (or a ZX Spectrum emulator) and running it grants access to a hidden message from the band.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_29a39f6
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 OK Computer (Music)
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OK Computer (Music) / int_29a39f6
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2bd2b7b8
type
List Song
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2bd2b7b8
comment
List Song: "Fitter Happier", which has a robotic monotone voice listing off phrases and imagery tied together subliminally by the theme of the cold and commonplace ethos of society.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2bd2b7b8
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OK Computer (Music) / int_2bd2b7b8
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2de495bb
type
Missing Child
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2de495bb
comment
Missing Child: A couple lines in "Fitter Happier": The phrase "Lost child" is visible on the album cover above the blue-orange figure.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_2de495bb
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OK Computer (Music) / int_2de495bb
 OK Computer (Music) / int_34f6774c
type
Concept Album
 OK Computer (Music) / int_34f6774c
comment
Concept Album: Although the band denies it, in the minds of the fans the album qualifies, due most of its songs addressing the future of technology and capitalist society on the eve of the 21th century.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_34f6774c
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 OK Computer (Music)
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OK Computer (Music) / int_34f6774c
 OK Computer (Music) / int_356e26da
type
Good Hair, Evil Hair
 OK Computer (Music) / int_356e26da
comment
Good Hair, Evil Hair: "Karma Police":
 OK Computer (Music) / int_356e26da
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_356e26da
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OK Computer (Music) / int_356e26da
 OK Computer (Music) / int_36e63b81
type
Rule of Cool
 OK Computer (Music) / int_36e63b81
comment
Rule of Cool: According to Thom Yorke, the line "kill me, Sarah" in "Lucky" was included simply because he thought "Sarah" was a neat name.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_36e63b81
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_36e63b81
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OK Computer (Music) / int_36e63b81
 OK Computer (Music) / int_38da8916
type
Uncommon Time
 OK Computer (Music) / int_38da8916
comment
Uncommon Time: "Paranoid Android" has some bars in 7/4. "The Tourist" alternates between 9/8 and 10/8. "Let Down" has a guitar part in 5/4 with the rest of the instrumentals in 4/4.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_38da8916
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OK Computer (Music) / int_38da8916
 OK Computer (Music) / int_3ec82b29
type
Chiptune
 OK Computer (Music) / int_3ec82b29
comment
Chiptune: "Let Down" closes out with a twinkling melody composed on a ZX Spectrum.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_3ec82b29
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_3ec82b29
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 OK Computer (Music)
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OK Computer (Music) / int_3ec82b29
 OK Computer (Music) / int_40cc0c7e
type
Bittersweet Ending
 OK Computer (Music) / int_40cc0c7e
comment
Bittersweet Ending: Ends with the one-two invokedTear Jerker punch of "Lucky" and "The Tourist", which provide a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel and resolve the tension and fear that pervade the rest of the album.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_40cc0c7e
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 OK Computer (Music)
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OK Computer (Music) / int_40cc0c7e
 OK Computer (Music) / int_453871ec
type
What Could Have Been
 OK Computer (Music) / int_453871ec
comment
What Could Have Been: In-Universe; "Exit Music" was built around an idea that Thom got when he watched the 1968 Franco Zeffirelli adaptation of Romeo and Juliet at the age of 13: What would've happened if Romeo and Juliet escaped the morning after they consummated their marriage?
 OK Computer (Music) / int_453871ec
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_453871ec
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OK Computer (Music) / int_453871ec
 OK Computer (Music) / int_4b1ca7d2
type
Genre Roulette
 OK Computer (Music) / int_4b1ca7d2
comment
Genre Roulette: While the album as a whole is Alternative Rock, the exact style of it shifts from song to song, including the straighter style of "Airbag", "Subterranean Homesick Alien", "Lucky", and "The Tourist", the aggressive, Progressive Rock-esque "Paranoid Android" and "Climbing Up the Walls", the acoustic "Exit Music (For a Film)", the Beatles and Beach Boys pastiches of "Karma Police" & "No Surprises" (respectively), the Laurie Anderson-esque Avant-Garde Music of "Fitter Happier", and the Punk Rock of "Electioneering".
 OK Computer (Music) / int_4b1ca7d2
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OK Computer (Music) / int_4b1ca7d2
 OK Computer (Music) / int_4d440389
type
Idealist vs. Pragmatist
 OK Computer (Music) / int_4d440389
comment
Idealist vs. Pragmatist: Invoked on "Fitter Happier"
 OK Computer (Music) / int_4d440389
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OK Computer (Music) / int_4d440389
 OK Computer (Music) / int_50b05d30
type
Disproportionate Retribution
 OK Computer (Music) / int_50b05d30
comment
Disproportionate Retribution: The narrator of "Karma Police" asks for the titular police to arrest a couple for the most trivial reasons, only to come to their senses when they realise that they too are not immune from karma.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_50b05d30
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OK Computer (Music) / int_50b05d30
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: OK Computer (possibly) begins and ends with a car crash; "The Tourist", which closes the album, can be interpreted as describing the leadup to it from the perspective of a bystander, and "Airbag", which opens the album, describes the driver's celebration after surviving the crash.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5313c266
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_5313c266
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OK Computer (Music) / int_5313c266
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5521ed05
type
No Animals Were Harmed
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5521ed05
comment
No Animals Were Harmed: "Fitter Happier": Which is subverted at the end with a reference to factory farming:
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5521ed05
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_5521ed05
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OK Computer (Music) / int_5521ed05
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5b2e1e5e
type
Fake-Out Fade-Out
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5b2e1e5e
comment
Fake-Out Fade-Out: "Electioneering" briefly slows down to a stop near the end, as if the song's ending, only to suddenly pick back up again for the real outro.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_5b2e1e5e
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OK Computer (Music) / int_5b2e1e5e
 OK Computer (Music) / int_6053dc28
type
Record Producer
 OK Computer (Music) / int_6053dc28
comment
Record Producer: Nigel Godrich. This the first album where the band worked with him as their producer (after he had engineered The Bends), and since then he has produced all their albums.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_6053dc28
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_6053dc28
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OK Computer (Music) / int_6053dc28
 OK Computer (Music) / int_67784113
type
Non-Appearing Title
 OK Computer (Music) / int_67784113
comment
Non-Appearing Title: "Subterranean Homesick Alien", "Exit Music (For A Film)", "Lucky", "The Tourist"
 OK Computer (Music) / int_67784113
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_67784113
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OK Computer (Music) / int_67784113
 OK Computer (Music) / int_68df9a56
type
OverCrank
 OK Computer (Music) / int_68df9a56
comment
Over Crank: Thom Yorke in the music video of "No Surprises", wearing a dome over his head like an astronaut, which is being filled with water. When it is completely full, Thom goes completely limp and motionless. For almost a full minute. Then the dome drains out and Thom appears to be quite distressed (sucking in great lungfuls of air), and also quite relieved, laughing as he lip-syncs the last of the lyrics. He was never in any actual danger— they Over Cranked the film in order to make it appear he was motionless. He actually only had to hold his breath for a few seconds. The kicker? The video took several takes to film, and each time Thom grew more and more stressed out and agitated at how long it was taking, as documented in Meeting People is Easy. Horribly, eye-wateringly claustrophobic.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_68df9a56
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OK Computer (Music) / int_68df9a56
 OK Computer (Music) / int_6dc7d2c
type
Fake Loud
 OK Computer (Music) / int_6dc7d2c
comment
Fake Loud: "Climbing Up the Walls" consists of two vocal tracks of Thom layered over each other. The one that's mixed lower is clipped and distorted in this manner, but it's actually much quieter than the Thom's other vocal track, which is more clean and melodic.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_6dc7d2c
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OK Computer (Music) / int_6dc7d2c
 OK Computer (Music) / int_74149c93
type
Epic Rocking
 OK Computer (Music) / int_74149c93
comment
Epic Rocking: "Paranoid Android" is over 6 minutes long.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_74149c93
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OK Computer (Music) / int_74149c93
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7d276626
type
Siamese Twin Songs
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7d276626
comment
Siamese Twin Songs: "Airbag" segues into "Paranoid Android." "Fitter Happier" is basically an extended spoken-word outro to "Karma Police".
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7d276626
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_7d276626
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OK Computer (Music) / int_7d276626
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7d89315b
type
"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7d89315b
comment
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: One possible interpretation of "Exit Music"— taking its roots in Romeo and Juliet into consideration— depicts it as one from Romeo and Juliet to either their parents or Friar Laurence, all of whom are integral to the couple's demise.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7d89315b
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OK Computer (Music) / int_7d89315b
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7e6c0522
type
Off with His Head!
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7e6c0522
comment
Off with His Head!: Literally sung in "Paranoid Android":
 OK Computer (Music) / int_7e6c0522
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OK Computer (Music) / int_7e6c0522
 OK Computer (Music) / int_808cbaeb
type
Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking
 OK Computer (Music) / int_808cbaeb
comment
Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: From "Paranoid Android":
 OK Computer (Music) / int_808cbaeb
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OK Computer (Music) / int_808cbaeb
 OK Computer (Music) / int_83535879
type
Tall Poppy Syndrome
 OK Computer (Music) / int_83535879
comment
Tall Poppy Syndrome: "Paranoid Android":
 OK Computer (Music) / int_83535879
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OK Computer (Music) / int_83535879
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8657c5
type
Rhyming Title
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8657c5
comment
Rhyming Title: "Paranoid Android".
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8657c5
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_8657c5
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OK Computer (Music) / int_8657c5
 OK Computer (Music) / int_88472ef3
type
Desperately Looking for a Purpose in Life
 OK Computer (Music) / int_88472ef3
comment
Desperately Looking for a Purpose in Life: The narrator of "Subterranean Homesick Alien" describes himself as such, to the point where he fantasizes about being abducted by aliens because he thinks it'll give him some sense of closure in his search.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_88472ef3
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_88472ef3
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OK Computer (Music) / int_88472ef3
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8a24c94e
type
Studio Chatter
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8a24c94e
comment
Studio Chatter: "Climbing Up the Walls" contains clips of what is apparently studio chatter pitch-shifted and buried among the insect noises and violins. The song must be slowed down before it can even be noticed at all, and even then it's hard to make out what is being said (it seems to be: "We're playing... Ready?" though it also sounds rather like "Amazing... Amazing").
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8a24c94e
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OK Computer (Music) / int_8a24c94e
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8c00118f
type
Spoken Word in Music
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8c00118f
comment
Spoken Word in Music: "Fitter Happier", which features a computer voice saying all the lines.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_8c00118f
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OK Computer (Music) / int_8c00118f
 OK Computer (Music) / int_90e31482
type
Laser-Guided Karma
 OK Computer (Music) / int_90e31482
comment
Laser-Guided Karma: "Karma Police" revolves around a man attempting to inflict this on others via the titular organization, eventually realizing that he too is suspect to their wrath.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_90e31482
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_90e31482
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OK Computer (Music) / int_90e31482
 OK Computer (Music) / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 OK Computer (Music) / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: The chorus of "Paranoid Android" contains a quiet Machine Monotone muttering the line "I may be paranoid, but not an android", which leads to the track "Fitter Happier", which has the same Machine Monotone voice front and center (albeit reading off a different series of lines throughout the piece).
 OK Computer (Music) / int_9d12bbc1
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OK Computer (Music) / int_9d12bbc1
 OK Computer (Music) / int_9da3227a
type
Careful with That Axe
 OK Computer (Music) / int_9da3227a
comment
Careful with That Axe: Thom's unsettling distorted shriek at the end of "Climbing Up the Walls".
 OK Computer (Music) / int_9da3227a
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_9da3227a
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OK Computer (Music) / int_9da3227a
 OK Computer (Music) / int_a05522e3
type
Alien Abduction
 OK Computer (Music) / int_a05522e3
comment
Alien Abduction: The narrator of "Subterranean Homesick Alien" fantasizes about being subjected to this, thinking that it'll give him closure in his search for a purpose in life.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_a05522e3
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 OK Computer (Music) / int_a05522e3
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OK Computer (Music) / int_a05522e3
 OK Computer (Music) / int_a4c37cbe
type
Mood Whiplash
 OK Computer (Music) / int_a4c37cbe
comment
Mood Whiplash: Used frequently. The aforementioned shifts in "Paranoid Android" and the transition from "Karma Police" to "Fitter Happier" may be the strongest examples.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_a4c37cbe
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OK Computer (Music) / int_a4c37cbe
 OK Computer (Music) / int_ac4ac8e5
type
Idiosyncratic Episode Naming
 OK Computer (Music) / int_ac4ac8e5
comment
Idiosyncratic Episode Naming: The 1997 double-LP release of the album names each of the four sides after the first line of the children's counting rhyme "Eeny Meeny Miney Mo." For the 20th anniversary OKNOTOK expanded release, which includes an additional disc of bonus material, the rhyme is changed to reference Ip Dip, a similar counting rhyme only widely used in the UK.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_ac4ac8e5
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OK Computer (Music) / int_ac4ac8e5
 OK Computer (Music) / int_b067ddfe
type
Animated Music Video
 OK Computer (Music) / int_b067ddfe
comment
Animated Music Video: "Paranoid Android", courtesy of Swedish animator Magnus Carlsson, who reused characters and settings from his TV series Robin. Radiohead were fans of the show, finding the title character resonant with their own situation, and commissioned Carlsson because of that.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_b067ddfe
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OK Computer (Music) / int_b067ddfe
 OK Computer (Music) / int_b13573b7
type
Machine Monotone
 OK Computer (Music) / int_b13573b7
comment
Machine Monotone: "Paranoid Android" and "Fitter Happier" feature one, both courtesy of the "Fred" voice from MacinTalk 3 Pro.
 OK Computer (Music) / int_b13573b7
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The Future Will Be Better
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The Future Will Be Better: The song "No Surprises" semi-ironically evokes this trope. The protagonist wants to have no surprises anymore in his life, which seems to indicate he might be Driven to Suicide.
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Take That!
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Take That!: The line "Kicking screaming Gucci little piggy" in "Paranoid Android" has been interpreted by some people as a shot at the Spice Girls. The actual story behind the line is that Thom had a very unpleasant encounter in a Los Angeles bar, where a woman reacted violently after somebody spilled a drink on her. There are more straightforward shots fired at the capitalist corporate lifestyle of the West in "Paranoid Android", "Fitter Happier", "No Surprises", and "Let Down" ("disappointed people clinging onto bottles" references another event where Thom was in a bar and suddenly wondered what would happen if the floor would collapse). The credits include a piss-take at their record label with the line "lyrics reproduced by kind permission even though we wrote them."
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Last Note Nightmare
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Last Note Nightmare: "Karma Police". As the rather mellow melody of the song fades out at the end, some very dissonant feedback fades in... Which is in turn followed by a nice closing piano chord. Then again, it is Radiohead; this sort of thing is to be expected. "Fitter Happier" closes with a synthesized downward whoosh as the narrator's monologue closes with its darkest lines, giving the impression of the song and the setting it paints as collapsing in on themselves. "Climbing Up the Walls" is scary enough already, considering it deals with insanity and paranoia, but as its climactic ending fades out, 16 violins are left playing notes separated by quarters. It can leave you thinking "Wait, how long were they there?!"
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Shout-Out
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Shout-Out: The title of "Subterranean Homesick Alien" to Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" from Bringing It All Back Home. At least two to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: the album title comes from Zaphod's line "okay, computer, I want full manual control now" from the 1978 radio series, while the song "Paranoid Android" derives its own title from the character Marvin the Paranoid Android. A possible third one is the line "When I am king, you will be first against the wall," also from "Paranoid Android." A joke in several different versions of the Hitchhiker's Guide concerned the marketing department of the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation (creators of Marvin, incidentally), whom the eponymous Guide described as "a bunch of mindless jerks who'll be the first against the wall when the revolution comes." Later, a copy of the Encyclopaedia Galactica that "had the good fortune to fall through a time warp from a thousand years in the future" described the same marketing department as "a bunch of mindless jerks who were the first against the wall when the revolution came." The beeps that mark the transition between "Airbag" and "Paranoid Android" are sampled from BBC radio, where they're used to mark the last seconds before a new hour starts. The music video for "Paranoid Android" is set in the universe of the Swedish-Canadian animated series Robin, starring the show's own main characters (the titular Robin and his friend Benjamin), courtesy of series creator Magnus Carlsson. The technique at the end of "Let Down" where two vocal tracks singing different lyrics and counter-melodies overlap is a nod to R.E.M., one of Radiohead's influences, who frequently used this trick on their 80's albums (albeit with multiple band members singing at once rather than using overdubs). Radiohead previously supported R.E.M. during their tour for Monster and wrote "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" as a musical homage to them. The "businessman and average Joe shaking hands" emblem that appears on the disc label and in the liner notes is a visible nod to the cover art of Wish You Were Here (1975); the back cover for the CD2 version of the "Paranoid Android" single also features a pig in the vein of Animals. Incidentally, Radiohead would later grow irate from the number of critics comparing OK Computer to Pink Floyd.
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Cloudcuckoolander
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Cloudcuckoolander: Spun in a dark way: insanity and paranoia are major themes on this album.
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One-Word Title
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One-Word Title: "Airbag" and "Lucky".
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Lyrical Dissonance
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Lyrical Dissonance: "Karma Police" contrasts a brooding, minor-key melody and doomy sound with lyrics that the band states are meant to be comedic. "No Surprises" contrasts a lullaby-like melody and comforting instrumentation with bluntly frank lyrics about the crushing sense of apathy and ennui that result from depression and burnout.
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Progressive Rock
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Progressive Rock: While not an example of the genre in the traditional sense, influences from it are rife in the album's complex, classical & jazz-inspired composition and instrumentation, abstract lyricism, and use of overarching themes; many analysts at the time in fact directly compared the album to The Dark Side of the Moon. Radiohead themselves opposed both the "progressive rock" label and the Pink Floyd comparisons, but nevertheless they persisted, and the band's work both here and on later albums are frequently listed as examples of crossover prog.
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Light Is Not Good
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Light Is Not Good: The abundance of white and otherwise bright colors on the cover and throughout the liner notes are designed to look dissonant and unsettling rather than reassuring, with Stanley Donwood describing the front cover in particular as his attempt at approximating the appearance of bleached bone.
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Self-Backing Vocalist
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Self-Backing Vocalist: Two different vocal tracks by Thom play simultaneously in the last verse of "Let Down".
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The Oner
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The Oner: The music video of "No Surprises" shows Thom Yorke shot in one long continuous take. The continuous 57 seconds in which Thom Yorke is submerged was done by speeding up the track Thom is miming to as his face becomes totally submerged, then editing the footage to slow it down for the full minute. The making of this video is featured in the band's documentary Meeting People is Easy, which shows Thom's frustrations with being unable to do the shot correctly for several takes.
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1-Dimensional Thinking
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1-Dimensional Thinking: The unseen driver in the "Karma Police" video never attempts to drive to the side to avoid the rapidly-advancing fire at the end of the video, instead continuing to reverse directly backwards in vain.
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Creepy Monotone
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Creepy Monotone: "Fitter Happier", used to show the disconnect between corporate advice and the people who follow it.
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In the Style of
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In the Style of: "Happiness is a Warm Gun" by The Beatles from The White Album, Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" from A Night at the Opera and Miles Davis' Bitches Brew were cited as influences for the multi-part structure of "Paranoid Android." Further Beatles influences appear in "Karma Police", whose main piano melody is reminiscent of "Sexy Sadie" from The White Album. The band admitted the drums on "Airbag" were recorded as an attempt to imitate the drum programming of DJ Shadow's Endtroducing...... Similarly, the band confirmed that "No Surprises" was written as a pastiche of The Beach Boys, specifically of Pet Sounds.
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Sanity Slippage Song
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Sanity Slippage Song: "Climbing Up the Walls" was based on Thom Yorke's time working in a mental ward, and the lyrics reflect this.
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Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick
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Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: Recurs in "Fitter Happier", making the already creepy song even creepier.
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Fading into the Next Song
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Fading into the Next Song: The beeps at the end of "Airbag" set the tempo for "Paranoid Android". The end of "Exit Music (For a Film)" segues into the start of "Let Down". The sirens at the end of "Karma Police" trail off into "Fitter Happier", which then fades into "Electioneering". As the former two are separated on the double-LP release, the sound of a radio shutting off at the end of "Karma Police" instead serves to signal the end of the Meeny/Skip side.
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Product Placement
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Product Placement: "Paranoid Android" sardonically dubs the song's target a "kicking and squealing Gucci little piggy."
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Together in Death
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Together in Death: A line near the end of "Exit Music (For a Film)" that is arguably the most explicit representation of Romeo and Juliet's influence on the song.
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

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B-Side / int_89869bb2
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Breather Episode / int_89869bb2
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