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alternative  alternative rock  experimental  music  radiohead  

Amnesiac

Amnesiac

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Artist: Radiohead
Label: Capitol
Category: Music

List Price: $7.96
Buy Used: $1.97
as of 9/4/2010 11:37 CDT details
You Save: $5.99 (75%)

Qty 9 In Stock


New (53) Used (75) from $1.97

Seller: ZoverstocksUSA
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 853 reviews
Sales Rank: 6287

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 5 x 0.4

UPC: 724353276423
EAN: 0724353276423
ASIN: B00005B4GU

Publication Date: 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Tracks:

  • Packt like sardines in a crushd tin box
  • Pyramid song
  • Pulk/pull revolving doors
  • You and whose army?
  • I might be wrong
  • Knives out
  • Amnesiac/Morning bell
  • Dollars & cents
  • Hunting bears
  • Like spinning plates
  • Life in a glass house

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com's Best of 2001
More song-driven and acoustic than Kid A, Radiohead's Amnesiac isn't quite "Kid B," but it is unquestionably cut from the same far-out cloth, as the band revels in fascinating quirks and abject nihilism. It's also the first time in Radiohead's career that a new record hasn't meant a complete shift in artistic priorities. Surely, however, regardless of which was released first, they both deserve recognition; after all, Amnesiac, like Kid A, is an amazing piece of work.

Only lightly augmented with electronics, songs like "You and Whose Army?" and "I Might Be Wrong" almost sound like they came from a typical five-piece rock band. You may even believe the band still employs a guitarist after hearing Jonny Greenwood's wistful surf-guitar lead on "Knives Out" or his subtle but noticeable contributions to the anticapitalist rant "Dollars and Cents." But inevitably, the band continually shifts gears, moving into Boards of Canada territory on "Like Spinning Plates" and delivering dark, bass-laden oddities like "Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors," a fuzzed-out piece of avant-garde techno that could just as easily be on an Autechre or Aphex Twin record. The song's half-sung, half-spoken vocal was laid down by either a heavily distorted Thom Yorke or, just perhaps, a loquacious microwave oven. Either way, the music always has momentum, regardless of whether propelled by man or appliance. Radiohead as a band understand how to make rock interesting again, and in the end, that's all they set out to do when they recorded Amnesiac, as well as Kid A. It's more than can be said for the bad frat-punk, teen-pop and soulless techno that currently rules the charts, and for that alone, Radiohead's astonishing exploration of 21st-century anguish deserves credit. --Matthew Cooke

Radiohead Photos

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Album Description
2 CD + DVD pressing.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 250
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...50Next »



3 out of 5 stars I'm a reasonable man, get off my case.   March 10, 2010
Tim Brough (Springfield, PA United States)
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

In a rare moment of album to album consistency, Radiohead loosed "Amnesiac" a mere year after the head-turning electronica of "Kid A." And like that previous album, Thom Yorke just sucked upon that lemon until his sour view of the world oozed up from the meditative piano and synthesized songs laid forth. This time, though, things seem more traditionally based in song structures. Both "Knives Out" and the opening "Packt Like Sardines In A Crushd Tin Box" almost feel like the Abacab structures. I did say almost.

And again, like "Kid A," "Amnesia" struggles to maintain the level of quality before ultimately puttering out. "Hunting Bears" is the biggest offender here, although it seemed to be included just to give guitarist Johnny Greenwood a chance to finally play. All is forgiven by the delirious brass band that closes out "Life In A Glass House." The horns that careened drunkenly on "Kid A's" "National Anthem" have sobered up enough to deliver an emotional wallop as Radiohead's dual-album experiment draws to a conclusion. In another two years, Yorke would return the guitars to the front of the band with "Hail To The Thief," and return Radiohead to rock and roll.



5 out of 5 stars Good   October 12, 2009
Mitchell L. Binns
0 out of 5 found this review helpful

I hate that amazon hounds you until you review your purchase. How hard is a CD transaction?


3 out of 5 stars Radiohead's own Zooropa   August 19, 2009
John Carswell (Franklin, TN)
3 out of 5 found this review helpful

Radiohead
Amnesiac; 2001
Capitol Records

My Rating: 61/100

Radiohead's own ZOOROPA...

Here we have Radiohead's own ZOOROPA, wherein the band has already changed the game and convinced millions that they will, in fact, love the left turn that the band has taken. So where to next? More of the same with a few twists. And while AMNESIAC is not a bad record, it's not a great one either. I'll dispense with my gripes first. "Amnesiac/Morning Bell" is unnecessary. The b-sides associated with the album prove that the band had plenty more tricks up its sleeve, and "Fog" or even the as-yet-unreleased "Follow Me Around," might have fit nicely in its place. Also, "Hunting Bears" feels like a throwaway, experimental to a pretentious extreme. Lastly, the production on some tracks is a bit too muffled, although I suppose this was somewhat intentional, given the extreme claustrophobia that forms the thematic center of this record. So now that I've got that out of my system, let's talk about what's good and even great. Good: the straightforward "Knives Out", the darkly hilarious "Packt", the twisted Dixieland jazz on "Life in a Glass House." Great: the lucid dreamscapes of "Pyramid Song" (a definite career highlight), the hardcore electronica of "Pulk", the avant-psalm "Like Spinning Plates." Although AMNESIAC isn't Radiohead's best album by any means, it nonetheless makes for a fantastic experience every once in a while. Recommended for any and all fans of experimental sounds, and, for that matter, Radiohead.

Cohesion (4.5/5)
Concept (4/5)
Consequence (4/5)
Consistency (3/5)

Tracks:

1. Packt like sardines in a crushed tin box (4/5)
2. Pyramid Song (5/5)
3. Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors (5/5)
4. You and Whose Army (3.5/5)
5. I Might Be Wrong (4/5)
6. Knives Out (4/5)
7. Amnesiac/Morning Bell (2.5/5)
8. Dollars & Cents (4/5)
9. Hunting Bears (2/5)
10. Like Spinning Plates (5/5)
11. Life in a Glass House (4/5)



5 out of 5 stars Try something new...   August 14, 2009
Louis Tremblay (Miami, FL United States)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This album was made for the die-hard fans of Radiohead... very creative, original and well-made...


4 out of 5 stars Worth the money for the limited edition book   July 16, 2009
Kevin Shipp (Bay Area, CA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Amnesiac's limited Red Library Book edition is a treat. Larger prints of the fantastic artwork, with more pages not to be found elsewhere make this worth spending the extra money if you like unique and collectable packages as I do.
When I bought Kid A in the winter of 2000, I was curious as to where this band would choose to go afterward; Radiohead has shown more maturity and creative bravery with every release, and it would be difficult for a band to keep a fanbase that expects regurgitation of familiar formulas. It would also be difficult to recruit more musically diverse and critical fans that may dismiss Radiohead as a Brit-grunge rock band that just released Kid A as a one-time indulgence, soon to return to regurgitating familiar formulas. Amnesiac was a very wise choice - rather than releasing an EP and a series of single/B-sides, they chose to let these songs breathe on a release that, though recorded in the same sessions as Kid A and "related" to those songs, stands very much on it's own artistic merit. Though I am not a fan of anything Radiohead did afterward, Amnesiac is really a great and logical transition between Kid A and where they went with Hail to the Thief. It absolutely stands alone from Kid A but is respectfully symbiotic to it.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 250
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Qty 9 In Stock


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