I thought it's actually just the crowd being muted by a gate to avoid it feeding into the microphone. You can notice it, that the cheer is only audible for tiny amount of time after his voice passes through (opening the gate).
homeboy has that technique down.. He'd did this 20 years ago on Kid A/ Amnesiac tour. It was in a loud track when the sound drops out. Here we see him use it in more in a type of subtle layering. Yorke is the kind of artist who can just keep reaching into his bag-of-tricks and reinventing what he's capable of. I love this song as much as what they were doing 20years ago. There's not too many bands one can say that about nowadays
check out "Idioteque" on the live album "I Might Be Wrong". I remember having a psychedelic experience while not on drugs experiencing Radiohead do that track live. You can't really hear how loudly you're cheering and everyone else around you in the moment. Because the music is thundering, but everybody screams all at once- knowing that song and that drop. Then suddenly it's as if the whole stadium of people including you who just went quiet, are sucked up into the music and hurled full-blast, back out over yourself. It was one of those live music moments witnessing an artist use the power of a unique environment to explode what you think is possible. Everyone around had a blank 2 or 3 seconds wondering where the hell the cheering's coming from- catching what was happening just as the noise goes slurping into another mutation. We all were looking around at about 20,000 other crosseyed people- then click bang- back to rocking!
One of the most soulful and intimate songs ever recorded. you can literally feel the emotion beaming into your ears and coursing through the rest of your body. Simply a musical masterpiece.
I was wondering how they could do this song on live, as it's full of unplayable things ... But this version is so much awesome, as much powerfull as the studio one. They are so good.
In my opinion, this is one of their more accurate live interpretations. A lot of their songs often get changed significantly to fit their live performance. It often means sacrificing certain samples and even sometimes changing the song into kind of a remix. A different version. This one keeps the important stuff the same. I miss the strings near the end since that is my favorite part. But I still love this performance.
i liked the live version of "i'll go to sleep". not as creepy sounding as the studio version but still interesting sounding. and yes i know that's not what he's saying but that's all i hear after someone said that's what it sounds like.
@@leroyatleroys I agree and it may be the case that the album "In Rainbows" was all songs the band had been kicking around for years without recording the "definitive" version of. They probably just recorded this one pretty much as how they played it live. Because here it sounds just like the album, compared to other tracks like "Identikit" for example. This band is phenomenally talented to be able to just reproduce these tones... like a magician doing a simple card trick.
I remember being at the Greek theatre and when they played this song, the crowd was so quiet and I remember being with my girlfriend and I don't care if you think I'm feminine or someshit but being there and seeing them which was one of my goals in life and I started to cry, I was just in awe and so into it and it felt like Tom was pulling the strings to my heart with my voice and Johnny being Mozart on the piano had me feeling some type of way. Anytime Radiohead is in town I will forsure be seeing them again! I don't care what it takes
this song was dedicated to his wife rachel owen who passed away from cancer in the most beautiful way. if you see the music video he opens 23 doors, going through the hospital and his house and family. and at the end you can notice that there's mumbling if you play the song in reverse he says "half of my life" him and rachel were married for 23 years before they split up one year before her death. he's 46 and was 23 when they got married so literally half of his life, that's why 23 doors were opened. he's getting a lot of rumours about how he immediately started dating this 28 year old model and went to a vacation with her 2 months after his wife's death. but thom never allowed his private life to be known he never talked about his wife in interviews and we barely know anything about his children. so im honestly sure that this is more personal than it can ever get
@@randomniche1345 nope. hes singing about the climate crisis, not his wife. hes saying everyone is in a consumerist reverie whilst the world is burning. we're past the point of no return. it's too late. the damage is done. it goes beyond me and you (i.e it's structural problem, not an individual one) we are happy to serve the death machine without blinking as it chews the planet and its resources up the endless doors represent an endless slew of idle individuals which cause him increasing panic, until eventually, he finds himself a nice nook in which to suffer the incoming ice age. the reversed 'half of my life' could be a reference to Owen, but it doesn't seem likely considering the actual context of the lyrics
Dreamers They never learn They never learn Beyond the point Of no return Of no return And it's too late The damage is done The damage is done This goes Beyond me Beyond you The white room By window Where the sound goes Through We are Just happy to serve Just happy to serve You
People at a concert seeing one of the best bands perform an unimaginably beautiful song, experiencing it through their phones!! I'll never understand that.
I could never believe that after "no surprises" they would come up with a true diamond like this song. They were wrong. Many surprises yet to come, seemingly.
Thanks to this, and with the fact that i found the middle-section riff difficult to play with one hand, i found out that Johnny plays it with both hands and it's a lot more simpler. Two different patterns playing together and one of them being the root (leitmotive?) of the song, hidden there, inside the riff. This only highlights their (or his) composition skills.
The whole song is polyrhythmic in the piano, so he goes from a 2:3 polyrhythm but just doubles the speed in the right hand going to sextuplets instead of triplets I think. That’s just on one listen though someone please correct me if it’s something else.
I'm not sure what is meant in this song but as true art it is subjective and to me it hits home quite painfully. When I was young I had a dream of playing football and I was very good but to quote Morrissey I had a shyness that was criminally vulgar. I played for my junior school but when I went to senior school I actually pretended I couldn't play so I wouldn't get picked for the football team an now I am riddled with regret, I never learnt and I've gone past the point of no return. Side note I was born on the 7th October 1968 in Corby Northamptonshire, just incase Thom reads this.
I have two questions. Maybe someone knows the answers. Are they using click track? What kind of gear Phil was playing at this concert? Was it something like sequencer or sampler?
I love the way Thom loops the audience cheer.
pure genius man. do you have any idea what else he's doing apart from loops? seems like he's got quite a lot going on there.
I was wondering what that was!
It's superfunny, because the best thing is Thoms reaction to it. I'm pretty sure he didn't intent to do it, but it sounded cool, so he used it.
I thought it's actually just the crowd being muted by a gate to avoid it feeding into the microphone. You can notice it, that the cheer is only audible for tiny amount of time after his voice passes through (opening the gate).
The same thing is on the record guys lol. It's just more subtle on the track.
He used a loop pedal for the crowd sounds holy crap
homeboy has that technique down.. He'd did this 20 years ago on Kid A/ Amnesiac tour. It was in a loud track when the sound drops out. Here we see him use it in more in a type of subtle layering. Yorke is the kind of artist who can just keep reaching into his bag-of-tricks and reinventing what he's capable of. I love this song as much as what they were doing 20years ago. There's not too many bands one can say that about nowadays
check out "Idioteque" on the live album "I Might Be Wrong". I remember having a psychedelic experience while not on drugs experiencing Radiohead do that track live. You can't really hear how loudly you're cheering and everyone else around you in the moment. Because the music is thundering, but everybody screams all at once- knowing that song and that drop. Then suddenly it's as if the whole stadium of people including you who just went quiet, are sucked up into the music and hurled full-blast, back out over yourself. It was one of those live music moments witnessing an artist use the power of a unique environment to explode what you think is possible. Everyone around had a blank 2 or 3 seconds wondering where the hell the cheering's coming from- catching what was happening just as the noise goes slurping into another mutation. We all were looking around at about 20,000 other crosseyed people- then click bang- back to rocking!
One of the most soulful and intimate songs ever recorded. you can literally feel the emotion beaming into your ears and coursing through the rest of your body. Simply a musical masterpiece.
Gettin older, listinening to this song
I 100% agree 💕
I was wondering how they could do this song on live, as it's full of unplayable things ... But this version is so much awesome, as much powerfull as the studio one. They are so good.
Yrtiop So True!!!
Meanwhile Beyoncé was called the greatest artist of the decade so far. Modern Artist don’t have a clue about recognizing true artistic expressions...
In my opinion, this is one of their more accurate live interpretations. A lot of their songs often get changed significantly to fit their live performance. It often means sacrificing certain samples and even sometimes changing the song into kind of a remix. A different version. This one keeps the important stuff the same. I miss the strings near the end since that is my favorite part. But I still love this performance.
i liked the live version of "i'll go to sleep". not as creepy sounding as the studio version but still interesting sounding. and yes i know that's not what he's saying but that's all i hear after someone said that's what it sounds like.
@@leroyatleroys I agree and it may be the case that the album "In Rainbows" was all songs the band had been kicking around for years without recording the "definitive" version of. They probably just recorded this one pretty much as how they played it live. Because here it sounds just like the album, compared to other tracks like "Identikit" for example. This band is phenomenally talented to be able to just reproduce these tones... like a magician doing a simple card trick.
i like how cinematic this one is. Great as a score.
Spot on
I remember being at the Greek theatre and when they played this song, the crowd was so quiet and I remember being with my girlfriend and I don't care if you think I'm feminine or someshit but being there and seeing them which was one of my goals in life and I started to cry, I was just in awe and so into it and it felt like Tom was pulling the strings to my heart with my voice and Johnny being Mozart on the piano had me feeling some type of way. Anytime Radiohead is in town I will forsure be seeing them again! I don't care what it takes
Same here. You're absolutely right.
Jok3er271 JKlilmonkey i would cry too. This song makes me feel in some kind of way that I can't explain in words
Eise ligo ntintis
The power of this song blows my heart to smitherines...
you cannot realize the amount of life this comment gave me
Ah, finally know what this song is about. Heavy stuff. Beautiful performance. What a masterful band.
And what this song is about?
this song was dedicated to his wife rachel owen who passed away from cancer in the most beautiful way. if you see the music video he opens 23 doors, going through the hospital and his house and family. and at the end you can notice that there's mumbling if you play the song in reverse he says "half of my life" him and rachel were married for 23 years before they split up one year before her death. he's 46 and was 23 when they got married so literally half of his life, that's why 23 doors were opened. he's getting a lot of rumours about how he immediately started dating this 28 year old model and went to a vacation with her 2 months after his wife's death. but thom never allowed his private life to be known he never talked about his wife in interviews and we barely know anything about his children. so im honestly sure that this is more personal than it can ever get
@@randomniche1345 thanks for that
@@randomniche1345 nope. hes singing about the climate crisis, not his wife. hes saying everyone is in a consumerist reverie whilst the world is burning. we're past the point of no return. it's too late. the damage is done. it goes beyond me and you (i.e it's structural problem, not an individual one) we are happy to serve the death machine without blinking as it chews the planet and its resources up
the endless doors represent an endless slew of idle individuals which cause him increasing panic, until eventually, he finds himself a nice nook in which to suffer the incoming ice age. the reversed 'half of my life' could be a reference to Owen, but it doesn't seem likely considering the actual context of the lyrics
Simply one of the greatest songs in existence
His vocal on this track a so beautiful I can’t help but tear up every time
what a masterpiece this song is!
Uma das melhores bandas de todos os tempos!
Dreamers
They never learn
They never learn
Beyond the point
Of no return
Of no return
And it's too late
The damage is done
The damage is done
This goes
Beyond me
Beyond you
The white room
By window
Where the sound goes
Through
We are
Just happy to serve
Just happy to serve
You
People at a concert seeing one of the best bands perform an unimaginably beautiful song, experiencing it through their phones!! I'll never understand that.
I never understood either but it’s so you can relive that moment anytime you want in the physical.
i love radiohead.
Completely blown away by this song - Amazing piano
I could never believe that after "no surprises" they would come up with a true diamond like this song. They were wrong. Many surprises yet to come, seemingly.
Extraordinarily beautiful 💕
so crazy, one second radiohead have a new album and the next it is nearly 6 years old
8 now
God I love this song.
Thanks to this, and with the fact that i found the middle-section riff difficult to play with one hand, i found out that Johnny plays it with both hands and it's a lot more simpler. Two different patterns playing together and one of them being the root (leitmotive?) of the song, hidden there, inside the riff. This only highlights their (or his) composition skills.
they opened with this song the first time I saw them live and it was something else
Otherworldly genius.
0:03 oOWwWoOOOOOOOOOO
Grazie Radiohead
Beautiful song 😟
At Glastonbury I was stopped in my tracks by this song. Masterpiece.
Love this :-)
beyond the point of no return... these dreamers...
My lord this was beautiful, it made me cry 😭..
He’s so goddamn incredible.
I've seen him standing 8 feet away and it's mind-blowing. I almost hyperventilated. It's like you're standing in front of Bach or Mozart...
All of them equally
Best performance of Daydreaming to date?
hermosa canción😣
such a raw & powerful song
siempre tan perfectos
Siii 💞
British band the best ever 🔥
this is from another universe.
So many people in the audience need to put their phones away and watch! :/
the curved back of Jonny
My back hurts just looking at him... but I guess he's impervious to age or something
@@ThinWhiteAxe i see your comments everywhere
@@sumedhhhh that's because I am everywhere
Amazing
Los necesito de vuelta en Chile para ir a verlos!!! 😭😭😭😭😭
Vivir consumido en la nostalgia o morir ahogado en la melancolía
Vivir, siempre vivir
Thom's voice :-D
"Dreamers......they never learn"...
Los tresillos vuelven fantásticos en esta canción
As a piano player, I'm very confused as to how Jonny is playing that part at around 1:55. Can someone explain this to me?
Edit: I figured it out.
The whole song is polyrhythmic in the piano, so he goes from a 2:3 polyrhythm but just doubles the speed in the right hand going to sextuplets instead of triplets I think. That’s just on one listen though someone please correct me if it’s something else.
basically the right hand goes still A-D-E at the same speed and the left hand plays the other keys
It's great, but what about EEEEEEEEEEEEED part?
Why the fuck is this video get labeled as creep?(in the description)
almost a hundred of this views are mine ;(
Pretty damn good. ख
seraaaaa
I miss this concerts❤
what kind of ear manitors yorke got?
The kind that makes sound engineers go crazy - the way he's wearing em
Shure monitors
1:56 best
I'm not sure what is meant in this song but as true art it is subjective and to me it hits home quite painfully. When I was young I had a dream of playing football and I was very good but to quote Morrissey I had a shyness that was criminally vulgar. I played for my junior school but when I went to senior school I actually pretended I couldn't play so I wouldn't get picked for the football team an now I am riddled with regret, I never learnt and I've gone past the point of no return.
Side note I was born on the 7th October 1968 in Corby Northamptonshire, just incase Thom reads this.
0:02 wooooww
...it s too late...the damage is done
whats up with this piano posture mate
I have two questions. Maybe someone knows the answers. Are they using click track? What kind of gear Phil was playing at this concert? Was it something like sequencer or sampler?
In the song, who are they happy to serve?
you
what strument use thom yorke on his left?
maybe a synthesizer
💔😘💔
He’s the John Lennon of our Generation!
He's just a Thom Yorke, just a great Thom Yorke
He’s better
Bull Terrier Face Yeah! he sings nice
Piano is recorded. What a shame.
Wtf