August 18th, 2009 8:28am
These Are My Twisted Words

Kevin Westenberg Everyone was abuzz last week when a song that sounded too much like Radiohead to not be Radiohead began circulating online without any official comment from the band’s camp. Naturally, everyone went batshit – they’d already released a new tune last week and recent interviews implied that they were tired of the conventional album release model and had some fresh ideas on how they’d release future recordings, so the idea that this was just the tip of a Radiohead-sized iceberg wasn’t an unreasonable assumption. Adding fuel to the fire was the discovery of an URL in some ASCII artwork that accompanied the leaked track that pointed to www.wallofice.com, which in turn pointed to w.a.s.t.e., Radiohead’s official webstore. By end of day Friday, the consensus was that the band would be releasing a new EP or album entitled Wall Of Ice on Monday, all sneaky-like, and all the ills of the world would be cured. Pitchfork has a summary of all this if you seek more detail.
Anyways, Monday rolled around yesterday as it often does following Sundays and lo and behold, there was indeed a new Radiohead release available for free on their website. One song – “These Are My Twisted Words” – which was the exact one that had been circulating since Friday and which started all the brouhaha.
Read more at Chromewaves →ZIP: Radiohead – “These Are My Twisted Words”
Channel News Asia has an interview with Emmy The Great, who has been keeping a Summer festival diary for The Guardian.
Fanfarlo, who has a new video, bring their delightful Reservoir album to North America on October 6. Paste declared them one of their “Best of what’s next for 2009″ and they’re not wrong.
Video: Fanfarlo – “The Walls Are Coming Down”
Arctic Monkeys insist to BBC that their new album Humbug, out August 25, is not more “mature”.
The Dumbing Of America has an interview with Charlotte Hatherley, whose New Worlds will be out in the UK on October 19.
The Times has a profile on Patrick Wolf.
The Boston Globe talks to Richard Thompson about his new box set Walking On A Wire: 1968-2009, which is out today. You can stream a sample of songs from the collection at Spinner.
Stream: Richard Thompson / Walking On A Wire (selections)
If you ever wondered exactly what you were getting when you paid for “remastered” reissues, check out this absurdly detailed report on what was done for the upcoming Beatles remasters, coming out September 9. I’m no big advocate of buying the same records over and over again, but if you’re a Beatles fan, these may well be worth the dosh.

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