Paranoid Android

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"Paranoid Android"
"Paranoid Android" cover
Single by Radiohead
from the album OK Computer
Released May 26, 1997
Format Blue 7", CD
Recorded  ?
Genre Alternative rock
Art rock
Length 6:23
Label Parlophone
Producer(s) Nigel Godrich
Chart positions
Radiohead singles chronology
"Street Spirit (Fade Out)"
(1996)
"Paranoid Android"
(1997)
"Karma Police"
(1997)
OK Computer track listing
"Airbag"
(1)
"Paranoid Android"
(2)
"Subterranean Homesick Alien"
(3)

"Paranoid Android" is a song by Radiohead, from their third album, OK Computer. Despite its length of over six minutes, making it the longest released Radiohead song (including b-sides, excluding remixes, and the 2 minutes of silence following Motion Picture Soundtrack), it was the first single from that album in 1997. The song's release marked the start of Radiohead's reputation as art rock innovators, and the album subsequently received huge acclaim.

Rolling Stone notes that the song "was recorded in actress Jane Seymour's fifteenth-century mansion, a house that Yorke was convinced was haunted". Bassist Colin Greenwood said "On 'Paranoid Android' what we were into was the idea of a DJ Shadow meets The Beatles thing."[1] Thom Yorke also compared the song to The Beatles' work, saying "it really started out as three separate songs and we didn't know what to do with them. Then we thought of 'Happiness Is a Warm Gun' — which was obviously three different bits that John Lennon put together — and said 'Why don't we try that?'"[1]

The flamboyantly epic structure of "Paranoid Android," though unique among Radiohead material, was also responsible for most of the comparisons with 1970s progressive rock that the band subsequently earned, to their annoyance. Thom often refers to it as a "joke" song, though not derisively; the band continues to play it live at nearly every concert, usually toward the end of the set, and many consider it among the band's best songs. It appeared at #256 on a Rolling Stone list of "500 Greatest Songs of All Time," slightly higher than "Fake Plastic Trees," another Radiohead entry which ranked 376. In August 2006 Q Magazine readers voted it the 10th greatest song of all-time.

The song remains popular among fans of the band. In public polls conducted by Ateaseweb.com (an award winning and very popular unofficial Radiohead web site) to determine the favorite Radiohead song, "Paranoid Android" has won the top position several times, beating second place contenders such as "Idioteque," "Street Spirit" and "Pyramid Song" by landslides. In listings of the most downloaded and most played Radiohead songs on Internet-based services, "Paranoid Android" typically follows just behind "Creep,"[citation needed] though unlike that song it receives virtually no mainstream radio exposure.[citation needed]

Contents

The title is a reference to a character from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy named "Marvin the Paranoid Android".[citation needed] However, lead singer Thom Yorke explained the specific lyrics as being inspired by intrusive fans, who harassed him in a Los Angeles bar:

Everyone was trying to get something out of me. I felt like my own self was collapsing in the presence of it, but I also felt completely, utterly part of it, like it was all going to come crashing down any minute.
It's about being exposed to God, I dunno. It was that one night, really. We'd been rehearsing the song for months, but the lyrics came to me at five o'clock that morning. I was trying to sleep when I literally heard these voices that wouldn't leave me alone. They were the voices of the people I'd heard in the bar. It turned out to be a notorious, coke-fiend place, but I didn't know that. Basically it's just about chaos, chaos, utter fucking chaos.

Early versions of the song performed in 1996 had a different structure and varying lyrics. According to members of the band, "Paranoid Android" originally exceeded 10 minutes. It is unknown whether this long version, also fabled to include organ solos, was ever played live. However, it was possibly played by Radiohead at the Werchter Festival in Belgium in July 1996, apparently the song's first live performance.

One month later, Radiohead began a brief tour as opening band for Alanis Morissette, in which they premiered many new songs that would go on to make up OK Computer, and played "Paranoid Android" regularly. By this point, the song was six to eight minutes long, without extended organ solos. However, the ending differed markedly from the final version of "Paranoid Android." The third section originally had the lyrics "Hallelujah," where the final version has "Rain down..." The third section also had other different lyrics and was extended longer, eventually returning to the opening theme and guitar riff of the song's first section, while the released version ultimately went straight into the final guitar solo. When played live since 1997, the song is performed as on the album, lacking these elements.

The members of Radiohead portrayed as cartoons in the Paranoid Android music video.
The members of Radiohead portrayed as cartoons in the Paranoid Android music video.

Magnus Carlsson, Swedish creator of the animated series Robin of which the band were fans, was commissioned to make a music video. Having first wanted to do a video for No Surprises instead, Carlsson was uncertain how to approach "Paranoid Android." He came up with a scenario that was to the band's liking after locking himself in his office, staring out the window at a distant bridge while listening to nothing but the song over and over again.

This animated video features mild-mannered Robin and a friend venturing out into the world, running into miserable UN representatives, bullying pub patrons, two kissing leathermen, a junkie, deranged businessmen, mermaids, and an angel who plays ping pong with Robin after rescuing him. The band has a cameo appearance in the video at a bar, where they are sitting at a table drinking and watching a man with a head coming out of his navel dancing on top of their table.

Although the single did not receive much radio play due to its length, MTV immediately put the video in high rotation. However, the version most often shown on television was edited. Thom Yorke was not happy about this: "The video of 'Paranoid Android' has been censored by MTV. They took all nipples out of the cartoon, but they had no problem with the scene in which a man cuts off his own arms and legs." The uncut version was later compiled along with other Radiohead videos on the DVD and home video release 7 Television Commercials.

  • "Paranoid Android" is featured as the ending theme in the sci-fi anime series Ergo Proxy.
  • The song is featured in an Australian disability association's television commercial.

  • CD1 CDNODATAS01
  1. "Paranoid Android"
  2. "Polyethylene Parts 1 & 2"
  3. "Pearly*"
  • CD2 CDNODATA01
  1. "Paranoid Android"
  2. "A Reminder"
  3. "Melatonin"

  1. ^ a b Radiohead At Ease


Radiohead
Thom Yorke | Jonny Greenwood | Ed O'Brien | Colin Greenwood | Phil Selway
Discography
Albums: Pablo Honey | The Bends | OK Computer | Kid A | Amnesiac | Hail to the Thief | TBA
EPs: Manic Hedgehog | Drill | Itch | My Iron Lung | No Surprises/Running from Demons | Airbag/How Am I Driving? | I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings | COM LAG
Singles: Creep | Anyone Can Play Guitar | Pop Is Dead | Stop Whispering | My Iron Lung | High and Dry/Planet Telex | Fake Plastic Trees | Just
Street Spirit (Fade Out) | Lucky | Paranoid Android | Karma Police | No Surprises | Pyramid Song | Knives Out | There There | Go to Sleep | 2 + 2 = 5
DVDs: Live at the Astoria | 7 Television Commercials | Meeting People Is Easy | The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time
Related articles
Nigel Godrich | Stanley Donwood | Dead Air Space | Covers of Radiohead songs | Trivia | "Scott Tenorman Must Die"
Other projects
Bodysong | The Eraser | Spitting Feathers
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