Radiohead: The Best Of Released June 2nd 2008

Parlophone Records can today confirm that the much anticipated release, ‘Radiohead: The Best Of’ will also be available as a DVD video collection.

The story of Radiohead is not solely about their extraordinary music. They have also made some of the greatest music videos of all time.

Working with music video’s most innovative directors – the likes of Jonathan Glazer, Michel Gondry, Jamie Thraves, Shynola, Jake Scott, Sophie Muller, Grant Gee, and others – the band’s commitment to visual creativity has resulted in some of the most memorable, groundbreaking and influential music videos in the history of the medium.

So the collection of videos on the Radiohead Best of DVD represents more than their body of work while at Parlophone Records – it’s a document of their huge contribution to music video as an artform.

These include the videos for Just, Street Spirit, Karma Police, Paranoid Android, No Surprises, Knives Out, Pyramid Song and There There. The DVD also includes the more experimental visual work, for Radiohead songs not released as singles. In all, there are 20 videos – nine of which are appearing for the first time anywhere on DVD.

It features Radiohead’s earliest videos, when they were still finding their feet, like in the video for Creep, which helped turn the single into a massive hit in the US, Anyone Can Play Guitar and Pop Is Dead.

There are the two different videos made for High And Dry, the band’s first single from The Bends, and the glossy production for Fake Plastic Trees, directed by Jake Scott (son of Ridley) when the band were arguably still bigger in the States than in the UK, which suggests great things soon to come.

And then there is the run of great videos which began when the band chose to work with young English director Jamie Thraves who had little to his credit but some acclaimed film school shorts. The result was Radiohead's first all-time classic video, for Just.

The genius of Just lies in its unforgettable final twist, and the video broke new ground in the way it subtly fused narrative with the band’s performance. Thraves, who has since directed more acclaimed videos like Coldplay’s The Scientist, and movies The Lowdown and the forthcoming Cry Of The Owl, also edited two other versions – one all-narrative, another all-performance – in case it didn’t work.

Just has won awards and named in numerous best ever videos polls – and it was recently parodied in the recent video for Mark Ronson’s cover version. And their next video would also win ‘greatest ever’ acclaim.

For Street Spirit, the band teamed with top music video and commercials director Jonathan Glazer – his work includes the video for Jamiroquai’s Virtual Insanity, the Guinness “Surfer” commercial (voted the best ad of all time) and would then go on to direct movies like Sexy Beast. Glazer's rigorous approach and intensity gelled with Thom Yorke, and the result was a mesmeric and groundbreaking video.

Glazer captured the hypnotic beauty of Street Spirit in his understated use of special effects and, particularly, high-speed photography. The still-astonishing trailer park-set video become a big award winner, including Best Video of 1996 at British music video award show The CADS. Glazer later revealed that Thom Yorke encouraged him to simplify his ideas for the video until the slow motion footage became the backbone of the piece.

Radiohead and Glazer worked together again two years later on the video for Karma Police. With the director preparing to shoot his first movie, the result was suitably cinematic: it’s shot from the viewpoint of a Cadillac driver bearing down on a man staggering down a road, with Thom Yorke in the back seat. Something bad is going to happen – but there’s a scorching twist in the tail. As with Street Spirit, the perfectionist Glazer insisted on reshoots before being satisfied with the results.

In between the two Glazer videos came an inspired departure for the accompaniment to the hugely anticipated first single from third Radiohead album OK Computer, Paranoid Android. Instead of commissioning an established video director the band invited Swedish animator Magnus Carlsson to make a surreal animated adventure featuring his cartoon slacker character Robin.

The band became enthusiastic patrons of a new wave of groundbreaking animation. Radiohead’s experimental album Kid A produced no singles or videos, but instead, 10-to 40 second animated ‘blipverts’ – many created by Shynola, a four-man group of computer animators not long out of film school. When Radiohead released the more accessible Amnesiac, Shynola directed the video for Pyramid Song, a superb ultimately devastating animation: a diver plunges into the sea from a concrete island to reveal a city, his home, submerged below.

Radiohead subsequently collaborated with pioneering CGI artists Johnny Hardstaff – who was given the freedom to make a single video for two tracks, Pull/Pulk Revolving Doors and Like Spinning Plates (retitled Push Pulk/Spinning Plates) – and Alex Rutterford, who created a computer-generated Thom Yorke for the promo for Go To Sleep.

Radiohead have often given talented directors a crucial career opportunity to prove themselves, with often stunning results. Some of the work has challenged viewer’s expectations of one of the world’s biggest bands – like Ed Holdsworth’s hypnotic collection of urban landscapes for Sit Down Stand Up. But they have also given established directors the chance to express themselves in a different way.

Legendary video director Michel Gondry had just made his first movie when he directed the video for Knives Out, a characteristically awe-inspiring one-shot video tracking the breakdown of a relationship – including a human version of the board game Operation. And the beautiful, ghostly feel of I Might Be Wrong was created by Sophie Muller, more generally found directing videos for the likes of Gwen Stefani and Beyoncé, shooting Thom and Jonny Greenwood on a no-lens pinhole camera.

While Radiohead’s later videos may have tended towards the leftfield, the video for There There, the first single from Hail To The Thief, directed by Bristol-based animation director Chris Hopewell, was arguably the band's most popular and widely-seen video for years when it arrived in 2003: part-Bagpuss, part-Brothers Grimm, it won best art directed video at the MTV Video Music Awards later that year.

Radiohead have encouraged directors to interpret their music in a singular fashion – and Thom Yorke in particular has been prepared to go to great lengths to realise a great concept – as demonstrated with No Surprises, the final video from OK Computer. Director Grant Gee, who was working with the band on their acclaimed documentary Meeting People Is Easy, persuaded Thom into a helmet that fills up with water. It’s an unforgettable (and potentially very dangerous) one-shot video as the viewer watches Thom hold his breath…

Consistently presenting something new and extraordinary, the Radiohead Best Of DVD shows that Radiohead’s music videos have mirrored their musical progression, striving and often succeeding to match the greatness of their music. It’s a rare and precious achievement.

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