Pop Is Dead | |
Cover: | Popisdeadradio.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Radiohead |
Released: | 10 May 1993 |
Studio: | Chipping Norton Recording Studios[1] |
Genre: | Alternative rock |
Length: | 2:10 |
Prev Title: | Anyone Can Play Guitar |
Prev Year: | 1993 |
Next Title: | Stop Whispering |
Next Year: | 1993 |
"Pop Is Dead" is a song by the English rock band Radiohead. It was released as a non-album single on 10 May 1993, several months after their debut album, Pablo Honey. The music video features the singer, Thom Yorke, in a coffin. "Pop Is Dead" reached number 42 on the UK singles chart and received mixed reviews. Years later, members of Radiohead said they regretted releasing it.
"Pop Is Dead" is driven by a chromatic riff played by the lead guitarist, Jonny Greenwood. As with Radiohead's previous single, "Anyone Can Play Guitar", the lyrics criticise the media and music industry.[2] The singer, Thom Yorke, said he wrote the song as "a kind of epitaph to 1992".[3]
The journalist Mac Randall described the acoustic B-side "Banana Co." as "Beatlesque", with lyrics hinting at a loathing of multinational corporations. The electric version of "Banana Co." was later included on the "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" single (1996).[4] [5] Another B-side, a live performance of the Pablo Honey song "Ripcord", was recorded at a Town and Country Club gig in London in February 1993, when Radiohead opened for Belly. The performance contains extra lyrics: "They can kiss my ass!"[6]
The music video was directed by Dwight Clarke, based on a treatment by Yorke. It features Yorke portraying the character of Pop as "a dandified vampire in a glass coffin", accompanied by other band members.[7] According to Radiohead's video commissioner, Dilly Gent, "We had the entire Radiohead fan club carrying him across the Oxford Downs ... In the early '90s, we probably thought those videos were all right, but looking back at them now, we all just want to die."[8] Stereogum likened the video to those of Nirvana.
"Pop Is Dead" reached number 42 on the UK singles chart. It was not released in the US.[9] In 1995, the Melody Maker editor Robin Bresnark wrote that had Radiohead released "Pop Is Dead" after their second album, The Bends, it would be a "top-five single".
"Pop Is Dead" was included on the 2009 Pablo Honey reissue. Reviewing the reissue for IGN, Finn White described "Pop Is Dead" as a "clever and humorous rock satire".[10] However, Pitchfork's Scott Plagenhoef found it "dreadful".[11] In 2019, the music journalist Marc Hogan named it the worst Radiohead song. Years after its release, the Radiohead guitarist Ed O'Brien called it "a hideous mistake", and the drummer, Philip Selway, said he regretted releasing it.[12]
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