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If You Say The Word

Follow Me Around

Creep

No Surprises

Karma Police

High and Dry

Fake Plastic Trees

Daydreaming

Radiohead
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Radiohead's New Company Sparks Speculation: Another 'Futile Endeavour' in the Works?
Radiohead's clandestine maneuvers reveal a tantalizing hint of activity. The quintet establishes Futile Endeavours Limited, a newly minted private company in the UK.
Such business detours have historically heralded subsequent releases or projects. Their previous escapades, like the formation of Spin With A Grin LLP, preceded thrilling releases, such as ‘Kid A Mnesia’ reissue.
Amid whispers of forthcoming music, Jonny Greenwood remains curiously coy, fueling speculation while acknowledging the logistical gears needed for a band resurgence.
Source: News | NME – Published on February 21, 2026
Radiohead casually revives "Like Spinning Plates" after 7 years of radio silence
Radiohead resurrects "Like Spinning Plates" during their final London performance, dusting off the Amnesiac track after a conspicuous seven-year dormancy.
The choice feels simultaneously calculated and nonchalant, slipping the spectral, reverse-engineered piece into the setlist as if to test whether absence still engineers intrigue.
Source: Music – Rolling Stone – Published on November 26, 2025
Radiohead dusts off 16-year-old tracks, revives the stage like it missed no beat
Radiohead return to European stages after a seven-year pause, rolling out a setlist that brushes off a thick layer of dormancy. Madrid’s encore treats the audience to “Jigsaw Falling Into Place” and “(Nice Dream),” both reintroduced after a conspicuous 16-year exile from live performance.
The night doesn't lean into nostalgia so much as it resurrects old ghosts with the precision of a surgeon—calm, measured, faintly unnerving. The choices suggest less a crowd-pleasing gesture than a calculated reanimation of songs long left suspended in amber.
Source: Music – Rolling Stone – Published on November 30, -0001
Radiohead Not Amused as ICE Hits Wrong Note Using 'Let Down' in DHS Video
Radiohead voices strong disapproval towards ICE for featuring a choral rendition of ‘Let Down’ in a Department of Homeland Security video, without clearance.
The clip, suggesting violence by immigrants, plays on a sensitive narrative that the band fiercely opposes, expressing their outrage with razor-sharp clarity: “It ain’t funny, this song means a lot to us and other people."
As calls against ICE's misuse grow, Radiohead underlines they’ll not tolerate misappropriation of their art.
Source: News | NME – Published on November 30, -0001



































































































