The masterpiece. Start here if you want to understand why critics call them "the Pink Floyd of the 90s." Kid A (2000) The Vibe: A frozen computer learning to cry. Essential Track: Everything In Its Right Place
After two albums of electronics, Radiohead plugged their guitars back in, but they kept the drum machines. Hail to the Thief is messy, overlong, and furious. It’s the sound of Yorke screaming about the Iraq War and media manipulation. It lacks the precision of OK Computer , but it has a visceral energy that their later, cleaner work misses. radiohead complete discography
True Love Waits , a song they had played live since 1995, finally appears here as a ghostly piano elegy. It is the perfect ending to their discography. The masterpiece
Don’t sleep on The Smile (Yorke/Greenwood’s new band), Thom’s solo work ( Anima ), or the b-sides compilation Airbag / How Am I Driving? Hail to the Thief is messy, overlong, and furious
Let’s address the elephant in the room. Radiohead hates Creep . You might be tired of it. But without it, this list doesn’t exist. Pablo Honey is a time capsule of early-90s alt-rock. It’s jagged, simple, and full of testosterone. Tracks like You and Stop Whispering show a band who knew how to riff but hadn't yet learned how to think.
Devastatingly beautiful. A masterclass in mature songwriting. The Final Spin Radiohead’s discography is not a straight line. It is a spiral. They started on the ground floor of rock stardom, got vertigo, and decided to build their own staircases into the unknown.