
eil.com (also known as Esprit) has been the world's biggest and best seller of premium quality and top condition rare and vintage vinyl records, rare CD's and music memorabilia since 1985 - that's 38 years! And we are proud of it.R-HCDOK748025 (quote this reference in any e-mails, letters, faxes or phone calls to help identify this item)Ītoms For Peace, Christopher O'Riley, EOB, John Matthias And Nick Ryan, Jonny Greenwood, Philip Selway, The Smile, The Unbelievable Truth, Thom YorkeĬomplete Stock to contact our sales team.Ĭall 01474 815010 quoting EIL.COM reference number R-HCDOK748025 Regardless of country of origin all tracks are sung in English, unless otherwise stated in our description. OK Computer (click here for more of the same title)Īdd item to your basket for a postage/shipping quote Radiohead (click here for complete listing) In Stock - Buy Now for shipping on Wednesday 22nd February Irrespective of the source, all of our collectables meet our strict grading and are 100% guaranteed. We buy items as close to Mint condition as possible and many will be unplayed and as close to new as you could hope to find. This item is in Excellent condition or better (unless it says otherwise in the above description). It's not revelatory it's a good set of footnotes carrying some mildly interesting supplemental material.Radiohead OK Computer Dutch CD album (CDLP) While none of this material is bad - and much is quite good - this isn't a disc that's necessary to the appreciation of OK Computer. While some of the non-LP B-sides here are quite good - particularly "Pearly," "Melatonin," "Meeting in the Aisle," and "How I Made My Millions" - they're not a patch on what is on the album they're a nice addition, but they don't enhance the album and that is true of the live cuts here, which are noteworthy only in how they illustrate that Radiohead's creativity was not limited to the studio (the remixes of "Climbing Up the Walls" sound like electronica artifacts compared to these). A large part of this is because all of the great songs from the sessions wound up on the album proper. This makes it a bit of a tricky candidate for a deluxe reissue like this 2009 double-disc set: it's nice to have it enhanced with all the released B-sides from the "Paranoid Android," "Karma Police," and "No Surprises" singles, along with three BBC sessions, but it's not necessary.

With the exception of Nirvana's Nevermind, no rock of the '90s is as widely accepted as a masterpiece as Radiohead's 1997 OK Computer, and even partisans of Nirvana would have to acknowledge that OK Computer creates its own universe in a way that Nevermind does not.
