


In fact, Yorke, Greenwood, and Selway, along with guitarist Ed O’Brien and Greenwood’s brother Colin on bass, have been doing some variation of this since attending school together in the mid-’80s. But on A Moon Shaped Pool, that sense of the half-understood sublime, conveyed most powerfully through Yorke’s fragile upper register and foreboding keys, remained undimmed. In the years before that, Yorke has brooded as a glitchy electronic solo artist when not shaking his ponytail as a member of the rhythm-centered Atoms for Peace supergroup multi-instrumentalist Jonny Greenwood has roamed from scoring Paul Thomas Anderson’s film Inherent Vice to recording with traditional musicians in India and drummer Phil Selway has devised his own singer/songwriter miniatures. quintet’s more recent activity has been just as fascinating: Their ninth studio album, A Moon Shaped Pool, was released in 2016. Radiohead Have a Very British Outlook on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
