Classic Albums. Hosted by Stevie Nix
Not all albums stand the test of time, but plenty do and Australian music critic Stevie Nix will bring one to you each week. He'll cover all eras and most genres and tell you why each record is so revered and, equally, why it deserves to be. And he only uses six songs to do it.
Classic Albums. Hosted by Stevie Nix
OK Computer by Radiohead
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OK Computer arrived like a dispatch from the near future — a warning, a prophecy, a mirror reflecting our increasingly complicated relationship with technology and modern existence. The album didn't just capture the zeitgeist; it anticipated it with uncanny precision. But OK Computer wasn't just forward-looking; it was also deeply connected to rock's past. Its ambitious scope and conceptual unity recalled progressive rock masterpieces like Pink Floyd's Dark Side Of The Moon. Its political consciousness evoked The Clash and The Smiths. Its sonic experimentation built on the legacy of The Beatles' Revolver and David Bowie's Berlin trilogy.
Featured songs:
Subterranean Homesick Alien
Karma Police
Exit Music [For A Film]
No Surprises
Lucky
Paranoid Android