100 Best Rock Bands With Food Names

What is your favorite food? Celebrate a playlist of rock bands with food names.

To many, food is the way of life. For a foodie, trying new food or snack is pure thrill. Cuisines from different parts of the world have their own unique taste and flavor. In the realms of music, different types of foods and their expressions are hugely popular. Many musicians actually find inspiration to include food ideas in their bands name. Rock bands in particular have taken food inspired themes to a whole new level.

Significance of Food Names in Musical Groups

Musicians may mention food items in their band names for a variety of reasons. The vision of every group of musicians differs in accordance with their perspective. A creative thought process is implemented to come up with names that are unique in identity. The name of a specific food may be included with other words to bring about dynamism. Sometimes, food names are used as connecting terms with other words to highlight a deeper meaning. Certain musicians may arrange words to showcase a double entendre.

Certain musicians love to add contradictory elements from different genres to bring uniqueness to their band name. The name of a food is sometimes added with contrasting words that bring aesthetic value to a name. Food ideas may be incorporated in band names to give theatrical identity or make something absolutely illogical sound adorable. Sometimes nonsensical words are combined with food ideas to come up with whacky band names.

What Is the Purpose of Mentioning Food Items in Band Names?

The purpose of mentioning food items in band names is to acquire a uniquely distinctive identity. Foods mentioned in band names may represent a diverse perspective related to varied attributes. Musicians may implement a logical concept or something totally illogical to convey a meaning through their band name. Specific types of food maybe picked as names represent their unique qualities. Food may also be used as a metaphor to express a mystical concept.

Sometimes members in a musical group like to bring in a certain amount of absurdity by combining food-themes with words. A number of bands combine vague words with the intention of sounding outlandishly different. This is often done to build a conceptual identity to promote the band as a brand. Food related themes may also be incorporated by group members as their band name while having fun with words during a brainstorming session. Commonly mentioned foods in band names are

  • Fruits
  • Vegetables
  • Meat and Poultry
  • Fish and Seafood
  • Desserts
  • Fruit Preserves
  • Nuts & Seeds
  • Beverages
  • Dairy Products
  • Sweets
  • Grains and Legumes

The list below showcases a diverse collection of rock bands, alternative rock bands, indie rock bands, garage rock bands, punk rock bands, pop-rock bands, hard rock bands, blues rock bands, country rock bands, gothic rock bands and heavy metal bands that have food in their names. If you have a view, opinion, or band suggestion, let us know in the comments section.

Top 10 Best Rock Bands With Food Names

  1. Iron & Wine
  2. Pearl Jam
  3. Red Hot Chili Peppers
  4. Smashing Pumpkins
  5. Cake
  6. Meat Puppets
  7. Cream

Great Indie Songs with Food in Titles


#11—20

11. The Electric Prunes

12. Moby Grape

13. Silver Apples

14. Meat Loaf

15. Apple Pie Motherhood Band

16. The Peanut Butter Conspiracy

17. Fishbone

18. Tangerine Dream

19. Strawberry Alarm Clock

20. The Apples in Stereo

#21—40

21. Humble Pie

22. Cracker

23. Sunflower Bean

24. Blind Melon

25. Neutral Milk Hotel

26. Sugar Ray

27. Orange Juice

28. Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band

29. King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard

30. Blue Oyster Cult

31. Wild Cherry

32. Country Joe and, the Fish

33. Sugarloaf

34. Hootie and the Blowfish

35. Raspberries

36. The Honeycombs

37. Blackberry Smoke

38. Lambchop

39. Goldie and the Gingerbreads

40. Hot Tuna

#41—60

41. Veruca Salt

42. The Lemonheads

43. Melt-Banana

44. The Jam

45. Sherbet

46. Fruit Bats

47. Lamb of God

48. Barleyjuice

49. Tumbleweed

50. Seaweed

51. The Flying Burrito Brothers

52. Bananarama

53. Five Finger Death Punch

54. Sweet

55. Martha and the Muffins

56. The Sea and Cake

57. Half Man Half Biscuit

58. Mushroomhead

59. Soup Dragons

60. Iron & Wine

#61—80

61. Midnight Oil

62. Reel Big Fish

63. The Sugarcubes

64. U.S. Maple

65. The Applejacs

66. Hall & Oates

67. Cherry Poppin’ Daddies

68. Mudhoney

69. Black Stone Cherry

70. The Mighty Lemon Drops

71. Paddy and the Rats

72. The Tea Party

73. Casper and the Cookies

74. Godley & Crème

75. Sweet Savage

76. Marmalade

77. Wings

78. Hedgehog Pie

79. Bread and Roses

80. We Butter the Bread with Butter

#81—100

81. School of Fish

82. G. Love & Special Sauce

83. Poppy

84. Black Honey

85. The Pineapple Thief

86. Bowling for Soup

87. Irish Stew of Sindidun

88. Honeytribe

89. Peaches

90. Tonic

91. King Prawn

92. Papas Fritas

93. Gorilla Biscuits

94. Alabama Shakes

95. Sugarcult

96. Gravy Train

97. Iced Earth

98. Egg

99. Salad

100. Breadwinner

Other Notable Rock Bands With Food Names

  • The Appleseed Cast
  • Stuck Mojo
  • The Mutton Birds
  • Sugarland
  • Mono Puff
  • Showbread
  • Baby Lemonade
  • Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
  • The Cherry Slush
  • Free Beer
  • Eels
  • The Honey Buzzards
  • Vanilla Ninja
  • Three Fish
  • 14 Carat Grapefruit
  • Egg Hunt
  • Snowcake
  • The Grapes of Wrath
  • Lemon Demon
  • Big Pig
  • Fishboy
  • Chicken Shack
  • Orange Bicycle
  • Phish
  • The Seeds
  • The Beach Nuts
  • Soda Stereo
  • The Gourds
  • Oil
  • Whiteberry
  • Milk ‘N’ Cookies
  • Sugar
  • Beer7

  • Kiwi Time
  • One Bad Pig
  • The Lemon Fog
  • Code Orange
  • The Milkshakes
  • Starfish
  • Hot Chip
  • The Candy Spooky Theater
  • The Brew
  • Sodagreen
  • Big Sugar
  • Olive Mess
  • Taproot
  • Great Shakes
  • Peachcake
  • Orange Goblin
  • Milky Chance
  • Back Ice
  • Tangerine Circus
  • Jellyfish
  • SugarComa
  • Mom’s Apple Pie
  • Blodwyn Pig
  • Chai
  • Lightning Seeds
  • Pepper
  • The Mojos
  • Brutal Juice
  • Squid
  • BBQ Chickens
  • Phatfish
  • Green Jelly
  • Starfish and Coffee

  • Sweet Water
  • Trout Fishing In Quebec
  • Archers of Loaf
  • Ram Jam
  • Team Tomato
  • Alice Donut
  • Weekend Nachos
  • Sweet Trip
  • Blakfish
  • The Electric Eels
  • Cookie Duster
  • Whole Wheat Bread
  • Shankin’ Pickle
  • Fattburger
  • Blood Sausage
  • Ghosts and Vodka
  • Sugarmonkey
  • The Icemen
  • Grenadine
  • The Salteens
  • Code Orange Kids
  • Beardfish
  • Strawberry Switchblade
  • Hot Butter
  • Sounds Like Chicken
  • Mojo Nixon
  • Shark Island
  • Agent Orange
  • Sweet Empire
  • Plumtree
  • Iceage
  • Roadside Poppies

  • Fudge Tunnel
  • Ginger Baker’s Air Force
  • Mischief Brew
  • Orange 9mm
  • The String Cheese Incident
  • Cake Like
  • Hagfish
  • Sweet Smoke
  • The Honeydrippers
  • Green Apple Quick Step
  • Modey Lemon
  • The Crabs
  • Lollipop Lust Kill
  • Tonic Breed
  • Sweetwater
  • Crumb
  • Tribal Seeds
  • Honeyblood
  • Beatsteaks
  • Two Spot Gobi
  • Cherry Boom
  • Big Cheese
  • The Honeys
  • Starlight Mints
  • The Dead Milkmen
  • Harvey Milk
  • Chocolate, Menta, Mastik
  • The Mojo Men
  • Sweet Comfort Band
  • The Salads
  • The Honey Brothers
  • Crying Nut


© 2021 Ansel Pereira

R.E.M. releases original recording of early B-side ‘Sitting Still’

As a part of their ongoing 40th-year celebration, R.E.M. has unveiled the Hib-Tone version of “Sitting Still,” that fans might recall is the B-side to the band’s 1983 debut single “Radio Free Europe.”

Hib-Tone is the Atlanta-based indie record label that originally released “Radio Free Europe” (a reissue was released last May) and “Sitting Still” in 1981.

In 1983, both tracks appeared on the college-rock favorites’ debut album, Murmur, via I.R.S. Records.

Above is the original 1981 version of “Sitting Still,” – offered digitally for the first time.

In a couple of weeks, R.E.M. will reissue their first single as a 7-inch via Craft Recordings. Likewise, R.E.M.’s 1981 demo tape — ‘Cassette Set’ — is going to be offered in limited quantities for the first time ever via the official R.E.M. store as a bundle with the 7-inch.

“We were all just kind of finger-painting,” Mitch Easter, who produced “Radio Free Europe,” told Rolling Stone in May. “They weren’t super-deliberate about anything. I loved that about the sessions. Even when we did the LPs, nobody was really taking any orders from anybody. There might have been people advising R.E.M. on the business end of things, to do this, that, or the other. but they pretty much ignored all of them.”

Watch out for the reissued “Radio Free Europe” 7-inch coming out later this month.

Rock Legends: Jack White

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Photo Credit: Yui Mok/PA Images via Getty Images

This feature was first published on PureVolume

If you’ve ever picked up a guitar, chances are one of the first things you learned to strum was the chord progression to the White Stripes “Seven Nation Army.” This is largely thanks to Jack White and his innate ability to take something so simple and turn it into a global phenomenon. His jet-black unkempt hair, loud guitar riffs, and unyielding devotion to the old way of producing music separate him from the rest. He may have started out as an altar boy with a knack for his brother’s old instruments, but he has grown into one of the most revered musicians of our generation. This is Jack White.

Believe it or not, his first instrument wasn’t the guitar.

A Not So Ordinary Childhood

Jack White was born John Anthony Gillis on July 9, 1975, in Detroit Michigan. He was the youngest of ten children born into a working-class family. Raised in a devout Catholic household, he found himself gravitating towards religion and developed a deep spiritual connection.

 As a child, he served as an altar boy and even considered going to seminary school to pursue what he thought was a spiritual calling to become a priest. White recalls this feeling and notes that “Blues singers and people who are singing on stage have the same feelings and emotions that someone who is called to be a priest might have.”

An Attraction To Music

During this time, White began showing an in interest in music. His older brothers had tried their hands at playing music, and White soon found himself messing around with their abandoned instruments. By the first grade, White was playing the drums after he had found an old kit in the attic. It wasn’t long until he began learning to play a variety of instruments in a short period.

He was also a fan of classical music but eventually started listening to classic rock bands such as Led Zeppelin and the Doors. However, it wasn’t until high school that he discovered his deep love for the blues, a genre of music that would shape his future music career

A Fork In The Road

 As a teenager, Jack White was accepted to a seminary school in Wisconsin and his intention was to go. At the last second, he decided to go to Cass Technical High School, one of the reasons being that he didn’t think seminary school would allow him to bring his new guitar amplifier.

When he was 15, he began working as an apprentice in an upholstery shop under a family friend, Brian Muldoon. At the upholstery shop, White was exposed to punk music, and the two even formed a small band The Upholsters. With White on the guitar and Muldoon on the drums, the two released their first album, Makers of High Grade Suites.

A Girl and a Job  

During his senior year in high school, Jack White met a girl named Meg at the Memphis Smoke Show where she worked. The two became fast friends and developed a relationship together going to coffee shops, record stores, and concerts. It was around the same time that White finished his apprenticeship and opened up his own store called Third Man Upholstery.

However, the business eventually failed as White never strived to make money and was known for writing out bills in crayon or writing poetry on the interior of customer’s furniture. Little did Jack and Meg know that their relationship would spawn a band that is credited with reviving a lost genre.

His Music Career Begins

When Jack White was 19 years old, he began playing music professionally as the drummer for the band Goober & the Peas. After the band broke up, White worked as an upholsterer during the day and played in various Detroit bands by night. In 1997, he married Meg when the two were both 21 years old. Although uncommon, he took Meg’s last name as his own and became known as Jack White.

The two lived in White’s parent’s house where they began to play music together with Jack on the guitar and Meg on the drums. Although Meg had no musical background, they decided to start a couples band which they named the White Stripes. Their first performance was in a Detroit nightclub in 1997.

The Jack and Meg Mystery

After gaining popularity in the Detroit music scene, Jack and Meg White divorced in 2000. However, this didn’t affect the White Stripes, but instead, made their music stronger. Their situation was unknown to the public and they started telling people that they were brother and sister, a rumor that still circulates today.

After the truth came out, White explained that they lied so that people would focus on their music rather than their relationship. The two continued to play as the White Stripes and months after their divorce released De Stijl which was acclaimed by critics and later grew into a cult classic.

The White Stripes Soar In Popularity

soarinsuccess.jpg In the following years, the White Stripes began to soar in popularity. They released White Blood Cells (2001and Elephant (2003) with the track “Seven Nation Army” as the single. That year, the duo would win a Grammy for Best Alternative Album for Elephant and Best Rock Song for “Seven Nation Army.” The band began to transition from their simplistic and loud sound to more complex and refined records.

Their albums Get Behind Me Satan (2005) won a Grammy for Best Alternative Album, and they won a third and consecutive time for Icky Thump (2007). Although fans didn’t know it at the time, Icky Thump would be their last album, and the band officially called in quits in 2011. Their reasoning behind their dissolution was in order “to preserve what is beautiful and special about the band and have it stay that way.”

Jack White wasn’t going to slow down after the success of the White Stripes.

Jack White Starts The Raconteurs

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Photo Credit: Flanigan/FilmMagic

While the White Stripes were one of the most popular bands of the early 2000s and are credited with reviving the garage rock music scene, Jack White wasn’t ready to call it quits. White and his friend Brendan Benson were having a friendly jam session and the two wrote the hit song “Steady As She Goes” in one night. They decided to team up and start the group The Raconteurs.

They later added Jack Lawrence and Patrick Keeler to the ensemble and released the album Broken Boy Soldier in 2006. The album reached the top 10 on the charts in both the United States and the UK. The band released Consolers of the Lonely in 2008 and began touring extensively.

The Dead Weather Was A Power-Group

 While still playing The Raconteurs, Jack White and fellow Raconteurs member Jack Lawrence were already working on another project called The Dead Weather. The powerhouse lineup included Allison Mosshart of The Kills and Dean Ferita of Queens of the Stone Age. For this band, White put aside the guitar and picked up the drumsticks once again.

Although the band was conceived during a mess-around jam session, they ended up releasing Horehound (2009) and Sea of Coward (2010), both of which debuted at top ten in the U.S. Billboard album chart. In 2011, the members went back to their original bands but promised they weren’t done. In 2015, the band came back together to release Dodge and Burn.

Have you ever thought you saw Jack White in a movie? You might have.

White Started Third Man Records in 2001 but It Didn’t Take off Until 2009


Back in 2001, Jack White started his own record Label called Third Man Records. However, it wasn’t until 2009 when he moved to Nashville that he actually purchased a space to turn his dream into a reality. When asked why it took so long to get running, he responded by saying:

“For the longest time, I did not want to have my own studio gear, mostly because with the White Stripes I wanted to have the constriction of going into a studio and having a set time of 10 days or two weeks to finish an album, and using whatever gear they happen to have there. After 10 to 15 years of recording like that, I felt that it was finally time for me to have my own place to produce music.”

When He’s Not Producing His Own Music, He Does It for Others

 

 Although Jack White has produced all of his own music, and that of his other music projects, he has also produced for some big-name artists. Usually under Third Man Records, White has worked with various artists to help them in their musical endeavors.

In 2004, White worked with Loretta Lynn on her album Van Lear Rose which went on to become a massive commercial success. He also produced Neil Young’s 33rd studio album A Letter Home, which used Third Man Record’s refurbished 1947 Voice-o-Graph. As if that wasn’t enough, he also helped produce Beyonce’s 2016 album Lemonade.

Jack White’s Music Career Landed Him In Numerous Films

 

Throughout his music career, Jack White was a minor actor in numerous films. As an altar boy, he had an uncredited role in the 1987 movie The Rosary Murders. He also appeared in the 2003 film Cold Moutain as the character Georgia where he performed five of the soundtrack songs. Jack and Meg also had a segment in the film Coffee and Cigarettes, and White played Elvis Presley in the comedy Walk Hard.

He was also featured in the documentary The American Epic Sessions, where he was an executive producer of the film. In 2009, he along with Jimmy Page from Led Zeppelin and The Edge from U2 were the stars of a guitar documentary titled It Might Get Loud.

See the other musicians that Jack White has collaborated with.

His First Solo Record Was Blunderbuss

 

On January 20, 2012, released the song “Love Interruption” as the first single to his first self-produced solo album Blunderbuss. The full album was released on April 24, 2012, which debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart.

To promote the album and let everyone know that Jack White was back, he appeared on Saturday Night Live, as well as performed in the festival circuit that summer. That year at the Grammys, Blunderbuss was nominated for Album of the Year, Best Rock Album, and Best Rock Song for “Freedom at 21”.

Three Bands Is Better Than One

While touring for the album, Jack White employed two other live bands that he would alternate between at random. The first was an all-female group called The Peacocks which had a total of seven members with an alternating bassist. The second was The Buzzards, an all-male group with five members.

Together, the three groups put on quite a show and made White one of the most creative and bold performers around. Unsurprisingly, White learned that maintaining the two bands was very expensive and was forced to stop the routine once he had finished touring.

Lazaretto Achieved The Same Success

 

On April 1, 2014, Jack White announced that he was going to release another solo album titled Lazaretto. The album was based on other songs and poetry that White had written during his teenage years. The song’s single “High Ball Stepper” was released along with the full album on June 10, 2014. The record was well-received by the public and critics and was also nominated for Best Alternative Music Album, Best Rock Song, and Best Rock Performance at the Grammys.

On his tour for the album, he played the longest show of his career at the Detroit Masonic Temple, headlined both weekends of Coachella, and played a few acoustic shows before taking a break from performing.

Because of Jack White’s extraordinary musical talent and colorful past, he is a prime candidate for others to collaborate with. One of his most impressive and best-known collaborations was with Alicia Keys with the James Bond: Quantum of Solace theme song “Another Way to Die.” The Rolling Stones even chose White to join them to perform “Lovin Cup” for the Martin Scorcese documentary Shine A Light.

Although uncredited, rumors were going around for years that White was involved with Electric Six’s “Danger! High Voltage,” which turned out to be true. Wanda Jackson, who used to date Elvis Presley, also asked to team up with White for a cover of Bob Dylan’s track “Thunder on the Mountain.” These are just a few of artists that have reached out to share a song with him.

On June 4, 2015, a ceremony was held in which Jack White was inducted into the Nashville Hall of Fame. He was joined by his friend and collaborator Loretta Lynn, and the two were the first musicians to be inducted after the renovations of the monument.

Although White is originally from Detroit, after he moved to Nashville to establish Third Man Records, he has become the face of the Nashville music scene. Much like the Hollywood Walk of Fame, inductees are given sidewalk medallions and join the ranks of other inductees such as Jimi Hendrix, Emmylou Harris, and more.

 

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Photo Credit: Rich Polk/WireImage

On December 12, 2017, Jack White released a 4-minute video to the public. It was titled “Servings and Portions From My Boarding House” and featured small sound bites that were masked simultaneously with white noise. Then, in January 2018, he released the tracks “Connected By Love” and “Respect Command.”

These were the new singles to his newest solo album Boarding House Reach which was released on March 23, 2018. Like his other two albums, it reached number one on the Billboard 200 chart. For promotion, he went on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon and Saturday Night Live.

Jack White was given the key to Cincinnati by Mayor John Cranley in June of 2018. The key was presented to him outside of the King Record building, which was where artists such as James Brown, Bootsy Collins, Otis Williams, and more recorded before the label died in the 1970s.

Jack White played a crucial role in saving the building which the city of Cincinnati later acquired in order to prevent demolition. The city felt it was only necessary to present White with a key to the city for his devotion to the project of keeping the building standing.

 

Aside from promoting his latest album Boarding House Reach, Jack White lives a quiet, private life in Nashville where he co-parents his two children with ex-wife Karen Elson. White and Elson met while filming the music for Blue Orchid. The two were married in 2005, and in 2006 had their first child, a daughter named ScarleTheresasa. Then, not long after, in 2007, they had a son named Henry Lee. The family lived in Brentwood, a suburb of Nashville until the two announced their divorce in 2011.

However, Karen’s lawyer villanized White making him seem aggressive when that wasn’t the case. In 2013, the two were divorced, and Karen recanted the adverse claims about White. The two are currently on good terms with one another.

Rock Legends: Freddie Mercury

Queen, and its frontman Freddie Mercury, changes the face of rock music. The group produced hit after hit while Mercury pushed the boundaries of music. The legendary rockstar proved that having a unique style, putting on flamboyant performances, and even including opera in a radio song could work.

Mercury is one of the most engaging and admired performers of all time who sadly left us too soon. Learn all about his rise to fame and how he handled the pressures of stardom, even when he was diagnosed with HIV. The life of Freddie Mercury is even more incredible, shocking, and tragic than you would expect for such an incredible musician.

He Was Born In A Small Town In Zanzibar

Freddie Mercury was born on September 5, 1946, in Stone Town, Zanzibar (which is now part of Tanzania). At the time, it was a British protectorate. Mercury’s parents were Parsis from British India. He was born with another name too: Farrokh Bulsara.

Photo Credits: Richard E. Aaron/Redferns

Mercury always had an ear for music and began playing piano at age 7. When Mercury was 8 years old, he attended St. Peter’s School, a British-style boarding school for boys in Panchgani, India. It was there that he continued his piano lessons and developed a passion for music.

Mercury Started His First Band When He Was 12

Photo Credits: Richard E. Aaron/Redferns

Mercury was only 12 years old when he took his musical talent to the world and started a band. He started the band called The Hectics with some fellow schoolmates. They mainly covered rock and roll artists like Cliff Richard and Little Richard.

Former bandmate Farang Irani said that they were very influenced by Western music. Another friend of Mercury’s said that the musician had “an uncanny ability to listen to the radio and replay what he heard on the piano.” It was during this period that he shed his birth name and began to go by “Freddie.”

From Zanzibar To England

Photo Credits: Ian Dickson/Redferns

At the young age of 17, Mercury and his family left their home in Zanzibar for Middlesex, England. The Zanzibar Revolution was in full swing which made the region dangerous for Arabs and Indians. In England, Mercury attended Isleworth Polytechnic then went on to earn and a diploma in Art and Graphic Design at Ealing Art College.

After graduation, Mercury spent most of his time doing odd jobs. He sold second-hand clothes in Kensignton Market and worked at Heathrow Airport.

The Making Of Queen

Photo Credits: Richard E. Aaron/Redferns

After years of working of jobs in 1970, Mercury teamed up with guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor. May and Taylor were already in a band called Smile and needed a new lead singer. Two years later, they added bassist John Deacon and Queen was formed. They didn’t have a band name though but Mercury dealt with that. Against the band’s wishes, Mercury announced the name “Queen” to the Trident Studios management.

Mercury claimed that “It’s very regal obviously, and it sounds splendid. It’s a strong name, very universal and immediate. I was certainly aware of the gay connotations, but that was just one facet of it.”

Building A Successful Career

Photo Credits: Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

Mercury used his design background to create the band’s logo then, in 1973, they released their debut album. Unfortunately, it didn’t get much attention. It wasn’t until their third album Sheer Heart Attack in 1974, with the hit song “Killer Queen” that they gained a following.

“Killer Queen” reached No. 2 on the U.K. charts and No. 12 in the United States. Queen capitalized on the success and their next album, A Night At The Opera, was released in 1975. The album featured “Bohemian Rhapsody”, which was at No. 1 for nine weeks and has gone down in music history.

Blowing Up In Popularity

Photo Credits: Ian Dickson/Redferns

After the success of “Bohemian Rhapsody” Queen continued to produce hit after hit. Their song “We Are The Champions” off News of the World in 1978 became an immediate Top 10 hit and the crowd-pleased “We Will Rock You” is still a sporting anthem.

During this time Queen also began experimenting with their sound. The track “Another One Bites The Dust” was disco-inspired while “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” was 100% rockabilly.

Mercury Had A Signature Style

Photo Credits: Steve Jennings/WireImage

Mercury was unique because while his speaking voice was well into the low baritone range. he sang primarily in the tenor range. Still, his vocal range could go from bass to high soprano. Singer Montserrat Caballe said that “the difference between Freddie and almost all the other rock stars was that he was selling the voice.”

Other artists praised Mercury’s talent and The Who singer Roger Daltry claimed the Queen frontman was “the best virtuoso rock ‘n’ roll singer of all time. He could sing anything in any style. He could change his style from line to line and, God, that’s an art. And he was brilliant at it.”

Mercury Wasn’t Just A Singer, He Was Also An Expert Songwriter

Photo Credits: Waring Abbott/Getty Images

Freddie Mercury wrote a whopping 10 of the 17 songs that appeared on Queen’s Greatest Hits album. Some of his most memorable are, “Bohemian Rhapsody,” Killer Queen,” “Seven Seas of Rhye,” “Bicycle Race,” and “Don’t Stop Me Now.” He didn’t just write his own songs though. He also wrote with other artists like David Bowie and their song “Under Pressure.”

In 2003, years after his death, Mercury was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Then, in 2005, he was posthumously awarded the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Song Collection.

Mercury Could Work In Any Genre

Photo Credits: Phil Dent/Redferns

Mercury had an uncanny ability to move between genres with ease. You could classify him in rockabilly, disco, progressive rock, heavy metal, gospel, and more. With so many genres he always wrote incredibly complex songs.

Mercury’s songs often feature complicated time changes with dozens of chords perfectly joining together at the same time. Even though Mercury was a mastermind he could barely read music and did most of his work by ear.

He Was An Expert With The Crowd

Photo Credits: FG/Bauer-Griffin/Getty Images

He was a singer, songwriter, and above all a showman. Fellow performer David Bowie once described Mercury as, “Of all the more theatrical rock performers, Freddie took it further than the rest… he took it over the edge. And of course, I always admired a man who wears tights. I only saw him in concert once, and as they say, he was definitely a man who could hold an audience in the palm of his hand.”

While every concert Mercury did was phenomenal, he pushed it over the top in 1985 with Queen’s unforgettable Live Aid charity concert set. Their performance at the show is consistently ranked in the top live performances in rock and roll history.

Rock Around The World

Photo Credits: FG/Bauer-Griffin/Getty Images

Over the course of their career with Freddie as their frontman, Queen is estimated to have played over 700 concerts. Of course, in true Queen fashion, those were rarely typical concerts. Queen concerts were often huge, theatrical stadium shows.

They also pushed the limits of where they played. Queen was the first band to ever play in South American stadiums, and in 1986, they played for a crowd of 80,000 behind the Iron Curtain. Mercury’s final performance was in Knebworth Park, England for a crowd of 160,000.

The Truth Behind “Bohemian Rhapsody”

Waring Abbott / Contributor

“Bohemian Rhapsody” is nearly-six-minutes long but is still, to this day, one of the most popular songs. You can visit any karaoke joint and an entire crowd will be singing along to the tune.

The song became so popular largely because of how unique it is. The strange sounds and lyrics left people wondering what the true meaning behind it was. According to Freddie Mercury, not much! When he was asked what the song means, he replied, “It bears no real meaning, it’s all rhyming nonsense.”

A Musician As Well

Photo Credits: Phil Dent/Redferns

Today, we best remember Mercury for his vocals but it’s important to know how committed he was to playing instruments. While he began his musical career playing piano, he also played guitar and wrote a lot of the guitar music for Queen’s songs.

Despite his talents, Mercury was always self-conscious about playing instruments, particularly in front of a live audience. He didn’t want to be restricted from singing or engaging with the audience. If Mercury did play guitar on stage, he would simply play rythym guitar.

Mercury’s Solo Career Wasn’t A Failure

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Many people look back at Freddie’s solo career as a bump in his legacy with Queen, but it wasn’t as bad as many think. While it wasn’t as successful as his work with Queen, Mercury still landed numerous singles on the UK Top 10 charts. His first album, Mr. Bad Guy was released in 1985 and praised for being a completely different sound.

His second album Barcelona had elements of popular music and opera. Even though some people called it “the most bizarre CD of the year,” it still did well. During his solo period, Mercury also worked with artists such as Michael Jackson, Billy Squire, and Mick Jagger.

Kenny Everett And Freddie Had A Special Bond

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A friendship began between Mercury and Radio DJ Kenny Everett after he invited the Queen frontman onto his breakfast show in 1974. They shared a lot in common and became fast friends, bonding over their love for entertaining. Everett is also one of the reasons for “Bohemian Rhapsody’s” success, playing it anyway after the station said that it was too long to play on air.

Throughout the 1970s, two became closer and became each other’s mentors, with Mercury helping Everette accept his homosexuality. Although they were never lovers, they experimented with homosexuality and drugs, going out in London together frequently.

His Sexual Orientation Was Frequently Questioned

Photo Credits: Peter Still/Redferns

Ever since he stepped into the limelight, people questioned his sexuality. Some claim that Mercury hid his sexual orientation from the public, while others argue that he was “openly gay.” Mercury was questioned about it during an interview with New Musical Press, where he responded by saying “You’re a crafty cow. Let’s put it this way: there were times when I was young and green. It’s a thing schoolboys go through. I’ve had my share of schoolboy pranks. I’m not going to elaborate further.”

John Marshall of Gay Times stated that “[Mercury] was a ‘scene-queen,’ not afraid to publicly express his gayness, but unwilling to analyze or justify his ‘lifestyle’…” Towards the end of his life, he had a long-term partner named Jim Hutton, although they kept their relationship private.

Freddie Had A Different Personality Off Stage

Photo Credits: Jorgen Angel/Redferns

Freddie Mercury was known for taking command of the stage but when he wasn’t performing, he was said to be quite a shy individual. Mercury was said to be reserved around people he wasn’t comfortable with and rarely gave interviews because they made him feel out of place.

Reflecting on that, Freddie once said that “When I’m performing I’m an extrovert, yet inside I’m a completely different man.” Even Kurt Cobain’s suicide note discussed Cobain’s resentment of Mercury’s ability to make the audience love him and for him to love them back.

The Love Of Freddie’s Life Was A Woman

freddie mercury looking at mary austin
Dave Hogan / Contributor

While Mercury played up to the rumors about his sexuality, supporters often squashed claims because he was in a long-term relationship with a woman. In the early 1970s, Mercury began dating a woman named Mary Austin. The two had met in their early 20s and were close friends.

The pair didn’t last as a couple though, and Austin admits she always felt Freddie was looking elsewhere. They remained close though and Freddie even wrote the song “Love of my Life” about Mary. When the Queen frontman died, he left most of his money, as well as his house and recording royalties, to Mary.

Freddie Mercury And The Bottomless Mic

Peter Still / Contributor

One of Freddie Mercury’s many trademarks was the “bottomless mic” that he often performed with. While his mic preference became something he was known for, it wasn’t exactly an intended quirk. During a show early on in Mercury’s career, his mic stand snapped in half midway through a show.

Rather than going through the trouble of having it replaced, he kept the mic with the broken stand and used it as is. The rock star liked it, and apparently, the fans did too, as it essentially became part of his image.

He Wrote A Song For His Cats

Ian Dickson / Contributor

Freddie Mercury was known for his iconic tunes and prowess on stage, but in his regular life, Mercury was a normal person, just like us…sort of. One surprising fact about Mercury is that he was borderline obsessed with cats. In fact, he had as many as 10 feline friends at one point. He loved his cats so much that he even wrote a song about them. Listen closely to the lyrics in “Mr. Bad Guy” and you’ll get the feline vibes. Here’s a snippet:

Delilah, Delilah, oh my, oh my, oh my – you’re irresistible. You make me smile when I’m just about to cry. You bring me hope, you make me laugh – you like it. You get away with murder, so innocent. But when you throw a moody you’re all claws and you bite –That’s alright!

He Had An Incredible Singing Range

Gus Stewart / Contributor

You do not need us to tell you that Freddie Mercury had an incredible singing range. Mercury had a recorded range of three octaves and at times he reached four octaves. To put this in perspective, Mariah Carey has been recorded at five, but considering she’s a female soprano, this isn’t surprising.

It’s even more interesting when you remember that he spoke as a baritone. If you didn’t know his skills, you would hardly believe he had the pipes to sing high hits like “Under Pressure.”

There Were Rumors Of An Illness

Photo Credits: John Rodgers/Redferns

Rumor of Mercury October 1986, the British Press reported that Mercury had been tested for HIV/AIDS at a Harley Street Clinic. When Mercury was asked about the rumor, he denied that he had the disease. As rumors continued to spread, he then claimed to have tested negative for HIV. However, according to his partner Jim Hutton, Mercury had been diagnosed with AIDS in 1987. The rumors continued to spread as Mercury began to look weak and gaunt and took a break from touring.

Finally, it seemed clear that he was ill after his appearance on stage with Queen at the 1990 Brit Awards when the band received the award for Outstanding Contribution to Music. Yet, Mercury and those close to him continued to deny the rumors that he was sick as he was stalked by paparazzi who were in search for the answer.

Freddie Didn’t Let His Illness Stop Him

Photo Credits: Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty Images

Several months after discovering that he had contracted HIV. Mercury decided to throw himself a party at the Pikes Hotel in Ibiza. He had spent a lot of time at the hotel after learning about his illness and grew close to the owner, Anthony Pike.

Mercury’s birthday party was described as “the most incredible example of excess the Meditteranean had ever seen.” There were over 700 people in attendance and over 32 glasses were broken. The entire check was also handed off to Queen’s manager. Freddie wasn’t going to let his diagnoses stop him from enjoying life.

Freddie Mercury Was Influenced By The Greats

Michael Ochs Archives / Stringer

Your favorite musicians inspire you, but have you ever wondered who inspires your favorite musicians? For Freddie Mercury, when he needed some inspiration, he turned on some of the greats — mainly the likes of Aretha Franklin and Jimi Hendrix.

Aretha Franklin was one of the Queen frontman’s biggest role models. He was moved by her success as a soul singer and was influenced by the female powerhouse to write songs of a religious nature. One of Mercury’s biggest hits, “Somebody to Love” was directly inspired by Franklin.

Mercury’s Untimely Death

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After finishing his work with Queen in 1991, he retired at his home in Kensington, West London. Here, his health began to deteriorate rapidly as he began to lose his sight and could no longer get out of bed. He then released a statement to the public stating “Following the enormous conjecture in the press over the last two weeks, I wish to confirm that I have been tested HIV positive and have AIDS.”

The statement continued, “I felt it correct to keep this information private to date to protect the privacy of those around me.” On November 24, 1991, just 24 hours after releasing his statement, Freddie Mercury died at the age of 45. He was at home and had succumbed to bronchial pneumonia, resulting from AIDS.

Only 35 People Were Invite To His Funeral

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Freddie Mercury’s funeral service was at West London Crematorium and was conducted by a Zoroastrian priest, as he was born Zoroastrian. Only his family and 35 of his closest friends were invited, including some huge stars like Elton John.

His coffin was carried in a procession while the song “Take My Hand, Precious Lord”/”You’ve Got A Friend” by Aretha Franklin. Mercury’s “love of his life” Mary Austin followed his wishes and placed his ashes in an unknown location. To this day, she hasn’t revealed where she buried them.

Mercury’s Popularity Still Soared After His Death

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After his death, Queen’s album sales saw a great increase, as they had been struggling by the end of the 1980s. In 1992, an American critic wrote that “What cynics call the ‘dead star’ factor had come into play—Queen is in the middle of a major resurgence.”

Then, the 1992 movie Wayne’s World featured the song “Bohemian Rhapsody” which exposed younger viewers to Queen’s music that may not have heard it before. By 2004, Queen had sold 34.5 million records in the United States, with nearly half of them being post-Freddie.

He Has Left An Incredible Legacy

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Freddie Mercury was the first internationally famous rock star to pass away from AIDS. It helped to raise awareness about the disease and Queen came together to establish The Mercury Phoenix Trust which has raised millions for AIDS research. Furthermore, they organized The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert For AIDS in 1992 to celebrate his life and raise money for the disease.

Since his death, he is ranked as one of the 100 Greatest Britons of All Time, one of Japan’s 100 Most Influential Heros, and is included in the 100 Most Influential Gay Men and Lesbians. In 2011, he was voted second in Rolling Stone’s Best Lead Singers of All Time. He’s still remembered and adored by fans and admirers to this day.

A Tribute Concert To Him Brought In 72,000 People

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Years after his death, numbers stars gathered to put on The Freddy Mercury Tribute Concert was held at London’s Wembley Stadium for an audience of 72,000. Guests ranged from Robert Plant, Roger Daltry, Extreme, Elton John, Metallica, David Bowie, Annie Lennox, Tommy Lommi, Guns N’ Roses, and Elizabeth Taylor performed.

Elizabeth Taylor gave a speech saying that Mercury was an extraordinary rock star who rushed across our cultural landscape like a comet shooting across the sky.” 76,000 people attended the concert but it was broadcasted to more than 1 billion people.

Elton John Started A Charity In Mercury’s Name

JON LEVY / Staff

Freddie Mercury and John Elton were close friends and confidants, so when the Queen frontman passed away, John wanted to pay tribute to his friend in a meaningful way. John created the Elton John AIDS Foundation.

The foundation works to provide those suffering from HIV or AIDS with the means to protect themselves. The group also provides access to medicine and other aid. They are following Freddie’s belief that everyone is entitled to dignity, respect, and compassion.

Queen Is A Top Record Holder

Photo Credits: John Rodgers/Redferns

Today, the estimation for the amount of Queen records sold worldwide is around 300 million. In the United Kingdom, Queen has spent more weeks on the UK Album Charts than any other band including the Beatles. In addition, Queen’s Greatest Hits album is the United Kingdom’s top-selling album of all time.

In polls by Sony Ericsson and Guinness Book of World Records, “We Are The Champions” and “Bohemian Rhapsody” have been voted as two of the greatest songs of all time. Both songs are also in the Hall of Fame. Don’t stop these guys now.

Freddie Mercury Designed The Queen Logo

John Rodgers/Redferns

Although not known to everyone, Freddie Mercury used the skills he learned in art school to create the iconic queen logo. The logo combines all four zodiac signs of the band members, two lions for Leo, a crab for Cancer, and two fairies for Virgo. The lions embrace the stylized “Q” for Queen with flames, and the fairies taking shelter beneath the lions.

There is a crown inside of the “Q” and the entire logo sits below a phoenix. The entire symbol shares a great resemblance to the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom, especially with the lions.

Switzerland Honored Freddie In A Special Way

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In 1996, a statue of Freddie Mercury was unveiled in Montreux, Switzerland. This statue was made by sculptor Irena Sedlecka and stands 10 feet high while overlooking Lake Geneva. Mercury’s father as well as Queen bandmates Brian May and Roger Taylor were on hand to reveal the statue.

Since 2003, fans have come to visit the statue from around the world to pay tribute to Mercury a part of the “Freddy Mercury MontreuxMemoriall Day” on the first weekend of September. It is an annual event where fans and musical artists can pay homage to Freddie.

Scientists Have Even Named Animals After Him

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To further show tribute to Freddie Mercury’s impact on the world, species have even been named after him. The frog genus Mercurana was discovered in 2013 in Kerala, India and was named in his name because his “vibrant music inspires the authors”. In addition, where the frog was found was near where Mercury had grown up during his childhood. Furthermore, a new species of the genus Heteragrion from Brazil was named “Heteragrion freddiemercuryi” in his honor.

The person that named it that stated: “I name this species after Freddie Mercury, artistic name of Farrokh Bulsara (1946–1991), superb and gifted musician and songwriter whose wonderful voice and talent still entertain millions of people around the world.”

A Posthumous Album

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Four years after Freddie Mercury passed away from AIDS-related complications, the final remaining members of Queen compiled Mercury’s final recordings into an album. The album was called “Made In Heaven” and was released in order to honor Mercury and show that he was still making music in the final days of his life.

Unfortunately, the results of the album weren’t that successful as Freddie’s illness had taken quite a toll on him during that time. The album seemed a little thrown together because it was, but nobody complained about hearing Mercury’s voice once again.

The Final Song Ever Recorded

Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty Images

On the album Made In Heaven, songs such as “Too Much Love Will Kill You,” and “Heaven For Everyone.” The song “Mother Love” was also included. “Mother Love” was the last recording that Freddie Mercury would ever produce before his death. Although he used a drum machine, his band members later added the instrumental. After completing the song.

Mercury told the band that he “wasn’t feeling that great” and stated, “I will finish it when I come back next time”. Sadly, he never made it back into the studio, so May took it upon himself and recorded the final verse of the song

Even Google Knows To Show Respect

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In 2011, for what would have been Mercury’s 65th birthday, Google dedicated their Google Doodle to him. The doodle included an animation of him to his iconic song “Don’t Stop Me Now”.

Guns N’ Roses even paid tribute to him in the 2012 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame acceptance speech reciting the lyrics “I’ve taken my bows, my curtain calls, you’ve brought me fame and fortune and everything that goes with it, and I thank you all” from his hit track “We Are The Champions.”

Asteroids, Plaques, And Other Tributes

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On September 1, 2016, an English Heritage blue plaque was unveiled at mercury’s home at 22 Gladstone Ave in Feltham, West London. It was unveiled by his sister Kashmira Cooke as well as Brian May. The UK Secretary of Culture was in attendance who stated that he was “one of Britain’s most influential musicians”, and added he “is a global icon whose music touched the lives of millions of people around the world”.

In addition, on what would have been his 70th birthday, the “17437 Freddiemercury” asteroid was named after him to honor him and his lyrics “I’m a shooting star leaping through the sky.”

Making Freddie Mercury To Broadway

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On November 24, 1997, a melodrama play took the stage that followed Freddie Mercury’s life. The performance was titled Mercury: The Afterlife and Times of a Rock God and opened in New York City. The play portrayed Mercury in the afterlife, examining his own life seeking redemption and searching for his true self.

The play was written by Charles Messina and Mercury was played by actor Khalid Goncalves. For one of the shows, Billy Squire opened with an acoustic performance of a song that he had written about Mercury.

Freddie On The Big Screen

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Bohemian Rhapsody is a 2019 biographical film about Freddie Mercury that starts with his childhood and leads up to Queen’s Live Aid performance in 1985. The film is going to be a collaboration between Britain and the United States. It is produced by 20th Century Fox, New Regency, GK Films, and Queen Films. Written by Anthony McCarten and directed by Bryan Singer, Freddie Mercury is portrayed by actor Rami Malek along with other notable actors.

Queen founding members Brian May and Roger Taylor are also serving as producers.

David Lynch directs psychedelic music video to celebrate Donovan’s 75th

Whatever David Lynch has coming down the pike in terms of film or TV projects is anyone’s guess, but the beloved director has served up a very, well, Lynchian slice of filmmaking while we wait. To celebrate the Scottish psychedelic folk singer Donovan’s 75 birthday (that’s today, May 10), Lynch has directed a new video for “I Am the Shaman,” a 2010 track that Lynch also produced. The filmmaker’s sonic fingerprints are apparent in the droning ambient aura of the song’s sound design. Check out the new video below.

In a statement shared on his Facebook page, Donovan talked about collaborating with Lynch on the song and video. “It was all impromptu,” the singer wrote. “I visited the studio and David said, ‘Sit at the mics with your guitar, Don.’ David in the same room behind the control desk with Linda. He had asked me to only bring in a song just emerging, not anywhere near finished. We would see what happens. It happened!”

Donovan continued, “I composed extempore. The verses came naturally. New chord patterns effortlessly appeared. On another day, David ‘sound sculpted’ my Ferrington acoustic guitar ‘Kelly,’ and he played his unique modal chord Ferrington guitar textures with ‘effects.’ David and I are ‘compadres’ on a creative path rarely traveled. And we bring TM Meditation to the world.”

As for what else David Lynch has coming up, we know he is definitely working on something, but as always, whatever shape it will take remains a riddle wrapped in a mystery. Reports emerged in 2020 that Lynch was working on an episodic project with the working title of “Wisteria” at Netflix. (The streamer declined to comment.) Currently on IMDb, Lynch is listed as the creator of a 13-part series title “Unrecorded Night” now in pre-production.

Lynch’s last feature film project was his 2006 “Inland Empire.” From there he returned to the beloved world of “Twin Peaks” for the Showtime limited series “The Return.” The filmmaker has yet to announce any new feature films or television projects since “Twin Peaks: The Return” wrapped its run in September 2017, though the 2017 short “What Did Jack Do?” debuted on Netflix last year.

Until Lynch’s next series or movie, follow along with his life and creativity via the David Lynch Theater on YouTube.

Radiohead’s Mass Distribution of In Rainbows Continues to Fuel Its Historic Success

With the #1 album in the U.S. and other markets around the globe, Radiohead has probably received more attention from the mainstream music press and the music blogs worldwide than any other band in the past six months. And it was no accident.

Radiohead broke out and totally embraced rock fans in a revolutionary way, initially having released their classic album In Rainbows on the Internet last fall and allowing fans to decide how much they were willing to pay for and download it. (However, now you have to buy the album, but it is arguably worth it.)

Through such innovative marketing and distribution techniques, like free and name-your-price offerings of its music, specially packaged disc sets by the band members (and not a major label) and live webcasts (such as last evening’s London webcast at radiohead.tv).

In addition, by setting up and regularly updating pages on various social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace, Radiohead has made In Rainbows not just one of the most important albums of 2007 and 2008, but perhaps one of the decade’s best albums of all.

Not only is the band still relevant 15 or so years after rising to fame with releases like Creep, The Bends and OK Computer, band members Thom Yorke (vocals, guitar), Ed O’Brien (guitar, vocals), Jonny Greenwood (guitar), Colin Greenwood (bass), and Phil Selway (drums) are pursuing all kinds of multimedia projects using the Internet and pushing the envelope in ways to reach fans and attract new fans as well.

But at the end of the day, the evidence is in the music. If In Rainbows sucked, it wouldn’t have mattered how much the band and their two new labels promoted it. The band decided to sign on with TBD and XL Records, ditching EMI after a failed reunion with their former label.

Thom was so enraged by “lies” about what went on ‘behind the scenes’ that led to the rift with Radiohead and EMI, and wrote this semi-rant on the band’s blog right after Christmas (left all of Thom’s own writing style):

we did not ask for a load of cash from our old record label EMI to re- sign. that is a L I E.
The Times in the UK should check its facts
before it prints such dirt.

whAT we WANTED WAS some control over OUR WOrK and how it was used in the future by them-that seemed REASONAblE to us, as we cared about it a great deal.

Mr Hands was not interested. So neither were we.

We made the sign of the cross and walked away. Sadly.

We are extremely upset that this crap is being spread about.

To bedigging up such bullshit, or more politely airing yer dirty laundry in public,
seems a very strange way for the head of an international record label to be proceeding.

On a happier note we took no ‘BRead-HEAd’ advances at all from both independent labels XL and TBD for our new record.

So judge for yourself.

AND we are really excited to be working with them. SHock!

AT least they do not behave like confused bulls in a china shop.

much love – Thom

However, the release is historic – on the level that The Bends was – and not only put Radiohead back on the rock map, it also has made their music available to a new generation of fans around the world.

It seems like every other day the band is releasing some new material, reworked and remastered recordings, announcements of concerts, alerts of new videos and live webcasts, such as the one the band performed last evening.

There was some confusion from fans in London who showed up at the Liverpool area Rough Trade shop for live, first-come, first-serve performance only to find that the location had been moved next door to the venue 93 Feet East.

Here’s what Thom wrote on the RH blog about the change:

On the advice of the police and the local council, it was decided to change the venue to the larger one in the interests of public safety and due to the size of the crowd that turned up for the event. Rough Trade and the band apologise for any inconvenience caused.

While there is no official word yet on whether the webcast from last evening will be replayed, or available in full anywhere on the web, here are some great links to RH music, videos, news and more. As soon as we find the webcast, you will too. If you’re not subscribed via a feed reader, choose one now or pick the ATOM or RSS plain feed.

Also, news is coming up soon about Radiohead’s 2008 concert and festival tours. While no specific dates have been set, some of the 20 or so U.S. cities include Chicago, Boston and New York and San Francisco. (really!?!)

More Radiohead Links:

Contest: Contribute to Radiohead’s BuzzNet rainbow and enter to win a special edition of
In Rainbows.

Watch: Radiohead play In Rainbows via the AT&T BlueRoom concert and festival series.

Visit: In Rainbows website put together by Radiohead and their new official TBD Records label

Coming Soon: Music Choice will be airing the Best of Radiohead on cable from January 21 to February 3, 2008 in a tribute to the band. For more information on how to tune in, check out the Music Choice website.

Watch: Check out this YouTube clip of “Videotape” from the recent Scotch Mist performances.