nytimes.com — In a twist for the music industry’s digital revolution, “In Rainbows,” the new Radiohead album that attracted wide attention when it was made available three months ago as a digital download for whatever price fans chose to pay, ranked as the top-selling album in the country this week after the CD version hit record shops and other retailers.
Jan 11, 2008 View in Crawl 4
kryptocaineJan 16, 2008
that'd actually be pretty cool.
gcellarioJan 23, 2008
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joegibesJan 26, 2008
I've listened to it a few times, and I've decided that it's not my style of music at ALL. Still, I respect talent, and it's not a bad album at all.
mlirblurJan 30, 2008
This is true. Radiohead has the kind of fanbase that will obsess to the umpteenth, so it was pretty much excpected that the same amount of people would buy the TBA release of In Rainbows. Even if Jonny Greenwood were to break into fans' homes, place an amp on top of their face while they're sleeping, blast continuous drones into their ears all night long, and then piss on them in the morning, you could pretty much guarantee that they would try to bottle up the piss before marching to the record store to buy the album.I'm more disappointed at the fact that Saul Williams, who doesn't have that kind of fanbase, did the same thing with a record that is FAR superior to In Rainbows and yet got little to no press for it.I paid $5 each for In Rainbows and Niggy Tardust, and I do not plan on purchasing In Rainbows on CD.