Radiohead - Pablo Honey

About Pablo Honey by Radiohead Album

Pablo Honey is the first studio album by English alternative rock band Radiohead, first released in early 1993. The album's title comes from a Jerky Boys prank call skit in which the prank caller says, "Pablo, honey? Please come to Florida!" to his victim. This snippet is sampled by the band in the song "How Do You?". The album includes the single "Creep", Radiohead's most well-known hit on mainstream radio. Pablo Honey peaked at #22 in the UK charts and went platinum there and in other countries. After a long dormancy while the members attended university, the band On a Friday reconvened in the early 1990s, becoming fixtures on the local Oxford scene with a series of demo recordings and well attended live gigs, finally signing with EMI/Parlophone and changing their name to Radiohead. The band's first official release, the Drill EP, was produced by their managers Chris Hufford and Bryce Edge, and sold poorly. For their debut album the band sought the production skills of Massachusetts-based Paul Kolderie and Sean Slade, responsible for Dinosaur Jr. and Buffalo Tom albums of which they were fans. Several months in advance of the album, the band came out with their debut single "Creep". According to bassist Colin Greenwood, "Creep" had been written by singer/rhythm guitarist Thom Yorke sometime in the late 1980s, while he was at Exeter University, and was shared with other members of the band, who were mostly very enthusiastic, citing the song as a reason to continue making music together. However, it was not included on any of their early '90s demo tapes and had not been a part of their live set. At the time, "Inside My Head" (which would later be released as a b-side to "Creep") was considered a good candidate for the band's lead single. Sometime in 1992 the band began an impromptu performance of "Creep" at a recording session, referring to it as their "Scott Walker song" because it reminded them of one of their musical idols. Rumour states that Jonny Greenwood's famous guitar crunches in the chorus were supposedly an attempt to ruin a song he didn't like. But "Jonny played the piano at the end of the song and it was gorgeous," stated producer Paul Kolderie (though the piano was mixed in at the wrong time, the band decided to keep the take complete with mistake, not for the last time). "Everyone who heard 'Creep' just started going insane. So that's what got us the job doing the album." As soon as their managers and producers realized the song was an original (not a Walker cover), other plans were put on the back burner, to the band's surprise, and "Creep" was released as a limited single to the public in late 1992. However, the single initially went nowhere. It was even blacklisted from Radio 1 for being too depressing. In the meantime the bulk of the album was recorded, in autumn 1992. Recording sessions were completed very quickly, as the band had been playing many of these songs for years. However, what ended up on Pablo Honey represents only a fraction of their On a Friday-era recorded material, with very little overlap with earlier demos. The album was once described by a Radiohead member as 'Our greatest hits as an unsigned band', with smooth sonic textures, anthemic vocals and walls of guitar noise. "Prove Yourself", which had led off Drill, reappears however in a different recording, as do "You" and "Thinking About You" in reworked versions. In the heady alternative musical climate of 1993, Pablo Honey did not receive particular attention. Upon release, however, the critical reaction to Pablo Honey tended towards the positive, with Rolling Stone, NME, Allmusic, Q Magazine and Entertainment Weekly giving favourable reviews. Besides "Creep", the album also included the melodic, perhaps ironic, and Sonic Youth-influenced single "Anyone Can Play Guitar" and U2-like single "Stop Whispering". Also on Pablo Honey are ethereal rocker "You", acoustic ballad "Thinking About You", and "Blow Out", the latter of which is apparently the band's personal favourite from the album, and points ahead to their future sonic manipulations. By mid-1993, "Creep" had become a hit in Israel, then the United States, and then a worldwide hit, finally reaching number 7 when it was re-released during the Autumn of 1993 in the band's native Britain. "Creep" went on to define the band's early career, at the expense of anything else on Pablo Honey. The song, whose self-loathing lyrics struck a chord with many fans, was released around the same time as other so-called "slacker" anthems such as Beck's "Loser" and was seen by some as a part of the grunge movement kicked into high gear by Seattle bands Nirvana and Pearl Jam. Radiohead eventually fell into a media-created niche as the "British Nirvana", due both to "Creep" and to the equally morose (if not equally successful) other songs on the album. In fact, Radiohead did share similar influences as Nirvana, notably the Pixies and R.E.M., although The Smiths were also a large influence on the band at this time. By their next album, The Bends (1995), Radiohead was more often being lumped by the press with the Britpop or "Brit-rock" movement, a reflection of changing trends. However, the band are not unanimously pleased with "Creep". Although at first ecstatic at their success, they soon came to resent being unable to escape its shadow, inspiring the bitter song "My Iron Lung". When performing live in 1993 and 1994, much of the audience would often leave after "Creep" had been performed, ignoring all the other material from Pablo Honey. One exception was "Prove Yourself", although Thom was reportedly disturbed by the way the crowd would sing along with the song's refrain of "I'm better off dead". By the mid-'90s as the band's style evolved and they became more confident about their newer material, the band and Yorke in particular came to believe "Creep" had been given too much weight, and by the late '90s, Yorke apparently no longer identified at all with their biggest hit. The clip for "Creep" was conspicuously absent from their official 1997 video compilation release 7 Television Commercials (none of the other videos from Pablo Honey were included, either). For a time, the band refused to play it live, but beginning in 2001 it has been aired several times as an encore. The videos from Pablo Honey have since been released by EMI on the 2008 DVD Radiohead: The Best Of. Other songs from Pablo Honey have received even less recent attention from the band. Aside from "Creep", the dreamy "Lurgee" is the only song from Pablo Honey to remain in the band's setlist following the OK Computer era, although "You" and "Blow Out" have both been played on special occasions. The band, however, have said in recent years that they are not unhappy with the album or its production, given their lack of experience at the time. Radiohead members have mentioned "Blow Out" as the Pablo Honey track of which they are most proud. Apart from "Creep", the album itself is rarely mentioned by the band today, and The Bends is usually considered a more notable album by those who prefer Radiohead's early rock sound. However, Pablo Honey continues to sell steadily, and has attained platinum status.

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Pablo Honey (Radiohead) Album Songs

NoSong TitleTime
1.You 3:28
2.Creep 3:58
3.How Do You? 2:12
4.Stop Whispering 5:25
5.Thinking About You 2:41
6.Anyone Can Play Guitar 3:37
7.Ripcord 3:09
8.Vegetable 3:12
9.Prove Yourself 2:25
10.I Can't 4:13
11.Lurgee 3:07
12.Blow Out 4:42

Radiohead - Pablo Honey Album Comments

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Pablo Honey [Radiohead] Album Reviews

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- Creep pls come back 2 me

I juz bought it. But cannot find in purchased music to download again, need help!

- Start with The Bends

Hardcore fan here, if you're trying to get into Radiohead then start with The Bends. This album does its job by being a 90s grunge album, but that's just it. Radiohead is a band that goes beyond conventional limits and breaks musical barriers that most wouldn't dare to touch. Pablo Honey is the only album in their discography where this artistic bravery is absent. Another issue here is that the album sounds like a big mess. Radiohead' albums are known for being sewn together with one cohesive sound and idea. Pablo Honey meanwhile, sounds more like the band trying to get a grip on what they want to be. In a nutshell, don't feel bad about skipping this one. Also Creep is bad.

- Classic

Radiohead is a classic

- Awesome Album!!!

I Really love this Album! Just Radiohead strait out of the gate to show the WORLD what talent they have!

- Aweful

I recommend listening to Lust for Life by Lana Del Rey as this album is pure trash. Ugh as if.

- Not even creep

Mediocrity

- Goooood

Good

- If you're a fan

If you're a fan, this isn't an album to be shunned. Plenty of great tracks that are a bit reminiscent of Jeff Buckley in the arrangements, ("you" could've been on "grace") and of course many just straight original songs. If you're not a fan it may not be the best introduction. Still good though. (Since when did iTunes reviews start having the tenor of YouTube comment trolling? Is no one regulating this stuff?)

- Yes

Such a good album

- GREATEST ALBUM

Read the music

- sonic bliss

a must addition to anyones collection.

- Flops

Such a flop

- Always My Favorite Radiohead

The majority of people heard "Creep" and dismissed this album as second rate Nirvana. They are missing out. This album is straight forward, yes. And freaking brilliant about it. This was before Radiohead went on their quest to be as experimental as possible (which often comes off as pretentious to me). I love straight forward Radiohead much more than anything they released after OK Computer, but this is my favorite. I can’t really say which are the standout tracks because they are all awesome in their own way. What I can say is "Creep" (while a great radio cut) is IMO the weakest track on this album. And "Creep" is still leaps and bounds better than anything from most bands' entire catalog.

- !!!

Awesome they don’t make music like this anymore

- Such an underrated album!

This debut from one of the best bands ever, Radiohead, deserves much more praise than it received. “Creep” is the standout track, and needs more praise.

- Perfect (to me, at least)

This is one of those very few albums in my collection that I call Perfect Albums - one that I can turn on and listen to from end to end without being tempted to skip even a single track. Maybe it's not the dreamy, ethereal, or even the downright bizarre Radiohead of more recent years; this is the powerful Radiohead of old, and listening to this album not only makes me smile but it makes me miss the days when Radiohead was a rock band.

- Shut up Hippie

This is one of the greatest songs ever, and you are such a liberal douche you want to attack Donald Trump instead of reviewing the song like a normal adjusted human being. This is a politics free zone, so write something about the song or shut up. Could you be anymore of a loser.

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