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artmst

Artem | Music Producer & Educator

Making a tribute project @radiohead.tribute
Also playing in @greydays.music
Helping artists sound like their idols
↓ watch our youtube

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Look at this amazing story that i found when i was watching Daydreaming videos on youtube to prepare it for performing. Some guy named Mr.White wrote:

“I was in a bar in Florida and they had an empty piano sitting there. In walked a very large Russian guy speaking broken English and he asked the bartender if he could play the piano.
He started playing popular show tunes and no one was really paying attention to him . He seen me looking at him and he said to me what would you like to hear and I said I’m sure you don’t know the music that I like and he replied try me. I said Radiohead. He started with this song, Daydreaming, and played about 10 songs by Radiohead before he left. I asked the bartender who he was and he said I have no idea l’ve never seen him before. It was great almost like a ghost walked in played Radiohead and then disappeared. It was an interesting night that I enjoyed immensely.”

No words, only love🖤

#radioheadcover #radioheadfans #amoonshapedpool #piano #pianotutorial #radioheadtutorial #daydreamingpiano #radioheadpiano #thomyorke #pianosheets #pianomusic #pianoteacher #keystutorials #pianolessons #pianotips


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1 years ago


The National Anthem is a 2000 track by Radiohead from Kid A, built around a repetitive bass line that Thom Yorke wrote as a teenager.

The song barely changes harmonically, but it keeps adding noise, horns, tension, and chaos until everything starts collapsing into itself.

Its brass section was inspired by free jazz and deliberately recorded to sound disoriented, crowded, and almost violent.

Nothing in the track feels clean or resolved. It sounds less like a performance and more like panic slowly becoming music.

Even the title feels ironic. There is nothing patriotic or triumphant here, just pressure, paranoia, and too many signals at once.

At its core, it captures the feeling of drowning in information, noise, people, thoughts - and staying inside it long enough for it to become hypnotic.


248
9
2 weeks ago

Weird Fishes/Arpeggi by Radiohead, from In Rainbows album, built almost entirely on layered guitar arpeggios.



Full video of this and other covers on our YouTube [check bio]



Originally performed as “Arpeggi” in 2005, it started as a different arrangement before becoming the version everyone knows.

The sound moves in loops and patterns, like waves that keep repeating and quietly pulling you further in.

At its core, it is about going all the way down emotionally just to find a way back out.


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4 weeks ago

🙃


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1 months ago

Full version on our YouTube🙌🏻
link in @radiohead.tribute bio

—-

The story behind Fake Plastic Trees by Radiohead isn’t some romantic tale of sudden inspiration, it’s closer to a creative breakdown.

After Pablo Honey (with Creep), the band was under pressure to deliver another hit. But they were already changing and didn’t want to repeat themselves.

While working on The Bends, things stalled. Fake Plastic Trees almost fell apart. They recorded it multiple times, but nothing felt right. Producer John Leckie couldn’t unlock it. It sounded pretty, but empty.

The turning point happened outside the studio.

Thom Yorke went to see Jeff Buckley live in London. That hit him hard. Buckley’s voice was raw, vulnerable, powerful. Yorke later said it made him feel like he wasn’t being honest enough.

The next day they tried again.

This time it worked:
Yorke recorded the vocal almost in one take
He broke down crying right after
That take became the final version

What you hear isn’t polished, it’s someone breaking through and finally letting go.

The song was also shaped by the artificial feel of consumer life, inspired by places like Tesco, where everything looks perfect but feels empty. “Fake plastic trees” became a metaphor for people and lives that seem real but aren’t.

In the end, the song almost didn’t make it. It wasn’t saved by production, but by emotional collapse. It became one of the first moments where Radiohead truly sounded like themselves.

At its core, it’s not about making a hit. It’s about hitting a wall, admitting you’re not there yet, and becoming real because of it.


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1 months ago

“Weird Fishes / Arpeggi” by Radiohead features a phasing technique influenced by the composer Steve Reich.

Phase music is a form of music that uses phasing as a primary compositional process. It is an approach to musical composition that is often associated with minimal music, as it shares similar characteristics, but some commentators prefer to treat phase music as a separate category. Phasing is a compositional technique in which the same part (a repetitive phrase) is played on two musical instruments, in steady but not identical tempo. Thus, the two instruments gradually shift out of unison, creating first a slight echo as one instrument plays a little behind the other, then a doubling effect with each note heard twice, then a complex ringing effect, and eventually coming back through doubling and echo into unison.

Phasing is the rhythmic equivalent of cycling through the phase of two waveforms as in phasing. The tempi of the two instruments are almost identical, so that both parts are perceived as being in the same tempo: the changes only separate the parts gradually. In some cases, especially live performance where gradual separation is extremely difficult, phasing is accomplished by periodically inserting an extra note (or temporarily removing one) into the phrase of one of the two players playing the same repeated phrase, thus shifting the phase by a single beat at a time, rather than gradually.
Phasing was popularized by composer Steve Reich, who composed tape music where several copies of the same tape loop are played simultaneously on different machines. Over time, the slight differences in the speed of the different tape machines causes a flanging effect and then rhythmic separation to occur. For example,”Drumming” asks for percussionists to play in synchrony, with some gradually accelerating as others remain steady.

#radiohead #radioheadcover #guitartutorial #basstutorial #drumtutorial #radioheadtutorial


740
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5 months ago

Ever wondered how 2 + 2 = 5 sounds when every part comes alive?
Here’s a full-band breakdown — every note, every instrument, one mad Radiohead ride.
Play along if you dare.😉
🎧 More tutorials on my profile.

#radiohead #radioheadcover #guitartutorial #basstutorial #drumstutorial #vocaltutorial #basscover #guitarcover #drumcover #fullbandcover


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7 months ago

Full sheet music is up in my Stories & Highlights

—> @artmst

There’s something unreal about this song.
It’s not about flashy chords or technique — it’s about that hypnotic loop that feels both calm and unsettling.
Like everything is falling apart, but exactly how it’s meant to.

#pianocover #pianotutorial #radiohead #everythinginitsplace


468
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7 months ago


When Radiohead opened Kid A with “Everything in Its Right Place” it marked a rupture. No guitars, no familiar structures - just glitchy loops, processed vocals, and unsettling beauty.
25 years later, it still stands as the moment rock’s future tilted toward the electronic unknown.
That’s why Kid A is one of the greatest albums of all time.
Happy Birthday, KID A!

What’s your favourite song from it?

#radioheadcover #kida #everythinginitsrightplace #pianocover


1.6K
24
7 months ago

Meow
->>> @greydays.music

#mtv


27
9 months ago

Meow
->>> @greydays.music

#mtv


27
9 months ago

Meow
->>> @greydays.music

#mtv


27
9 months ago

Meow
->>> @greydays.music

#mtv


27
9 months ago

Part 2
Grey Days - TMRRW music video
-> @greydays.music


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10 months ago

Grey Days - TMRRW (music video) part.1

Our first record / first music video & first single!

Listen all platforms:
Link in Bio


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10 months ago


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