Morning Bell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Morning Bell”
Song by Radiohead
Album Kid A
Released 2 October 2000
Recorded January 1999–April 2000
Genre Electronic
Experimental rock
Length 4:29
Label Parlophone
Capitol
Producer Nigel Godrich and Radiohead
Kid A track listing
  1. "Everything in Its Right Place"
  2. "Kid A"
  3. "The National Anthem"
  4. "How to Disappear Completely"
  5. "Treefingers"
  6. "Optimistic"
  7. "In Limbo"
  8. "Idioteque"
  9. "Morning Bell"
  10. "Motion Picture Soundtrack"
“Morning Bell/Amnesiac”
Song by Radiohead
Album Amnesiac
Released June 4, 2001
Recorded January 1999 - late 2000
Genre Art rock
Length 3:14
Label Parlophone
Producer Nigel Godrich and Radiohead
Amnesiac track listing
  1. Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box
  2. Pyramid Song
  3. Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors
  4. You and Whose Army?
  5. I Might Be Wrong
  6. Knives Out
  7. Morning Bell/Amnesiac
  8. Dollars and Cents
  9. Hunting Bears
  10. Like Spinning Plates
  11. Life in a Glasshouse

"Morning Bell" is the ninth track on the Radiohead album Kid A (2000). Another version of this song is also found on Amnesiac (2001), and is titled as "Morning Bell/Amnesiac". The Kid A version is linked to the previous song ("Idioteque") on the album by a transition. The sampled electronic sounds of "Idioteque" continue as they are absorbed into the beat of "Morning Bell." A live version appears on I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings.

[edit] Two versions

According to Radiohead singer Thom Yorke, the song went through many stages, and the Amnesiac version was actually the first to be written, before being "lost" and then suddenly remembered again, leading to the other version. Both versions were committed to tape during the same period of recording sessions in 1999–2000 (along with the rest of the material on both albums). However, the Kid A version was released first and is better known.[citation needed] The Kid A version is usually the one that gets played live as evidenced by the live version in I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings. Driven by electric piano chords played on a Rhodes, "Morning Bell" as it appears on Kid A is in a 10/8 time signature, with beats 9 and 10 played by snare drum fills. A programmed drum machine is used in the album version, but in live concerts the tense pattern is played by drummer Phil Selway.[citation needed]

In contrast, the Amnesiac version (officially identified as "Morning Bell/Amnesiac") is based in common time, features desolate acoustic orchestration (including organ) and no audible percussion except a tambourine. This version is also one minute and fifteen seconds shorter and lacks the climactic ending, however, the rest of the lyrics are unchanged.

[edit] The song

Thom Yorke, who wrote the song, said in an interview that the lyrics were 'extremely violent'[1]. The song contains lines like 'cut the kids in half', in contrast to its quiet yet hypnotic melody. Benefiting from the Dada method of cut-up poetry, "Morning Bell" has been taken as a typical example of Radiohead's cryptic style on Kid A, privileging atmosphere and sound over literal sense.[2]

"Cut the kids in half" references verse 3:25 of book 1 Kings in the Bible, in which two women are fighting over custody of a baby and the wise King Solomon is asked to adjudicate. He proposes a fair solution: that the child be cut in two and one half be given to each woman. Shocked by the cold logic of such a proposal, the real mother attempts to save her baby's life by saying she would rather have the baby be alive with the other woman than be cut in half. King Solomon sees that she is the real mother and gives her her baby.

The band has described Kid A and Amnesiac as two very distinct albums, although products of the same recording sessions, with "Morning Bell" providing an intentional link. When asked about the relationship, if any, between Kid A and Amnesiac, bassist Colin Greenwood described the albums themselves as "twins, separated at birth."[3]


[edit] References

Languages