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True Love Waits: Christopher O'riley Plays Radiohe

Christopher O'Riley Audio CD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (68 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (June 10, 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Sony
  • ASIN: B00009MGQ4
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  MP3 Music
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (68 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #35,235 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Everything In Its Right Place
2. Knives Out
3. Black Star
4. Karma Police
5. Let Down
6. Airbag
7. Subterranean Homesick Alien
8. Thinking About You
9. Exit Music (For A Film)
10. You
11. Bulletproof
12. Fake Plastic Trees
13. I Can't
14. True Love Waits
15. Motion Picture Soundtrack

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Rock bastardizations of classical music are as old as Kim Fowley's--and ELP's--Tchaikovsky tweaking "Nutrocker." But classical interpretations of rock music have generally been something of a high-wire act. While most pop fare has strong melodic foundations for the soloist to build from, Christopher O'Riley has challenged himself here with the catalog of Radiohead, one of modern rock's most acclaimed--and texturally complex--bands. O'Riley's insightful gifts for interpretation (which have previously enlightened everything from Stravinsky to P.D.Q. Bach) produce a hypnotic, emotionally compelling listening experience here; O'Riley is a huge Radiohead fan, and that love courses through everything from the dreamy, bittersweet title track through the brooding loveliness of "Let Down." Radiohead's stock in trade is dense, multi-layered music that leans heavily on electronic processing for its moody sonic atmospherics; O'Riley's evokes those complex textures with but a judicious use of the sustain peddles, a deft use of dissonance (as on "Knives Out"), and a rhythmically anxious left hand. Call them etudes for the post-modern age if you will, but O'Riley's performances here largely achieve what all great interpretations strive for: New insight and enlightenment. --Jerry McCulley

Product Description

Christopher O'Riley True Love Waits - The Music Of Radiohead US CD album

Customer Reviews

I love classical music, and I am a Radiohead fan. Dick Whiting  |  17 reviewers made a similar statement
Although the music is quite good, it pales when compared to the originals. Chet Fakir  |  4 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
72 of 80 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Transcription is a very old, very honorable tradition, particularly among virtuoso musicians - and Christopher O'Riley is surely that. A thought experiment: what must listeners who have never heard of Radiohead make of this music? I find it almost impossible to listen "cold" - Radiohead is my "seminal band of the 1990s" and its music is burned into my brain - but the effort is useful.

As piano pieces, True Love Waits is a very mixed bag. Throughout - and, indeed, in passages of virtually every piece - you will hear what may strike you as New Age Pulse Music - the languid, lovely title song, the pretty Knives Out, even Everything In Its Right Place (although the darkly throbbing chords seem a tad too ominous for Windham Hill). In its repetitive motifs, Let Down almost sounds as though it spiraled out of the Philip Glass songbook.

And some of this music will strike you as squarely within the Elton John-Billy Joel genre of banged out block chords, with O'Riley flooring the "loud pedal" for extra sonic effect. I refer specifically to Black Star, but you can also hear this throughout in most of the forte passages.

Still other time we hear lovely, lyrical moments - in, say, Karma Police or Fake Plastic Trees or Subterranean Homesick Alien (I've always loved that title's Dylan reference) - and sweetly wistful sounds that wouldn't seem inappropriate in a piano bar, tinkling-wafting up from a dark corner out over solitary drinkers hunched around their glasses....

And more than once - for example, during the chorus of I Can't, with its dramatic descending major chords over O'Riley's rumbling, roiling left hand - the thought of the original music itself intruded on my little "experiment" in listening, forcing me to muse on "why it is that every band I've ever loved winds up being transposed into elevator music?" Some of O'Riley's arrangements Liberace would have had a ball with. And I could not help but think of the bombastic drama of 1960s pop writers with orchestral pretensions, like Jimmy Webb (MacArthur Park) and Mason William (Classical Gas), who can be heard piped out of malls and elevators throughout the civilized world.

None of this is by definition "bad." This is simply to say I'm not quite certain this CD would have a market in the classical bin without legions of Radio-heads having already been captured by the beauty of O'Riley's realizations. No, what I am certain of is that this is "good music" - Ellington said, and I paraphrase, "Jazz music? Swing? Bop? No. There's only good music and bad music." O'Riley's True Love Waits is - like all provocative, satisfying art - protean: you listen, again, and again, and hear these pieces differently at different times. This is a good thing.

So now I'm preaching to the choir: for those who already love the music - and who, I presume, will account for 95 percent of the sales - several points are worth making.

O'Riley makes intellectual inroads that some will view as novel. What a well-trained concert pianist does that perhaps you and I cannot is literally inhabit a piece of music. They connect with the arrangement of notes in much the same way a mathematician connects with the abstract nature of a math problem, or a chess master with the dynamic interaction of 32 pieces on 64 squares. I imagine it as a different kind of "sight" - think about when Neo realizes he's "The One" and, all of sudden, perceived the slowed-down, pixilated molecular structure of reality. I can't share such perception, but I can watch and listen for those who give signs of having attained a deeper level. O'Riley is there. Period. He sees, quite clearly, that this music stands as music - even though he's attentive to the ways in which the arrangement of notes also reflect the words of Radiohead's lyrics. O'Riley's judgments, particularly of mood, meter, and dynamics, never seem less than apt: grandiose when grandiosity is called for, majestic when majesty is palpable in the music, quietly reflective in pensive passages, and on and on. He has seen to the very center of this music, has touched its emotional core, and with great artistic sweep and skill communicates this essence.

And unlike a few reviewers who claim to have "learned nothing" from the O'Riley transcriptions, I came away from this CD with an enhanced appreciation of the music's satisfying architecture. The world of composition (in which I include the spontaneous "composition under pressure" of jazz improvisation) divides into those who are relatively good architects - who build pieces logically, coherently, with effective repeats and other musical devices, and create a satisfying sense of the whole and of closure - and those who simply cannot pull the "architectonic thing" off with consistency. For all the asymmetries of their music, Thom-Colin-Jonny-Ed-Phil are brilliant architects. The new Hail to the Chief has example after example of sounds meticulously structured and arranged for a total harmonic-melodic-rhythmic effect that is unlike anything in popular music. O'Riley captures these dimensions - indeed, he says he was struck by Radiohead's "interesting textures and colors and harmonies" but goes on to suggest is that the overall structure, the assemblage of elements, is what truly delivers. (See his illuminating interview in the 6 June Boston Herald.)

O'Riley's great respect for this music extends to Stephen Byram's appealing design for the package, which seems appropriately Radiohead-esque.

And so I find Christopher O'Riley's Radiohead hommage to be exciting, provocative, evocative, and, not least, astonishingly beautiful. I was tempted to dock O'Riley a star for his fondness for repeated (some may say "cheap") melodramatic effect, but this impulse was neutralized by the my admiration for, and appreciation of, the fresh light the pianist casts on music I love. This CD deserves a wide audience and, I hope, will lure Radiohead's fans into the parallel worlds of "classical music" and "jazz music" - both of which could use the help of new audiences. Read more ›

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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars when the power runs down, we'll just hum July 28, 2003
Format:Audio CD
It's always been a perverse fantasy of mine to hear Thom Yorke's subversive tunes in unlikely places (in the mall, on an elevator, in the dentist's office, at a wedding reception, on hold with Dell, etc.). An irresistable irony: the mundane against the hyper-aware, the placid against the paranoid, the superego faced with the realities of the id. Christopher O'Riley has had this one, too, apparently, given his recrafting of some of Radiohead's most despondant melodies into lovely, innocuous solo piano ballads.

Any Radiohead fan with any piano skills whatsoever has already worked out rudimentary versions of piano-friendly classics like "Knives Out," "Everything In Its Right Place," or "Karma Police." But O'Riley is a much more talented technical player than most of us, and his fingerwork allows for some subtle, sometimes startling revisions of songs we thought we knew. Where Brad Mehldau demonstrated the potential for improvisation just below the surface of songs like "Exit Music...", O'Riley teases out their classical perfection.

I was particularly impressed with the song choices. He manages a fairly even spread, pulling selections from "Pablo Honey," "The Bends," and "Kid A" (although three from the former does seem excessive, especially with only two from the "Amnesiac" era), but passing over some of the more obvious favorites in favor of less popular choices like "Thinking About You," "Black Star," and "Motion Picture Soundtrack." At the end of the day, this record has more to say than Mehldau's interpretations and holds more interest than the string quartet recording of "Ok Computer" released a few years back.

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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A must for obsessive Radiohead fans June 12, 2003
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
I'll be honest, I don't know a single thing about classical music. Nada. But I know Radiohead. And I know that this CD is very good. It's obvious from the first ten seconds of Track 1 that Christopher O'Riley is a virtuoso on the piano....but what makes this CD even more remarkable is how he uses just a single instrument to capture the inctricate layers upon layers of sound that make Radiohead who they are. "Everything In It's Right Place" and "Let Down" are the standout tracks for me....it's amazing, on "Everything" you actually feel like you're hearing Thom Yorke's voice.

A great CD. A nice change of pace for Radiohead fans. It makes you appreciate not just the talent of Mr. O'Riley (which is considerable) but also how the music of Radiohead translates on so many different levels.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Just beautiful... June 19, 2003
Format:Audio CD
I picked this up in Newbury Comics today, drawn mainly to it by the words Radiohead and piano combined on the same cd cover. Once I got my probing hands on a CD player, I popped this in and was blown instantly away. The quality of the playing is very emotive and nearly virtuostic, and when you put together virtuosos and emotion, you get beautiful, poignant music that makes you turn your head and see things in a whole new light. As O'Riley here has made his own transcriptions of these already beautiful songs by probably one of the greatest living bands of today, only blowing my mind even more, and instilling a thirst to play the piano. Someday, I want to be able to play these songs.
Now, if you're expecting just to hear yet another version of your favorite Radiohead tunes (like me), you're about to have your socks blown off. These aren't so much Radiohead songs as interpretations of Radiohead songs. O'Riley's transcriptions are powerful, and almost chronically emotive and beautiful. Something about Radiohead and a grand piano put together just makes me shiver and gape in awe.
Well, if one thing is for sure, it's that if you like Radiohead, you're probably going to like this. Now, if you have some sort of taboo with classical instruments played in a classical way, steer clear of this. If you just like music in all its shapes, forms, and sometimes mutations, you would definitely enjoy this album.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Spectacular Transcription and Beautiful interpretation
This is a collection of gorgeous music for piano. The uses of the many registers and sonorities on the piano are almost as varied as the material it takes its inspiration from. Read more
Published 11 days ago by De Profundis Ad Astra
5.0 out of 5 stars Worth a listen!
I think one needs the music to appreciate the playing here (available). O' Riley doesn't always play exactly what is written, but is convincing nevertheless. Read more
Published on June 6, 2011 by David DeLucia (Consignment)
4.0 out of 5 stars Pianohead.
Just a guy covering Radiohead songs on his piano. Seems pretty simple, and it is. Simple and pretty. Read more
Published on May 1, 2011 by H3@+h
5.0 out of 5 stars Kudos. . . O'Riley
Have you ever purchased an album out of pure impulse?
Have you ever purchased an album knowing that, beyond a shadow of a doubt, it would turn out to be one of the most... Read more
Published on February 1, 2010 by Shannen D. Norris
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazingly Beautiful
I don't know which is more amazing: Radiohead's music, O'Riley's imagination as an arranger, or his skill as a pianist. Read more
Published on August 11, 2009 by Marcus Peter Ginger
1.0 out of 5 stars too much pedal
I read the review of this CD in the NY Times and finally looked it up on Amazon. I have no interest or knowledge of Radiohead but this seems like an endless stream of "romantic/... Read more
Published on July 27, 2009 by Augmented Forth
4.0 out of 5 stars Triumphant tributes
Even if you are not into the obsessed-over, alternative juggernaut's infectiously catchy compositions, these high quality, compellingly rendered interpretations strained though the... Read more
Published on July 7, 2009 by IRate
5.0 out of 5 stars Radiohead fans will love this, Classical music fans, eh... It's...
The host of 'From the Top' is interesting and funny. This CD is an interesting interpretation. I love classical music, and I am a Radiohead fan. Read more
Published on April 2, 2009 by Dick Whiting
4.0 out of 5 stars one of the best radiohead
one of the best radiohead cover with Brad Mehldau
do you know Amnesiac quartet ?
jazz quartet who play Radiohead
watch it :
[...]
Published on October 2, 2008 by Paindestre
5.0 out of 5 stars Looking Forward, Looking Back
Ove the last decade or so, Radiohead has created some of the most complex and mind-blowing rock music out there, and I wondered if a solo pianist could really capture their... Read more
Published on March 2, 2007 by A Minstrel in the Gallery
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