Genius Lyrics
|
|
Radiohead – Ill Wind
|
“Ill Wind” was released as a bonus track on Radiohead’s special edition of A Moon Shaped Pool, and later on streaming services. In 2016, Stereogum described it as having “an almost
|
|
Frank Sinatra – Ill Wind
|
[Verse 1] / Blow, ill wind, blow away / Let me rest today / You're blowing me no good, no good / Go, ill wind, go away / Skies are, oh, so gray / Around my neighborhood and that
|
|
Sarah Vaughan – Ill Wind
|
Blow, ill wind, blow away; find my love today / You're blowin' me no good, no good / Go, ill wind, go away; skies are oh-so gray / Around my neighborhood and that's no good / You'
|
|
Genius Farsi Translations (ترجمهی فارسی) – Ill Wind_Radiohead(ترجمه ی فارسی)
|
[Verse 1] / Keep your distance / Then no harm will come / فاصلهت رو حفظ کن تا آسیب نبینی / [Chorus] / No ill wind / Will blow / Will blow / هیچ اتفاق بدی نمیافته / [Verse 2
|
|
Spotify – New Music Friday 01/11/19
|
Every Friday, Spotify compiles the hottest and most notable recent releases. If you want to discover new music and keep up with the freshest songs, listen to the playlist below and
|
|
Radiohead – Present Tense
|
Present Tense has its roots as far back as 2009, when Thom performed it at the Latitude Festival. A favorite since then, fans have been waiting eagerly for a studio version and now
|
|
Radiohead – No Surprises
|
“No Surprises” is the fourth and final single from Radiohead’s third album, OK Computer. It was the first song to be recorded for the album, and the band actually stuck with the
|
|
Radiohead – True Love Waits
|
“True Love Waits” was first played in 1995. Since then, it has appeared in Radiohead setlists, and on their live album I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings in 2001. Fans consider it
|
|
Radiohead – Desert Island Disk
|
The title of this song is a play on the classic BBC Radio 4 talk show programme Desert Island Discs, where celebrities must name eight recordings (usually songs) that they would
|
|
Radiohead – Spectre
|
Released Christmas morning, Radiohead revealed the track that would have been their theme song for the 25th James Bond film, “Spectre”. For one reason or another, it didn’t quite
|
|
Radiohead – Climbing Up the Walls
|
Sung from the perspective of paranoid fear itself, “Climbing Up the Walls” takes the English idiomatic expression for utter unpleasant feelings, such as worry and doubt giving the
|
|
Radiohead – Glass Eyes
|
This watery piano ballad featuring a stark string section, tackles themes of anxiety and alienation as the character is frightened by society, leading him to escape the unknown.
|
|
Radiohead – Lotus Flower
|
Lotus Flower, a new addition to what you have to say is a fairly slender catalogue of Radiohead songs about having it all, is as plaintive and sensual as the preceding tracks are
|
|
Radiohead – Life in a Glasshouse
|
“Life in a Glasshouse” was originally penned sometime after the band’s magnum opus OK Computer but never recorded.
For Amnesiac, Radiohead finally placed it on an album as they
|
|
Radiohead – Decks Dark
|
This song continues the space narrative on A Moon Shaped Pool. Thom uses metaphors of a UFO and extraterrestrial matter in order to portray the questions and darkness of humanity.
|
|
Radiohead – Burn the Witch
|
Radiohead has a long history with this song. Phrases related to “Burn the Witch” first appeared in the cover art to 2003’s Hail to the Thief. The lyrics were reportedly finished in
|
|
Radiohead – Daydreaming
|
“Daydreaming” contains allusions to Plato’s Allegory of the Cave. This is depicted in the music video, both at the beginning and end, just like the symmetry in the song. The video
|
|
Radiohead – The Numbers
|
This folksy, reverb-laden song has drawn comparisons to Neil Young. Originally performed in December 2015 by Thom Yorke at the Pathways to Paris concert as “Silent Spring.” The
|
|
Radiohead – Identikit
|
Identikit: A picture of a person, reconstructed from strips showing facial features selected to match witnesses' descriptions; used by the police to build a likeness of a person
|
|
Radiohead – All I Need
|
In the fall of 2005, Radiohead had already been working on new music for their 7th LP. On September 30th, they posted a photograph on their blog, Dead Air Space, revealing a black
|
|
Radiohead – Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor Rich Man Poor Man Beggar Man Thief
|
“Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Sailor…” is named for a popular English children’s counting rhyme. It is often used in children’s games to decide who is “it” and is referenced many times
|
|
Radiohead – Ful Stop
|
Radiohead debuted this song in Chicago on their 2012 tour. It’s a soaring, ominous, driving Krautrock-type song.
Check out the tour version from 2012 – it’s very similar to what
|
|
Radiohead – Everything in Its Right Place
|
On the opening track of Kid A, Thom Yorke sings of depression, change, confusion, and the state of the world all while trying to find a place in a confusing existence. The stripped
|
|
Radiohead – High and Dry
|
The second single from Radiohead’s second album, The Bends. “High and Dry” was released on a double A-side with the album’s opening track, “Planet Telex.”
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Karma Police
|
[Verse 1] / Karma police / Arrest this man, he talks in maths / He buzzes like a fridge, he's like a detuned radio / Karma police / Arrest this girl, her Hitler hairdo / Is making
|
|
Coldplay – Fix You
|
“Fix You” is the fourth track and second single from Coldplay’s third album X&Y. It was written by Chris Martin for his then-wife, Gwyneth Paltrow, to comfort her after her father
|
|
Coldplay – Yellow
|
“Yellow” is the fifth track and second single from Coldplay’s 2000 debut album Parachutes. It is one of their oldest and most enduring hits, continuing to be a celebrated staple of
|
|
The Smile – Waving a White Flag
|
[Intro] / Out of my sight / Out of my mind / Out of my sight / Out of what's coming / Out of my sight / Out of my sight / Out of my sight / [Verse 1] / Couldn't move a muscle
|
|
Audioslave – I Am the Highway
|
This fourth single from the band’s debut album peaked at 66 on Billboard. It is about escaping a one-sided relationship and escaping from it. Most people speculate that it is
|
|
Oasis – Stand By Me
|
The second single from the band’s third album Be Here Now, written by Noel Gallagher while he was suffering from food poisoning. The song borrows elements from David Bowie’s “All
|
|
Katy Perry – Firework
|
“Firework” is a song by American singer Katy Perry from her third studio album, Teenage Dream. The song was released as the third single, following the success of singles “
|
|
Kendrick Lamar – N95
|
“N95” is the second track on Kendrick Lamar’s fifth and final studio album with Top Dawg Entertainment, Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers. The song’s title refers to N95 face masks
|
|
Coldplay – The Scientist
|
“The Scientist” is a very mellow song about trying to analyze a broken relationship.
The song’s melody is inspired by “Don’t Look Back in Anger” by the Oasis, especially the piano
|
|
Radiohead – How to Disappear Completely
|
“How to Disappear Completely” was based on a dream Thom Yorke had in which he was floating around the city as if he were a ghost. The chorus also came from advice that Michael
|
|
Eagles – Hotel California
|
One of the most mysterious and widely speculated songs in rock history, “Hotel California” is best described in the words of its creators. As Don Henley explained in the Daily Mail
|
|
SKECH185 & Analog(ue) Tape Dispenser – Not So Garden
|
We don't really matter! when we will is a while off / We're dust collected to legs bred to fuck and eat mild sauce / Corrupted in our heads. Fed to the public whose now lost / Wipe
|
|
Laufey – Lovesick
|
[Verse 1] / Floorboards creaking in my home / Deathly silence when alone / Oh, I wish that you were here right now / So, unlike me, somehow I / Fell in love in just three nights
|
|
Nirvana – Something in the Way
|
“Something in the Way” is the twelfth and final song on Nirvana’s major label debut, Nevermind—not including its hidden track, “Endless, Nameless.” While many fans believed that
|