Radiohead's expansive discography is characterized by a restless evolution from alternative rock to avant-garde electronic experimentation
Dystopian alternative rock utilizing layered textures, ambient noise, and complex structures.
These seven records are the bedrock of modern art-rock. Each one represents a violent rupture with the past.
Recorded during the Kid A sessions, it continues the electronic-jazz exploration.
A wildly popular EP compiling the B-sides from the OK Computer singles. It actually earned a Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Music Performance, a rare feat for a B-side compilation.
The Leap If Pablo Honey was the sketch, The Bends was the masterpiece painted in five minutes. Shifting from grunge to lush, cinematic Britpop, this album saw Jonny Greenwood discover the guitar’s soul. Tracks like "Fake Plastic Trees" and "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" introduced the melancholic existentialism that would define their career.
A hypnotic, krautrock-inspired track.
Warm, vibrant art pop, intricate rhythms, and gorgeous orchestration. Key Track: "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi"
Radiohead has released to date, moving from Britpop roots to avant-garde electronic and art rock. I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings
OK Computer is frequently cited as one of the greatest albums ever, exploring themes of technological alienation. They followed this with Kid A and Amnesiac , a "radical rewriting" of their sound that replaced guitars with electronic blips and jazz influences.

