A Moon Shaped Pool
A Moon Shaped Pool is the ninth studio album by the English rock band Radiohead, featuring eleven tracks recorded primarily between 2014 and 2015 with some material originating from earlier sessions dating back to 2005.[1][2] It was released digitally on 8 May 2016 and on CD and vinyl on 17 June 2016 by XL Recordings.[3][4] Produced by longtime collaborator Nigel Godrich, the album incorporates orchestral elements, including string arrangements by guitarist Jonny Greenwood, and marks a return to more structured song forms following the experimental electronic focus of prior releases.[1][2] The recording process was described by band members as difficult and fragile, reflecting personal challenges during the sessions.[5] Preceded by animated videos for lead singles "Burn the Witch" and "Daydreaming", the album debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart—Radiohead's sixth such achievement—and number three on the US Billboard 200, with first-week UK sales exceeding 50,000 units.[6][7][8] It earned awards including Best Rock Album at the 2016 AMFT Awards and recognition for "Daydreaming" in the Best Rock Duo/Group Performance category. Themes of loss and introspection permeate the work, with several tracks interpreted as responses to frontman Thom Yorke's separation from his long-term partner.[9]Background and Conception
Personal and Artistic Context
The creation of A Moon Shaped Pool coincided with significant personal upheaval for Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke, whose separation from longtime partner Rachel Owen was announced on August 15, 2015, after 23 years together.[10][11] Owen, the mother of Yorke's two children, had been a key figure in his life since the early 1990s. The album's recording sessions, which overlapped with this period, infused its overall tone with themes of introspection and emotional detachment, as observed by multiple reviewers linking the timing to the work's melancholic undercurrents.[12][13] Following the release of The King of Limbs in 2011, which featured dense, loop-driven compositions constructed via sampling software and elicited mixed responses for its perceived inaccessibility and brevity compared to prior efforts, Radiohead pivoted toward expansive orchestral arrangements.[14][15] This shift marked a departure from the prior album's rhythmic experimentation, favoring string-heavy textures that evoked the band's earlier melodic sensibilities while addressing critiques of overly abstract structures.[16] Several tracks on A Moon Shaped Pool drew from material developed over years of prior sessions, illustrating continuity rather than abrupt reinvention. For instance, "Burn the Witch" originated during the late stages of the Kid A sessions in 2000, with further refinements attempted for Hail to the Thief (2003) and In Rainbows (2007), before finalization for this release.[17] This archival approach underscores how personal catalysts interacted with longstanding creative reservoirs to shape the album's final form.Development from Prior Sessions
Several tracks on A Moon Shaped Pool incorporated material developed during earlier recording sessions, reflecting a process of pragmatic refinement rather than entirely new compositions. For instance, "Burn the Witch" originated from sketches dating back to the Kid A (2000) and Hail to the Thief (2003) eras, with further work during In Rainbows (2007), as confirmed by producer Nigel Godrich.[18] Similarly, "True Love Waits" had been performed live in acoustic form since 1995 and evolved through synth arrangements during the The King of Limbs tour in 2012 before its final piano-led incarnation.[18] Other songs, such as "Identikit" and "Present Tense," emerged from live performances during the The King of Limbs era (2011–2012), integrating band-tested ideas post-tour.[19] Band collaboration emphasized arrangement over initial songwriting, with guitarist Jonny Greenwood contributing orchestral strings and choir elements that drew from his experience scoring films, adding layers of emotional texture to longstanding demos. Greenwood's string parts, performed by the London Contemporary Orchestra, were developed iteratively, as in "Burn the Witch," where violinists strummed with plectrums to mimic rhythmic drive.[20] This approach built on the group's history of evolving ideas across albums, prioritizing collective input to deepen the material's resonance.[21] In contrast to the digital looping and electronic focus of The King of Limbs, the band opted for an analog 8-track tape setup over Pro Tools, fostering a warmer, more organic sound that addressed perceptions of emotional detachment in prior experimental work.[21] This shift highlighted a return to refined, band-cohesive arrangements of pre-existing sketches, culminating in sessions that began intermittently after the 2012 The King of Limbs tour.[19]Recording and Production
Studio Sessions
Recording for A Moon Shaped Pool began in September 2014 at Radiohead's Oxfordshire studio, where the band worked with longtime producer Nigel Godrich until the Christmas break.[22] Drummer Philip Selway confirmed in a February 2015 interview that the group planned to resume sessions in March.[22] The process was intermittent, allowing flexibility amid members' other commitments, including Thom Yorke's concurrent solo releases such as Tomorrow's Modern Boxes in October 2014.[23] In 2015, the band relocated primary sessions to La Fabrique studio in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France, spending three weeks there to capture core band performances in a residential setting.[2] Godrich described this phase as focused group effort, after which he assembled the material independently.[2] Additional tracking and refinements occurred at RAK Studios in London, Godrich's primary facility.[24] The overall timeline extended from late 2014 through December 2015, prioritizing live interplay among the band members over isolated looping techniques used in prior work like The King of Limbs.[25] Key decisions during these sessions included building tracks from full-band takes augmented later by Jonny Greenwood's orchestral arrangements, recorded separately to integrate with the ensemble foundation.[1] This approach marked a shift toward organic group dynamics in a controlled environment, contrasting the more fragmented methods of earlier albums.[26]Technical Approach and Innovations
Producer Nigel Godrich utilized analog multitrack tape recording for A Moon Shaped Pool, employing a Studer A800 MKIII 24-track machine alongside two Otari MTR90 24-track recorders to achieve a warm, organic sonic texture characteristic of vintage equipment from the 1960s and 1970s.[27] This approach minimized digital intervention during initial capture, prioritizing tape's natural compression and harmonic saturation over computer-based Pro Tools workflows common in contemporary production.[28] Orchestral contributions from the London Contemporary Orchestra, arranged by Jonny Greenwood, incorporated traditional string instrumentation with targeted innovations such as violinists strumming bows across strings using guitar plectrums to generate percussive rhythms, as revealed by Greenwood in detailing the album's textural layers.[1] These elements were layered analogously during sessions, preserving acoustic immediacy rather than relying on synthesized emulation or post-production digital manipulation.[29] In mixing, Godrich focused on precise spatial placement of effects like delays and reverses, integrating them seamlessly into the tape-recorded foundation to enhance subtlety without aggressive compression or artificial reverb, thereby maintaining the performances' emotional directness.[28] This restraint contrasted with more processed rock productions, emphasizing dynamic range and instrumental clarity derived from the source material's fidelity.[27]Musical Composition
Style and Orchestration
A Moon Shaped Pool is characterized by an orchestral rock style, where intricate string arrangements by Jonny Greenwood form a core element of the sonic architecture.[19] These arrangements, performed by ensembles like the London Contemporary Orchestra, blend seamlessly with the band's instrumentation, creating layered textures that extend beyond traditional rock elements.[30] Greenwood's compositions incorporate innovative techniques, such as violinists strumming strings with guitar plectrums to generate rhythmic patterns.[1] The album features piano, synthesizers, and electronic samples that nod to Radiohead's prior experimental electronic influences, while minimizing raw electric guitar in favor of acoustic and orchestral timbres.[31] Colin Greenwood's bass lines anchor the ethereal arrangements, providing structural depth, and Phil Selway's drumming adopts a restrained, nuanced approach that supports the overall subtlety rather than driving aggressively.[32] Keyboards including a Sequential Circuits Prophet 5, Roland Juno-60, and Moog contribute to the atmospheric palette.[33] Specific tracks exemplify this orchestration: "Daydreaming" centers on piano-led melancholy with wavy samples, reverse drones, and looped vocals building to a symphonic swell.[31] The album's tempos lean elegiac, emphasizing introspective pacing over the rhythmic intensity of earlier releases like The King of Limbs.[34] This results in a symphonic dominance of pianos, strings, and guitars, with percussion appearing sparingly to heighten emotional resonance.[35]Lyrics and Thematic Elements
The lyrics of A Moon Shaped Pool center on motifs of emotional isolation, dissolution of long-term bonds, and quiet resignation, rendered in Thom Yorke's characteristically elliptical and imagistic style that eschews direct narrative for evocative fragments. This approach, consistent with his prior work, prioritizes visceral emotional states over literal exposition, as seen in phrases conveying entrapment and futility, such as the plea in "True Love Waits" to "don't leave" amid assurances of patient devotion.[36] The track, first performed live in 1995 and re-recorded for the album with a stark piano arrangement, underscores enduring unfulfilled longing, with its placement as the closer amplifying a sense of finality. Critics have linked this and similar imagery—evident in "Glass Eyes," where a dreamlike reunion fractures into absence—to Yorke's separation from visual artist Rachel Owen after 23 years together, announced on August 15, 2015, though Yorke has not explicitly confirmed such autobiographical ties.[11] [9] Heartbreak recurs through water and fluidity metaphors, symbolizing inevitable drift and submersion, as in "Daydreaming"'s half-remembered escape ("We are just happy to be / Walking through the night") that dissolves into solitary wandering. "Identikit" extends this with lines like "Broken hearts make it rain," portraying relational wreckage as a compounding, atmospheric force, while "Decks Dark" evokes obscured vision and descent into uncertainty. These elements cohere around causal realism of personal rupture: observable patterns of attachment fraying under time's weight, without romanticization of turmoil. Broader societal allusions appear subordinately, such as in "Burn the Witch," where warnings against blind adherence—"The monster in your mind"—critique conformity and mob dynamics, drawing on historical witch-hunt imagery to highlight groupthink's perils.[37] Interpretations tying the album's intimacy to environmental or existential decay, as in "The Numbers"' quantified despair or "Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor Rich Man Poor Man Beggar Thief"'s fatalistic shuffle, remain secondary to verifiable personal catalysts, given the album's recording timeline overlapping the relationship's end. Yorke's reluctance to dissect meanings—evident in sparse promotional comments—preserves ambiguity, allowing lyrics to function as prisms for individual projection while grounding in empirical emotional cores like loss's incremental erosion.[12]Visual and Packaging Elements
Artwork Design
The artwork for A Moon Shaped Pool was created by Stanley Donwood, who has collaborated with Radiohead since the band's early career, often working alongside the group during recording sessions to align visuals with the music's evolving themes.[38] For this album, Donwood produced a series of 13 abstract paintings, experimenting with techniques such as large-scale brushwork on un-stretched canvases and initial attempts at marbling using water, inks, and even a pond liner in France, though disrupted by local winds like the Mistral.[38] The final cover image emerged from black-and-white enamel paintings refined in the UK, where exposure to weather—particularly a thunderstorm—altered one piece, imparting a somber, elemental quality reflective of the process's unpredictability.[39][38] This cover depicts an abstract, grayscale swirling form interpreted as a distorted, moon-shaped pool, achieved through stripped-back simplicity after earlier overcomplications in the series.[38] Donwood's method emphasized natural intervention over digital manipulation, contrasting some prior Radiohead aesthetics while maintaining an abstract style devoid of explicit political or narrative elements.[39] The inner sleeve features additional cryptic, monochromatic drawings from the same painting series, such as Wraith (enamel on canvas, 2016), which complement the album's introspective mood through their ethereal, unease-evoking abstractions without venturing into overt symbolism beyond the title's evocation.[40][38] These choices underscore a deliberate shift toward elemental rawness, mirroring the recording's organic development in locations like La Fabrique studio.[38]Packaging Formats
A Moon Shaped Pool was released in standard double LP format on 180-gram black vinyl, with a limited edition on white vinyl, both housed in a gatefold sleeve featuring silver foil detailing on the cover.[41][4] A standard CD edition was also produced in a jewel case. Limited color variants, including marbled grey/brown and silver pressings, were manufactured to attract collectors valuing rarity and aesthetic appeal in physical media.[42] The special edition box set included a case-bound hardcover book with 32 pages of artwork, two heavyweight 12-inch vinyl records of the album, and two compact discs—one with the standard tracks and another containing bonus material such as "Ill Wind" and "Spectre."[43][44] This packaging format provided enhanced value through additional content and durable materials, targeting dedicated fans willing to pay a premium for comprehensive editions. Digitally, the album was distributed via Bandcamp, offering downloads in MP3 and 16-bit/44.1 kHz FLAC formats for $9.99 or "name your price," which facilitated direct-to-fan sales and retained a larger share of revenue for the band compared to conventional label-mediated platforms.[45] This approach underscored Radiohead's emphasis on artist autonomy in digital packaging, prioritizing uncompressed audio quality accessible without intermediary streaming services. The varied formats balanced accessibility for casual listeners with collectible exclusivity, supporting commercial viability through diversified revenue streams from physical premiums and digital immediacy.
Release and Distribution
Pre-Release Events and Leak
Radiohead began teasing A Moon Shaped Pool in early May 2016 with cryptic social media posts and short video clips, culminating in the release of the lead single "Burn the Witch" on May 2, accompanied by an animated video directed by Cristóbal León and Joaquín León. Four days later, on May 6, the band shared the second single "Daydreaming," featuring a Paul Thomas Anderson-directed video starring Thom Yorke. These previews built anticipation without disclosing the album title or release details, aligning with the band's history of unconventional rollout strategies seen in prior releases like In Rainbows. The full album leaked online via unauthorized file-sharing sites on May 7, 2016, prompting Radiohead to accelerate their planned schedule and issue a digital version for purchase through their official website and platforms like iTunes and Apple Music the following day, May 8. The band issued a brief statement acknowledging the breach, stating the music was now available and expressing a pragmatic acceptance of digital dissemination's inevitability, eschewing aggressive legal action in favor of direct fan access. This response echoed their earlier pay-what-you-want model for In Rainbows in 2007, prioritizing adaptation to piracy's realities over enforcement of traditional copyright controls. The surprise digital launch subverted conventional pre-release hype cycles reliant on physical retail windows, yet yielded robust initial commercial performance, with over 50,000 combined units sold in the UK during its truncated debut chart week ending May 14—despite only two days of official availability.[46][47] Radiohead's approach underscored a causal shift in artist-label dynamics, where leaks catalyzed rather than derailed distribution, fostering immediate engagement without reported pursuits of litigation against leakers.Official Launch and Variants
The physical retail release of A Moon Shaped Pool occurred on June 17, 2016, distributed by XL Recordings in formats including double heavyweight vinyl LP and compact disc.[4][48] The band offered a special edition directly through their W.A.S.T.E. online store, featuring a case-bound booklet with artwork, the album on vinyl and CD, an additional CD with bonus tracks, and a snippet of original master recording tape.[43] Radiohead managed digital distribution independently, making the album available for purchase and streaming on their website alongside platforms like Apple Music, bypassing traditional major label intermediaries for direct fan access.[49][50] International editions, such as the Japanese release, included standard obi strips but featured no alterations to the tracklist or content compared to the primary version.[51]Promotion and Live Performances
Marketing Efforts
Radiohead's marketing for A Moon Shaped Pool centered on controlled scarcity and digital intrigue rather than broad advertising campaigns. Prior to the May 2, 2016, announcement, the band executed a social media blackout by deleting all posts and profiles across platforms, which prompted speculation in outlets like The Guardian and amplified anticipation without direct expenditure on promotions.[52] On that date, they simultaneously unveiled animated music videos for lead singles "Burn the Witch" and "Daydreaming" on YouTube, pairing the releases with immediate digital availability exclusively via their website to prioritize fan-direct sales over instant streaming ubiquity.[53] [54] This direct-to-fan model extended to email communications, where subscribers received updates on purchases and subsequent special editions featuring deluxe packaging, vinyl variants, and artwork inserts, reinforcing loyalty without reliance on intermediaries.[55] The strategy eschewed mainstream television or print ads, leveraging the band's established reputation to generate organic buzz through limited initial access, which encouraged physical and premium digital buys. Post-release, Radiohead commissioned short artist vignettes inspired by each track, shared sporadically online to sustain visual engagement without saturating channels.[56] Cross-promotion with individual members' projects remained restrained; while Thom Yorke continued solo endeavors, including collaborations and performances around this period, these were not overtly linked to the album to maintain focus on Radiohead's collective output.[57] This understated approach contrasted with industry norms, prioritizing artistic integrity and core audience retention over mass-market hype.[58]Touring Activity
Radiohead's touring in support of A Moon Shaped Pool commenced shortly after the album's May 2016 release, encompassing European warm-up shows in May, followed by arena legs across North America in summer 2016 and spring 2017, with additional dates in the UK, France, and Canada. The tour itinerary included 33 concerts in the United States, 6 in the United Kingdom, 5 in Canada, and 4 in France, among others.[59] Setlists prominently featured new material, with tracks like "Daydreaming" and "Ful Stop" performed at 76 shows each, "Idioteque" at 73, and "Bloom" at 72, reflecting a balanced integration of the album's songs alongside staples from prior releases.[60] The band debuted the album's reimagined arrangement of "True Love Waits"—previously performed acoustically since 1995—in full band form during the European leg, including at Le Zénith in Paris on May 23, 2016, and subsequent North American dates such as the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on August 4, 2016.[61][62] Stage production emphasized electronic and visual elements to evoke the album's lush orchestration, including symmetrical arrays of lights and screens above a bank of monitors, without a live string section.[63] Arena venues hosted crowds typically ranging from 13,000 to over 15,000, as evidenced by the sold-out Philips Arena show in Atlanta on April 1, 2017, which drew 13,057 attendees.[64] The tour extended into 2018 with select dates, including South American performances in April, marking a scaled-back conclusion compared to the more exhaustive schedules of prior cycles like the 2012 King of Limbs promotions. This restraint aligned with the band's shifting priorities toward solo endeavors post-2018, leading to a hiatus from group touring until later announcements.[65]Commercial Outcomes
Sales Data
A Moon Shaped Pool achieved aggregate sales of 752,327 copies across eight tracked countries, including 500,000 units in the United States (certified gold by the RIAA) and 100,000 in the United Kingdom, with additional figures of 50,000 in France.[66] These totals, current as of available industry aggregates, underscore the album's specialized market penetration rather than mass-market dominance, as Radiohead's catalog emphasizes dedicated fanbases over broad commercial peaks.[67] The album's debut digital release on May 8, 2016, generated 173,000 pure sales in the US during its first full tracking week, buoyed by pre-release anticipation following an online leak the prior evening.[68] Physical formats saw subsequent surges, particularly vinyl, with 21,000 US units sold in the week ending October 13, 2016, driven by a deluxe edition release that marked the largest physical sales frame since the June retail launch (46,000 units).[69] Post-2017, no major reissues or variants produced verifiable sales spikes, indicating stabilized but limited ongoing commercial traction beyond initial collector demand.[70]Chart Achievements and Certifications
A Moon Shaped Pool debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart on May 13, 2016, becoming Radiohead's sixth chart-topping album in that territory and shifting over 50,000 combined units in its first official tracking week.[7][8][71] In the United States, the album entered the Billboard 200 at number three on the chart dated May 21, 2016, with 181,000 album-equivalent units, including 173,000 in pure album sales—Radiohead's largest sales week since 2003.[68][72] The release also demonstrated strong format-specific performance, topping the Billboard Vinyl Albums chart in the issue dated October 22, 2016, upon the vinyl edition's physical availability.[73] The album earned a gold certification from the British Phonographic Industry in the United Kingdom, denoting 100,000 units shipped. It has not received platinum status in major markets, including no gold or higher award from the Recording Industry Association of America despite cumulative US consumption exceeding 370,000 units by mid-2017.[66]Critical Analysis and Reception
Contemporary Reviews
Upon its release on 8 May 2016, A Moon Shaped Pool garnered strong critical acclaim, with an aggregated Metacritic score of 88 out of 100 based on 40 reviews, signifying "universal acclaim" for its lush orchestration, intricate arrangements, and introspective emotional resonance.[74] Critics frequently praised the album's return to more accessible, melody-driven structures reminiscent of Radiohead's pre-Kid A era, contrasting with the band's prior electronic experiments on The King of Limbs (2011), while emphasizing the sophisticated string work and atmospheric depth contributed by collaborators like Jonny Greenwood.[75][13] Pitchfork, awarding it "Best New Music" status with a score of 9.1 out of 10, highlighted tracks like "Burn the Witch" and "Daydreaming" for their blend of tension and release, yet observed that the album's strengths lay in refined execution rather than groundbreaking innovation, potentially risking a sense of déjà vu amid familiar thematic concerns of alienation and decay.[75] Similarly, The Guardian gave it five out of five stars, commending the "restrained" production and forward-pushing compositions that drew from the band's extensive catalog, but noted a deliberate paring back of intensity that evoked disintegration over explosive disruption.[13] The New York Times echoed this, portraying the record as a patient meditation on environmental peril and relational fracture, with Thom Yorke's vocals conveying quiet urgency amid swelling strings, though it critiqued the overarching mood of brooding stasis as less propulsive than prior efforts.[76] NPR's review underscored the album's cohesive dread, from droning electronics to orchestral swells, positioning it as a culmination of Radiohead's evolution without the abrasive edges of earlier albums, but implied a polished familiarity that prioritized cathartic immersion over raw confrontation.[77] Among fans, opinions divided, with some online discussions critiquing the "over-polished" sound as a departure from the visceral grit of works like OK Computer (1997), favoring instead the perceived regression to orchestral comfort over experimental edge.[78]Accolades and Recognitions
A Moon Shaped Pool was nominated for the 2016 Mercury Prize, the fifth Radiohead album to receive such recognition, though it did not win.[79] At the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, the album earned nominations for Best Alternative Music Album and Best Rock Song for "Burn the Witch", but Radiohead received no wins in these categories.[80] The album appeared on Rolling Stone's list of the 50 best albums of 2016.[81] NME included it in their albums of the year for 2016.[82]Substantiated Criticisms
Some reviewers criticized A Moon Shaped Pool for containing tracks that appeared underdeveloped and akin to B-sides or rarities, rather than cohesive album material demanding full realization. In The Quietus, writer John Doran observed that the record evokes a "B-sides and Rarities" compilation, with certain songs insufficiently fleshed out despite the band's resources, diminishing their impact compared to the sharper, more urgent songcraft of prior releases like OK Computer (1997).[83] The album's orchestral emphasis and introspective tone drew accusations of conservatism, particularly as a reaction to the experimental sparseness of The King of Limbs (2011), which had faced backlash for its perceived repetitiveness and lack of melodic anchors. Stephen Dalton, in a Louder review, faulted the extended gestation period for yielding a "flimsy and unfocused" result, with no daring sonic innovations or fresh flavors to elevate it beyond refinement of existing motifs.[84] Accessibility concerns further highlighted structural weaknesses, as the album forgoes conventional hooks in favor of ambient swells and lyrical abstraction, yielding no hit singles to propel broader appeal. This melodic restraint, while artistically deliberate, aligned with a sales plateau—initial U.S. figures around 113,000 units fell short of In Rainbows' (2007) 290,000 first-week total—suggesting over-reliance on atmospheric immersion at the expense of immediate engagement.Enduring Impact
Cultural and Artistic Influence
A Moon Shaped Pool solidified its place within the canon of breakup albums through its introspective portrayal of personal dissolution, drawing from Thom Yorke's separation from Rachel Owen after 23 years of partnership. Reviewers have highlighted tracks like "True Love Waits" and "Daydreaming" for their raw emotional disclosures, positioning the record as a model of intimate lyrical vulnerability that echoes confessional traditions in rock without generalizing individual heartbreak as a universal narrative.[9][15] Thematically, the album perpetuated Radiohead's engagement with environmental degradation and collective conformity, evident in lyrics confronting climate impacts and societal inertia across songs such as "The Numbers" and "Burn the Witch." This reinforced the band's contribution to alternative music's discourse on anthropogenic crises and group dynamics, with arrangements blending rock instrumentation and orchestral swells to evoke urgency without prescriptive solutions.[85][76][86]Retrospective Assessments
In the years following its release, A Moon Shaped Pool has been increasingly interpreted by critics as a potential swan song for Radiohead, given the band's extended hiatus from new studio material—now approaching a decade by 2025 without a successor. A 2020 analysis framed the album as a "haunting treatise on impermanence, death, aging, and the legacy we leave behind through art after we are gone," emphasizing its elegiac tone as fitting for a group confronting artistic finality.[87] This view aligns with the absence of band activity post-2016, contrasted against Thom Yorke's and Jonny Greenwood's solo endeavors, positioning the record as a contemplative endpoint rather than a transitional work.[88] The album's motifs of emotional isolation and quiet despair garnered heightened appreciation during the COVID-19 quarantines of 2020–2021, when listeners revisited its introspective soundscapes amid global seclusion. Retrospectives from this era highlighted how tracks evoking detachment and introspection mirrored pandemic-induced solitude, fostering a reevaluation of its subdued urgency over more bombastic predecessors.[87] However, debates persist regarding Radiohead's post-OK Computer trajectory, with some assessments affirming a narrative of diminishing returns—labeling A Moon Shaped Pool as refined yet less innovative than the 1997 peak, prioritizing orchestral elegance over groundbreaking experimentation.[89] By 2025, the album's legacy reflects archival stasis, with no major reissues, deluxe expansions, or remasters comparable to prior anniversary treatments like OK Computer OKNOTOK (2017). A 2022 vinyl reissue included remastering, but lacks additional content or broader archival releases, underscoring a lack of active legacy curation.[90] This contrasts with the band's earlier pattern of revisiting catalog material, suggesting A Moon Shaped Pool endures in its original form, its relevance sustained by thematic depth rather than promotional reinvention.[88]Album Contents
Track Listing
A Moon Shaped Pool comprises 11 tracks, all written by the members of Radiohead and produced by Nigel Godrich. The standard track listing, as released on XL Recordings, is presented below.| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Burn the Witch" | 3:40 |
| 2 | "Daydreaming" | 6:24 |
| 3 | "Decks Dark" | 4:41 |
| 4 | "Desert Island Disk" | 3:44 |
| 5 | "Ful Stop" | 6:07 |
| 6 | "Glass Eyes" | 2:53 |
| 7 | "Identikit" | 4:26 |
| 8 | "The Numbers" | 5:44 |
| 9 | "Present Tense" | 4:46 |
| 10 | "Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor Rich Man Poor Man Beggar Man Thief" | 5:04 |
| 11 | "True Love Waits" | 4:25 |
Personnel Credits
A Moon Shaped Pool credits the five members of Radiohead as primary performers, with Thom Yorke handling vocals alongside guitar, piano, and keyboards; Jonny Greenwood contributing guitar, keyboards, ondes Martenot, and string arrangements; Colin Greenwood on bass; Ed O'Brien on guitar and backing vocals; and Philip Selway on drums and percussion.[4] Production, engineering, and mixing were led by longtime collaborator Nigel Godrich, with additional engineering by Sam Petts-Davies, Maxime Le Guil, and Darrell Thorp, and mastering by Bob Ludwig.[4] The project incorporated strings performed by the London Contemporary Orchestra under conductor Hugh Brunt, directed by Robert Ziegler, marking a limited external involvement that underscores the band's in-house creative control.[4][91]Core Band and Production
- Thom Yorke – vocals, guitar, piano, keyboards[4]
- Jonny Greenwood – guitar, keyboards, strings, ondes Martenot (arrangements)[4]
- Colin Greenwood – bass[4]
- Ed O'Brien – guitar, vocals[4]
- Philip Selway – drums, percussion[4]
- Nigel Godrich – producer, engineer, mixing[4][3]