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Pablo Honey es el primer álbum de la banda británica Radiohead, lanzado el 22 de febrero de 1993. Su gran éxito fue el single "Creep". La versión estadounidense del álbum tiene una versión especial de "Creep", en la cual el fuckin pronunciado antes del coro es reemplazado por very. El tema "Creep" surgió accidentalmente ya que era una canción que Jonny Greenwood odiaba y trataba de arruinar con ruidos discordantes, así nació el acorde distorsionado, que cambia el ritmo y clima del tema. El mismo llegó al puesto 27 de la Billboard. Las versiones japonesas en cambio tienen un total de 17 pistas, siendo las nuevas: "Pop Is Dead", "Inside my Head", "Million Dollar Question" y dos versiones en directo de "Creep" y "Ripcord".
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Oxfordshire's best-known musical export have been voicing the angst of an inarticulate generation for the last fifteen years, kicking off with Pablo Honey, their exploration of suburban, adolescent self-awareness. Released when the boys still glistened with the sheen of an expensive private education and set against the more mature redneck, white bread, blue-collar roar of Nirvana, Radiohead's intelligent, delicate take on the loud/soft, quick/slow language of grunge appeared spineless and effete until Creep was released and set the record straight.
Massively backed by UK 'indie' radio, the single became a hit in the slacker student community, and simultaneously established the band as serious musicians, with interesting points to make and hefty musical skills with which to drive them home.
The band's apparent overnight success came after years of dedication (even keeping in touch while away at various universities) and endless free time spent in rehearsal. They'd toughened up and tightened their sound on the road before setting out to make the album, and had grown the confidence to expand ideas across lengthy instrumental breaks that other new kids in the studio might fear to try.
It all resulted in a stunning blend that combined the best aspects of prog rock (challenging lyrics, deft chord changes, novelty time signatures and so forth) with the plaintiveness of bedsit singer song-writing and the sound of expensive equipment thrashed at by experts. Though later albums were better received, this remains one of rock's most impressive debuts.
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