Want to be featured? Click here!

Radiohead Drummer Philip Selway Anticipates Bands’ Comeback After 5 Years

After a five-year silence, Radiohead is stirring again—drummer Philip Selway confirms the band is ready to reconnect and explore new creative ground together.

British experimental rock band Radiohead is gearing up for a return after a hiatus, as revealed by drummer Philip Selway. The band, known for their last release in 2016 with “A Moon Shaped Pool,” hasn’t performed live since 2018. Selway shared on a live stream with the Crow Hill Company, stating, “We’ve actually had a little break for a minute; the last show that we did was back in 2018, but we’re coming back ’round to that point now.”

Despite individual pursuits during the break, including Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood forming The Smile, Selway expressed the unique importance of Radiohead’s creative and personal relationship, emphasizing, “This feels like something to dive back into and really explore and see what other directions it can take us in.”

During the break, Yorke and Greenwood collaborated in their new band, The Smile, releasing their debut LP in 2022 and announcing a second album, “Wall of Eyes,” for 2024, along with a U.K. and European tour.

The 56-year-old musician previously explained the motivation behind Radiohead’s break to a magazine, citing a planned deviation from Radiohead during the pandemic to allow members to pursue various side projects. While individual projects have flourished, Selway affirmed, “We’ll get together soon, and in the next couple of years, there will be something there, of some sort.”

Fans can now anticipate the return of arguably the biggest postmodern art rock band in history after their 5 years hiatus.

Read More > “Treated her like property” – Penthouse Model Exposes 1989 Sexual Assault by Axl Rose

+ posts

An entity of flesh and bones in pursuit of becoming a higher being. A connoisseur of the mystic arts and everything musical. His origins are unknown, and so are his true motives.

Discover more from Sinusoidal Music

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading