10 Amazing Follow Ups To Classic Albums
10. Kid A - Radiohead
As Radiohead faced a new decade, it sounded like they were about to be the new leaders of rock and roll going forward. Ever since grunge's corpse stopped twitching at the end of the decade, the massive sonic landscape of OK Computer felt like the future of rock already, so all they had to do was keep up their creative streak. Though these British lads were able to remain titans of rock, they did it by delivering the polar opposite of standard rock and roll.
Recorded after the Computer tour dates wound down, Kid A was as clinical a piece of music as you could expect out of Radiohead, trading in a lot of the righteous guitar riffs of their previous effort for densely packed synthesizer parts and glitchy effects that made Thom Yorke sound nearly robotic next to everything else. As much as this kind of thing seemed off putting at first, things started to take a different course once we realized what we were listening to.
By moving outside of everyone's collective comfort zones, Radiohead made a masterpiece with Kid A through taking the standard rock tropes and distilling them down into the most hollow and uncomfortable soundscapes ever created, like it was ripped straight out of an old school horror movie. While Kid A might take a minute to grow on you, it might also be the reason why rock was even relevant in the next decade.