Since their breakthrough hit "Creep" in 1993, Radiohead has continued to
make waves throughout popular and political culture with its views about
the Bush presidency (its 2003 album was titled Hail to the Thief), its
anti-corporatism, its pioneering efforts to produce ecologically sound
road tours, and, most of all, its decision in 2007 to sell its latest
album, In Rainbows, online with a controversial "pay-what-you-want"
price. Radiohead and Philosophy offers fresh ways to appreciate the
lyrics, music, and conceptual ground of this highly innovative band. The
chapters in this book explain how Radiohead's music connects directly to
the philosophical phenomenology of thinkers like Maurice Merleau-Ponty
and Martin Heidegger, the existentialism of Albert Camus and Jean Paul
Sartre, and the philosophical politics of Karl Marx, Jean Baudrillard,
and Noam Chomsky. Fans and critics know that Radiohead is "the only band
that matters" on the scene today -- Radiohead and Philosophy shows
why.