Everything In Its Right Place Katia

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Everything In Its Right Place Katia

I just watched The Unforgivable on Netflix and in the movie there’s a piano rendition of this Radiohead song. I know there’s a version by Josh Cohen but something about the way Katia plays i like better. I can’t seem to find the song anywhere other than the movie. I know it’s tough but please help me!

Everything In Its Right Place Katia

level 1

It’s a originally a Radiohead song, I think? Maybe that will help you find it.

level 2

Oh shit you’re right, sorry don’t know why I said Nirvana. I’m having the hardest time finding this version but I also realized the movie just released. So maybe it’ll get released eventually? It’s just weird because the Katia Labeque version is credited but not available anywhere. Anyways, thanks!

level 2

Everything In Its Right Place” by Katia Labeque.

THANK YOU!

Google search for that piece from the movie brought me here. Thank you OP, too.

level 1

Yesterday I woke up sucking a lemon…

level 2

It was so beautiful. I sent Katia Labeque a message on Instagram so here’s hoping someone from her team responds 🤞🏼

level 1

I cannot find it anywhere either.

level 2

It’s not on there I checked :/ Hans Zimmer does the soundtrack and he mixes the piano rendition into one of his own pieces. His piece is available on the soundtrack but not the piano

level 1

I found almost the exact song on spotify here

level 2

I know I mentioned that song in the text of my post

level 1

Need to find!!!! This song has fucking GOT IT

level 1

Shazam recognizes it and refers to Apple Music.

level 2

It's not available in Apple Music

level 1

trying to find the version that was played in the movie...

level 1

Agreed - really want the Katia version. The Cohen version just doesn't hit the same. Lovely tho.

level 1

Big fan of Radiohead, I was amazed by this variation too. Look up everywhere without results, hope to find the right version.

"Everything in Its Right Place"
Song by Radiohead
from the album Kid A
Released2000
RecordedJanuary 1999 – April 2000
Genre
  • Electronica
  • post-rock[1]
Length4:11
Label
  • Parlophone
  • Capitol
  • XL
Songwriter(s)Radiohead
Producer(s)
  • Nigel Godrich
  • Radiohead
Audio sample

  • file
  • help

"Everything in Its Right Place" is a song by the English rock band Radiohead, released on their fourth album, Kid A (2000). It features synthesiser, manipulated vocals, and lyrics inspired by the stress singer Thom Yorke experienced while promoting Radiohead's album OK Computer (1997).

Yorke wrote "Everything in Its Right Place" on piano. Radiohead worked on it in a conventional band arrangement before transferring it to synthesiser, and described it as a breakthrough in the album recording. Though it alienated some listeners expecting more of Radiohead's earlier rock music, "Everything in Its Right Place" was named one of the best songs of the decade by several publications.

Writing[edit]

Following the success of Radiohead's 1997 album OK Computer, the songwriter Thom Yorke had a mental breakdown.[2] He suffered from writer's block and became disillusioned with rock music.[3] Instead, he listened almost exclusively to the electronic music of Warp artists such as Aphex Twin and Autechre, saying: "It was refreshing because the music was all structures and had no human voices in it. But I felt just as emotional about it as I'd ever felt about guitar music."[2]

Yorke bought a house in Cornwall and spent his time walking the cliffs and drawing, restricting his musical activity to playing his new grand piano.[4] "Everything in Its Right Place" was the first song he wrote,[4] followed by "Pyramid Song".[5] Yorke described himself as a "shit piano player", and took inspiration from a quote by Tom Waits saying that ignorance of instruments gives him inspiration. Yorke said: "That's one of the reasons I wanted to get into computers and synths, because I didn't understand how the fuck they worked. I had no idea what ADSR meant."[6] He would "endlessly" play the riff for "Everything in its Right Place", attempting to "meditate out of" his depression.[7]

Yorke denied that the lyrics were "gibberish", and said they expressed the depression he experienced on the OK Computer tour. He cited a performance at the NEC Arena in Birmingham, England, in 1997: "I came off at the end of that show sat in the dressing room and couldn't speak ... People were saying, 'You all right?' I knew people were speaking to me. But I couldn't hear them ... I'd just so had enough. And I was bored with saying I'd had enough."[8] The line "Yesterday I woke up sucking a lemon" references the sour-faced expression Yorke said he wore "for three years".[8]

Recording[edit]

Everything In Its Right Place Katia

According to the Radiohead bassist, Colin Greenwood, Radiohead's producer Nigel Godrich was initially unimpressed by "Everything in its Right Place".[9] Radiohead worked on the song in a conventional band arrangement in Copenhagen and Paris, but without results.[10] One night, while they were working in Gloucestershire,[10] Yorke and Godrich transferred the song from piano to a Prophet-5 synthesiser.[11][9] Yorke hesitated to use the line "Yesterday I woke up sucking a lemon", but recorded it at Godrich's encouragement.[12] Godrich processed his vocals in Pro Tools using a scrubbing tool.[9] For live performances, Radiohead recreated the vocal effect by manipulating Yorke's vocals with Kaoss Pads.[13]

The lead guitarist, Jonny Greenwood, said the song was a turning point in the making of Kid A: "We knew it had to be the first song, and everything just followed after it."[9] He said it was the first time Radiohead had been happy to leave a song "sparse", instead of "layering on top of what's a very good song or a very good sound, and hiding it, camouflaging it in case it's not good enough".[9] The guitarist Ed O'Brien and the drummer, Philip Selway, said the track forced them to accept that not every song needed every band member to play on it. O'Brien recalled: "It forced the issue, immediately! And to be genuinely sort of delighted that you'd been working for six months on this record and something great has come out of it, and you haven't contributed to it, is a really liberating feeling."[10]

Composition[edit]

"Everything in its Right Place" is an electronic song featuring synthesiser and digitally manipulated vocals. ABC.net described it as "dissonant" and "ominous".[14] According to NME, it features "Warp-style electronica, minimalism and all manner of glitchy creepiness", with a "weirdly hymnal dreamscape of ambient keys".[15] O'Brien observed that it lacked the crescendos typical of Radiohead's previous songs.[10]

The minimalist composer Steve Reich, who reinterpreted "Everything in Its Right Place" for his 2014 album Radio Rewrite noted the song's unusual harmonic movement, observing that "it was originally in F minor, and it never comes down to the one chord, the F minor chord is never stated. So there's never a tonic, there's never a cadence in the normal sense." He also noted that the word "everything" follows the dominant and tonic: "The tonic and the dominant are the end of every Beethoven symphony, the end of everything in classical music ... I'm sure Thom did it intuitively, I'm sure he wasn't thinking about it ... but it's perfect, it is everything."[16]

Reception[edit]

"Everything in Its Right Place" alienated critics who had hoped for more of the rock music of Radiohead's previous albums. The NME described it as "the moment where Radiohead finally left behind the limitations of being an alt rock band and embraced a whole wide world of weirdness".[15] In 2009, Pitchfork described the shock some fans experienced hearing it for the first time:[17]

What was this shit? If everything was really in its right place, where were the fucking guitars ... And whose crackling old keyboards were those? And why did rock's razor-sharp voice suddenly sound as if it'd been broken into bits by a centrifuge? ... "Everything in Its Right Place" – a sharp-tongued kiss-off that stood on the shoulders of different giants, like krautrock, Stockhausen, and Squarepusher – poured new possibilities into several previously hermetic circles. And it was too hypnotic to dare apologise.

Reviewing Kid A, the Guardian critic Alexis Petridis called "Everything in Its Right Place" a "messy and inconsequential doodle",[18] and the Melody Maker critic Mark Beaumont dismissed it as a "haphazard and pointless synth'n'laptop experiment".[19] Reviewing Kid A for the New Yorker, Nick Hornby described his disappointment in the song: "'Hey! I can handle experimentalism!' you think, but your confidence is immediately knocked flat by the lyrics."[20] NME described it as a "beautiful triumph of understatement" and a "pointed" opener.[21]

"Everything In Its Right Place" was named one of the best tracks of the decade by Rolling Stone,[22] NME[15] and Pitchfork.[17] In a 2020 piece for the Guardian, the journalist Jazz Monroe named it the 25th-best Radiohead track, writing: "Like David Byrne before him, Yorke had renounced his authorship to flirt with self-erasure, yielding to gorgeously sunlit synths."[23]

Personnel[edit]

Radiohead[edit]

  • Colin Greenwood
  • Jonny Greenwood
  • Ed O'Brien
  • Philip Selway
  • Thom Yorke

Additional personnel[edit]

  • Nigel Godrich – production, engineering, mixing
  • Gerard Navarro – production assistance, additional engineering
  • Graeme Stewart – additional engineering

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Inductee Insights: Radiohead". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. 16 December 2019. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  2. ^ a b Zoric, Lauren (22 September 2000). "I think I'm meant to be dead ..." The Guardian. Retrieved 18 May 2007.
  3. ^ Smith, Andrew (1 October 2000). "Sound and fury". The Observer. Retrieved 19 May 2007.
  4. ^ a b Naokes, Tim (12 February 2012). "Splitting atoms with Thom Yorke". Dazed. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  5. ^ Kent, Nick (June 2001). "Happy now?". Mojo. Archived from the original on 6 February 2012.
  6. ^ Fricke, David (14 December 2000). "People of the Year: Thom Yorke of Radiohead". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  7. ^ "Radiohead's Thom Yorke recalls writer's block while working on Kid A". NME. 16 October 2021. Retrieved 16 October 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ a b Fricke, David (2 August 2001). "Radiohead: making music that matters". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d e Greenwood, Jonny; Greenwood, Colin (20 October 2000). "An interview with Jonny and Colin Greenwood". Morning Becomes Eclectic (Interview). Interviewed by Nic Harcourt. Los Angeles: KCRW.
  10. ^ a b c d O'Brien, Ed; Selway, Philip (25 September 2000). "Interview with Ed O'Brien and Philip Selway" (Interview). Interviewed by Paul Anderson. XFM.
  11. ^ "The 14 synthesizers that shaped modern music". The Vinyl Factory. 4 March 2014. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  12. ^ Doherty, Niall (27 July 2022). "Lost in music: Nigel Godrich". The New Cue. Retrieved 27 July 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  13. ^ McNamee, David (9 March 2011). "Hey, what's that sound: Kaoss Pad". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  14. ^ Zwi, Adam (13 October 2014). "Steve Reich meets Radiohead with 'Radio Rewrite'". Radio National. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  15. ^ a b c "100 Best Songs Of The 00s". NME. 29 May 2012. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  16. ^ Petridis, Alexis (1 March 2013). "Steve Reich on Schoenberg, Coltrane and Radiohead". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  17. ^ a b "The 200 Best Songs of the 2000s". Pitchfork. 21 August 2009. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  18. ^ Petridis, Alexis (1 July 2001). "CD of the week: Radiohead: Amnesiac". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  19. ^ Beaumont, Mark (11 October 2010). "Radiohead's Kid A: still not much cop". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  20. ^ Hornby, Nick (30 October 2000). "Beyond the Pale". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
  21. ^ "Radiohead: Kid A". NME. 23 December 2000. Archived from the original on 4 March 2020. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  22. ^ "100 Best Songs of the 2000s". Rolling Stone. 17 June 2011. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  23. ^ Monroe, Jazz (23 January 2020). "Radiohead's 40 greatest songs – ranked!". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 January 2020.

'

What song is played on the piano in the unforgivable?

The Skylark (From a Farewell to Saint Petersburg)” by Mikhail Glinka (00:35:00): Katie plays a piano at home. She remembers screaming as a child.

What movie was everything in its right place?

Vanilla SkyEverything in Its Right Place / Movienull

How was everything in its right place made?

Lead singer Thom Yorke wrote this about how he felt after a show on their 1997 OK Computer tour. The show was in Birmingham, England, and when Yorke got off stage he went to the dressing room and felt completely burned out. The band was becoming famous, but Yorke was feeling helpless and victimized.