THE GUITARIST TRIED TO SABOTAGE THE SONG IN THE STUDIO — AND THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT MADE IT LEGENDARY. Thom Yorke wrote “Creep” at Exeter University — about a girl he used to follow around campus but never once dared to speak to. He brought the song to the band. They thought it was too soft, too wimpy. Nobody wanted to record it. But the producers pushed. And when they finally played it in the studio, guitarist Jonny Greenwood did something no one expected — he slammed his guitar as hard as he could before the chorus, trying to wreck the take completely. What the band didn’t know: the producers were secretly recording. That raw, angry burst of distortion became the most recognizable sound in the whole song. “Creep” flopped in the UK in 1992. A year later, it exploded worldwide. Today it has nearly 3 billion Spotify streams. And Radiohead? They got so sick of playing it that Yorke once told a crowd begging for it: “We’re tired of it.” The song one member tried to destroy ended up being the one the world never let go of.
The Guitarist Tried to Sabotage the Song in the Studio — and That’s Exactly What Made It Legendary Some songs…