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Everything in Its Right Place

"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, digitally manipulated vocals and unusual time signatures. The lyrics were inspired by the stress felt by the singer, Thom Yorke, while promoting Radiohead's album OK Computer (1997).

This article is about the song by Radiohead. For other uses, see Everything in Its Right Place (disambiguation).

"Everything in Its Right Place"

2 October 2000

4:11

Radiohead

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.


"Everything in Its Right Place" represented a change in Radiohead's style and working methods, shifting to a more experimental approach. Though it alienated some listeners, it 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 "Everything in its Right Place" melody, 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] He said "Everything In Its Right Place" was about "trying to fit into the right place and the right box so you can connect".[9]


The line "yesterday I woke up sucking a lemon" references the sour-faced expression Yorke said he wore "for three years".[8] He hesitated to use the line, but recorded it at the encouragement of Radiohead's producer, Nigel Godrich.[10] Yorke said it was "pretty silly ... But I thought it was funny when I sang it. When I listened to it afterwards, it meant something else."[11]

Composition[edit]

"Everything in its Right Place" is an electronic song featuring synthesiser and digitally manipulated vocals.[16] It uses unusual time signatures and mixed modes, staples of Radiohead's songwriting.[17] O'Brien observed that it lacks the crescendos of Radiohead's previous songs.[12] ABC.net described it as "dissonant" and "ominous".[16] NME likened it to electronic music released on the record label Warp, with "minimalism and all manner of glitchy creepiness" and "weirdly hymnal dreamscape of ambient keys".[18]


The minimalist composer Steve Reich reinterpreted "Everything in Its Right Place" for his 2014 album Radio Rewrite. He noted the song's unusual harmonic movement: "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."[19]

Colin Greenwood

Jonny Greenwood

Ed O'Brien

Philip Selway

Thom Yorke