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from DrFox

from What Inspired Me
I discovered the Cranberries in high school, through a TV programme covering the Billboard charts. The moment Dolores O'Riordan's voice came through the speakers, it lodged itself in my ear and refused to leave. That unmistakable trembling lilt, the reverb-drenched guitars, a sound that was at once fragile and fierce. For the teenage version of me, the Cranberries were simply the best thing there was.
Years later, as an adult, a song came on the radio. Reverb-laden guitars, a voice with a rolling, melismatic quality, harmonies coiling around each other — it sounded so much like the Cranberries that I genuinely thought I was mistaken about what I was hearing. But it wasn't the Cranberries. It was a band called Cocteau Twins, who had arrived at that same sound a full decade earlier.
My favorite song of Cramberries
Cocteau Twins were a Scottish rock band active from 1979 to 1997. They formed in Grangemouth, an industrial town in central Scotland — a place guitarist Robin Guthrie once described to Billboard as “like Elizabeth, New Jersey: a great chemical-refining works that's not at all picturesque.” It was from that grey, unglamorous setting that a group of young people began making music as if trying to escape it.
The band was founded by Robin Guthrie (guitar, drum machine) and Will Heggie (bass), with Elizabeth Fraser joining on vocals in 1981. In 1983, multi-instrumentalist Simon Raymonde replaced Heggie, completing the lineup the band is best known for.
Fraser's arrival in the group was almost accidental. Guthrie and Heggie spotted her dancing at a local club and asked if she could sing. She was seventeen years old and had never thought of herself as a singer.
The sound at the heart of the band grew out of Guthrie's unconventional relationship with the guitar. Trained as an electrician with a natural fascination for electronics, he began running his guitar through fuzz boxes and effects pedals in search of something no one had made before. Because he had never learned to play conventionally, his experiments took him in directions that no one else would have thought to try. Layering chorus, flanger and delay units into dense, interlocking textures, he arrived at the ethereal sound that would define the band.
Guthrie described his ambition in his own words: “The aim was to make music with punk's energy but more finesse and beauty, and that shiny, Phil Spector sound. I was trying to make my guitar sound like I could play it, so I was influenced by guitarists who made beautiful noise, like The Pop Group or Rowland S. Howard.”
Then there was Fraser's voice. She prioritised the transcendent quality of sound over lyrical meaning, saying: “The words don't have any meaning at all until I sing them. I did it so I could sing something.” Her vocals were in English and yet somehow defied comprehension, bypassing the mind entirely and arriving directly at emotion. This approach — sometimes called glossolalia — became the defining characteristic that set Cocteau Twins apart from every other band.
In 1982 the band signed to the London independent label 4AD and released their debut album, Garlands. They went on to pioneer the dream pop subgenre and helped define what would later become known as shoegaze.
Cocteau Twins occupied a peculiar position in the music world — one that commercial statistics alone cannot explain.
On the UK Albums Chart, their trajectory was one of steady ascent: Treasure (1984) peaked at number 29, Victorialand (1986) at number 10, Blue Bell Knoll (1988) at number 15, and Heaven or Las Vegas (1990) — their most celebrated album — reached number 7.
Yet in the United States, even Heaven or Las Vegas peaked at only number 99 on the Billboard 200. Icons of the British indie scene, yet virtually unknown in America — this double status was the curious hallmark of Cocteau Twins.
And yet their musical gravity was quietly pulling in some of the biggest names in the world. Madonna was said to “love” both the band and Fraser, and Prince sought to sign them to his own record label. Great musicians were drawn to them in silence.
The list of artists who have publicly cited Cocteau Twins as an influence is remarkable in its breadth: Björk, Imogen Heap, M83, Annie Lennox, Lana Del Rey, Tori Amos, Slowdive, Ride, Prince, The Weeknd, Massive Attack, The Sundays, My Bloody Valentine, Radiohead, Deftones, and Reggie Watts — all have spoken of the profound impact that Cocteau Twins, and Elizabeth Fraser's voice in particular, had on their music.
Among the most striking testimonies: The Cure's Robert Smith called Treasure “the most romantic sound I'd ever heard,” and the fingerprints of that album's guitar sound can clearly be heard on The Cure's landmark record Disintegration.
Slowdive guitarist Christian Savill recalled the first time he heard “Pearly-Dewdrops' Drops”: “The vocals and words were unlike anything I'd ever heard, and the guitars seemed huge and mysterious.” Ride bassist Steve Queralt was equally direct: “For me, Cocteau Twins recorded some of the greatest sounds ever committed to tape. It's Robin's shimmering guitars that set the blueprint for bands like us — and that's surely where it all began for shoegaze.”
In the world of post-rock, Explosions in the Sky's Chris Hrasky cited Cocteau Twins as part of the DNA of their sound. Simon Raymonde was so taken with the band that he eventually signed them to his own label, Bella Union, for their landmark 2003 album The Earth Is Not a Cold Dead Place.
Let me return to where this began. The instinct I had when I heard that song on the radio — that it sounded like the Cranberries — turns out to be a matter of broad critical consensus.
Central to that lineage is a band who sit precisely between Cocteau Twins and the Cranberries: The Sundays. Formed in 1988 when vocalist Harriet Wheeler and guitarist David Gavurin met at the University of Bristol, this English quartet caused an immediate sensation. Their debut single “Can't Be Sure” prompted Melody Maker's reviewer to declare them “the best thing I've ever heard,” sparking a label bidding war almost immediately. Their 1990 debut album Reading, Writing and Arithmetic reached number 4 on the UK Albums Chart. Their sound — blending the ethereal textures of Cocteau Twins with the jangly guitar melodicism of The Smiths, anchored by Wheeler's crystalline voice — led critics to describe them repeatedly as a band carrying the genetic imprint of both. They released three albums before falling silent after 1997, but their music endures as a cornerstone of dream pop.
In the 1990s, Rolling Stone wrote about the Cranberries: “They sound an awful lot like The Sundays, who, in turn, strongly resemble the Cocteau Twins. What they have done with that aesthetic, however, is make it their own.”
Neither Dolores O'Riordan nor guitarist Noel Hogan explicitly acknowledged the Cocteau Twins as an influence. When Noel was confronted with comparisons, he tended to deflect: “If we sound like other bands, that's coincidence.” In interview after interview, Hogan named Johnny Marr and The Cure as his primary guitar influences — never Robin Guthrie. And yet the music they made so clearly transplanted the dream pop aesthetic that Cocteau Twins had spent a decade building, rooting it in Irish soil.
Sound on Sound described the Cranberries as a band who “followed in the footsteps of The Sundays — themselves shaped by Cocteau Twins — to rise quickly to fame in the early 1990s with their evocative dream pop.” The influence runs in one direction only: Cocteau Twins → The Sundays → the Cranberries.
Salon's music criticism went even further: the Cranberries track “The Icicle Melts,” from their album No Need to Argue, was identified as a direct homage to Cocteau Twins — whether or not Dolores intended it consciously, that lineage ran all the way down to the title.
Guthrie had complicated feelings about the many bands who followed in his wake.
In an interview with Drowned in Sound, he said: “I find it hard to have respect for artists who only look back. They're constantly trying to recreate something that happened 20 or 30 years ago. If I said we were going to reform the Cocteau Twins tomorrow, everyone would think it was great. I don't get that.”
Elsewhere he pushed back against being grouped with the shoegaze movement: “The Cocteau Twins often get compared to bands from the shoegaze movement, but we were never part of that. I was really pushing the electronic idea. I wasn't just happy to put my guitar through one effects pedal — I'd put it through loads. That was my idea, and I wanted to take it further and further.”
The band's official website puts it this way: “Others have tried to reproduce or capture their sound, with limited success. The few artists who have succeeded sound mostly unlike them, but have managed to convey an essence — inspiration without imitation. Think Beach House, Goldfrapp, Sigur Rós, or M83. Cocteau Twins were a foundational influence for whole categories of music, notably dream pop and shoegaze.”
The Cranberries achieved commercial success on a scale that Cocteau Twins could never have imagined. Their debut album sold tens of millions of copies worldwide. “Zombie,” “Linger,” and “Dreams” are songs that have outlasted generations. By comparison, Heaven or Las Vegas — Cocteau Twins' biggest record — sold 235,000 copies in the UK by 1996. The difference is not merely significant; it is categorical.
And yet when it comes to musical influence, the picture reverses entirely. The aesthetic of reverb and layered effects that Cocteau Twins built — an approach to texture, atmosphere and the voice as instrument — is written into the DNA of an enormous body of music in the twenty-first century: dream pop, shoegaze, indie folk, ambient R&B and much more. That the Cranberries could sound the way they did was only possible because Cocteau Twins had spent a decade establishing that aesthetic.
Slowdive's Neil Halstead captured this precisely: “I've heard plenty of tracks that mimic the Cocteaus' sound and vocal style, but fail to include their beautifully constructed chord progressions, key changes and melodic hooks. The voice, the guitars, the songs — they aren't just simple blocks you can co-opt or fit together to recreate the whole. Each element is huge and deep and unique in and of itself. Many of us try and borrow a hint of one or two facets, but we're really only scratching at the surface.”
The Cranberries' success is unquestionably great. But if you ask where the music came from — who built the house that the Cranberries moved into — the answer points to Cocteau Twins. And the blueprint for that house is still being followed everywhere.
The official Cocteau Twins website contains a quietly remarkable observation: “It is a testament to the timelessness of their sound and production quality that many new fans don't even know that the story actually started in 1979.”
That, to me, is the highest possible compliment. Music that people hear today and assume was made recently. Music that carries no timestamp. Cocteau Twins' albums, more than forty years on, are still that kind of music.
Robin Guthrie, in a rare reflective moment, said of his former bandmate: “I would record with Liz again in a heartbeat. But at least I worked with the world's best singer.”
In high school, the Cranberries were the door I walked through into dream pop. But it was Cocteau Twins, arriving on the radio years later, that showed me just how deep and beautiful and timeless the world on the other side of that door really was.
from What Inspired Me
Christopher O'Rileyのトランスクリプションから読み解く、Thom YorkeとJonny Greenwoodの役割分担、そして現在のソロ活動へと続く一本の道筋
2003年、アメリカのNPRラジオ番組「From the Top」に奇妙な問い合わせが殺到した。番組の途中、ホストのピアニストが演奏した曲に感銘を受けたリスナーたちが、「この”Mr. Head”という作曲家の美しい音楽はどこで入手できますか」と尋ねてきたのだ。
「Mr. Head」とは、もちろんRadioheadのことだった。
番組ホストのChristopher O'Rileyは、DebussyやRachmaninoffの小品を弾く時間枠に、Radioheadの曲をピアノ独奏にアレンジしたものをクラシック曲のように無告知で演奏していた。クラシック音楽の聴衆は、それをバッハやドビュッシーの系譜に連なる音楽だと思って聴いていたのだ。
この「誤認」は、単なる面白いエピソードではない。Radioheadの音楽が持つ構造的な深さを、これ以上なく雄弁に証明している。
Christopher O'Rileyは、けっして無名のアマチュアではない。Van Cliburn、Leeds、Busoni、モントリオールという国際ピアノコンクールの最高峰すべてで受賞し、ニューヨーク・フィル、ロサンゼルス・フィル、フィラデルフィア管弦楽団など主要オーケストラと共演を重ねたコンサートピアニストだ。4歳からピアノを始め、ニューイングランド音楽院でRussell Shermanに師事した。プロコフィエフ、ラヴェル、ショスタコーヴィチという高度な技巧を要する作品を演奏し続けてきた人物が、Radioheadのカバーに向かったのだ。
彼がRadioheadを知ったのは1997年、OK Computer発売の年だった。ラジオで偶然耳にしたその音楽に打ちのめされたO'Rileyは、以来Radioheadの公式音源だけでなく、ライブブートレグ、B面曲、未発表音源まで聴き尽くし、みずから採譜を始めた。
ここで立ち止まって考えてほしい。Radioheadは5人組のバンドだ。Thom Yorkeのボーカルとギター、Jonny Greenwoodのギター・オンドマルトノ・弦楽アレンジ・電子処理、Ed O'Brienのエフェクトギター、Colin Greenwoodのベース、Phil Selwayのドラム。しかもOK Computer以降は、これらに加えてMellotron、電子音響処理、サンプリングが加わる。事実上、ロックバンドと電子音楽と室内楽が融合した多層構造だ。
O'Rileyはこれをピアノ独奏に圧縮する。右手と左手、そして足のペダル操作だけで。
O'Riley自身がこの困難さについて明言している。「自分のRadioheadのトランスクリプションはレパートリーの中で最も難しい部類に入る。プロコフィエフのピアノ協奏曲第2番も含めて」。彼は”There There”のある2小節を例に挙げ、「プロコフィエフ協奏曲の最難所とほぼ同じだ。それが40回続くだけだが」と語っている。
では具体的に、O'Rileyは何をしているのか。
まず声部の再配分だ。Radioheadの楽曲では、ボーカルメロディー、ギターの対旋律、ベースラインという複数の独立した声部が同時進行する。O'Rileyはこれらをピアノの音域全体に再配置する。ボーカルラインを右手の高音域で歌わせながら、左手でベースとリズムを支え、中音域でギターの対旋律を織り込む。バッハのインベンションやフーガを弾くときの声部分離技術が、ここで直接応用される。
次に電子的テクスチャーの変換だ。Jonny Greenwoodのオンドマルトノが生み出す浮遊感、Ed O'Brienのディレイペダルが作る「霧」、電子処理されたYorkeのボーカルが持つ非人間的な質感。これらはピアノという純粋に物理的な楽器では再現不可能に見える。O'Rileyはサステインペダルを精緻にコントロールすることで残響と音の溶け合いを作り出し、和声の不協和音を戦略的に配置することで電子的な「ざらつき」を模倣する。音楽評論家はこの技術を「ラヴェル的なハーモニー感覚とショスタコーヴィチ的な不協和音の使い方を駆使した翻訳」と表現している。
さらにリズムの再構築がある。Phil Selwayのドラムが刻むポリリズムやシンコペーションは、ピアノの左手に移植される。しかしただ移植するだけでは平板になる。O'Rileyは「リズム的に不安定な左手」と評されるアプローチで、ドラムのグルーヴ感をピアノのタッチの強弱と微妙なテンポの揺れで表現する。
彼はRadioheadの音楽の魅力についてこう説明している。
「Radioheadのメンバーの誰一人として譜面が読めないかもしれない。しかし、それぞれが特定のアイデアや動機という糸を曲に持ち込んでいる。それはバッハのフーガやショスタコーヴィチのフーガにおける複数の声部の絡み合いと、よく似ている」
この認識こそが、彼のアレンジをただのカバーと区別するものだ。5人分の音を単純に「減らす」のではなく、その声部構造の本質を保ちながら88鍵の上に再構築する。それは楽曲の解体と再組立であり、クラシック音楽の訓練なしには見えてこない作業だ。
ただしO'Riley自身も「すべての曲がピアノに翻訳できるわけではない」と知っていた。「”Pyramid Song”はあなたが歌わない限り、ピアノで弾こうとは思えない」とYorkeに伝えたとき、それはYorkeのボーカルという声部を失ったときに曲の核心が消えてしまうという判断だ。どの曲を選び、どの曲を避けるか。その編曲者としての眼力もまた、O'Rileyの技術の一部だった。
2003年にリリースされたTrue Love Waits: Christopher O'Riley Plays RadioheadはRolling Stone誌で4つ星を獲得した。クラシック作品としてRolling Stoneに4つ星をつけられたのは、事実上このアルバムだけだと言われている。
アルバムのリリース前後、O'RileyはThom Yorkeと直接言葉を交わす機会を得た。その会話の記録が、Radioheadという音楽の本質と、Yorkeという人物の両方を照らし出している。
O'Rileyがカバーアルバムを準備していた頃、Radioheadをよく知る友人たちは彼にこう警告したという。「彼らが君のバージョンを聴いて、”なんでわざわざ我々をカバーするんだ”と言っても驚かないほうがいい」。
実際にYorkeと対面したO'Rileyが発見したのは、想像とは全く異なる人物像だった。
O'Rileyが「1997年バージョンの”Lift”を編曲しています。古いバージョンのほうが好きで」と伝えると、Yorkeはこともなげに言い放った。「それは良かった、新しいバージョンはクソだから」。自分の曲に対するこの容赦ない自己評価が、Yorkeの一貫した姿勢だった。
さらにO'Rileyが「”Pyramid Song”はあなたが歌わない限り、ピアノで弾こうとは思えない」と言うと、Yorkeは間髪入れずに返した。「つまり、私が台無しにしなければいいんでしょ」。
O'Rileyが「”How to Disappear Completely”はギターとボーカルだけでは凡庸かもしれない。しかしJonnyが重ねた四分音のストリングスのクラウドがこの曲をユニークにしている」と語ったとき、Yorkeは黙ってわずかに微笑んだ。その微笑みには、自分では言語化しなかった何かを言い当てられた人間の表情があった。
O'Rileyはこの出会いをこう振り返っている。「非常に謙虚で自己卑下的な人物だった。ただ彼の素晴らしい音楽について話して過ごした」。
その後、O'RileyはアムステルダムでRadioheadのメンバー全員とも顔を合わせた。こちらはよりフレンドリーな雰囲気だったという。バンドとして活動する彼らと、一人でRadioheadの曲に向き合い続けるピアニストの間に、ある種の相互尊重が成立していた。
この出会いが示すのは、Yorkeが自分の音楽の価値を誰よりも低く見積もっているということだ。しかしその謙遜は、偽りの謙遜ではなく、完璧主義者が必然的に陥る「自作への飽くなき不満」から来ている。Kid Aで他のメンバーを困難に追い込んでまで方向を変えようとしたのも、その同じ衝動からだろう。
O'RileyがRadioheadに見出した多声部的な構造は、OK Computerやそれ以降の実験的な作品だけに宿っているわけではない。それはThe Bendsの時点で、すでに萌芽的に完成していた。
The Bendsは1995年3月にリリースされ、全英アルバムチャートで4位を記録した。シングルは5枚リリースされ、「High and Dry」が全英17位、「Fake Plastic Trees」が同20位、「Just」が同19位、そして最終シングル「Street Spirit (Fade Out)」が同5位を記録した。「Street Spirit」はそれまでの「Creep」を超えるチャート成績を収め、Radioheadが一発屋ではないことを証明した。アルバムは最終的に全英4倍プラチナ、全米プラチナを達成した。
チャートの数字よりも重要なのは、The BendsがRadioheadのバンドとしての作曲形態を確立した作品だということだ。Pablo Honeyではほぼ全曲をYorkeが書いていたのに対して、The Bendsでは各メンバーの声部が初めて自律し始めた。「Just」のギターパートはJonny Greenwoodが4オクターブにわたるオクタトニックスケールを駆使して作り上げ、DigiTech Whammyペダルでソロを高音域にピッチシフトするという独創的なアプローチを取った。「(Nice Dream)」はYorkeのシンプルな4コードの骨格に、O'BrienとGreenwoodがパートを追加して膨らませた。「Fake Plastic Trees」はYorkeが一人でギターを弾いたテイクをLeckieが録音し、そこにバンドが音を積み重ねるという逆転した方法で完成した。さらに「Black Star」はLeckieが席を外した日に、当時まだエンジニアだったNigel Godrichがバンドと録音した曲で、この日を起点にGodrichはRadioheadのすべての作品を手がける生涯のプロデューサーとなっていく。
こうした分業の多様化が、各曲に独立した声部を持たせる素地を作った。The BendsはBritpopが全盛を誇った1995年のイギリスにおいて、Oasisのような「懐古的なロック」とは全く異なる方向を向いていた。後にPitchforkはこの時期のYorkeとJonny Greenwoodのパートナーシップを「Lennon=McCartneyやJagger=Richardsに匹敵する」と評した。GarbageやR.E.M.がRadioheadを好きなバンドとして挙げ始め、The Cureはこのアルバムの音作りを自分たちの作品に応用したいと問い合わせてきたほどだ。
O'RileyがThe Bendsの曲を積極的にカバーしたことは、この見立てと一致している。True Love Waits(2003年)のトラックリストには、The Bendsから「Fake Plastic Trees」「Bulletproof...I Wish I Was」「Black Star」「Thinking About You」「You」が収録されている。OK Computer以降の実験的な楽曲と並べてThe Bendsの曲を選んだことは、O'Rileyの選曲眼が語ることとして重要だ。彼にとってRadioheadの音楽的深みはOK Computer以降に突然生まれたものではなく、The Bendsにおいてすでに十分にピアノ独奏へと翻訳するに値する多声部的構造を持っていた。
AllMusicの批評家はO'RileyのThe Bends曲のカバーについて「”Bulletproof”や”Motion Picture Soundtrack”のような暗くて落ち着いたナンバーは特にピアノへの翻訳がうまく機能している」と評した。これらの曲が持つ内省的な静けさと声部の絡み合いは、ピアノという楽器の特性と親和性が高い。逆にいえば、この時代のRadioheadがすでに「ロックバンドのサウンド」だけに依存しない音楽を書いていたことの証左でもある。
O'Rileyが指摘した「バッハ的構造」とは、具体的にどういうことか。
バッハのフーガの本質は、複数の独立した声部が同時進行しながら有機的に絡み合うことにある。各声部は「伴奏」ではなく、主題を持った対等な存在として機能する。Radioheadの5人もまた、それぞれが代替不可能な「声部」を担っていた。
Thom Yorkeは曲の骨格・歌詞・メロディーの主要な発信源だ。ピアノで曲の骨格を書きバンドに持ち込む。彼のボーカルは独立したメロディー声部として機能し、楽器群と拮抗する。
Jonny Greenwoodはクラシック現代音楽の素養を持ち込んだ存在だ。ギターのテクスチャー、弦楽アレンジ、オンドマルトノ、電子処理など「曲の外側の音響空間」を設計した。O'Rileyが「”How to Disappear Completely”はJonnyが重ねた四分音のストリングスのクラウドがこの曲をユニークにしている」と指摘したとき、Yorkeが微かに微笑んだことは先に述べた。その「声部」の重要性を、誰よりもYorke自身が知っていた。
Ed O'Brienはエフェクトとギターのテクスチャーで音の「霧」や「空間」を作る役割を担う。ディレイペダルの使い方一つで、楽曲全体の音響空間が変わる。
Colin Greenwoodのベースラインは単純な低音ではなく、独立したメロディー的な動きを持つ声部として機能する。Kid Aの「Dollars and Cents」のベースラインは、彼がAlice Coltraneのレコードをかけながら即興で弾いたものが原型だ。
Phil Selwayのドラムはジャズ的な柔軟性を持ち、拍を刻む以上に他の声部と対話する。
重要なのは、この「フーガ的構造」が意図的な設計ではなかったことだ。バンドメンバーの多くは譜面を読めない。しかしそれぞれが持ち寄る音楽的直感と経験が、偶然にもバッハが理論として構築した多声部音楽に近い何かを生み出した。「無意識に生まれた対位法」とでも呼ぶべき現象だ。
ただし、Pablo Honey(1993年)の段階ではそこまで至っていない。この時期はYorkeが書いた曲をバンドが演奏するという段階で、PixiesやDinosaur Jr.の影響下にある普通のオルタナロックだった。各メンバーの声部が自律し始めたのはThe Bends(1995年)から、そして完全に開花したのがOK Computerだった。
The Bendsのツアーを終えたRadioheadは、バスの中でMiles DavisのBitches Brew(1970年)を聴き続けていた。Jonnyはこう回想している。
「ある意味で僕らは傲慢だった。Bitches Brewのようなレコードを聴いて、それをやりたいと思った。誰もトランペットなど持っていないし弾きたくもないのに、”ああ、あれに近い何かができる”という傲慢さがあった」
YorkeはOK Computerの出発点を「Bitches Brewの信じられないほど密で恐ろしいサウンド」だと明言した。また、Ennio Morricone、クラウトロックバンドのCan、DJ Shadowのサンプリング技術も影響源として挙げた。
この段階ではエレクトロニカの影響はまだ萌芽的だ。「Airbag」の冒頭でPhil Selwayのドラムを16分間録音し、そこから数秒のループをMacintoshで加工してリズム構造の核にした。「Karma Police」の後半は、YorkeとGodrichが二人だけでサンプルとループを使って再構築した。これが後のKid Aへの「前哨戦」となった。
しかしOK Computerは根本的にはまだバンドの共同作業だ。影響を共有し、全員が「どこへ向かうか」に同意していた。
OK Computerの世界的成功のあと、Yorkeは奇妙な喪失感を経験した。Travis、Coldplayなどの後続バンドが自分たちのサウンドを模倣し始めたことに激しく反応し、ロックを聴くのを完全にやめた。
彼がコーンウォールの断崖を歩きながら聴き続けたのは、WarpレーベルのAphex Twin、Autechre、Boards of Canadaだった。後にAphex Twinを「自分のエレクトリックギターを必要としない別の世界を開いてくれた」と評している。
Yorkeが新曲を持ち込むとき、歌詞もなく、サウンドやリズムだけで構成された不完全なものばかりだった。Jonnyは「ただ芸術のための芸術的なロックになるのではないか」と恐れた。Colinはその「冷たさ」が好きになれなかった。プロデューサーのGodrichでさえ戸惑い、他のメンバーは脱退を真剣に考えた。Yorke自身も後に認めている。
「他のメンバーたちは何を貢献すればいいかわからなかった。シンセサイザーで作業していると、他の人と同じ部屋にいる感覚がなくなる。私は全員の人生をほぼ不可能にしてしまった」
しかしここにも「偶然のフーガ」が機能した瞬間がある。「Idioteque」はJonnyがモジュラーシンセサイザーで作った50分の即興演奏をYorkeに渡し、Yorkeがその中から40秒の断片を「絶対の天才だ」と感じて曲全体を構築したものだ。Yorkeの電子音楽的衝動とJonnyの音響的設計力が融合した瞬間だった。
Kid Aはバンドが崩壊しかけながらも生み出した作品だ。そしてその経験が、次の決断を準備した。
Hail to the Thief(2003年)のツアーを終えた後、Radioheadは休止期間に入った。Yorkeはその間に一人でラップトップと向き合い、音楽を作り始めた。それが2006年のソロアルバムThe Eraserになる。
これはRadioheadへの反発ではなかった。Jonnyは「彼がこれを出す必要があった。みんな喜んでいた」と語っている。Yorkeもリリース時に「ずっとこういうことをやってみたかった。楽しくてあっという間にできた。Radioheadは解散しない」と繰り返し強調した。
The Eraserの曲の多くは、Radioheadに「収まらなかった曲」だった。ホテルや飛行機の中で書かれた、バンドのフレームに入りきらない個人的な電子音楽の断片。Kid Aの制作でバンドを困難な状況に追い込んだ経験が、「次の電子音楽的衝動はバンドを巻き込まずに一人でやろう」という判断に繋がった。
その後YorkeはエレクトロニックバンドAtoms for Peaceを結成し、さらに近年はJonny GreenridgeとThe Smileを立ち上げた。The Smileはより多くのジャズ、クラウトロック、プログレッシブロックの影響を取り込んだ、より自由でワイルドなサウンドのプロジェクトだと評されている。
一本の線が浮かぶ。
中西部の夜に生まれたAmerican Footballのアルペジオが、Steve Reichのミニマリズムからインスピレーションを受けていたように。O'RileyがRadioheadの音楽にバッハのフーガを見出したように。YorkeがBitches Brewに「壊れながら積み上がる何か」を感じたように。
音楽の深さとは、ジャンルの垣根を超えて、同じ構造原理が異なる時代・文化・形式において反復されることかもしれない。O'Rileyのピアノが示したのは、Radioheadが「ロックバンド」という枠を超えた場所にいたという事実だ。
from What Inspired Me
I discovered the Cranberries in high school, through a TV programme covering the Billboard charts. The moment Dolores O'Riordan's voice came through the speakers, it lodged itself in my ear and refused to leave. That unmistakable trembling lilt, the reverb-drenched guitars, a sound that was at once fragile and fierce. For the teenage version of me, the Cranberries were simply the best thing there was.
Years later, as an adult, a song came on the radio. Reverb-laden guitars, a voice with a rolling, melismatic quality, harmonies coiling around each other — it sounded so much like the Cranberries that I genuinely thought I was mistaken about what I was hearing. But it wasn't the Cranberries. It was a band called Cocteau Twins, who had arrived at that same sound a full decade earlier.
My favorite song of Cramberries
Cocteau Twins were a Scottish rock band active from 1979 to 1997. They formed in Grangemouth, an industrial town in central Scotland — a place guitarist Robin Guthrie once described to Billboard as “like Elizabeth, New Jersey: a great chemical-refining works that's not at all picturesque.” It was from that grey, unglamorous setting that a group of young people began making music as if trying to escape it.
The band was founded by Robin Guthrie (guitar, drum machine) and Will Heggie (bass), with Elizabeth Fraser joining on vocals in 1981. In 1983, multi-instrumentalist Simon Raymonde replaced Heggie, completing the lineup the band is best known for.
Fraser's arrival in the group was almost accidental. Guthrie and Heggie spotted her dancing at a local club and asked if she could sing. She was seventeen years old and had never thought of herself as a singer.
The sound at the heart of the band grew out of Guthrie's unconventional relationship with the guitar. Trained as an electrician with a natural fascination for electronics, he began running his guitar through fuzz boxes and effects pedals in search of something no one had made before. Because he had never learned to play conventionally, his experiments took him in directions that no one else would have thought to try. Layering chorus, flanger and delay units into dense, interlocking textures, he arrived at the ethereal sound that would define the band.
Guthrie described his ambition in his own words: “The aim was to make music with punk's energy but more finesse and beauty, and that shiny, Phil Spector sound. I was trying to make my guitar sound like I could play it, so I was influenced by guitarists who made beautiful noise, like The Pop Group or Rowland S. Howard.”
Then there was Fraser's voice. She prioritised the transcendent quality of sound over lyrical meaning, saying: “The words don't have any meaning at all until I sing them. I did it so I could sing something.” Her vocals were in English and yet somehow defied comprehension, bypassing the mind entirely and arriving directly at emotion. This approach — sometimes called glossolalia — became the defining characteristic that set Cocteau Twins apart from every other band.
In 1982 the band signed to the London independent label 4AD and released their debut album, Garlands. They went on to pioneer the dream pop subgenre and helped define what would later become known as shoegaze.
Cocteau Twins occupied a peculiar position in the music world — one that commercial statistics alone cannot explain.
On the UK Albums Chart, their trajectory was one of steady ascent: Treasure (1984) peaked at number 29, Victorialand (1986) at number 10, Blue Bell Knoll (1988) at number 15, and Heaven or Las Vegas (1990) — their most celebrated album — reached number 7.
Yet in the United States, even Heaven or Las Vegas peaked at only number 99 on the Billboard 200. Icons of the British indie scene, yet virtually unknown in America — this double status was the curious hallmark of Cocteau Twins.
And yet their musical gravity was quietly pulling in some of the biggest names in the world. Madonna was said to “love” both the band and Fraser, and Prince sought to sign them to his own record label. Great musicians were drawn to them in silence.
The list of artists who have publicly cited Cocteau Twins as an influence is remarkable in its breadth: Björk, Imogen Heap, M83, Annie Lennox, Lana Del Rey, Tori Amos, Slowdive, Ride, Prince, The Weeknd, Massive Attack, The Sundays, My Bloody Valentine, Radiohead, Deftones, and Reggie Watts — all have spoken of the profound impact that Cocteau Twins, and Elizabeth Fraser's voice in particular, had on their music.
Among the most striking testimonies: The Cure's Robert Smith called Treasure “the most romantic sound I'd ever heard,” and the fingerprints of that album's guitar sound can clearly be heard on The Cure's landmark record Disintegration.
Slowdive guitarist Christian Savill recalled the first time he heard “Pearly-Dewdrops' Drops”: “The vocals and words were unlike anything I'd ever heard, and the guitars seemed huge and mysterious.” Ride bassist Steve Queralt was equally direct: “For me, Cocteau Twins recorded some of the greatest sounds ever committed to tape. It's Robin's shimmering guitars that set the blueprint for bands like us — and that's surely where it all began for shoegaze.”
In the world of post-rock, Explosions in the Sky's Chris Hrasky cited Cocteau Twins as part of the DNA of their sound. Simon Raymonde was so taken with the band that he eventually signed them to his own label, Bella Union, for their landmark 2003 album The Earth Is Not a Cold Dead Place.
Let me return to where this began. The instinct I had when I heard that song on the radio — that it sounded like the Cranberries — turns out to be a matter of broad critical consensus.
Central to that lineage is a band who sit precisely between Cocteau Twins and the Cranberries: The Sundays. Formed in 1988 when vocalist Harriet Wheeler and guitarist David Gavurin met at the University of Bristol, this English quartet caused an immediate sensation. Their debut single “Can't Be Sure” prompted Melody Maker's reviewer to declare them “the best thing I've ever heard,” sparking a label bidding war almost immediately. Their 1990 debut album Reading, Writing and Arithmetic reached number 4 on the UK Albums Chart. Their sound — blending the ethereal textures of Cocteau Twins with the jangly guitar melodicism of The Smiths, anchored by Wheeler's crystalline voice — led critics to describe them repeatedly as a band carrying the genetic imprint of both. They released three albums before falling silent after 1997, but their music endures as a cornerstone of dream pop.
In the 1990s, Rolling Stone wrote about the Cranberries: “They sound an awful lot like The Sundays, who, in turn, strongly resemble the Cocteau Twins. What they have done with that aesthetic, however, is make it their own.”
Neither Dolores O'Riordan nor guitarist Noel Hogan explicitly acknowledged the Cocteau Twins as an influence. When Noel was confronted with comparisons, he tended to deflect: “If we sound like other bands, that's coincidence.” In interview after interview, Hogan named Johnny Marr and The Cure as his primary guitar influences — never Robin Guthrie. And yet the music they made so clearly transplanted the dream pop aesthetic that Cocteau Twins had spent a decade building, rooting it in Irish soil.
Sound on Sound described the Cranberries as a band who “followed in the footsteps of The Sundays — themselves shaped by Cocteau Twins — to rise quickly to fame in the early 1990s with their evocative dream pop.” The influence runs in one direction only: Cocteau Twins → The Sundays → the Cranberries.
Salon's music criticism went even further: the Cranberries track “The Icicle Melts,” from their album No Need to Argue, was identified as a direct homage to Cocteau Twins — whether or not Dolores intended it consciously, that lineage ran all the way down to the title.
Guthrie had complicated feelings about the many bands who followed in his wake.
In an interview with Drowned in Sound, he said: “I find it hard to have respect for artists who only look back. They're constantly trying to recreate something that happened 20 or 30 years ago. If I said we were going to reform the Cocteau Twins tomorrow, everyone would think it was great. I don't get that.”
Elsewhere he pushed back against being grouped with the shoegaze movement: “The Cocteau Twins often get compared to bands from the shoegaze movement, but we were never part of that. I was really pushing the electronic idea. I wasn't just happy to put my guitar through one effects pedal — I'd put it through loads. That was my idea, and I wanted to take it further and further.”
The band's official website puts it this way: “Others have tried to reproduce or capture their sound, with limited success. The few artists who have succeeded sound mostly unlike them, but have managed to convey an essence — inspiration without imitation. Think Beach House, Goldfrapp, Sigur Rós, or M83. Cocteau Twins were a foundational influence for whole categories of music, notably dream pop and shoegaze.”
The Cranberries achieved commercial success on a scale that Cocteau Twins could never have imagined. Their debut album sold tens of millions of copies worldwide. “Zombie,” “Linger,” and “Dreams” are songs that have outlasted generations. By comparison, Heaven or Las Vegas — Cocteau Twins' biggest record — sold 235,000 copies in the UK by 1996. The difference is not merely significant; it is categorical.
And yet when it comes to musical influence, the picture reverses entirely. The aesthetic of reverb and layered effects that Cocteau Twins built — an approach to texture, atmosphere and the voice as instrument — is written into the DNA of an enormous body of music in the twenty-first century: dream pop, shoegaze, indie folk, ambient R&B and much more. That the Cranberries could sound the way they did was only possible because Cocteau Twins had spent a decade establishing that aesthetic.
Slowdive's Neil Halstead captured this precisely: “I've heard plenty of tracks that mimic the Cocteaus' sound and vocal style, but fail to include their beautifully constructed chord progressions, key changes and melodic hooks. The voice, the guitars, the songs — they aren't just simple blocks you can co-opt or fit together to recreate the whole. Each element is huge and deep and unique in and of itself. Many of us try and borrow a hint of one or two facets, but we're really only scratching at the surface.”
The Cranberries' success is unquestionably great. But if you ask where the music came from — who built the house that the Cranberries moved into — the answer points to Cocteau Twins. And the blueprint for that house is still being followed everywhere.
The official Cocteau Twins website contains a quietly remarkable observation: “It is a testament to the timelessness of their sound and production quality that many new fans don't even know that the story actually started in 1979.”
That, to me, is the highest possible compliment. Music that people hear today and assume was made recently. Music that carries no timestamp. Cocteau Twins' albums, more than forty years on, are still that kind of music.
Robin Guthrie, in a rare reflective moment, said of his former bandmate: “I would record with Liz again in a heartbeat. But at least I worked with the world's best singer.”
In high school, the Cranberries were the door I walked through into dream pop. But it was Cocteau Twins, arriving on the radio years later, that showed me just how deep and beautiful and timeless the world on the other side of that door really was.