Dear wannabepretty,
by good you mean pop, at least I'm asuming
I love radiohead now, but I hated Pablo Honey, so I find them to be "good" now, as much as you found them to be "good" before
sorry
As for the song, I think it's about how we treat the emotion of love, as a society and how it no longer has any connection with a human connection but rather as a means for sexual exploitation. Throughout the entire song, there's a sample of the word "J'aime" ( french for I love) playing in the background. The frequency of the sample quickens throughout the song untill it reaches a climax at the end. One might infer, that the song is a parody of sex, as near the end, the sample is barely recognizable, so as to say that what is left is no longer love, or rather never really was.
Dear wannabepretty, by good you mean pop, at least I'm asuming I love radiohead now, but I hated Pablo Honey, so I find them to be "good" now, as much as you found them to be "good" before sorry
As for the song, I think it's about how we treat the emotion of love, as a society and how it no longer has any connection with a human connection but rather as a means for sexual exploitation. Throughout the entire song, there's a sample of the word "J'aime" ( french for I love) playing in the background. The frequency of the sample quickens throughout the song untill it reaches a climax at the end. One might infer, that the song is a parody of sex, as near the end, the sample is barely recognizable, so as to say that what is left is no longer love, or rather never really was.