Photo
66 | Thom Yorke


Photo: Celotto/Getty
Born
October 7th, 1968
Key Tracks
"Fake Plastic Trees," "Karma Police," "Everything in Its Right Place"
Influenced
Chris Martin, Jim James, Tom Champlin

By the turn of the century, the broad, emotive sweep of Thom Yorke's voice had made him one of the most influential singers of his generation. His high, keening sound, often trembling on the edge of falsetto, was turning up on records by Coldplay, Travis, Muse, Elbow and numerous others. "I tried to sing like Thom Yorke," Coldplay's Chris Martin told Rolling Stone. "The Radiohead influence on us was plain to see." But Yorke himself "couldn't stand the sound of me anymore" — and went on to reinvent his voice beginning with 2000's Kid A. Using electronic trickery and exploiting what he called "the tension between what's human and what's coming from the machines," he changed his voice into a disembodied instrument; songs like "Everything in Its Right Place" sound like fragmented transmissions from some distant galaxy.

Playlist
1. Fake Pastic Trees
2. Karma Police
3. Everything in Its Right Place

View List: The 100 Greatest Singers of All Time
Listen: The Ultimate Singers Playlist
The Ballots: View Handwritten Votes
Legends at Work: In the Studio Photos
Voters & Methodology


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