Instant albums do not, as a rule, encourage reflection. There is surprise, sometimes indignation, a social media flame war, a lot of static about delivery systems. Once the 38 minutes of, say, Thom Yorkeโ€™s โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€ have passed, it can all suddenly be over. What happens next?

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Maybe you write about it, then play it again and donโ€™t write about it. Or maybe you live with an album for a conceptually inconceivable 66 hours and gradually put some thoughts into order: about the environmental possibilities of Thom Yorkeโ€™s music, perhaps; about the mythical promise of electronica; about radically different ideas of what ambition means.

The first useful thing to say about this second Yorke solo album (third if you count Atoms For Peace as an at least quasi-solo venture, I guess) is that it encourages reflection. โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€ reveals its riches incrementally, as music fundamentally unsuited to snap judgments. At first, there doesnโ€™t seems to be a huge amount going on beyond the phases and wobbles of modern electronic, theoretically danceable music, cycling around beneath Yorkeโ€™s familiar repertoire of treated, forlorn exhortations. If you follow Yorkeโ€™s regular โ€œoffice chartsโ€ at www.radiohead.co.uk/deadairspace (the most recent sample: Caribou, Luke Abboutt, Nathan Fake, The Dead Kennedys), it feels predictable: nebulous Night Bus sadness; Our Tune requests on Rinse FM. This oneโ€™s for the special alienated person in your lifeโ€ฆ

Living with โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€ for the weekend โ€“ not playing anything else, in fact โ€“ its usefulness begins to emerge. Many of these tracks are the kind that make radical shifts according to the balance of situation, volume, mood and so. โ€œThere Is No Ice (For My Drink)โ€ (one for the self-elected barkeepers there) works as distantly itchy ambience, with slow-moving melodic tones โ€“ a little reminiscent of the way Autechre seed tectonic prettiness beneath their beat science โ€“ discreetly coming to the fore. Louder, itโ€™s the bass frequencies which are most resonant, sprung moves learned in some way from dubstep. In headphones, the micro-detailing of the whole endeavour becomes clear: a brilliant exercise in syncopation and dislocation; buffeted by dub; scattered with digitised babble that adds texture and a hint of emotion without the burden of explicit meaning.

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These are the pleasures of โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€, an album whose mood is so consistent (as, perhaps, was the underrated โ€œKing Of Limbsโ€) that it can be hard to remember where one track ends and another begins. The distrait piano doodles at the end of โ€œThere Is No Iceโ€ are gradually overwhelmed by a tiny chorale, part mosquitoes, part banshees, that runs into โ€œPink Sectionโ€ before another fractured piano study drifts into something akin to focus.

Radical gear shifts are rare, and the polyrhythmic drive of โ€œAMOKโ€ has been disabled. While Atoms For Peace and the last live manifestation of Radiohead both featured two drummers/percussionists, โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€ is built on the slightest of gestures. โ€œCymbal Rushโ€, โ€œThe Eraserโ€โ€˜s closing track, is a likely precursor, and the finale here, โ€œNose Grows Someโ€, is propelled by mere glitches, like an old Pole or Alva Noto record, like something from a Mille Plateaux โ€œClicks + Cutsโ€ comp from around the turn of the millennium. Not for the first time (cf โ€œVideotapeโ€), it sees Yorke ending an album with the vaguest, unshowiest kind of resolution.

Mostly, this is lovely, clever and subtly involving music. In particular, โ€œInterferenceโ€ and โ€œThe Mother Lodeโ€ feature some of Yorkeโ€™s best music of the last decade. The former has one of those rapturous, yearning melodies, articulated in the most minimal strokes, that Yorke has been finessing since โ€œPyramid Songโ€ (ie โ€œCodexโ€, โ€œNudeโ€, the track which precedes โ€œInterferenceโ€, โ€œGuess Againโ€), with the anthemic potential scrupulously blown out, and a hint of Boards Of Canada in the warped tones. โ€œThe Mother Lodeโ€, meanwhile, finds Yorke at his most soulful, riding a skipped two-step that. Like all of โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€, it privileges a certain elegance over aggression. Both, too, are object lessons in how apparently sketchy tunes can, soon enough, be truly insidious.

It is, then, a notably tasteful album, though that certainly shouldnโ€™t be taken as a criticism. And while plenty of attention has been paid to how Yorkeโ€™s means of dissemination differs from that of U2, itโ€™s the aesthetic chasm between the two thatโ€™s more striking, once the downloadingโ€™s been done. The business strategy behind โ€œSongs Of Innocenceโ€ might have been predicated on an assumption that those who hate U2 couldnโ€™t hate them any more than they already do. But it also betrays a phenomenally needy band, who still appear fixated on being the most commercially powerful rock or pop band in the world (@petepaphides was very good discussing this on Twitter after the U2/Apple clusterfuck).

For those who remain uncharmed, outside the otherwise gargantuan target market, itโ€™s not a particularly edifying spectacle. At some point over the weekend, though, it occurred to me that โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€ is every bit as needy an album as โ€œSongs Of Innocenceโ€, with a desire to be seen as a piece of work outside mainstream culture that might be far from vulgar, but is every bit as neurotic. The anti-corporate rhetoric embedded in the Bittorrent launch, and the deal with Bittorrent itself, is only the most visible aspect of that desire.

Once youโ€™ve purchased โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€, it reveals that Yorke has now manoeuvred himself further away than ever from the expediencies of stadium rock; a self-conscious radical who can still sell over 100,000 downloads in 24 hours. Behind every lovingly-bent note of โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€, thereโ€™s an anxiety to be seen as forward-thinking, as disdainful of old rock codes, as blazing new territory, even though many of the musical antecedents here โ€“ Burial, say โ€“ date from the best part of a decade ago.

If it werenโ€™t such a terrific piece of work, you can see how โ€œTomorrowโ€™s Modern Boxesโ€ could be quite an irritating one. But perhaps these are caveats borne of over-analysis, when Yorkeโ€™s music, for all its inherent calculation, works so well in intuitive, environmental ways. Itโ€™s playing again now, and itโ€™s a very satisfying album to write to. Maybe we should talk again in a week or so?

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