Radiohead drummer Phil Selway has said that now is the right time to start working on the band's new album, though he has "no idea" what it will sound like.
The band will regroup to start work on the follow-up to 2011's The King Of Limbs in September, as has been previously confirmed.
Radiohead have updated their official PolyFauna app with new music.
The app was first unveiled this February, with imagery from the band's The King Of Limbs album used throughout. However, as Rolling Stone report, as of September 1, the app features new artwork as well as new music.
Jonny Greenwood has said that he has been emailing Thom Yorke ideas for new Radiohead songs.
Speaking in The Sunday Times, Greenwood commented: "I was emailing stuff to Thom last night, actually, but it's not the same, is it? You don't see him tutting." When asked if there was a release date in mind for their next album, Greenwood explained: "No! Release? No, no idea. No," adding: "Our plan is to start making music soon. We've just got to get the inertia back."
Radiohead will begin rehearsing and recording again in September, guitarist Jonny Greenwood has confirmed.
The band are currently pursuing solo projects and enjoying a break from official band duty following the end of touring their last album, The King Of Limbs.
Speaking on Mary Anne Hobbes' BBC 6Music show on July 12, Greenwood was asked what Radiohead are up to at the moment and said, "We're going to start up in September, playing, rehearsing and recording and see how it's sounding."
Musicians including David Gilmour, Radiohead's Ed O'Brien and Philip Selway, Elbow's Guy Garvey, Johnny Marr and Billy Bragg have thrown their weight behind a campaign to overturn the ban on steel-strung guitars in British prisons.
Jonny Greenwood has revealed that Radiohead will regroup this summer to discuss their next album.
The band are currently pursuing solo projects and enjoying a break from official band duty following the end of touring their last album, The King Of Limbs. However, Greenwood spoke about the future of Radiohead in a new interview with Nashville Cream and said that the "slow moving animal" will gain life in the coming months.
A Detroit chef has designed a 10 course meal inspired by Radiohead's Kid A album, reports The Huffington Post.
Kyle Hanley, a chef at the Detroit Golf Club, has created a menu designed to pair a course up with each track on the 2000 record, while Joseph Allerton, a food and beverage director, chooses the complementing wine and cocktails by considering the music rather than the food it will be consumed with.