The story of Radiohead's breakout song Creep.
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Whenever you hear a really specific or weird lyric in a song, you can’t help but wonder where it came from. Sometimes it’s just an inside joke, but other times the true story is stranger than anything you could invent. Today we’re looking at one of the strangest backstories in 90s rock. It starts with a song that was never meant to be a hit, accidentally became one of the biggest songs on the planet, and then turned into a curse its creators spent years trying to escape. This is the story of the joke that launched Radiohead into stardom and almost destroyed them.
Before they were the revered architects behind OK Computer and Kid A, Radiohead were five kids from Oxfordshire playing under the name On a Friday. Thom Yorke, Jonny and Colin Greenwood, Ed O’Brien, and Phil Selway formed the band at Abingdon School in 1985, absorbing influences from The Smiths, Pixies, and Talking Heads. In 1991 they signed a six‑album deal with EMI, changed their name to Radiohead, and released the Drill EP, which flopped and put huge pressure on their debut album. The song that would define them was one they didn’t even want and one member actively tried to destroy.
Its roots go back to the University of Exeter in the late 80s, where Thom Yorke felt like a permanent outsider. He wrote about unrequited love and deep alienation, fixating on a woman he saw around campus who seemed completely out of his league. He felt like a “creep” and a “weirdo” who didn’t belong in her world. That intense self‑loathing, mixed with a very British sense of not being good enough, became the emotional core of the song. To Yorke, it was essentially a diary entry set to music, never meant for mass consumption.
By 1992, Radiohead were at Chipping Norton Studios struggling to make their debut album Pablo Honey. Sessions were going nowhere. Producers Sean Slade and Paul Kolderie were frustrated as the band failed to land a strong single. During a break, Radiohead casually ran through this older song just so the engineers could set levels. When they finished, Yorke joked that it was their “Scott Walker song.” The producers, unfamiliar with the reference, assumed it was a cover but were blown away by its power. The next day they asked the band to play “the Scott Walker song” again, hit record, and captured a raw, electrifying take that ended with the control room applauding.
One person wasn’t applauding: Jonny Greenwood. He thought the track was too soft and radio‑friendly, so he tried to sabotage it. Right before the chorus he smashed two violent stabs of distorted guitar, hoping to wreck the song. Instead, those “chunk chunk” hits became its most iconic moment, turning the quiet verses into an explosion of self‑loathing catharsis. The producers cranked his guitar even louder in the mix. A joke song, a sarcastic comment, and a failed act of sabotage accidentally fused into the track that would follow Radiohead for the rest of their career.
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