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With Claude Monet painting as backdrop, the song “like the Water Lilies, went through decades of versions and distillations… through time and loss and perseverance,” singer writes of rendition
Caroline Polachek’s Performance
Caroline Polachek covered Radiohead’s “True Love Waits” Friday during the singer’s performance at the Musée de l’Orangerie in Paris.
With Claude Monet’s painting Water Lilies serving as a backdrop, Polachek delivered a stripped-down rendition of the track as part of “a short program of songs on the occasion of the Museum Berggruen and Neue Nationalgalerie exhibition of the Heinz Berggruen collection,” Polachek wrote on Instagram.
“I had chills all over to sing in that room, while seeing those paintings IRL for the first time.”
Evolution of “True Love Waits”
Radiohead performed the fan favorite ballad “True Love Waits” live for a decade — the song went through various permutations, from its early acoustic version to its OK Computer full-band test-run to its official live recording on the I Might Be Wrong EP — before its finished product appeared on the band’s 2016 album A Moon Shaped Pool, a transformation that Polachek acknowledged was one of her reasons for performing the song at the museum show.
“‘True Love Waits,’ like the Water Lilies, went through decades of versions and distillations… through time and loss and perseverance,” she wrote.
Polachek’s Museum Performance
The museum gig marked the first time that Polachek – who recently appeared on Charli XCX’s all-star Brat And It’s Completely Different But Also Still Brat – has performed the song.
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FAQs
Q: What inspired Caroline Polachek to cover “True Love Waits” at the museum?
A: Caroline Polachek was inspired by the evolution of the song and the backdrop of Claude Monet’s painting Water Lilies.
Q: How did Radiohead’s “True Love Waits” transform over the years?
A: The song went through various versions before its final appearance on the album A Moon Shaped Pool in 2016.
Q: What was significant about Polachek’s performance at the museum?
A: It marked the first time she performed the song in that setting, adding a unique touch to the rendition.
Credit: www.rollingstone.com