Oct 11, 2007, 8:00 GMT
Radiohead fans crashed the band's website trying to download their new album 'In Rainbows' yesterday (10.10.07).
Thom Yorke performs with Radiohead at the 5th annual Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee 17 June 2006. The three day festival attracts 80,000 fans and features multiple stages with such acts such as Bonnie Raitt, Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, and Phil Lesh and Friends. EPA/DAVID RAE MORRIS
The album has been available for a pre-order download since October 1, but the website just couldn't cope with the number of fans desperate to get their hands on the band's first album since 2003.
In a bold move that has sent the music industry into a panic, Radiohead are allowing their fans to choose how much they want to pay for it.
Radiohead entusiasts can pay anything from £100 to absolutely nothing for the download version. Many fans are opting to pay 0p, with some even accusing the band of being "pretentious" for choosing to sell their album in such a unique way.
Internet forum user Tombigbee bragged: "I paid absolutely zero for the album, but I might get the discbox when it comes out."
Gumshoe added: "I paid nothing either, but I think I will get the discbox because the album is excellent."
Another fan, TommyGavin76, disapproves of the band's decision, saying: "I'm sure if everyone paid nothing they would be a tad upset. It's just a gimmick anyway, why can't Radiohead just make albums without having to be so pretentious all the time?"
Meanwhile, other musicians are unsure how to take the news of Radiohead's album sales.
James Blunt said: "I definitely think there is value in music. I don't think Radiohead should devalue it. I've got to pay a band and a producer and a mixer. I don't know how I'd necessarily pay them if I sold my albums for 1p. I'd have to work it out, but maybe they know how this works in practice."
As well as the download version, 'In Rainbows' is available for pre-order in a £40 "discbox", shipping on December 3, which contains both CD and vinyl versions of the album, as well as an enhanced CD featuring another eight new tracks.
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