Thom Yorke Urges Music Executives to Invest in New Artists at Ivor Novello Awards
Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke criticized the music industry at the 2026 Ivor Novello Awards, telling executives to "pull your finger out" and invest in emerging talent, stating, "Without us, you ain't shit!"

Thom Yorke was inducted into the Fellowship of the Ivors Academy at the 2026 Ivor Novello Awards on Thursday night, where he used his speech to take he music industry to task for the “insane flow of money upwards that leaves nothing but dust for new artists.” Read his full statement ahead.
The Ivor Novello Awards are a prestigious annual ceremony celebrating songwriters and screen composers, and the Fellowship of the Ivors Academy is their highest honor. The Radiohead frontmen dedicated the award to his wife and children, as well as his many collaborators, asserting that he’s “not a solo artist.” As if to emphasize this “it takes a village” approach, his prepared remarks took aim at the industry’s “weird, myopic self-destruction.”
In particular, he called out the lack of artist development and focus on non-sustainable revenue streams. He began by saying that while every artist has the “God-given right to rebel and thumb their nose at the business” by creating their own artistic path, “the industry needs the wisdom to allow them to develop, and be able to take risks with them and make mistakes with them.”
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Instead, Yorke went on, “business is becoming risk-averse and unable to help,” focusing their sights on “the exciting share price of streaming services and the insane value placed on the catalogues of a few artists of the previous generation, and the financial frenzy around them.”
Yorke continued, “I wonder why no one questions this insane flow of money upwards that leaves nothing but dust for new artists.”
He said that industry heads’ focus on back catalogues will eventually dry up, and the “lip service” paid to new music via “self-serving playlist” does nothing to actually support the music scene because of “a refusal to offer even a semblance of a sustainable revenue source for the majority of musicians.”
Yorke concluded with a direct message for the execs at the top of this heap: “This industry will die and arseholes with it, if all you do is devalue the next generation of artists and their fans. Just remember: without us, you ain’t shit!”
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Watch a segment of Yorke’s speech and read a full transcript (via NME ) below.
Meanwhile, Ed O’Brien recently suggested Yorke has a new solo album in the works, something given more credence when Yorke debuted a new song called “Space Walk” at the Ivors.
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Thom Yorke’s 2026 Fellowship of the Ivors Academy Acceptance Speech:
“To me, every generation has the God-given right to rebel and thumb their nose at the business, and prove everyone wrong.
“To use music and song to tell the story of what it truly means to grow up in their mode, and go stylistically wherever the fuck they want, because they can. This is the pumping heart of music. This is how music stays relevant.
“For this to happen, the industry itself has to have faith in these people. They’re fragile, usually kind of fucked up like me, and they need support. And the industry needs the wisdom to allow them to develop, and be able to take risks with them and make mistakes with them. That is literally their job, in my opinion.
“I’m very aware, and so are my band, [of] how lucky we were in our formative years, thanks to our managers Brian, Chris, Bryce and Jules. They fought really hard for us guys. And weirdly, our old record company, the old school EMI, cut us a lot of slack back in the old days. It all paid off.
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“We watched a lot of other artists not be so lucky, get chewed up and spat out. It takes time for artists to find their voice, to learn their craft and where it will take them. That is when the good shit occurs.
“I worry that our business is becoming risk-averse and unable to help. It makes zero sense to me. The same is true in a lot of the creative industries: art, film, theatre – they’re all going through this weird, myopic self-destruction.
“Instead, I picked up the FT [ Financial Times ] and read about the exciting share price of streaming services and the insane value placed on the catalogues of a few artists of the previous generation, and the financial frenzy around them.
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“That’s nice for them. But it is not, as they would like to call it, investment in the music sector. Quite the opposite.
“I wonder if those people appreciate what went into the making of those records. Maybe you should read some biographies of the music you’re buying and hoarding, and some of the history about that subject.
“I wonder why no one questions this insane flow of money upwards that leaves nothing but dust for new artists.
“Those heads of our industry are not asking what happens for the future generation, when the musical well dries up – which it will, guys.
“Instead, a lot of lip service is paid to new music with self-serving playlists, and to the idea of a vital music scene. But there is a refusal to offer even a semblance of a sustainable revenue source for the majority of musicians.
“And they continue the nasty fucking opaque accounting tricks that major labels were doing in the ’90s.
“So I guess I’d like to provide a quick reminder to the top of the industry and streaming services: pull your finger out. Where are you gonna get your next juicy back catalogues from, eh?
“This industry will die and arseholes with it, if all you do is devalue the next generation of artists and their fans. Just remember: without us, you ain’t shit!”
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_Originally reported by [Consequence](https://consequence.net/2026/05/thom-yorke-music-industry-new-artists-playlists/)._
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