138. "Feral," The King of Limbs

137. "Yes I Am," Creep (single)

136. "The Amazing Sounds of Orgy," Pyramid Song (single)

135. "Stupid Car," Drill EP

134. "Paperbag Writer," There There (single)

133. "Go Slowly," In Rainbows: Discbox

132. "How Do You?" Pablo Honey

— Grungy, snarling, frenetic, and very straightforwardly about a specific person who sounds like he's a real asshole. It's an understatement to say that this is not a direction that Radiohead would pursue as they progressed as a band, but that doesn't mean it's not a banger. (JS)

131. "Molasses," Street Spirit (Fade Out) (single)

— Radiohead at their most word-salad-y, and certainly the first and last time anyone has thought to stick chickens, genocide, and molasses together to see what comes out. The languorous guitar line and Thom Yorke's soupy drawl do an excellent job of evoking the title. Food for thought: This song was recorded in the same session that produced "Lucky." (JS)

130. "Hunting Bears," Amnesiac

129. "Worrywort," Knives Out (single)

128. "Daydreaming," A Moon Shaped Pool

— This gorgeous, heartbreaking meditation on an irreparable loss is all the more devastating when you realize that the haunting, wounded-animal groans at the end are a backwards loop of Thom Yorke repeating "Half of my life." This album was released a year after the 47-year-old's separation from a 23-year relationship. "The damage is done." (JS)

127. "Bangers + Mash," In Rainbows: Discbox

— One of the few Radiohead songs that wouldn't feel at all out of place on a workout playlist. (SL)

126. "Vegetable," Pablo Honey

— For all their introspection and anxiety, Radiohead are often at their best when they're defiant. I love "Vegetable" because it's a rousing anthem for those of us whose default state is petty indignation. "I will not control myself;" "I spit on the hand that feeds me." Surprisingly cathartic things to shout at the top of your lungs if you have a complicated relationship with authority. (JS)

125. "Prove Yourself," Pablo Honey

124. "I Promise," OK Computer OKNOTOK 1997 2017

123. "Ill Wind," A Moon Shaped Pool (special bonus edition)

122. "Staircase," The Daily Mail/Staircase (single)

121. "I Can't," Pablo Honey

120. "Fog," Knives Out (single)

119. "Down Is the New Up," In Rainbows: Discbox

118. "Morning Mr Magpie," The King of Limbs

117. "Lewis (Mistreated)," My Iron Lung EP

— What fun they had with this one. I'd like to think this came very, very close to making it onto The Bends. (SL)

116. "I Want None of This," Help!: A Day in the Life

115. "Permanent Daylight," My Iron Lung EP

— Notable primarily because it's a very convincing homage to Sonic Youth, which is not a particularly easy thing to pull off well. (JS)

114. "Maquiladora," High and Dry (single)

— Following directly on from the hysterical, humorless laugh that "India Rubber" devolves into on the High and Dry / India Rubber EP, this feels like a snapshot of the moments before a panic attack. (JS)

113. "How I Made My Millions," No Surprises (single)

— An early candidate for "Saddest Radiohead Song." The lo-fi recording only adds to the yearning quality here; I'm glad they never did another version of it. (SL)

112. "Ripcord," Pablo Honey

111. "Little by Little," The King of Limbs

110. "Give Up the Ghost," The King of Limbs

109. "Bloom," The King of Limbs

— A close cousin to Stereolab's "Brakhage," this one contrasts chill jazzy chords with a nervous beat that sounds like it's always on the verge of falling apart. It's like being in this calm, meditative state in the middle of a loud, cluttered world that's doing everything it can to distract you. (MP)

108. "Glass Eyes," A Moon Shaped Pool

107. "The Gloaming," Hail to the Thief

106. "The Trickster," My Iron Lung EP

— This one's primarily just a reminder that Jonny can shred. Some nifty guitar lines and a powerful forward momentum to create – as Bends-era B-sides often do – a kind of delightful alternate universe where Radiohead are rock gods instead of the sad kings of moping around. (JS)

105. "Pearly*," Paranoid Android (single)

104. "Palo Alto," No Surprises/Running From Demons (single)

— Despite originally being titled "OK Computer," "Palo Alto" still didn't make it to the final cut of that album, destined instead to be a favorite B-side. For an OK Computer-era song, this one's surprisingly raucous, and given the "I'm OK, how are you?" of its chorus, you could be forgiven for thinking it's about something more hopeful than the nervous alienation at the center of the album it never made it to. But it's not. (JS)

103. "Lull," Karma Police (single)

102. "Cuttooth," Knives Out (single)

101. "A Reminder," Paranoid Android (single)

— The audio clip at the start of the song is taken from the Prague subway system, including the phrase "the doors are closing," and there's something about this song that always makes me think of The Doors, both the sound and its main theme of longing and memory. Talking about its genesis, Thom Yorke said, "I had this idea of someone writing a song, sending it to someone and saying, 'If I ever lose it, you just pick up the phone and play me this song back to remind me.'" I also had a short-lived band in college called "A Reminder." (SL)