Coldplay
Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends
Rare & Collectible Vinyl Records
Coldplay
Gone Are Chris Martin's Piano Recitals And Gone Are The Washes Of Meticulously Majestic Guitar, Replaced By Orchestrations Of Sound, Sometimes Literally Consisting Of Strings But Usually A Tapestry Of Synthesizers, Percussion, Organs, Electronics, And Guitars That Avoid Playing Riffs. Gone Too Are Simpering Schoolboy Ballads Like "Fix You," And Along With Them The Soaring Melodies Designed To Fill Arenas. In Fact, There Are No Insistent Hooks To Be Found Anywhere On Viva La Vida, And There Are No Clear Singles In This Collection Of Insinuatingly Ingratiating Songs. This Reliance On Elliptical Melodies Isn't Off-putting -- Alienation Is Alien To Coldplay -- And This Is Where Eno's Guidance Pays Off, As He Helps Sculpt Viva La Vida To Work As A Musical Whole, Where There Are Long Stretches Of Instrumentals And Where Only "Strawberry Swing," With Its Light, Gently Infectious Melody And Insistent Rhythmic Pulse, Breaks From The Album's Appealingly Meditative Murk. Whatever Iciness There Is To The Sound Of Viva La Vida Is Warmed By Martin's Voice, But The Music Is By Design An Heir To The Earnest British Art Rock Of '80s Peter Gabriel And U2 -- Arty Enough To Convey Sober Intelligence Without Seeming Snobby, The Kind Of Album That Deserves To Take Its Title From Frida Kahlo And Album Art From Eugene Delacroix. That Delacroix Painting Depicts The French Revolution, So It Does Fit That Martin Tones Down His Relentless Self-obsession -- The Songs Aren't Heavy On Lyrics And Some Are Shockingly Written In Character -- Which Is A Development As Welcome As The Expanded Sonic Palette. Martin's Refined Writing Topics May Be Outpaced By The Band's Guided Adventure, But They're Both Indicative That Coldplay Are Desperate To Not Just Strive For The Title Of Great Band -- A Title They Seem To Believe That They're To The Manor Born -- But To Actually Burrow Into The Explorative Work Of Creating Music. And So The Greatest Thing Coldplay May Have Learned From Eno Is His Work Ethic, As They Demonstrate A Focused Concentration Throughout This Tight Album -- It's Only 47 Minutes Yet Covers More Ground Than X&y And Arguably A Rush Of Blood To The Head -- That Turns Viva La Vida Into Something Quietly Satisfying." AMG - Stephen Thomas Erlewine.
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Artist: Coldplay
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Genre: Rock
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Type: New - LP
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Label: Parlophone
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Catalog ID: PRL1-791437
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Condition:
Vinyl:Mint (M)Sleeve:Near Mint (NM or M-) -
Country ID: US
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SKU: 178089
Track List
A1 | Life In Technicolor | 2:29 |
A2 | Cemeteries Of London | 3:21 |
A3 | Lost! | 3:55 |
A4 | 42 | 3:57 |
A5 | Lovers In Japan / Reign Of Love | 6:51 |
B1 | Yes | 4:04 |
B2 | Viva La Vida | 4:04 |
B3 | Violet Hill | 3:50 |
B4 | Strawberry Swing | 4:08 |
B5 | Death And All His Friends | 3:30 |