Coldplay
follow up the underwhelming X&Y with an album that
is reminiscent of U2 at their peak, thanks in no small part
to production guru Brian Eno.
Coldplay. Viva la Vida.
In their most starry-eyed moments, partisans of Coldplay have
envisioned the English band as a potential successor to U2's
throne.
Well, the group has taken at least a small step in that
direction.
Its new album Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends was
co-produced by Brian Eno, a principal player in U2's studio
team.
The first single is Violet Hill, and while one track might
not define the entire album, this one does send a signal that
the group has broken out of an increasingly confining
formula.
It opens with an orchestral/electronic mass, a meditative
moment that's interrupted suddenly - almost abruptly - by
Chris Martin singing an ominous line: Was a long and dark
December/ From the rooftops I remember there was snow, white
snow.
Martin's everyman British voice is familiar, but it has a
slightly different quality here, a twangy intonation and more
biting attack.
The guitar and rhythm section quickly rush in with a thick,
almost sloppy sound and insistent, loping beat.
The effect is miles away from the polished, piano-based
arrangements that made Coldplay one of the biggest bands in
pop music earlier this decade.
But it was the emotion and urgency of its first two albums
that positioned the London quartet as more than a
huge-selling pop group.
There was a sense of connection and inspiration that if fully
realised might command the sweeping vision and deep-seated
loyalty enjoyed by U2 and the few other rock institutions on
that level.
But the recording of their third album, X&Y, was plagued
by uncertainty and false starts, and when it came out in 2005
it did not find the same level of sales or indeed receive the
same critical acclaim.
Hiring Eno apparently helped, assuming he and co-producers
Markus Dravs and Rik Sampson were involved in designing the
harder sound and coaxing the free-spirited performance.
But Martin also sounds more urgently involved as a singer and
lyricist, conjuring a vivid yet elusive landscape of social
upheaval.
Military and religious imagery entwine in the song, which
evokes that wintry hell when banks became cathedrals and
priests clutched on to Bibles hollowed out to fill their
rifles.
Artistically and in terms of response, it is a promising
return.
Maybe Coldplay has found what it was looking for.
- Richard Cromelin