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Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends | 
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| Artist: Coldplay Label: Parlophone/EMI Category: Music
List Price: £16.99 Buy New: £5.23 You Save: £11.76 (69%)
New (45) Used (5) Collectible (3) from £5.05
Rating: 170 reviews Sales Rank: 3
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
EAN: 5099921211409 ASIN: B0017NCVWY
Release Date: June 12, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new - Factory sealed - Import edition We ship via first class mail from Miami, Florida.USA
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| Tracks:
| • | Life In Technicolor | | • | Cemeteries Of London | | • | Lost | | • | 42 | | • | Lovers In Japan/Reign Of Love | | • | Yes | | • | Viva La Vida | | • | Violet Hill | | • | Strawberry Swing | | • | Death And All His Friends |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk review To say there has been a lot of anticipation for Coldplay's fourth album, Viva La Vida, is an understatement. Having enlisted legendary leftfield producer Brian Eno, borrowed their album title from a painting by renowned Mexican artist Frida Kahlo and made tantalising remarks about sonic reinvention, the world has been curious (to say the least) to hear what the `new' Coldplay might sound like. Viva La Vida definitely makes some departures from the band's usual formula, which happens to be one of the most commercially successful rock-pop blueprints of recent years. The plangent chords, emotive melodies, stadium-rock rhythms and universal lyrical concerns remain, but Martin and co. have gone out on several limbs here, incorporating instrumental tracks ("Life In Technicolour"), using subtle North African and Latin elements ("Yes", "Strawberry Swing"), and overhauling previously strict verse-chorus-verse structures in favour of slightly more avant arrangements. The old Coldplay still shine through (see tracks like "Violet Hill" and the title song) but even their classic sound feels more muscular and confident. The band's new flourishes, cosmetic and self-conscious as they may be, are enough to make Viva La Vida a welcome break from the old routine--Danny McKenna
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| Customer Reviews: Read 165 more reviews...
I love this CD! August 29, 2008 L. Macdonald (Glasgow) I've always liked Coldplay and previously bought Parachutes and A rush of blood to the head. However I didn't rush out to the buy this one as I wasn't overly impressed by the single Violet Hill but Viva La Vida does not disappoint. I feel with this album they have grown and evolved, it is creative, full of feeling and depth, gentler than A rush of blood to the head. I love so many tracks especially 42, Reign of Love, Lovers in Japan, and Death and his friends. There is only one track that I skip - Yes. It's the type of album that gives you goosebumps. People assume that Coldplay are dull and pretentious but IMO they are talented and provide something different from the rest. Give it a try and I'm sure you'll grow to love it!
Hoots man! August 29, 2008 Mr. J. E. Constable (Cambridge, England) Since their successful and widely popular debut 'Parachutes', Coldplay have been accused of playing it safe; sticking to the same routine and allowing themselves to stagnate in a well of mediocrity. This latest effort, then, could be regarded as a step into the unknown - a risk aimed at breaking into the world of rock immortality. The sleeve certainly makes it look this way. Gone is the standard font and minimalist cover art, and in with the romantic, renaissance war scene, with the album title scrawled nihilistically on the front in white chalk (doesn't the guy lying dead in the bottom right look like Chris Martin?). So no one can accuse Coldplay of sticking to the agenda here. Unfortunately, the direction they've stepped in has left them waist-deep in manure, frantically clawing at the reeds and perhaps wishing they'd stayed on the safe footpath of 'Parachutes' et al instead of leaping wildly into the undergrowth in search of musical evolution. Ok so it's not that bad. There are some really nice noises coming out from time to time - for instance the intro/outro loop and the latter half of 'Death and All His Friends'. Sadly, the majority of the album sounds like an anthology of Scottish line-dancing anthems. Some of the beats are unforgivably cheesy and cloying, making the listener's spine concertina in loathing and vitriol. I'm looking specifically at 'Lost!', 'Strawberry Swing' and 'Lovers in Japan' here. There's an impossible tension between the rare but enticing synth tones of 'Life in Technicolour' and the morbidly cringe-worthy stomp of 'Strawberry Swing' and 'Lost!' that makes you wonder if Chris Martin is trying to make a Proclaimers tribute album or an alternative score for the 'Lord of The Rings' movies. Intelligent, sickeningly beautiful guitar melodies from the 'Parachutes' era have been replaced over time with over-produced, pedestrian instrumental hooks that leave you wanting to bite off your own face in frustration and disappointment. And then there're the lyrics. My word. I can remember being at primary school and being told to write a four line poem that rhymed. A simple exercise, that left me feeling satisfied at my own puerile creativity. I can imagine a similar aura of smug surrounding Chris Martin, after penning the gem: 'You might be a big fish in a little pond Doesn't mean you've won Cos along may come a bigger one' It's the kind of thing you might shout at a bully from the safety of your dad's car when he's driving you home from school. It's disgraceful, and unfortunately it shows (if we weren't sure already) that Coldplay and Chris Martin have run out of ideas. Moving in a new direction is fine, but it doesn't mean you can just release a collection of substandard B-sides and call it innovation. If you're unable to stray from a formula, stick to the knitting - at least you'll never be accused of selling out.
Empty and vile August 24, 2008 Mr. M. J. Turner (London, England) 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
The absence of everything spontaneous, beautiful and courageous in music. Cod poetry mired down by turgid dirgery with all the wit and sophistication of a rotten cat dropping. Some posh boy warbles unconvincingly over U2's sub-Bsides and expects the world to be saved while I boak heartily into a straw boater. Music for people with no love for music and no clue about life.
Their best yet August 24, 2008 Tim Lintott (Brighton UK) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I haven't always liked Coldplay. Parachutes I could take or leave (and generally left). 'Rush of Blood' was good in parts but only really 'The Scientist' and 'Warning Sign' have lasted for me. 'X and Y' attended to their main fault - a lack of variety in building a melody - and also gave us sound washes, instumental development and nearly sixty minutes of sound. Viva La Vida (a much shorter work) has attended to most of their remaining weaknesses and come up with their first classic pop/rock album that can be enjoyed as a whole. The lyrics are less pretentious - the title track even manages to be witty - and the songs are tidier and organised; they all tell their own particular story in music and lyrics. Critically the instrumentation has real variety with the percussion particularly good. Meanwhile Chris Martin's vocals have matured allowing most melody lines to range well over one octave. The conceit of 'Fix You' ie two competing musical ideas on one particular track is arguably done to death but there is really not a single weak contribution here.
Just give it time... August 22, 2008 Dafydd Jones (Aberystwyth, Ceredigion United Kingdom) This is Coldplay, but with a bit of a twist. I doubt these guys want to create an album that sounds generically similar every time they decide to release a collection of tracks. So what's the big fuss, and why is everyone having a go at them? Is it because it's Coldplay and it's 'cool' to criticise them? Or is it because they are boring and dull and unimaginative? Or is it because all of their stuff sounds similar? On the last few counts, I can say that 'Viva La Vida' is NOT boring and NOT dull. Neither is it unimaginative. It is probably the most diverse record Coldplay have produced...but does that necessarily mean that it's their best? Flip a coin. On one side, you have the critics who hate it for not being Coldplay - too different, too experimental, too 'bits and pieces'. On the other hand, you have the people who enjoy it for being a diverse record, with plenty of variety shown in the songs in structure and in how they sound. I admit myself, it's the kind of record that grows on you. They do say that the best records tend to do so. 'Viva La Vida' is a great album. And it's great because Coldplay create wonderful music. The standout tracks are: 'Lost!', '42', 'Lovers in Japan', 'Violet Hill', and the title-track, 'Viva La Vida'. However, there isn't one bad track on it, despite many people dismissing the album. Other tracks, 'Life in Technicolor', 'Cemeteries of London', 'Yes', 'Strawberry Swing', and 'Death and All of His Friends' are good, but don't grab you by the scruff of the neck and beg for your listening attention. Maybe we take Coldplay for granted. They create excellent music, but some people fail to recognize this. They perceive them as dull and unimaginative. But 'Viva La Vida' is anything but. It is the bravest Coldplay album yet. And quite possibly one of the best, if only because of that. 8/10.
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