The Province

How we eventually warmed to Coldplay

The unfashiona­ble foursome became the world’s comfort blanket with their safe, soothing brand of pop

- JAMES HALL LONDON DAILY TELEGRAPH

Exactly 20 years ago, four wideeyed students in a band called Starfish played their first gig in front of friends. Within months, Starfish changed their name to Coldplay and four years later, they headlined Glastonbur­y and became one of the world’s biggest acts. They have sold more than 70 million albums and played stadiums from London to Lima and Mumbai to Miami.

How did these four unassuming individual­s become a globe-straddling phenomenon? And why, despite chart-topping albums, Hollywood lifestyles and a phenomenal live reputation, has the band never shed the tag of being a bit straight and uncool?

Back in the ’90s, initial reaction among industry talent scouts was mixed. Even Dan Keeling, Parlophone’s A&R man, who signed Coldplay in April 1999, was initially “unimpresse­d” when he saw them in 1998.

“They hadn’t nailed their sound,” Keeling said. “Far from it. So I left. They were just another band.”

But when Keeling saw them in early 1999 in Manchester, they’d vastly improved. The songwritin­g showed promise in many areas, Keeling says.

“I couldn’t believe they’d come on so much,” he says.

Great songs drove Coldplay’s success. Lyrically, they groaned with pathos, hope and togetherne­ss. Crucially, the band understood dynamics; songs often built to a rousing singalong climax.

Admittedly there were other factors at play in the band’s phenomenal journey — some of them distinctly un-rock ’n’ roll. For a start, there was the fortunate timing.

Coldplay signed in an “in between” phase in music: specifical­ly, the four-year window between Britpop’s final retro swagger in 1997 (very un-Coldplay), and the garage rock revival spearheade­d by The Strokes in 2001.

But not being tied to any particular scene was, perhaps paradoxica­lly, the key to their longevity. By never being part of a fashionabl­e movement, Coldplay has never been out of fashion.

They were polite and worked hard. Martin spent early gigs apologizin­g and his teetotal lifestyle let him focus on songwritin­g, thus creating a virtuous circle. Sensible business decisions — such as equally splitting royalties and investing in the company behind the flashing wristbands they give out at shows — gave the band ballast.

Of course, they have attracted criticism. Creation boss Alan McGee famously called their output “bed-wetters’ music.” But, following the horrors of 9/11, the world craved “safe” and Coldplay’s music fit the bill perfectly. The members were writing their second album when the attacks happened.

In dark times, who could fail to be soothed by the sonic balm of 2005’s Fix You? Coldplay became the world’s comfort blanket: warm and reassuring.

For all that people love to hate them, it is hard not to be impressed and moved when seeing them perform. A Coldplay show is a riot of colour and communal positivity. Such is the level of production that their gigs end with rolling credits.

Coldplay’s live prowess has coincided with a cultural shift: as physical music sales decline, people will shell out for visceral experience­s. They want memories, not stuff. The year Coldplay started, Americans spent $1.5 billion on gig tickets. In 2017, they spent $7 billion.

Their sound has also moved with the times, becoming more pop and mainstream and less guitar-led. Perhaps keeping things vague and shiny is a way of keeping their appeal broad and their momentum going.

In this sense, 20 years on, Coldplay seem to be playing an astute long game that sums up modern music. They know surviving as a band means adapting to shifting musical tastes. And they know the future lies in immersive live music.

If this means occasional­ly substituti­ng heart for colour, and replacing vulnerabil­ity with spectacle, it’s a price they seem willing to pay.

 ?? — POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Coldplay has survived its critics, becoming one of the world’s major stadium bands. They’ve never been truly fashionabl­e, but that’s one of the reasons they’re going strong after 20 years.
— POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Coldplay has survived its critics, becoming one of the world’s major stadium bands. They’ve never been truly fashionabl­e, but that’s one of the reasons they’re going strong after 20 years.

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