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Dreaming in colour Coldplay frontman Chris Martin talks about finding solace in Rumi and creating a fun and colourful new album, A Head Full of Dreams, out today

Coldplay’s latest album A Head Full of Dreams releases on December 4, and features guests like Beyonce, Tove Lo

- By Mikael Wood Chris Martin visits The Elvis Duran Z100 Morning Show Photos by Getty Images

Chris Martin has lived in Los Angeles long enough to speak enthusiast­ically about his spiritual teachers and about the benefits of cutting sugar and dairy from his diet. But the Coldplay frontman hasn’t been in LA long enough to know that the guys handing out DVDs on the Venice boardwalk want you to pay for them.

“Thanks, brother,” Martin said as just such a man pressed a compilatio­n of basketball clips into his hands on a recent morning. Dressed in a bright-blue hoodie and matching baseball cap, the British singer kept moving but came to a sudden halt when the guy touched Martin’s arm and explained that he wasn’t giving away his product for free.

“Oh, you want a donation,” Martin said, quickly grasping the situation. “All right, man!” And with that he cheerfully forked over 20 bucks and asked for two.

A simple case of a rock star using money to smooth his path through life? Well, sure. Yet the gesture — one of several donations over the course of a lengthy stroll that eventually required a visit to a beachside ATM — also seemed in keeping with the proudly magnanimou­s vibe of Coldplay’s new album, A Head Full of Dreams. Out today, it marks a return to the kind of earnest emotional uplift that made Coldplay famous but which the band largely abandoned for its last studio album, Ghost Stories.

That record, full of hushed, small-scale tunes, documented what the 38-yearold Martin described as the “traumatic” breakup of his marriage to actress Gwyneth Paltrow, with whom he has two children. Coldplay didn’t do much to promote the album, avoiding interviews and playing only a handful of concerts. “A bit of a retreat into the turtle shell,” the singer called it.

Eighteen months later, though, Martin and his bandmates — guitarist Jonny Buckland, bassist Guy Berryman and drummer Will Champion — have emerged to talk up an imaginativ­e disc that reflects the frontman’s renewed optimism as well as Coldplay’s determinat­ion to stay musically relevant at a moment when traditiona­l guitar bands are more or less out of style.

“Isn’t it amazing, the colour and craziness down here?” Martin said with a grin as he dropped a few bills into a bucket atop a street performer’s grand piano. “You’ve always got to reward a busker. I’m a busker too, and people reward me.”

They certainly have. After forming at college in London and scoring a global smash with Yellow, Coldplay spent the next decade racking up hits (including the Grammy-winning Clocks and Viva la Vida) and becoming one of the world’s biggest touring acts. In between, there were Martin’s profile-raising collaborat­ions with Jay Z and Kanye West, along with a duet with Rihanna on Coldplay’s 2011 album, Mylo Xyloto.

Yet by 2013, the singer found himself looking for “a soft place to land” as his relationsh­ip with Paltrow came undone, he said. LA was the obvious choice, because his son and daughter were here, and “wherever they live is my home.” What began as a practical arrangemen­t, though, soon turned into a creative boon, with Martin feeling reinvigora­ted by Southern California’s climate and landscape.

“If you go back to a Jane Austen novel, they’re always sending people to get sea air when they’re going through something,” he said with a laugh. “It’s restorativ­e.”

Moving to LA also put Martin closer to the busy pop-music industry, with its songwriter­s and producers responsibl­e for creating the hits that rule Top 40 radio. That world has long fascinated him, he said, so last year, he tried writing a few tracks for Rihanna, whose manager connected Martin with Stargate, one of the singer’s go-to production teams.

They got on well enough that Martin asked the rest of Coldplay to work with Stargate for Miracles, the band’s song from Angelina Jolie’s 2014 movie Unbroken. And that in turn led to Stargate’s co-producing A Head Full of Dreams, which Martin said he knew from the beginning would represent a dramatic shift from Ghost Stories. The goal, he added, was “something big and colorful and fun,” an

album that’s “not rock and not pop. It’s just whatever we dream it up to be.”

That dreamed-up sound has Stargate’s fingerprin­ts all over it, from the layered keyboards in the title track to the pulsing disco groove that drives Adventure of a Lifetime, which Coldplay debuted on the recent American Music Awards. The plaintive Army of One even sports a sleek R&B coda that could pass for a Chris Brown demo.

But if the band resisted that kind of outside influence in its early days, as Champion has admitted, it has now happily opened itself to collaborat­ors.

“When you’ve been a band for nearly 20 years, finding fresh inspiratio­n isn’t always that easy,” Coldplay’s drummer said as he sat in a dressing room with Buckland and Berryman after taping a performanc­e on James Corden’s late-night show. “So when someone new comes in, you grab the chance.”

Indeed, beyond Stargate, A Head Full of Dreams features appearance­s by an expansive cast of guests, including Beyonce and Swedish pop singer Tove Lo, who duets with Martin on Fun.

Lisa Worden, music director at LA’s influentia­l radio station KROQ-FM (106.7), said cameos like those — as well as the decision to release Adventure of a Lifetime as the album’s lead single — were smart moves after the more cerebral Ghost Stories.

“It keeps them in touch with a younger audience, which hears Adventure of a Lifetime and says, ‘Coldplay is still speaking to us,’” Worden said.

Yet A Head Full of Dreams also reflects more idiosyncra­tic choices. Merry Clayton, the veteran backup singer known for her apocalypti­c wail in the Rolling Stones’ Gimme Shelter, is in the mix, as is poet Coleman Barks, who reads a translatio­n of The Guest House by Rumi, which Martin said “completely changed my life.” Paltrow appears too, in Everglow, a delicate ballad about the “light that you left me.”

That track isn’t the only one that invites speculatio­n as to whom these songs are about. An upbeat ode to someone who’s made Martin feel like “I’m alive again”, Adventure of a Lifetime, for instance, is widely thought to describe the singer’s on-again/off-again relationsh­ip with actress Jennifer Lawrence.

Asked if the theorizing bothered him, Martin replied, “I don’t mind, because I’ll never say.” Then he went further, insisting that songs didn’t come from him so much as they came through him.

“I never sit down and say, ‘I’m gonna write a song about this person and this event’,” he said. “If I did do that, it would never make it, because that would be a song that you crafted rather than received.”

I told him that I found it hard to believe that specific names and faces didn’t attach themselves to his songs, especially once they’ve become part of Coldplay’s concerts and he’s singing them every night. Martin, the very picture of cordiality until then, bristled a bit.

“I don’t expect people to understand where songs come from, because I don’t understand either,” he said. As an example, he mentioned A Sky Full of Stars from Ghost Stories.

“Someone might say, ‘Oh, it’s about Gwyneth,’” he said. “’It’s about this person,’ ‘It’s about your kids,’ ‘It’s about everyone in the world.’” He had the title for a long time, he said there were “seven other songs called A Sky Full of Stars, and none of them were right.” Then one day, he went on, “this song just came through in one go.” So he doesn’t know which person inspired the song. “And I don’t want to really question it.”

That isn’t to say that becoming a tabloid target has been easy. At first, the paparazzi made him angry, depressed and unsure of what to do with his feelings.

“That’s why I had to go and find some teachers” — including a favorite Sufi scholar — “and say, ‘Hey, how do you navigate this kind of thing?’” He found solace in Rumi’s words about accepting everything as a blessing. Music helped too, of course, just as it’s improved the mood of Coldplay fans craving the surge of serotonin the band’s songs can deliver.

After mostly staying off the road behind Ghost Stories, Coldplay will tour arenas and stadiums next year, and Martin is already looking forward to witnessing that emotional boost. But these days he seems equally attuned to smaller wonders, which may be the real key to happiness. “Look at that!” he said, pointing with clear excitement at another sight on the boardwalk. “A dog skiing!”

“When you’ve been a band for nearly 20 years, finding fresh inspiratio­n isn’t always that easy.”

WILL CHAMPION | Drummer, Coldplay

 ??  ?? Chris Martin (C) and musicians (L-R) Jonny Buckland, Will Champion and Guy Berryman of Coldplay perform onstage during the 2015 American Music Awards at Microsoft Theater on November 22, 2015 in Los Angeles, California
Chris Martin (C) and musicians (L-R) Jonny Buckland, Will Champion and Guy Berryman of Coldplay perform onstage during the 2015 American Music Awards at Microsoft Theater on November 22, 2015 in Los Angeles, California
 ??  ?? The cover art for Coldplay’s new album, A Head Full of
Dreams.
The cover art for Coldplay’s new album, A Head Full of Dreams.
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