The Guardian (USA)

Coldplay review – still the masters of the sweeping statement

- Elle Hunt

For all the grandeur of the 25-metre whale skeleton hanging from the ceiling, the Natural History Museum’s atrium is a relatively intimate venue for stadium stalwarts Coldplay. As Chris Martin himself acknowledg­es partway through a piano-driven take on A Sky Full of Stars: “Normally we have some fireworks at this point, but they said this building was too precious.”

From his repeated references (including some dreadful puns: he’d wanted the gig “near Wales, not whales!”, etc), Martin can’t seem to believe his luck in having secured the “non-convention­al venue” for one of the first shows in service of Coldplay’s new release, Everyday Life – tonight, set against skeletal life.

The double-disc album finds Coldplay in an expansive mode, trying out demo recordings, doo-wop, vaguely religious imagery, and even a political identity in sampling an incident of racist police harassment and decrying inadequate gun control in the US. Some of these experiment­s – such as Church, featuring guest vocals from

Norah Shaqur, singing in Arabic, and the sinister, rumbling Trouble in Town – are more persuasive live than on the record, finding a solid footing in the confidence conveyed by the band’s performanc­e and the choice of stage.

Martin’s understate­d vocal is charming in a call-and-response with a gospel quartet in Broken. Later, the idea that Everyday Life is Coldplay’s Graceland moment is reinforced when Femi Kuti (Fela’s son) and his brass quintet join the band for a stomping, honking rendition of Arabesque. (They recently performed it together during an ambitious concert live-streamed from Jordan.)

Any misgivings about white (you might say, the whitest) musicians accessoris­ing with African instrument­alists are alleviated when Martin cedes the stage to Kuti and his band for an extended sax-and-vocal jam – an unexpected but welcome collaborat­ion for a band that, one evolution ago, was branching out with the Chainsmoke­rs in an ancillary role.

But the biggest question is what this reinventio­n of sorts is in service of, what statement Coldplay are trying to make about Everyday Life – and not only does it remains elusive in this performanc­e, opportunit­ies to clarify are curiously missed.

Instead of being underscore­d as a talking point of the album, Guns – as explicitly political as the band have ever been – is skipped over lightly as a precursor to Sparks from Parachutes (2000). Daddy, too – a song that Martin has said was inspired by children growing up without fathers because of the US prison industrial complex – is introduced by the clarificat­ion that it is not about Martin’s own dad, but is “an empathetic exercise”.

There was also no reference to the band’s decision to pause touring until it could be made environmen­tally sustainabl­e, despite proceeds from this show going towards charitable organisati­on ClientEart­h – and the highly conspicuou­s reminders of biodiversi­ty flanking the stage. It is telling that Fix You, “an oldie” as Martin put it, and Viva La Vida – the rare chart-topping pop song that can also fill a cathedral – had the most impact. For all their new sound and apparent politicise­d identity, Coldplay are still doing what they have always done: sweeping emotional statements with hazy nuclei.

Few would expect them to come out on stage campaignin­g, but in the run-up to a pivotal general election, on the night that Stormzy – an heir to their Glastonbur­y main stage – mobilised voters for Corbyn on social media, the oblique gestures towards profundity seemed especially lacking in context and urgency. During an undeniably special and joyful performanc­e, that was the elephant skeleton in the room.

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 ??  ?? Ignite your bones … Chris Martin looks up at the museum’s blue whale. Photograph: Anthony Harvey/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Ignite your bones … Chris Martin looks up at the museum’s blue whale. Photograph: Anthony Harvey/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
 ??  ?? ‘Non-convention­al venue’ … the Natural History Museum. Photograph: Anthony Harvey/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
‘Non-convention­al venue’ … the Natural History Museum. Photograph: Anthony Harvey/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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