CHOOSE YOUR COUNTRY:  UK   US 

Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends

Product Details | Similar Products | Customer Reviews
Viva La Vida Or Death And All His FriendsArtist: Coldplay
List Price: £16.99
Our Price: £8.98
You Save:
£8.01 (47%)

Availability:
Usually dispatched within 24 hours

View more information about Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends at Amazon
 See larger photo
 Email this CD to a friend

Product Details:

   Release Date: 12 June 2008
   Record Label: Parlophone/EMI
   Rating:
   Sales Rank: 2

Look for similar items by category:

 Music > Indie > Bestsellers
 Music > Pop > Bestsellers
 Music > Pop > General AAS
 Music > Adult Contemporary > Bestsellers

Customers who bought this item also bought:

 Here We Stand
by Fratellis
 You Can Do Anything
by The Zutons

Customer Reviews:

  Coldplay deliver once again - the best British band of the Noughties (19 August 2008)
How can you argue with this band and their success so far? And before people think I just happen to be a sheep, I found Coldplay's Trouble and Yellow abhorrent. I was not convinced at all. However, I just love Coldplay's work from Parachutes (the two singles excepted) through to this latest installment. This is not an X&Y and is different thanks to the very positive influence of Brian Eno, a magician in his own right. The first 3 tracks just glide you through the listening experience but I struggle with 'Yes'. It is quite different from a typical Coldplay melody and reminds me of the French ambient/rock band, M83. Maybe that's a good thing. Not for me though. However, the two chart hits are just fantastic and uplifting. Not convinced by Strawberry Swing either but I like the way the album finishes. So what have we got then? Just another Coldplay album or have they tried something a little different? Indeed they have and for that they should be applauded as they attempt to evolve. As an album it works very well and it holds CD 4 in my car and will do so for a while. I can't give it 5 stars, it's just not as good as Parachutes for me but it's still a very good album. Don't denigrate, just appreciate.

  Best Coldplay Album By Far (11 August 2008)
I have taken time to listen to the new Coldplay album several times since its release. There is no denying that this album is far more experimental than the first three albums and moves away from the bands pop/rock songs based around basic chords. The meat of the album is vedged between a very catchy intro and outro which compliment the new style very well.

Initially i found the lyrics on the album a little simple in places but as i listened more, i realised that it may be a small price the band has paid for pushing the content of the songs into new subject areas. A good example of this is the title track 'Viva La Vida' which encapsulates the front cover and speaks of revolution and the trials and tribulations of being a king.

Standout tracks for me are 'Yes', 'Lost' and the very radiohead-esque '42' but to be honest there isn't a bad track on the album.

Overall, the album solidifies Coldplays status as one of the driving cogs in British music at the moment. While many bands continue to stumble along and produce continuous streams of 'safe' music, Coldplay have turned their music in a new direction and made a brilliant go of it.

  Waste of instruments. (11 August 2008)
Coldplay are going the same way Mike Yarwood did. He forgot who he was and had to impersonate himself which lead to all manner of problems. Coldplay have gone the same way after their catchy, like Ebola catchy, first hit Yellow. They cannot recapture that audio fluke and have been pursuing it relentlessly even into the very bowels of Chris Martins back passage. Maybe if they spent some time out of that passage they could start making music again instead of dreary soundalike pap. Get over yourself and do some proper tunes, and cheer up, how can they still be that miserable when duping so many people with a promise of a good album but never delivering for so long. I don't think it's unfair to compare them too U2, they are are annoying dreary guitar twangling regurgitators of the same formula dliuted over the years to a distinct sound but no content too.

  Most diverse album to date... but is that a good thing?, (08 August 2008)
Has it all gone `pete tong' for Coldplay ? There are instrumental tracks, long 7 mins tracks, tracks that change tempo and tone half way through. This is certainly their most experimental album.

It's as though they raided their own album collection and referenced different styles that they liked i.e. 42 has piano riffs like john lennon's - imagine, lovers in japan is like 80's pop, yes - take's off nico's venus in furs.

It's an album that's not as easy to get into as their previous ones, but good never the less.

  it will grow and grow (07 August 2008)
I bought this and put it in the car before a driving holiday so listened to it many times through over a couple of weeks. My first reaction was disappointment except for the two singles and then as time passed, I found myself loving the whole album more and more. It needs to be played loud and it needs to be played several times to get the full appreciation.
I still stand by my view that Chris Martin isn't a brilliant singer but the skill is making the best of what you've got and he certainly milks every drop from the (limited) talent he has (and fair play to him for that!) Some parts of the album sound a little like things we have heard from others - some is really U2 but what shines through is the contribution at beginning and end from Jon Hopkins - stunning
All round, one to buy
One final thing - the packaging is pathetic - it'll be dog-eared and ruined in no time

 
 


Books and more books