Monday 23 December 2019

Coldplay - "Everyday Life" (2019)

Coldplay have had a pretty underwhelming decade compared to the 2000s, all things considered. They kicked things off with 2011's Mylo Xyloto, a pop rock concept album that I will defend more than most, however it was probably their weakest release at that time. They then followed this up with the sombre break-up album, 2014's Ghost Stories, which won some people back with its moodiness more akin to the bands earlier albums. However, the weak writing and incredibly stiff, lifeless instrumentation and production make this by far my least favourite Coldplay release. Just a year later, they then moved onto A Head Full of Dreams, which stepped further into pop than Mylo Xyloto, and returned some of the colour which was so devoid in Ghost Stories. The last we heard from the band was the 2017 Kaleidoscope EP, a project that contained a mix of the typical safe, radio-friendly Coldplay tracks and a couple of weirder, less mainstream ones which hearkened back to some of their more ambitious work from the 2000s. So I had a feeling that whatever the band was going to do next, it wasn't going to be just 'A Head Full of Dreams 2'.

And that is exactly what happened. Everyday Life is a double album that takes influence from world music, showing the bands artier side that hasn't really seen much light since Viva La Vida in 2008. The two halves are titled Sunrise and Sunset and deal with far more global and political topics that Coldplay are generally know for.

Sunrise opens with its title track, a beautiful short string piece which sounds like it would accompany a sunrise quite perfectly. This leads into Church, a relaxed, sunny tune with Chris Martin's joyous vocals floating above a shuffling drum beat and chiming guitar. It's the first of many religious references within the album, and certainly the best of them. Trouble In Town takes a turn away from the serene atmosphere of the album so far, starting as a very moody, Latin inspired tune about police violence. The back half of the song explodes into this Radiohead-like frenzy while an audio clip of some police violently harassing someone is added to the mix. The other truly fantastic song on the Sunrise half (and my favourite from the entire album) is Arabesque, a song built around this French-pop groove as Martin sings about how we 'share the same blood', even singing in French for a verse. A stomping Nigerian brass band then enter the tune, giving it this massive sounding quality as it builds to the climax where Martin drops his first ever F-bomb in a Coldplay song.

The rest of the first half is fine, if completely unremarkable. BrokEn is a bog standard gospel song, WOTW/POTP (standing for Wonders Of The World/Power Of The People) is a cute but clearly unfinished acoustic song in desperate need for a memorable hook, and Daddy is as about as awkwardly soppy as Coldplay have ever been. Sunrise concludes with When I Need A Friend, a song done in the style of traditional church hymns, and for me this style just sucks the life out of the track, making it sound pretty uninteresting to me.

Sunset, unlike the first half, doesn't have a title track; instead opening with Guns, a sarcastic tune where Martin lists off plenty of the worlds injustices (including America's apparent love for solving their gun problem with more guns) while he strums his acoustic guitar so ferociously it starts to go out of tune by the short track's end. I love the intensity of this track, but I think it could've done with another pass as its chorus of Martin declaring everything is crazy and he might be crazy too creates a fair amount of tonal dissonance within the song. The album's big single, Orphans, also suffers from this. The track is literally about teenagers who have lost their homes and everything in the war in Syria, yet features a typical Coldplay party chorus about just wanting to get drunk with their friends (complete with millennial whoops and all). Cry Cry Cry is a cringy faux-retro doo-wop tune complete with fake vinyl crackles, and is half finished to say the least. Old Friends is much better, a sentimental, simple but effective acoustic tune that gives me Parachutes vibes.

The last two tracks are far more complete than much of whats on the Sunset half, and do seem to give the album some direction in its latter stages. Champion Of The World is a song dedicated to Frightened Rabbit singer, Scott Hutchinson, and I appreciate the intent of the song but it isn't Martin's strongest set of lyrics, so the track lands in this awkward sense of sentimentality but also being too generic to truly resonate. Everyday Life, the closer and overall title track, also falls into this trap, as the songs message basically amounts to 'why can't everyone just be nice to each other'. Not that is inherently a bad thing (much of the Beatles' music amounted to the same), but here Coldplay just don't quite land it.

Everyday Life is certainly the bands messiest album. It goes in loads of different musical directions, and attempts to address some massive themes and ideas with a tracklist that is full of half finished songs. However, the musical concepts the band has been going for in this one is much more to my tastes than the squeaky clean pop of 'A Head Full Of Dreams' and the stiff electronics of 'Ghost Stories', making it a much more enjoyable listen even if those albums were more polished and carefully constructed. I'm also glad that the band is prioritising their own artistic ambitions over commercial appeal, and despite Everyday Life's faults I'm exited for whatever they do next.

Top Tracks: Sunrise, Church, Trouble In Town, Arabesque, Guns, Old Friends

6/10

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