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Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends [Import]

ColdplayAudio CD
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (540 customer reviews)


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MP3 Music, 10 Songs, 2008 $9.49  
Audio CD, 2008 $9.99  
Audio CD, Import, 2008 --  
Vinyl, 2008 $27.90  

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Biography

Formed in 1997, Coldplay – comprised of Guy Berryman (bass), Jonny Buckland (lead guitar), Will Champion (drums), and Chris Martin (vocals, guitar, keyboards) – released two EPs, The Safety and Brothers and Sisters, before signing with Parlophone in 1999. Three additional EPs (The Blue Room, Shiver and Yellow) followed before their landmark debut album, Parachutes, which was ... Read more in Amazon's Coldplay Store

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (June 17, 2008)
  • Original Release Date: 2008
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Phantom Sound & Vision
  • ASIN: B0017W7FPS
  • In-Print Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Music
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (540 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #907,138 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

To say there has been a lot of anticipation for Coldplay’s fourth album, Viva La Vida, is an understatement. Having enlisted legendary leftfield producer Brian Eno, borrowed their album title from a painting by renowned Mexican artist Frida Kahlo and made tantalising remarks about sonic reinvention, the world has been curious (to say the least) to hear what the ‘new’ Coldplay might sound like. Viva La Vida definitely makes some departures from the band’s usual formula, which happens to be one of the most commercially successful rock-pop blueprints of recent years. The plangent chords, emotive melodies, stadium-rock rhythms and universal lyrical concerns remain, but Martin and co. have gone out on several limbs here, incorporating instrumental tracks ("Life In Technicolour"), using subtle North African and Latin elements ("Yes", "Strawberry Swing"), and overhauling previously strict verse-chorus-verse structures in favour of slightly more avant arrangements. The old Coldplay still shine through (see tracks like "Violet Hill" and the title song) but even their classic sound feels more muscular and confident. The band’s new flourishes, cosmetic and self-conscious as they may be, are enough to make Viva La Vida a welcome break from the old routine--Danny McKenna

Customer Reviews

Every song is very good. Kevin M. Reinwald  |  80 reviewers made a similar statement
The music is great, the lyrics are so interesting. 2 Flip Combination  |  85 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
234 of 255 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Viviendo La Vida! June 17, 2008
Format:Audio CD
Coldplay has turned in another solid effort with its 4th studio album, the indecisively-titled "Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends," but they expand their boundaries this time. Gone is the predictability of tightly-wound, highly catchy 4 minute arena pop/rock anthems marching in succession, not to mention the sensitive male singer/songwriter clichés and often dial-by-numbers production values. The British quartet has traded that solid but stagnant formula for artsy experimentation, and the results are commendable, even if their enlisting legendary studio wizard Brian Eno to bolster the LP's ethereal, left-field sound is in and of itself predictable. These songs do not lend themselves to radio playlists in the vein of "Clocks" or "Talk," but the album is their most intriguing and memorable. The results are a little less Phil Collins, a little more Peter Gabriel.

The highly digitized, nearly instrumental "Life In Technicolor" opens the album on a high note with sweeping Middle-Eastern instrumentation and loopy, buoyant beats. Immediately ascertainable is that this is not an album that can safely grace the intercom of the local ShopRite. With hand claps and frothy production values behind a droning, funereal organ, "Lost!" is a poignant, yearning ode to finding salvation and a new lease on life. Accented by just the right amount of electric guitar, the intriguing, atypical track not only rocks and invigorates but finds these talented musicians trying for something new and succeeding, underscoring the album's unexpectedly adventurous direction.
... Read more ›
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81 of 91 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Assuming We Knew Nothing of Coldplay... June 17, 2008
By Liam F.
Format:MP3 Music
And assuming that we had no knowledge of any of Coldplay's previous 3 albums, and assuming that we had no idea of Coldplay's alleged greatness in today's music world. So without any comparison or benchmark, here's what I have to say.

"Life in Technicolor" is so aptly titled. An instrumental arrangement that gradually picks up in volume, texture and excitement, this album opener is so colourful it reminds you of a carnival. It gets your foot tapping and your head nodding. Some sources rumour that this song will be sung in words in Coldplay's next CD. The mood then glooms down when "Cemeteries of London" comes along. Sinister synthesizers flood the atmosphere and mysterious notes tinkle from the piano before the beats enter and the song erupts into a minor-key rock anthem. You'll find yourself singing "la la la la la" in no time. "Lost" bounds in, as track #3, with claps and a bouncy beat. Featuring some of the most intriguing lyrics (either deep or nonsensical will depend on you) - "just because I'm hurting, doesn't mean I'm hurt" and "just because I'm losing, doesn't mean I'm lost" - this song maintains the upbeat tempo throughout.

The mood becomes sombre once again at the beginning of "42". Apparently this is the favourite number of this band's lead singer. Anyway, by the time you finish pondering what makes 42, the number, so likeable, this song takes a sharp turn and rages forward, pounding drums screeching guitars and all. "42" finishes off back where it began - kinda like a fine day turning into a storm and becoming peaceful once again after the storm. Work of art. "Lovers in Japan/Reign of Love" is really 2 songs. "Lovers in Japan" sports a `happy' tune, with racing piano.
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73 of 86 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
As a fan from Coldplay's very early days (I still have "Parachutes" as one of my favorite albums of the last decade, and I saw the band's second ever US gig, in February 2001 in Portland, OR), I have to admit that I was somewhat apprehensive about the new album, which has been widely touted as Coldplay's 'experimental' album. One of the things touted was that the album would feature sounds recorded in a Barcelona church, as if anyone really cares about that, in the end we just want to hear good songs/a good album. So.... three years after "X&Y", finally comes Coldplay's 4th studio album.

"Viva la Vida or Death and All of His Friends" (10 tracks, 46 min.) starts off with a 1-2 blast of the soaring instrumental "Life in Technicolor" and the equally great "Cemeteries of London". "Lost!" finds Chris Martin pensive ("I May Be Losing/But I'm Not Lost"). The album centers around the two long tracks into the middle: "Lovers in Japan/Reign of Love" (2 separate songs stapled together for whatever reason, with "Lovers in Japan" reminding me of U2's "Where the Streets Have No Name", courtesy of producer Brian Eno) and "Yes", which also features 2 different songs, albeit under the same name. "Viva La Vida" (2nd single, also featured in the iPod commercial, prompting Coldplay to its biggest Billboard Hot 100 success ever at No. 3) is a nice dreamy song. "Violet Hill" (1st single) is for me the best song on the album, even without it being catchy as such. The album's closer "Death and All of His Friends" crashes in after a pensive beginning and also includes the 'hidden' track "Chinese Sleep Chant", which reprises the"Life in Technicolor" theme, and a nice way to round off the album.

In all, this album makes clear that this is not the Coldplay of yesteryear. Even "X&Y" sounds dated by this.
... Read more ›
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Still not sure
I must have listened to this 100 times. I'm still not sure whether they are stretching music or pandering. Read more
Published 12 days ago by Eric K. Jensen
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazed
Oh my.
I bought this on a whim, running out of money on my Amazon gift card (and I know youv'e had the same experience!). Read more
Published 17 days ago by Courtney
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite albums!
This Coldplay album is awesome! So many great songs! Disc quality is great, price was great, just what I was looking for. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Trevor
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Coldplay must-have
Love the CD for the music I bought it for, not so crazy for the cardboard case which is now dented and bent. Will have to get creative with a blank case. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Green Onions
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic Next Step!
I first found Coldplay with "A Rush of Blood to the Head" and loved them. Then "X&Y" was a little bit of a downer for me. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Thendricks
5.0 out of 5 stars Great CD
This CD beats out any Coldplay CD out there. The songs are incredible. Try out samples of the songs if you are a fan of Coldplay
Published 3 months ago by Kat
5.0 out of 5 stars gotta love coldplay
It doesn't matter what I have to say about the music, it could suck to you it could be really cool I don't really care about this review crap when it comes to music just enjoy it... Read more
Published 3 months ago by J. Yee
1.0 out of 5 stars Obselete Tool for Establishing Your Intellect
I was riding my fixed-gear bike into Cambridge, Massachusetts one day (that's what all of the hip kiddos do these days) and passed a bar. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Ron
5.0 out of 5 stars Love, love this album!
Every song on this disc is memorable.Coldplay is my favorite band and I haven't even heard all their songs yet (not early years)- they're the best!
Published 4 months ago by Nancy R. Bacon
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Music
Music is a personal thing, so not sure what I could say here that would trump someone just listening to the music for themselves. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Hunter Blackstone
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Why is this world so obsessed with bad music?
Everyone is entitled to different taste in music. It's a personal choice. What you think is good is probably terrible to someone else. It all depends on what someone is looking for in it. Attacking someone's taste in music is attacking them as a person. If everyone had the exact same taste... Read more
Oct 4, 2008 by Linda J. Knee |  See all 15 posts
CD doesn't play in PS3 or computer
I can't get it to play in my work computer (Vista), either. It will play in the car. I haven't put it on my home computer yet (it is pretty slow so I hadn't done it yet) but I will try that tonight. I really wanted to put it on my IPOD.

By the way, I bought mine from Target.
Jun 25, 2008 by C. Wright |  See all 21 posts
Is Coldplay simply U2 for hire (again)?
I think there are some similiarities on some songs but when I hear an album by Coldplay I don't think of U2 and likewise. They have there own sound that has evolved. They have said many times that they are influenced by bands like U2, and Radiohead and that can be heard, but it is still Coldplay... Read more
May 25, 2008 by Mr Jones |  See all 16 posts
Coldplay Viva la Vida is comparable to the White Album
To the original poster: Is your comparison point that Viva La Vida is a left-field change in direction for the band, as the White Album was? If so, I can perhaps see that idea. But I doubt it would achieve the iconic status of the White Album, regardless of how good it is. The rock music... Read more
Jun 8, 2008 by DavidLG1971 |  See all 8 posts
Viva La vida: Suspiciously similar to 1999 Japanese band album cover
Hardly. First off, the painting on the Coldplay album is Delacroix's 1830 painting "Liberty Leading the Revolution." By itself, it's an obvious and direct reference to the notion of revolution--it's in the title of the painting, after all. The Dragon Ash album title (Viva La Revolution)... Read more
Jun 3, 2008 by M. Locher |  See all 9 posts
Where to find just the CD from this? Be the first to reply
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