Viva La Famethrowa
Posted Thu 8 May 2008 8:15PM BST by in Touching The Void
This being the 21st century music industry and with little to choose between rock writers and global terrorists, secrecy and security was super tight. In fact since hearing the album, three close family members have emigrated and so I can reveal little of this new opus. At the complex, after mobiles had been confiscated and metal detectors brandished, the chosen few were led into a lavish, oak-wallpapered studio space, decorated with red gerberas and framed album artwork, before free booze was thrust into our palms and we reclined in deep cushions. So far so comfortable then but what of the follow-up to 2005's "X&Y"?
Well, on the basis of one luxurious listen, "Viva La Vida" sounds like a triumph, the album to cement Coldplay's status as the band who now do U2 so much better than they can do it themselves. Before the playback, a film explains it was recorded "in a bakery, nunnery, studio and a church", Chris Martin telling us Brian Eno taught them "there were no rules, we could steal from everyone but ourselves". As the music rolls, it soon becomes clear "Violet Hill" is the most underwhelming thing here. Because elsewhere, this collaborative sonic freedom delivers a dense, detailed, rhythmically tight and busy collection that calls for peace but is up for a fight.
Atmospheric ambient intro/album outro "Life In Technicolour" gives way to full-on stadium attack, while "Lost" takes influence from Arcade Fire producer Markus Dravs for an organ-heavy "Fix You" reworking. Gossamer string eulogy "42" fuses Radiohead and John Lennon, while the driving, experimental rush of one of a handful of hidden tracks sound more like Primal Scream than Coldplay. But Famethrowa has said enough and really must dash. Sir Paul Macca just landed his Learjet outside Sainsbury's on Kilburn High Road and he's giving me a lift home...
Today's Famethrowa's
New: "We Carry On" Portishead
Old: "Zoo Station" U2

