Coldplay's leap of greatness
Chris Martin was on the floor working out the knots. As his handlers hovered, the usually affable Coldplay singer stretched out on the carpet in a dim and airless room backstage at the Jimmy Kimmel show.
It was hours before show time and the singer's muscles were tight and his expression sour. Finally, he looked up with pleading eyes. "Can we escape? Let's go somewhere else. Maybe some place with trees? I have a car and a driver..."
A few minutes later, the lanky Brit ducked through an alleyway behind the talk show's Hollywood Boulevard studios and climbed into an ebony SUV that whisked him and his visitor up the hill to Griffith Park.
"This looks good," he said, tapping the window. "Yes, let's stop here." As soon as his sneakers hit the grass, the black-clad Martin was as perky as the Labrador that trotted past him on a path.
Hummingbirds and butterflies were in the air and Martin was at ease, enough so that he started making confessions and jokes which, for him, are hard to separate.
"Like millions of people in the world, I can't listen to Coldplay," Martin said with a daft wink. "But my reason is professional. You see, I'm always thinking about the next thing.
I'm also always looking for something that will inspire the next thing. Look, we're the one band we can't plagiarise. So really there's no point in me listening to it. If I think, ‘Well, that's good', then I'll want to use it, which won't work. And if I think, ‘Hey that's terrible', then I'll be depressed over breakfast. It's a classic lose-lose situation."
Critics
If you listen to Coldplay - and many people do, considering the 11.2 million albums they've sold in the US alone - then you know that Martin is an earnest voice in an ironic age. That has opened the band up to savage insults but instead of retreating, Martin decided to join in the sport.
No one gives Chris Martin more grief these days than Martin himself. He makes fun of his hair, clothes, diet and famous falsetto. He even mocks himself for thinking, deep-down, that he's cool for not being cool.
"We've never been about being cool and we never will be. And I think in a way that's quite cool. But I can't think about it too much - because if you think about it then you automatically aren't cool. Wait, I've gone too far. I'm not cool. Again."
Coldplay has a new album, Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends, which hit stores last week and arrived with considerable heat.
The lead single, Viva la Vida, hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 a few days ago and, at iTunes, the pre-orders for the album were the largest in the history of the digital merchant.
The band became famous for polished, piano-based songs of soaring pop exultation and rainy-day reflection, but with this new studio album, their fourth, they have made a bid at reinvention. The songs are still from the heart but maybe more from the gut.
Flurry of hits
Their 2000 debut album, Parachutes, yielded the yearning, breakthrough hit Yellow and the 2002 follow-up, A Rush of Blood to the Head, came with a flurry of hit singles: In My Place, Clocks and The Scientist.
That's when things got complicated. Relentless tour dates, the tug of their personal lives and the turbulence of success put Coldplay in a shaky place.
The members say they felt pressured by their label, EMI/Capitol Records, to create a follow-up with similar scope and sound. The album was delayed and EMI's stock dropped (literally) as a result, turning up the tension. The result was X&Y, a 2005 album that sold well but, in the band's view, lacked clarity.
To steady themselves, Martin said, Coldplay looked for a place to "make it homemade again". They found it in a blind alley in London.
"We found this little bakery, and we bought it and turned it into a, well, it's like a youth club," Martin said. "Do you read the Harry Potter books? It's a bit like that train stop they use, the platform 9 3/4, which you can't find unless you know where it is. If you drive by quickly, it doesn't look like anything is there. If you go in, it's like a little band heaven."
There's also a brother-in-arms message:
"I think with each band there comes a point where they have to find a place to be together otherwise they end up living in different countries and just meet on stage," Martin said. When you get famous, there are two reactions to your other bandmates.
You either think ‘I could do this without you'. Or you think, ‘I really couldn't do this without you'. You're luckier if you are in the second category. We've always been very grateful for each other."
A wild ride
For Viva la Vida, the band brought in producer Brian Eno, famed for his work with U2. The result is a wild ride: Interstitial sounds, hidden tracks, a towering church organ here, North African tabla and flamenco hand claps there.
Viva la Vida has Beatles-esque strings, a U2-style build and a grand old church bell that, if you listen closely, has bird chirps trailing its toll like the tail of a kite. In her review, Los Angeles Times music critic Ann Powers said Eno's presence has Coldplay making their "official leap toward greatness".
Martin said he feels time is moving faster these days. He's the father of two children with his wife, actress Gwyneth Paltrow, which has inspired him to cut away the distractions in his life.
The day before the visit to Griffith Park, he and the band were at the MTV Movie Awards to perform Viva la Vida live, for the first time anywhere - a precursor to their concerts July 14 and 15 in Los Angeles, which kick off a North American tour.
At rehearsals, Martin was grim-faced - everything seemed to be going wrong. The band, befitting their uniforms, soldiered on through the rehearsals and broadcast, no easy feat considering the blank-faced fans in the venue.
The band won them over halfway through the song when an intense cascade of confetti shot up from both sides of the stage. Not just any confetti either - it was butterfly shaped, and appeared to flutter. It was the type of image that inspires a gag reflex in Coldplay detractors, but the band (and audience) loved it.
"Those butterflies are important to us because they make us feel very happy," Martin recalled the next day at the park. "At a time when you could be insecure, whenever we fire those butterflies up we just can't help but smile.
I love everything about what we do, we're very lucky and fortunate, but I do recoil a bit from the judgments. As long as some people are kind and supportive, that makes it easier. But even then you need your butterflies to remember to just enjoy the moment."