My Coldplay review can be found (click here) on treblezine.com
Coldplay
Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends
Capitol
2008
Life is but a dream. That little classic rhyme comes to mind when I listen to Coldplay's flawed tour de force, Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends. You can hear the creative touches inspired by producer Brian Eno throughout, starting with a dreamlike electronic coda on "Life in Technicolor" that leads us into this new journey which promised us a new and improved Coldplay sound.
Lately I judge albums on how the emotions they inspire. Viva La Vida is an uplifting trip by a band who, to quote Bono, went away trying make it up all over again. If you're expecting an In Rainbows-like leap from Berryman, Buckland, Champion and Martin, you've come to the wrong album. Coldplay is not there yet. Viva is a far improvement from the overproduced hooks from X & Y. They are learning to steal from the best. Who better to help guide Coldplay along the way that the legendary Brian Eno, the producer who helmed such classic albums from artists like Talking Heads, U2 and James.
But Eno can only do so much; he can help bring out the power in soundscapes as the band has to provide the creative colors in this canvas of songs. Coldplay does deliver, most of the time, they stepped up and reached for the heavens. My favorite song has to be "42." It starts off with a beautiful "Imagine"-esque" like piano and yet Martin slip's with an awkwardly rhymed "Those who are dead are not dead they're just living in my head." Whaa? Quit with the forced end rhymes, Chris, and use more of your imagination. The lyrics at times don't live up to the wondrous rhythms that the band sets up for Martin. He quickly makes up for it in the second half of "42" with my favorite lyric, "you didn't get to heaven but you made it close."
You may hear more of these throughout Viva La Vida. Sometimes they fall as in the cleverly pop song that is "Strawberry Swing." But even in these failures there are elements of greatness, like Buckland's tripped out world beat guitar riff.
Coldplay's fighting a solitary attempt to trying to put some substance on the airwaves. Martin says he's tired of the loneliness as he sings "When it started/ we had high hopes/ now my back's on the line/ my back's on the ropes." It takes guts for a band to take a foot off their commercial success and risk it all for some creative glory. Yes, they could've played it safe and wrote another "Yellow," but who wants to hear that again?
Viva La Vida is the sound a band searching for positive flourishes of elation in this world of static and soulless pessimism. Listen to the lyrics "Just because I'm losing doesn't mean I'm lost/ doesn't mean I'll stop." Martin & Co. stimulate us with their message of love and hope. There's not much of that coming from the mainstream these days.
Viva La Vida is their Unforgettable Fire. It's the wonderful mix of experimental rhythms and pop songs to lift Coldplay to a new level. They're getting there, just listen to the songs like the epic title track. "I hear Jerusalem bells a ringing/ Roman Cavalry choirs are singing." To me this is a sign of a band that is growing. The thing you have to remember is, unlike an indie band, every little misstep is magnified because of their presence on a world's stage. Of course, just because they want to be the best band doesn't make it so. It took Radiohead and U2 some time to become legends.
I'm looking forward to Coldplay's next album, that one is destined to be their great one. Could it be their Joshua Tree, OK Computer or their Laid? We'll just have to wait and listen. Though it's not perfect, if Viva La Vida is any indication, they heading in the right stratosphere. Let's just lay off the slagging. Coldplay was never cool. And yet they are lifting the sound of pop music to new heights away from the empty mindedness of corporate America. Give them a break. It will take some time but if this is the soundtrack of change, sign me up every time. With an ever-evolving sound Coldplay is the rising soundtrack to an increasingly perfect day.
Adrian Ernesto Cepeda
06.24.2008
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Review: Radiohead: Best of
My Radiohead review can be found (click here) on treblezine.com
Radiohead
Best Of (Special Edition)
Capitol
2008
I was torn when I heard the news about Radiohead's new The Best Of CD being released without cooperation from the band. Even though I am devoted to Radiohead, I can't help but feel conflicted about a compilation not sanctioned by the band. Perhaps EMI is sour about Radiohead parting ways for the uncharted waters of free agency. But this isn't the first time a label has released an artist's material without their blessing. The Beatles had problems with Capitol/EMI releasing haphazard collections in the '70s without the Fab Four's permission. Most recently, The Smiths' Very Best of disc and The Libertines' Time for Heroes: Best of collections were released without any input from either band.
The sad fact and the reason that many artists like Nine Inch Nails and Radiohead are going label-less is because once you sign a contract, in many cases, the record label then owns the product. The artist owns the copyright and publishing. This is where bands make the most money on songwriting publishing. So even though Thom and the band wrote "Paranoid Android," EMI owns the songs and can release and re-release the song in any form of compilation.
Of course, this would all be moot if Radiohead had stayed at EMI. More likely the label would be asking the band for input on compilations like this Best of. So because they left and went indie, you could say that EMI is sort of sticking it to the band. But Radiohead still has the last laugh in a sense. Even though Radiohead didn't approve this release, and the reason they aren't telling their fans to boycott this collection, is because, at the end of the day, the band will recoup some money on this release.
Sorry for that long historical diatribe, but in terms of the compilation itself, the songs speak volumes of Radiohead's success during the EMI years. Regardless of the past, The Best Of is a stunning collection. Song after song it's an impressive compilation of stellar selections from a band that changed the landscape of music with their unique blend of supersonic brilliance. From The Beatles-meets-DJ Shadow epic "Paranoid Android" to Aphex Twin and XL Recordings inspired electronic wickedness of "Idioteque," Radiohead created a new form of otherworldly and revolutionary rhythms with an emotional touchstone we all can connect to.
I hate to say it but I got into Radiohead late in the game. I wasn't a fan of "Creep" when it was first released. If you were to ask me which band of the '90s would have lasted well into the next decade, I would have guessed Jeff Buckley and Suede. Even though the memory of Buckley will live on forever, I admit that I was way off. Nonetheless, this band went from a one hit wonder to exploding beauty and urgency of an artist searching for meaning and rhythm within their songs. The Bends' sound was influenced by records by two of the band's heroes, namely Morrissey's Your Arsenal and Nirvana's In Utero. You can hear the Nirvana influence on the chaotic guitar breakdown in the "Heart Shaped Box"-like riffs on "My Iron Lung." It is also known that that a Jeff Buckley live performance led to Thom Yorke's heart wrenching vocal on "Fake Plastic Trees."
The amazing thing about Radiohead, and unlike some novice rock acts, is that you rarely can pick out their influences on their music. For the most part, the band sound only like Radiohead which is what separates the great acts from sub par ones. You've likely heard the famous saying by Lionel Trilling, "Immature artists imitate. Mature artists steal."
As Radiohead matured the more evolved into their own distinctive sound. Listen to OK Computer and beyond, especially the brilliant "Karma Police." "Karma" is the first Radiohead song that hooked me. I remember, much to the annoyance of my co-workers and customers, playing that song over and over again, and turning it up louder and louder at this bookstore job I had in San Antonio. There was something about the truth and decadent exquisiteness of that song: the marching drum beats and cinematic piano keys, and Thom Yorke's lyrics, especially the lines, "For a minute there/ I lost myself, I lost myself," when I finally understood Radiohead. It was as if my life was separated between two distinct sections B.R./A.R., before and after Radiohead. I was blind, now I could hear clearly in a voice and a vision that was beautiful and strange to me in the same breath.
"Everything (was) In Its Right Place" when Kid A, Radiohead's next album dropped in 2000. To this day this is my most beloved album in the band's eclectic catalog. Along with "Everything," "Idioteque" and "How to Disappear Completely," the exemplary "The National Anthem" my favorite song off Kid A is featured on this double disc compilation. Colin's addictive bassline and Charles Mingus influenced arrangement mixed with a spaced-out, effects-layered backbeat make this the most freaked-out song in their canon. Thom Yorke's vocals foreshadow the fear that gripped our nations after September 11th.
Amnesiac has three of the band's most underrated cuts—the riffed intensity of "I Might Be Wrong," the killer induced and Johnny Marr influenced "Knives Out" and the piano-based splendor that is "Pyramid Song." Dubbed at one time by Thom Yorke, `the best thing we ever committed to tape,' their inclusion is essential on this compilation.
Hail to the Thief's "2 + 2 = 5" was supposed to announce to the world Radiohead's triumphant return to their guitar rooted glory. Even though the band incorporated more of their trademark killer riffs, Radiohead didn't abandon any of the electronic experimentation that they discovered in Kid A and Amnesiac. Listen for the percussive and mysterious lovesick "There There" and the guitar heroics of "Go to Sleep," which make the cut on The Best Of.
I was pleased to see the inclusion of the fan favorite "Talk Show Host" and the live version of "True Love Waits" on this deluxe edition. But why have three songs from Pablo Honey? I know if the band was involved we may have finally seen the release of the ever elusive "Big Boots" as heard on Grant Gee's extraordinary documentary Meeting People is Easy.
I have to say I am very impressed with this deluxe The Best Of collection. Thirty tracks from the most influential band of our lifetime—listening to this classic, I hope we have hundreds more. With the release of In Rainbows, my favorite album since Kid A, it's reassuring to know that Radiohead made the right choice by going forward with their sonic excursions and leaving behind the bottom line politics of major label business. Regardless, it's the songs and not the behind the scene bullshit that everyone will remember in the long run.
Radiohead
Best Of (Special Edition)
Capitol
2008
I was torn when I heard the news about Radiohead's new The Best Of CD being released without cooperation from the band. Even though I am devoted to Radiohead, I can't help but feel conflicted about a compilation not sanctioned by the band. Perhaps EMI is sour about Radiohead parting ways for the uncharted waters of free agency. But this isn't the first time a label has released an artist's material without their blessing. The Beatles had problems with Capitol/EMI releasing haphazard collections in the '70s without the Fab Four's permission. Most recently, The Smiths' Very Best of disc and The Libertines' Time for Heroes: Best of collections were released without any input from either band.
The sad fact and the reason that many artists like Nine Inch Nails and Radiohead are going label-less is because once you sign a contract, in many cases, the record label then owns the product. The artist owns the copyright and publishing. This is where bands make the most money on songwriting publishing. So even though Thom and the band wrote "Paranoid Android," EMI owns the songs and can release and re-release the song in any form of compilation.
Of course, this would all be moot if Radiohead had stayed at EMI. More likely the label would be asking the band for input on compilations like this Best of. So because they left and went indie, you could say that EMI is sort of sticking it to the band. But Radiohead still has the last laugh in a sense. Even though Radiohead didn't approve this release, and the reason they aren't telling their fans to boycott this collection, is because, at the end of the day, the band will recoup some money on this release.
Sorry for that long historical diatribe, but in terms of the compilation itself, the songs speak volumes of Radiohead's success during the EMI years. Regardless of the past, The Best Of is a stunning collection. Song after song it's an impressive compilation of stellar selections from a band that changed the landscape of music with their unique blend of supersonic brilliance. From The Beatles-meets-DJ Shadow epic "Paranoid Android" to Aphex Twin and XL Recordings inspired electronic wickedness of "Idioteque," Radiohead created a new form of otherworldly and revolutionary rhythms with an emotional touchstone we all can connect to.
I hate to say it but I got into Radiohead late in the game. I wasn't a fan of "Creep" when it was first released. If you were to ask me which band of the '90s would have lasted well into the next decade, I would have guessed Jeff Buckley and Suede. Even though the memory of Buckley will live on forever, I admit that I was way off. Nonetheless, this band went from a one hit wonder to exploding beauty and urgency of an artist searching for meaning and rhythm within their songs. The Bends' sound was influenced by records by two of the band's heroes, namely Morrissey's Your Arsenal and Nirvana's In Utero. You can hear the Nirvana influence on the chaotic guitar breakdown in the "Heart Shaped Box"-like riffs on "My Iron Lung." It is also known that that a Jeff Buckley live performance led to Thom Yorke's heart wrenching vocal on "Fake Plastic Trees."
The amazing thing about Radiohead, and unlike some novice rock acts, is that you rarely can pick out their influences on their music. For the most part, the band sound only like Radiohead which is what separates the great acts from sub par ones. You've likely heard the famous saying by Lionel Trilling, "Immature artists imitate. Mature artists steal."
As Radiohead matured the more evolved into their own distinctive sound. Listen to OK Computer and beyond, especially the brilliant "Karma Police." "Karma" is the first Radiohead song that hooked me. I remember, much to the annoyance of my co-workers and customers, playing that song over and over again, and turning it up louder and louder at this bookstore job I had in San Antonio. There was something about the truth and decadent exquisiteness of that song: the marching drum beats and cinematic piano keys, and Thom Yorke's lyrics, especially the lines, "For a minute there/ I lost myself, I lost myself," when I finally understood Radiohead. It was as if my life was separated between two distinct sections B.R./A.R., before and after Radiohead. I was blind, now I could hear clearly in a voice and a vision that was beautiful and strange to me in the same breath.
"Everything (was) In Its Right Place" when Kid A, Radiohead's next album dropped in 2000. To this day this is my most beloved album in the band's eclectic catalog. Along with "Everything," "Idioteque" and "How to Disappear Completely," the exemplary "The National Anthem" my favorite song off Kid A is featured on this double disc compilation. Colin's addictive bassline and Charles Mingus influenced arrangement mixed with a spaced-out, effects-layered backbeat make this the most freaked-out song in their canon. Thom Yorke's vocals foreshadow the fear that gripped our nations after September 11th.
Amnesiac has three of the band's most underrated cuts—the riffed intensity of "I Might Be Wrong," the killer induced and Johnny Marr influenced "Knives Out" and the piano-based splendor that is "Pyramid Song." Dubbed at one time by Thom Yorke, `the best thing we ever committed to tape,' their inclusion is essential on this compilation.
Hail to the Thief's "2 + 2 = 5" was supposed to announce to the world Radiohead's triumphant return to their guitar rooted glory. Even though the band incorporated more of their trademark killer riffs, Radiohead didn't abandon any of the electronic experimentation that they discovered in Kid A and Amnesiac. Listen for the percussive and mysterious lovesick "There There" and the guitar heroics of "Go to Sleep," which make the cut on The Best Of.
I was pleased to see the inclusion of the fan favorite "Talk Show Host" and the live version of "True Love Waits" on this deluxe edition. But why have three songs from Pablo Honey? I know if the band was involved we may have finally seen the release of the ever elusive "Big Boots" as heard on Grant Gee's extraordinary documentary Meeting People is Easy.
I have to say I am very impressed with this deluxe The Best Of collection. Thirty tracks from the most influential band of our lifetime—listening to this classic, I hope we have hundreds more. With the release of In Rainbows, my favorite album since Kid A, it's reassuring to know that Radiohead made the right choice by going forward with their sonic excursions and leaving behind the bottom line politics of major label business. Regardless, it's the songs and not the behind the scene bullshit that everyone will remember in the long run.
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