Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Coldplaying

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Small Reminders/Updates & The Coldplay Messenger (feat. Roadie #42!)

Featured Replies

ep80.jpg

Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall EP out now

26 June 2011 12:23 am

Download the EP from iTunes now

news_line.png

 

Following tonight's storming Glastonbury show, the three-track Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall EP is out now in iTunes Stores across the planet. Click your flag below to buy it now. (It'll be in the US Store very soon.)

 

uk43.png switzerland.png sweden.png spain.png portugal.png newzealand.png netherlands.png mexico.png luxembourg.png italy.png

ireland.png greece.png germany.png france.png Finland.png Denmark.png canada.png Belgium.png austria.png australia.png Norway.png

 

You can also still pre-order the 7-inch and CD single by clicking here.

 

ep500.jpg

 

Anchorman

  • Replies 7.5k
  • Views 703.1k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

christhmb.jpg

Relive the Glastonbury performance online

26 June 2011 2:22 pm

Check out some great pictures and watch the BBC's stream

news_line.png

 

Good afternoon. Following last night's storming Glastonbury Festival set, you can now relive the performance on the BBC's website, where they're streaming extended highlights (which we're told are viewable worldwide). Click here to watch them.

 

Meanwhile, Glastonbury Festival photographer Jason Bryant has been good enough to share some of his excellent Coldplay shots with us:

 

g696a.jpg

 

g687a.jpg

 

g698a.jpg

 

g692a.jpg

 

g713a.jpg

 

g719a.jpg

 

g694aTTT.jpg

 

It really was a special night.

 

Anchorman

 

The 3-track Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall EP is available now on iTunes.com/Coldplay

Good afternoon. Following last night's storming Glastonbury Festival set' date=' you can now relive the performance on the BBC's website, where they're streaming extended highlights (which we're told are viewable worldwide). Click here to watch them.

 

Well, I can't watch it. But I just downloaded the concert, so I couldn't care less about extended highlights :laugh3:

ep80.jpg

Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall CD, 7-inch and digital EP released

27 June 2011 5:22 pm

You can now buy the single on all formats, with brand new tracks

news_line.png

 

Good afternoon. Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall is now available to buy on digital EP, 7-inch vinyl and CD single - all of which feature brand new music.

 

The digital EP - available now on the iTunes Store worldwide by clicking here - contains Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall, Major Minus and Moving To Mars.

 

The CD and blue 7-inch feature Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall and Major Minus. You can buy both from Digital Stores in the UK by clicking here (they ship worldwide).

 

The physical singles will be released in the US on July 12 (CD) and July 19 (vinyl). You can pre-order [ame=http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0052RUYZW/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=capitolmusicgroup-20&linkCode=as2&camp=217145&creative=399373&creativeASIN=B0052RUYZW]the CD[/ame] and [ame=http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0052RUZ1K/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=capitolmusicgroup-20&linkCode=as2&camp=217145&creative=399373&creativeASIN=B0052RUZ1K]7-inch[/ame] from Amazon now.

 

Anchorman

festcrowd.jpg

Hear Sunday's Main Square Festival set online

11:51 am

If you're in France you can also watch it live

news_line.png

 

bg.jpg

 

On Sunday night (July 3), Coldplay will headline the Main Square Festival in Arras, France. If you can't make it along, then you'll be pleased to hear that the show is being broadcast live on France's Virgin Radio - and you can listen online, wherever you are, at VirginRadio.fr.

 

The performance will also be broadcast live on the Direct Star channel. If you're in France, you'll be able to watch it at http://www.directstar.fr/livetweet/.

 

The show is due to begin at 11.30pm French time - find out what time that is where you are.

 

Anchorman

There's a new blog post but coldplay.com won't let me open it. :( So if someone could post the update here. :D

"illustrates another side to Will that people might not always see. He sometimes gets seen as rather stern or even intimidating, but that’s completely unfair. He’s always the most solid, the handbrake that will prevent the band from sliding back downhill. "

 

AWWWWWWWW :wacky:

Champion FTW

my browser wont let me read the end of the post, can someone copy and paste it here?

you can try this mobile version... it works for me...

 

http://www.coldplay.com/mobile/newsdetail.php?id=753

my browser wont let me read the end of the post, can someone copy and paste it here?

 

Zongia was kind enough to give us mobile version of site and you can try it. It worked for me and I have the same problem as you with the normal website.

428.jpg

 

 

Roadie #42 - Blog #136

July 1, 2011 10:20 am

Roadie #42 on Glastonbury and the video shoot

 

news_line.png

 

When I went away to university, slightly more moons ago than I care to admit here, I promised family and friends that I’d write regularly. Most of the letters that I actually sent, began with “Sorry I haven’t written for a while, but I’ve been dead busy”. If you’d told me then, that there would be weeks in my future like the couple I’ve just had, my 18-year-old self would have had to concede that, really, he’d just been drinking a lot and not getting up ’til the afternoon. (Thinking back though, that was probably better grounding for touring life than a thorough understanding of convolution theory. But I digress…)

 

Since Pinkpop then, there’s been more work on nailing down the record, a video shoot, a bunch of very intense rehearsals, a tiny gig to nobody in an empty theatre - oh and an absolutely storming set at the mother of all festivals. Now we’re all back together heading off to another festival somewhere in Europe it all feels a little like it never really happened. The weary bodies and far-away looks though, mean that we haven’t quite shaken the feeling that we’ve crammed at least a couple months into the last dozen days.

 

20110630A.jpg

 

Video shoots are always a strange proposition. Gig days bring with them an urgency and a definite set of times when the show must go on - ready or not. Videos, being a more permanent and lasting piece or art than a 90 minute show, involve a lot more painstaking “we’re not quite ready yet” in the pursuit of the perfect result.

 

20110630B.jpg

 

Added to the normal video-shoot treacle, was the fact that the video in question was being shot using a technique called stop motion animation. For the first day, it has to be said, there was a great deal more stop than motion - and generally, the animation came only when the tea trolley made an appearance… As you can all see for yourselves though, Matt Whitecross and his army of collaborators pulled something truly wonderful out of the bag.

 

20110630C.jpg

 

20110630D.jpg

 

Always lovely as well to see Paris, the band’s Graffiti artist in residence. Paris is both extremely talented and genuinely one of the most lovely people I’ve met along the way. I’m hoping we see a lot more of him over the next year or so.

 

20110630E.jpg

 

Also, we had to get ready for Glasto. To say that the band were keen for things to go well might be understating things a touch. Glastonbury, as I’ve discussed before, is no place to phone it in. Rehearsals passed in a blur of trying out different ways of doing things and a hundred tiny alterations to the set. Finally, in order to give our tweaked up machine a proper street test, there was a show booked at the Shepherd's Bush Empire.

 

There had been talk of making it another “Friends and Family” show, like the Forum, but as it turned out, it was just going to be one last closed rehearsal, complete with smoke, lights and a resolute promise that once the intro tape ran, they wouldn’t stop until the last song was done - no matter what. So there they were, in a tiny empty theatre in west London - preparing for possibly the hugest show of their careers by playing to a few roadies and Phil Harvey up in the balcony.

 

20110630F.jpg

 

The simple awareness of G-Day approaching was enough to get the nerves right up. These situations can be an interesting chance to watch and learn how the band relationships work. There’s a nervy moment during Yellow. It’s unclear whether someone’s instrument has cut out, or whether they’ve decided that it just feels wrong, but the musician in question is pulling it over their head and reaching for the spare. This leaves a pretty big hole in the sound.

 

Will shouts into his vocal mic, “Drum solo!” laughing and pulling out a couple of ridiculously over the top fills. When the spare instrument is back on, it transpires that it’s tuned for another song, making the re-joining band-member sound some way out. “Key Change!” yells Mr Champion.

 

20110630G.jpg

 

 

It’s over in a flash, but illustrates another side to Will that people might not always see. He sometimes gets seen as rather stern or even intimidating, but that’s completely unfair. He’s always the most solid, the handbrake that will prevent the band from sliding back downhill. He’s simply not going to allow the stress to put a black cloud over things today. His irrepressibly upbeat vibe today is a huge show of the strength in the face of mounting stress.

 

And then, yes - G-day was upon us.

 

Despite having received a mass email entitled “Glastonbury set list - Final” almost a week prior, the show day conversations were all about the uncertainties and rumours of setlist alterations. Is Jay joining us? Are they adding that song? Have they sped this up? Are we doing that bit between these songs, or going straight into that? It’s mainly tiny details, but all stuff that needs programming and prep for the different departments involved.

 

There’s a crew meeting at 7 to put the final word on every detail of the show. Somewhat fittingly, this meeting (to put an end to all the last minute changes) is rescheduled for 7.15 and then 7.45 and finally happens around 8pm. Afterwards, I go out to watch Elbow from my rig at stage left.

 

The sound of this many people singing together just cannot fail to affect you emotionally. The nerves are staring to be eroded by a sense that it’s a very glorious event that we’re a part of. It’s dangerous of course, to focus on any other feeling than “don’t fuck this up” because after all, that’s the most important sentiment for the crew right now. Somehow though, I can’t help but realise quite how special this is.

 

 

20110630H.jpg

 

 

You folks probably had a better view of the gig than us, thanks to the glorious BBC coverage, so a blow-by-blow account is unneccesary. Mention must be made though, of the video department, who played an absolute blinder, painting the pyramid with light in a genuine Glastonbury first. They were on site for days beforehand building projector towers, lining things up and generally going the extra mile. I haven’t spoken to a single person who doesn’t think it spectacularly worthwhile.

 

My own highlight though, was something that came about completely without forethought or planning. During Everything’s Not Lost, the stage was bathed in a purple-y ultra-violet look. I looked out across the crowd for the massed singalong and every hand was in the air. Each of these pairs hands carried a security wristband that had allowed people onsite. These happened to be luminous meaning that the UV lights turned the audience into a huge purple field of waving phosphorescent limbs.

 

And I wasn’t even hammered…

 

There were highlights and special moments galore. The endearing fuck-up in Us Against The World, the sound of the massed voices in Fix You - complete with the view of the campfires leading way off up to the horizon. For me, watching the fellas bow at the close of the set to the deafening sound of the Viva chant (from what must be its biggest ever choir), confirmed an unequivocal sense of Mission Accomplished.

 

Backstage following the gig felt like a family Christmas. Even people who had spoken to each other moments before the show started, are greeting each other with hugs and back rubs as though they’ve not seen each other for years and they’re overjoyed to find each other still alive.

 

Elbow are clinking bottles with broad grins, Jay-Z and B are casually sat on a flightcase by the dressing room, Tim Wheeler from Ash is all smiles. The crew arrive in waves as they finish their trucks, grinning their way through the crowd in search of cold beers.

 

Inevitably, the mood is huge relief and not a little “what happens now?”. Some folks collapse in a heap, some are clearly in for a long night. All are overjoyed that’s it’s gone so remarkably well.

 

The following morning, I nip to the train station alone to join the great unwashed for the trip home. Next to me on the platform is a gang of mudsoaked folks who’ve come to the festival to celebrate finishing their exams. I realise that for me, having got through the one show that’s been hanging over us all for months makes today feel like the end of my finals.

 

We’ve still got a huge amount of work ahead of us, obviously; the tour is very much only beginning. The huge sense of pressure and expectation though, has passed - or at the very least temporarily dissipated. I’d almost forgotten how it felt to not be preparing for this.

 

Sorry it’s been a while since I wrote. I really have been pretty busy though…

 

R42

One of the best R42 blogs ever. That said, it is a shame there wasn't not a single tiny little update on how LP5 is finally shaping. I really miss Prospekt.

They should know we all got problems seeing the website! :D But mobile version is a savior! :)

the text below the pictures is hilarious :lol:

the text below the pictures is hilarious :lol:

 

This! :lol:

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.