Jump to content
✨ STAY UP TO DATE WITH THE WORLD TOUR ✨

[Rolling Stone] Backstage With Coldplay: Exclusive Photos, Plus Secrets Behind Tour


Jenjie

Recommended Posts

25046677-25046680-slarge.jpg

Photograph by LeAnn Mueller for Rolling Stone

 

When Rolling Stone’s Brian Hiatt hit the road with Coldplay for a recent Viva la Vida gig, the band gave him unprecedented access into their behind-the-scenes world — opening up about their sets (”We’re not going to be Springsteen and play for three hours”), stage outfits (”Are we gonna look ridiculous?”) and why Chris Martin is frontman (”He’s like the sort of engine of us”). Click below for exclusive photos of the band prepping to go onstage, rehearsal shots and live photos, complete with commentary from the quartet:

 

Backstage With Coldplay: Exclusive Shots From the “Viva La Vida” Tour

 

• On the Road With Coldplay

 

http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2008/12/16/backstage-with-coldplay-exclusive-photos-plus-the-secrets-behind-their-live-shows/

 

-------------------------------------------------------

 

On the Road With Coldplay

 

Minutes before showtime in Coldplay's darkened Dallas dressing room, Chris Martin cracks open a bottle of Jameson. He takes a shot, throws his head back and gargles loudly. At least a dozen pill bottles litter the floor next to Martin's yoga mat. But it's all a lot less decadent than it seems: The pills are vitamins, and the whiskey is mostly to lubricate Martin's throat for the many quavering high notes to come. "It's pretty exciting back here, right?" cracks drummer Will Champion, who spends most of his pre-show time playing a PlayStation 3 soccer game. "It's just like Mötley Crüe!"

 

Coldplay are in the middle of the biggest tour of their career, and their latest album, Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends, has made them the top-selling band in the world this year. (They have trouble accepting the news: "Most of the time we just feel like losers," says laid-back bassist Guy Berryman.) But as they hang backstage, reports are bouncing all over that they're about to break up: Martin, 31, told a British newspaper that he was treating 2009 as Coldplay's final year. But he didn't quite mean it: He explains that Coldplay have the ambitious plan of recording and releasing a Viva la Vida follow-up next year (they hope to work again with the production team of Brian Eno and Markus Dravs), and setting an end date is meant to keep them focused.

 

"We're proceeding as if it's our last, because it's the only way to proceed," Martin says. "You've got to have deadlines, you know. What that means is we're going to pour everything we can into next year and not think beyond that. We always say that and we always mean it. But every time we say it, someone writes that it's over. I don't think we'll ever split up, but we have to do a lot before we're 33." The band is about to release the last of its Viva la Vida leftovers in a deluxe reissue of the album, so the new record will consist of more recently written tunes — which Coldplay have already begun experimenting with in various studios. "I would like to build on what we've just done," says Martin, "and deliver something short and optimistic."

 

Backstage, the four band members have just changed into the French Revolution-inspired uniforms that provide the visual theme for their tour — and inspired more discussion than Martin would prefer. "The Pittsburgh Steelers wear the same outfit every week, and no one expects them to change," he says. "But wear the same outfit on both Leno and Letterman, and suddenly it's an issue." The band plans to shift to modified versions of the get-ups when the tour continues early next year. "We're not sick of the theme — just the smell," says Martin, who actually has six or so near-identical versions of his suit — today's has Barack Obama's name written on one of the armbands.

 

The group members perk up when they hear the distant sound of "I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)," by Martin's pal Jay-Z — the final song on their pre-show mixtape. They button their frilly jackets and march out of the dressing room, stopping just outside the curtains that lead to the stage and a crowd of 20,000 people. Their intro music — Strauss' "Blue Danube" — swells, and Coldplay gather in a huddle and join hands in a "go, team" gesture.

 

The band is clearly most excited about playing the Viva la Vida tunes — but it delivers enthusiastic, straightforward versions of old hits like "Yellow." Martin used to pull the Dylan move of changing that song's melody — but then he got some simple advice from Michael Stipe: "Stop doing that. People want to hear the songs the way they know them."

 

The show gets a lot of mileage out of simple tricks, beginning with the illuminated balls above the stage that serve as spherical video screens. And then there's the bit where the band runs into the nosebleed seats to perform "The Scientist" acoustically among the fans.

 

Most spectacular is the moment during "Lovers in Japan" when thousands of transparent confetti butterflies spill from the ceiling, glowing in the stage lights. It's a stunning sight, inspired equally by the Flaming Lips' showmanship and a trip Martin took to a zoo's butterfly habitat with his kids. "Even if the show's going shit, I know that there's two moments that'll be fine," says Martin. "The song 'Viva la Vida' — and when the butterflies glow in the dark."

 

[From Issue 1067 — December 11, 2008]

 

http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/24617025/on_the_road_with_coldplay

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh, now I know Chris's secret for non-stop motion: Whisky + vitamins :lol:

 

"Most of the time we just feel like losers," says laid-back bassist Guy Berryman.

They're so modest. That makes me love them more.

 

And then there's the bit where the band runs into the nosebleed seats to perform "The Scientist" acoustically among the fans.

I will NEVER forget when they came to the end of my row.

Although my seat wasn't exactly in the nosebleed section.

 

Most spectacular is the moment during "Lovers in Japan" when thousands of transparent confetti butterflies spill from the ceiling, glowing in the stage lights. It's a stunning sight,

:flutterby::dance::heart:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thanks, jen! i didn't realize that there were extra photos online!

 

this quote from jonny is priceless:

 

"There's sort of a whole heap of things that we do before the show," says Buckland. "Obviously we get changed, we do a bit of singing, play the guitar and just sort of relax for a bit before. But we don't deflower any virgins or anything like that."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thanks, jen! i didn't realize that there were extra photos online!

 

this quote from jonny is priceless:

 

"There's sort of a whole heap of things that we do before the show," says Buckland. "Obviously we get changed, we do a bit of singing, play the guitar and just sort of relax for a bit before. But we don't deflower any virgins or anything like that."

Agreed!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

:laugh3:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:laugh3: That Jonny comment sounds like something we usually hear from Chris!

 

How many of those pictures are in the in-print issue, as opposed to online? *tries to decide if it's worth buying*

 

only one of the pictures is in the print article, the one with all of them on the b-stage on the ramp. there's also one in the print article that i don't think was in that album of photos, of chris and jonny on the ramp (assumedly during IMP), and chris is gripping jonny's knee.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...