Wanna know how your favourite band kicked off? Educate yourself : )
This is a story about ambition. About four people who formed a band not to become famous or provide fresh soundtracks for TV ads, but because they wanted to write great songs, to make music with real honesty and passion. 'We were trying to say that there is an alternative,' says singer Chris Martin. 'That you can try to be catchy without being slick, poppy without being pop, and you can be uplifting without being pompous. Because we're sometimes playing quieter stuff, it's hard to sound like we're trying to change things, but we wanted to be a reaction against soulless rubbish.'
It seems quite a few of us were ready for this alternative. Coldplay's debut album, 'Parachutes', was a collection of direct, soulful, utterly beautiful songs stripped right back to expose the raw emotion underneath. Showing that you don't always have to shout to be heard, it has sold nearly five million copies worldwide, winning a clutch of NME and Q awards, two Brits in 2001 and the Grammy award for Best Alternative Album in 2002. Almost overnight, the band moved from playing small pubs to T In The Park in Glasgow, The Big Day Out in Australia and a headlining US tour. 'It was nerve-wracking, quite surreal,' laughs Jonny. 'But also the biggest high ever.'
Chris Martin grew up in Devon, Will Champion in Southampton, Guy Berryman in Scotland and later Kent, Jonny Buckland in North Wales. They met in the mid-90s during their first week as students at University College London, and quickly became friends. Chris began writing songs with Jonny. Guy liked what he heard, and joined in on bass. Will was so keen to be part of it that he moved from guitar to drums. All four shared a passion for music, and a quiet determination to be as good as they possibly could be. They rehearsed almost every night: 'We used to play in bathrooms, the basement, even in the park,' laughs Chris. 'Anywhere we could find to play.'
'We were determined to do it, from the start,' adds Jonny. 'And from the moment I met Chris I really did think that we could go all the way. Do something.'
They recorded a four-track EP and pressed 500 copies, which got them a gig at the In The City music festival in Manchester in 1998. Their set brought them to the attention of Simon Williams, who signed them to his Fierce Panda label for one single, 'Brothers And Sisters', which in turn led to their deal with Parlophone. But although they have signed to a major, Coldplay's attitude remains fiercely independent. They like to have control. They co-produced both of their albums, and are closely involved in everything from videos to artwork (they even took the photograph on the cover of 'Parachutes' themselves). Despite numerous requests, no Coldplay track has ever been used in an advertisement, and so far they haven't allowed any of their songs to be used on film soundtracks.
'It's been all on our own terms,' says Will. 'We have 100 per cent control over any aspect of whatever we do, and that's really important to who we are and the music we make. We take control of the recording, the videos, the artwork. We're not a band that can be pushed around, although we do have some amazing advisors.' (continues over page)
Their second album, 'A Rush of Blood To The Head', is rather later than expected because of that control. They used the same team as 'Parachutes': Ken Nelson co-produced and mixed with the band, and Mark Phythain handled the computers. They started work in October 2001, and by Christmas the recording was finished. Everyone was happy - except the band. 'There was a feeling it was almost going too smoothly,' recalls Jonny. ' We were pleased with it, but then we took a step back and realised that it wasn't right. It would have been easy to say we'd done enough, to release an album to keep up the momentum, but we didn't. And I'm glad because now we have something we'll be happy to tour with for two years.'
'I think we day-jobbed it a bit,' agrees Chris. 'It was good, but not good enough. So we went back to Liverpool, to the tiny studio where we did a lot of the last album. Just the four of us and Ken and Mark, a little gang. Songs like Daylight, The Whisper and The Scientist splurged out over two weeks, and we recorded them very quickly. We just felt completely inspired, and felt we could do anything we liked. We didn't have to do the acoustic thing, we didn't have to do a loud rock thing, we didn't have to react against anything. We started seeing a lot of Ian McCulloch, and he was saying, 'Try this, try that.' Brilliant!'
Although still recognisably Coldplay, this album is louder than the last, more uptempo and energetic. 'There's a lot more fear on the last record, a lot more blatant insecurity, whereas on this one it's more hidden,' says Chris. 'We've grown up a bit, travelled a lot more, met so many people. Musically too, we've heard more: the Bunnymen, The Cure, PJ Harvey, Nick Cave, New Order… The last two years, we've been like a cultural sponge. We've sucked it all in and now it's coming out on this record. A lot of it is meant to be about drive and confidence in the face of worry and insecurity.'
In February this year during a break in recording, Chris went to Haiti and the Dominican Republic with Oxfam in support of their campaign to change the world trade rules. It was a gruelling, intense trip, with long journeys over rough rural roads to meet the hard-working but impoverished farming communities whose lives are being devastated by fluctuations in the world coffee market and cheap US rice imports. Since then, Chris has performed at the launch of the Fair Trade campaign in Trafalgar Square. It's a cause the whole band supports.
'Anyone in our position has a certain responsibility,' explains Guy. 'Odd though it may seem to us, a lot of people are read what we're saying, see us on TV, buy our records and read the sleeves, and that can be a great platform. You can make people aware of issues. It isn't very much effort for us at all, but if it can help people, then we want to do it.'
But the politics on the album are often personal. 'We made this album feeling like every day could be the last, and we just wanted to get everything out, do everything to the maximum,' say Chris. 'We might as well make the most of things and live everything utterly with conviction. It's about making the most of this amazing opportunity, because we can't believe we've been given it. That applies to the band and to our lives in general. And it's about girls, of course. Because isn't everything?'