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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02.390 --> 00:00:04.790 [phone ringing] 2 00:00:07.500 --> 00:00:09.530 [ringing continues] 3 00:00:09.710 --> 00:00:12.620 -[Chris, on phone] Hello? -[on phone] Hi, hey, Chris, it's Mat. 4 00:00:12.800 --> 00:00:15.710 -[Chris] Mat, how you doing? -[Mat] I'm good. Can you talk? 5 00:00:15.890 --> 00:00:18.370 [Chris] Yeah, it's a good time. How are you? 6 00:00:18.540 --> 00:00:22.200 [Mat] I'm good, I was just... I was just wondering if you had a chance to see the film yet. 7 00:00:22.200 --> 00:00:25.900 [Chris] Uh, the truth is, Mat, I don't think I'm gonna be able to do it. 8 00:00:26.700 --> 00:00:31.940 I feel like if I see it, I might just wanna remove myself from the film. 9 00:00:32.120 --> 00:00:36.470 -[both laughing] -So, if it's okay with you, could I just trust you on it? 10 00:00:36.650 --> 00:00:38.260 -[Mat] Okay. -[Chris] If you don't mind. 11 00:00:38.430 --> 00:00:40.130 I just feel like we've known you for so long 12 00:00:40.300 --> 00:00:42.900 and we trust you and we love you. 13 00:00:42.260 --> 00:00:44.390 You just make the film you wanna make 14 00:00:44.570 --> 00:00:47.400 and all I ask is please could you not open the film 15 00:00:47.570 --> 00:00:49.700 with one of those shots of the band walking to the stage, 16 00:00:49.880 --> 00:00:51.830 'cause I feel like that's been done. 17 00:00:52.100 --> 00:00:53.660 -[Mat] Really? -[Chris] Yeah. 18 00:00:53.840 --> 00:00:55.400 [Mat] Okay. Well, leave it with me. I'll see what I can do. 19 00:00:55.580 --> 00:00:57.100 -[Chris] Thanks, Mat. -[Mat] Yeah. 20 00:00:57.270 --> 00:00:58.450 -[Chris] Speak to you soon. -[Mat] Bye-bye. 21 00:01:01.100 --> 00:01:03.110 [cheering] 22 00:01:23.390 --> 00:01:26.400 [cheering continues] 23 00:01:55.900 --> 00:01:58.250 [cheering intensifies] 24 00:02:06.910 --> 00:02:10.780 [man through speaker] I don't want to rule or conquer anyone. 25 00:02:10.960 --> 00:02:12.740 I should like to help everyone if possible-- 26 00:02:12.910 --> 00:02:16.000 Jew, Gentile, black man, white. 27 00:02:16.180 --> 00:02:17.830 We all want to help one another. 28 00:02:18.100 --> 00:02:20.100 Human beings are like that. 29 00:02:20.180 --> 00:02:22.450 We don't want to hate or to despise one another. 30 00:02:22.620 --> 00:02:26.100 In this world there's room for everyone. The good earth is rich. 31 00:02:26.190 --> 00:02:29.540 For those who can hear me, I say do not despair. 32 00:02:29.710 --> 00:02:33.110 The hate of men will pass and dictators die, 33 00:02:33.280 --> 00:02:36.590 and the power they took from the people will return to the people. 34 00:02:36.760 --> 00:02:38.550 The kingdom of God is within men, 35 00:02:38.720 --> 00:02:40.510 not one man, nor a group of men, 36 00:02:40.680 --> 00:02:42.200 but in all men, in you! 37 00:02:42.380 --> 00:02:44.340 You, the people, have the power! 38 00:02:44.510 --> 00:02:47.470 The power to create machines, the power to create happiness, 39 00:02:47.650 --> 00:02:50.100 you, the people, have the power to make this life free and beautiful, 40 00:02:51.170 --> 00:02:53.900 to make this life a wonderful adventure! 41 00:02:53.260 --> 00:02:56.480 [echoing] A wonderful adventure! 42 00:02:56.650 --> 00:02:59.220 [cheering] 43 00:03:01.270 --> 00:03:05.620 [echoing] A wonderful adventure! 44 00:03:05.790 --> 00:03:07.320 ["A Head Full Of Dreams" playing] 45 00:03:46.970 --> 00:03:48.500 [shouts] 46 00:04:30.920 --> 00:04:34.320 [Chris] A Head Full Of Dreams is somewhere we've been trying to go for a long time. 47 00:04:35.580 --> 00:04:39.280 The journey has been so incremental and so episodic, 48 00:04:39.450 --> 00:04:41.500 it's just a mountain that keeps getting higher. 49 00:04:41.670 --> 00:04:43.630 If I ever turn round and look down, 50 00:04:43.810 --> 00:04:46.850 I think will I just be amazed about how on earth we got here? 51 00:04:47.200 --> 00:04:49.110 [singing softly] 52 00:04:49.290 --> 00:04:50.940 [Will] There's not really a day goes by 53 00:04:51.120 --> 00:04:54.730 that I don't get a reminder of how very fortunate I am, 54 00:04:54.900 --> 00:04:56.900 first of all, to have met the other guys 55 00:04:57.800 --> 00:04:59.820 and that things just happened in the way that they did. 56 00:05:00.650 --> 00:05:02.910 [Jonny] Our friendships have somehow survived 57 00:05:03.800 --> 00:05:05.960 and stayed quite similar to how they were. 58 00:05:06.130 --> 00:05:08.220 We've spent half our lives together now. 59 00:05:08.390 --> 00:05:12.620 I've spent more time with these people than almost anybody else. [chuckles] 60 00:05:13.100 --> 00:05:16.270 [Guy] It's more like family, it's more like brothers, actually, than friends. 61 00:05:16.450 --> 00:05:19.450 I think we all think about what we'd be doing with our lives 62 00:05:19.620 --> 00:05:21.320 if we hadn't met each other. 63 00:05:21.500 --> 00:05:23.800 I mean, it's almost terrifying thinking about it, really. 64 00:05:23.980 --> 00:05:25.980 [singing softly] 65 00:05:28.330 --> 00:05:29.680 -Cool. -[man] Nice. 66 00:05:29.850 --> 00:05:31.630 Can you turn the lights down a tiny bit? 67 00:05:33.810 --> 00:05:35.860 Just this one down a bit. Thanks, bro. 68 00:05:36.680 --> 00:05:37.600 Cool, cool, cool. 69 00:05:37.770 --> 00:05:39.380 [instrumental music plays] 70 00:05:39.560 --> 00:05:44.400 -What are we singing? -[singing "A Head Full of Dreams"] 71 00:06:03.670 --> 00:06:07.410 [all vocalizing] 72 00:06:07.580 --> 00:06:12.760 [vocalizing continues] 73 00:06:15.200 --> 00:06:16.810 [crowd vocalizing] 74 00:06:16.990 --> 00:06:20.420 -[shouts] -[singing "A Head Full of Dreams"] 75 00:06:49.370 --> 00:06:52.150 [resumes singing] 76 00:07:10.730 --> 00:07:11.910 Nice. 77 00:07:12.800 --> 00:07:13.430 -Great work, fellers. -[children cheer] 78 00:07:13.610 --> 00:07:15.740 -Yeah, that's it. That's it. -[applause] 79 00:07:15.910 --> 00:07:17.520 Wait, list-- Listen to the applause. 80 00:07:17.700 --> 00:07:19.700 [cheering and applause] 81 00:07:22.750 --> 00:07:25.360 If you don't like it, don't worry about it. I'm having fun. You know what I mean? 82 00:07:25.530 --> 00:07:27.360 [laughs]That's how it makes me feel. 83 00:07:27.530 --> 00:07:29.580 Dad, I love this song.Thank you, baby. 84 00:07:29.750 --> 00:07:32.540 [chatters]And thank you for saying what I paid you to say earlier. 85 00:07:32.710 --> 00:07:33.760 [all laughing] 86 00:07:35.110 --> 00:07:36.630 I was saying to the others, 87 00:07:36.800 --> 00:07:39.720 to see things that were recorded 20 years ago, you know, 88 00:07:39.890 --> 00:07:42.680 I had no recollection of anyone having a camera back then-- 89 00:07:42.850 --> 00:07:44.550 is a really strange sensation. 90 00:07:44.730 --> 00:07:48.950 ["Brothers and Sisters" playing on computer] 91 00:07:49.120 --> 00:07:52.600 [Guy] What had become really distant memories came flooding back to me. 92 00:07:52.780 --> 00:07:55.560 You know, our lives have changed in so many ways. 93 00:07:56.210 --> 00:07:58.960 And when I think back to what our first album was-- 94 00:07:59.130 --> 00:08:01.130 You know, if you listen to Parachutesnow, 95 00:08:01.310 --> 00:08:04.830 it's very acoustic and it's very small and it's very intimate. 96 00:08:07.230 --> 00:08:11.710 [singing "We Never Change"] 97 00:08:11.880 --> 00:08:15.410 [Guy] And then if you fast forward to A Head Full Of Dreams, 98 00:08:15.580 --> 00:08:17.670 it's a very different thing altogether. 99 00:08:17.850 --> 00:08:20.800 Looking back at some of the old footage, underneath it all, 100 00:08:20.980 --> 00:08:24.200 I still see the same people then as we are today. 101 00:08:24.200 --> 00:08:27.810 To really get the full story, you've got to go back to when we met. 102 00:08:27.990 --> 00:08:32.210 I mean, it really does feel like a lifetime ago. 103 00:08:32.380 --> 00:08:36.730 We were friends for almost a year before we played any music together. 104 00:08:36.910 --> 00:08:40.390 We all lived in the same student halls of residence. 105 00:08:41.740 --> 00:08:44.350 Most people would've found their bandmates by advertising. 106 00:08:44.520 --> 00:08:47.790 "Drummer required" in the back of the NME or something like that. 107 00:08:49.880 --> 00:08:52.140 -Fuck it! -[Guy] I think in our case, it was different 108 00:08:52.310 --> 00:08:55.660 because we all really knew this is the group that we want to form. 109 00:08:55.840 --> 00:08:57.270 This is who we want to be with. 110 00:08:57.450 --> 00:09:00.200 [vocalizing] 111 00:09:00.190 --> 00:09:02.410 We met at University College London. 112 00:09:02.590 --> 00:09:06.550 We were all studying to be in bands. [laughs] 113 00:09:15.770 --> 00:09:16.950 I've been expecting you, come on in. 114 00:09:18.600 --> 00:09:20.730 Just your Jones person? 115 00:09:21.520 --> 00:09:22.820 Let me show you around. 116 00:09:22.100 --> 00:09:25.350 College was just a sideline, you know. 117 00:09:25.520 --> 00:09:27.740 I thought it was a good place to meet people 'cause I wanted to be in a band. 118 00:09:28.650 --> 00:09:30.350 I got there, got to this big place, 119 00:09:30.530 --> 00:09:32.310 Ramsay Hall it was called, Tottenham Court Road. 120 00:09:33.880 --> 00:09:36.490 That block hasn't changed a bit. That was where we lived. 121 00:09:36.660 --> 00:09:38.880 -Looks quite bucolic now, doesn't it? -Yeah. 122 00:09:39.600 --> 00:09:41.230 Didn't look like that then. [laughs] 123 00:09:41.410 --> 00:09:44.980 I remember the first day I got here, a tramp was sick outside my room. 124 00:09:45.150 --> 00:09:47.500 Lots of musicians in this hall, weren't there? 125 00:09:47.670 --> 00:09:50.630 Five or six bands were spawned in our year. 126 00:09:51.680 --> 00:09:53.810 There was a lot of sniffing out at the beginning, wasn't there? 127 00:09:53.980 --> 00:09:55.770 Like, who does what? Who's a guitarist? 128 00:09:55.940 --> 00:09:59.300 -There was a bass player on the third floor. -[students chattering] 129 00:09:59.210 --> 00:10:01.990 Chris was like this massive ball of energy and hair. 130 00:10:02.170 --> 00:10:04.390 Yeah, I remember he had very long hair, 131 00:10:04.560 --> 00:10:06.610 quite unlike anyone I'd ever met before. 132 00:10:06.950 --> 00:10:08.100 I would always be showing off saying, 133 00:10:09.170 --> 00:10:11.440 "I play songs, I play songs" to anyone that would listen, you know? 134 00:10:12.000 --> 00:10:15.660 ♪ I love you Jim You are a geezer♪ 135 00:10:17.880 --> 00:10:19.840 ♪ I don't mind In the slightest♪ 136 00:10:20.100 --> 00:10:24.580 ♪ That you look just a little Bit like Julius Caesar♪ 137 00:10:24.750 --> 00:10:27.410 -[girl laughs] -He was very, very funny, 138 00:10:27.580 --> 00:10:30.590 and, you know, he was the life of the party. 139 00:10:30.760 --> 00:10:35.200 -[Jonny laughs] -♪ I love Jim And everybody knows♪ 140 00:10:37.160 --> 00:10:41.250 -♪ Even though he's got A slightly Roman nose♪ -[girl laughs] 141 00:10:42.950 --> 00:10:45.380 He was just waiting for someone to click with, 142 00:10:45.560 --> 00:10:47.300 -and fortunately that was you. -[Jonny] Hmm. 143 00:10:48.560 --> 00:10:50.740 Back in 1996 when we met, 144 00:10:50.910 --> 00:10:52.910 I didn't think Jonny spoke at all. 145 00:10:53.900 --> 00:10:55.400 He was just this stoned guy in the corner 146 00:10:55.220 --> 00:10:57.530 that if you said something he would just, like, smile. [laughs] 147 00:10:57.700 --> 00:10:59.700 Yeah, we got on pretty well straightaway, 148 00:10:59.880 --> 00:11:02.180 but you know, you can't start playing music on your first date. 149 00:11:02.790 --> 00:11:06.930 I came to London solely to find some people to be in a band with and make music. 150 00:11:08.450 --> 00:11:11.850 I'd wanted to do this from when I was a small boy, 151 00:11:12.200 --> 00:11:15.150 but you never really imagine that it's possible. 152 00:11:16.590 --> 00:11:17.980 One day I came into the room he was in, 153 00:11:18.150 --> 00:11:19.550 and Jonny had a guitar, and I was like, 154 00:11:19.720 --> 00:11:20.720 "I didn't know you played guitar." 155 00:11:20.900 --> 00:11:22.300 Then he started playing. 156 00:11:24.290 --> 00:11:26.380 And something in me was switched. 157 00:11:26.550 --> 00:11:28.300 I was like, "This is the guy I've been looking for my whole life." 158 00:11:28.470 --> 00:11:30.560 [man on TV] Chuck! Chuck, it's Marvin. 159 00:11:30.730 --> 00:11:33.560 [Chris] Like in Back to the Future where Chuck's cousin Marvin 160 00:11:34.610 --> 00:11:37.520 calls Chuck Berry and says, "I've got that new sound you're looking for." 161 00:11:37.700 --> 00:11:39.480 Well, listen to this! 162 00:11:41.900 --> 00:11:43.100 [Chris] It was love at first sight for me. 163 00:11:43.660 --> 00:11:45.490 He took a little longer to convince. 164 00:11:50.100 --> 00:11:52.320 When I first started playing with Chris, 165 00:11:52.490 --> 00:11:56.720 I thought, "He's so good, I think we might do something," you know. 166 00:11:56.890 --> 00:11:59.720 [Chris singing and playing guitar] 167 00:12:05.300 --> 00:12:07.810 [Jonny] Obviously you have a sense that something is starting, 168 00:12:07.990 --> 00:12:12.210 but I don't think we had a sense of what that something was or where it would end up. 169 00:12:13.730 --> 00:12:17.390 Within a couple of weeks, we'd asked Guy if he would join. 170 00:12:19.900 --> 00:12:21.000 Me and Guy didn't like each other at first. 171 00:12:21.170 --> 00:12:23.610 He thought I was weird 'cause I had long curly hair. 172 00:12:23.790 --> 00:12:26.530 I thought he was arrogant, but he wasn't. He was just really quiet. 173 00:12:26.700 --> 00:12:29.180 But then we bonded over a keyboard, so we thought, 174 00:12:29.360 --> 00:12:31.490 "Ah, wicked. Well, maybe we don't hate each other." 175 00:12:32.140 --> 00:12:34.450 What does it mean to me, music? 176 00:12:34.620 --> 00:12:39.450 It's been my life since I was probably about five years old. 177 00:12:40.200 --> 00:12:44.200 I found a box of cassettes my sister had, and I'll never forget that. 178 00:12:44.200 --> 00:12:49.300 I became a bass player 'cause of my love of soul and funk. 179 00:12:49.200 --> 00:12:50.940 And that was it, you know. I'd get home from school 180 00:12:51.120 --> 00:12:53.770 and I would just play that instrument constantly for hours, 181 00:12:53.950 --> 00:12:55.690 just lock myself away and play it. 182 00:12:57.800 --> 00:12:59.950 He was the first person to put his whole life on hold 183 00:13:00.130 --> 00:13:04.650 based on one song that Jonny and I had played him on two crappy old guitars. 184 00:13:05.650 --> 00:13:08.500 It just blows my mind that he did that. 185 00:13:09.220 --> 00:13:11.400 It soon became apparent that we needed a drummer 186 00:13:11.570 --> 00:13:14.500 if we wanted to play a gig. [laughs] 187 00:13:14.530 --> 00:13:16.660 [Guy] Chris Martin, these are your wheels of fortune. 188 00:13:16.840 --> 00:13:20.580 What's up? I'm Cheese Hawk, I ride for Proco trucks 189 00:13:20.760 --> 00:13:22.500 and Deutschentractors. 190 00:13:22.670 --> 00:13:25.200 We went away for the summer and at the end of the summer, 191 00:13:25.200 --> 00:13:27.850 we started really writing some good songs and we wanted to do a demo. 192 00:13:28.200 --> 00:13:30.590 [Guy] Today we can eat food that isn't come out of the bin. 193 00:13:30.770 --> 00:13:33.550 -[laughter] -[chattering, laughing] 194 00:13:33.730 --> 00:13:36.160 [Chris] We were cool in everything except the drums. We didn't have a drummer. 195 00:13:36.730 --> 00:13:40.820 So, when we went to do our first photo shoot in Tesco's on Oxford Street, 196 00:13:41.430 --> 00:13:43.340 I did mine, Jonny did his, Guy did his. 197 00:13:43.520 --> 00:13:46.400 So it was just three of us and it was called the PanicEP. 198 00:13:47.000 --> 00:13:49.180 So, we went down to Will's house 199 00:13:49.350 --> 00:13:51.960 and Will was always our mate who played guitar much better than anyone 200 00:13:52.130 --> 00:13:53.750 and knew about 100 songs. 201 00:13:53.920 --> 00:13:55.490 He was a walking jukebox. 202 00:13:55.660 --> 00:13:58.450 I met Chris-- We were on a bus somewhere together. 203 00:13:58.620 --> 00:14:02.360 We used to play guitars in the stairwells 'cause they had nice acoustics. 204 00:14:02.540 --> 00:14:04.930 I was at the bottom of the stairs and he was on the fifth floor. 205 00:14:05.110 --> 00:14:07.540 A five-story musical experience. 206 00:14:08.460 --> 00:14:13.200 It's a very fundamental and basic memory that I have about being a child. 207 00:14:13.370 --> 00:14:17.160 Music was all around. It's a legacy of my mum's. 208 00:14:17.330 --> 00:14:19.860 I knew that Chris and Jonny had recorded an EP 209 00:14:20.300 --> 00:14:21.640 and they wanted some drums on it. 210 00:14:21.820 --> 00:14:24.380 My flatmate played the drums and he had a drum kit. 211 00:14:24.560 --> 00:14:28.220 We set it all up and then, when it was ready to go, he wasn't around. 212 00:14:28.390 --> 00:14:29.100 I think he'd disappeared. 213 00:14:30.170 --> 00:14:31.650 I'm not sure how committed he was to being in a band. 214 00:14:32.130 --> 00:14:33.830 So, Will said, "I'll do it." 215 00:14:34.180 --> 00:14:35.830 I'm the only one here, I'm the only one left. 216 00:14:36.000 --> 00:14:38.970 "I'll give it a go" and then he went... [imitating drums] 217 00:14:42.920 --> 00:14:46.320 I had the same feeling that I had with Guy and Jonny. "Oh, that's him. There he is." 218 00:14:46.490 --> 00:14:47.890 We didn't actually know you were a drummer. 219 00:14:48.600 --> 00:14:49.760 [Will] No, I wasn't. 220 00:14:49.930 --> 00:14:52.460 That's the key, I'm still trying to convince the world that I am. 221 00:14:54.980 --> 00:14:56.500 [Chris] And Coldplay was born. 222 00:14:56.680 --> 00:14:59.510 It's like when bacon and eggs 223 00:14:59.680 --> 00:15:01.600 and mushrooms and chips 224 00:15:01.770 --> 00:15:03.470 are put on the same plate 225 00:15:03.640 --> 00:15:06.770 and become something greater than those individual parts. 226 00:15:06.950 --> 00:15:09.870 It becomes a cohesive whole that's tasty. 227 00:15:10.560 --> 00:15:12.130 Our sound is tasty. 228 00:15:12.690 --> 00:15:16.350 Chris is the unstoppable creative force of the band 229 00:15:16.520 --> 00:15:18.870 that we try our best to keep up with. 230 00:15:19.570 --> 00:15:22.530 He's our best friend and a musical genius 231 00:15:22.700 --> 00:15:25.180 and he never stops surprising you. 232 00:15:26.190 --> 00:15:28.140 Music means everything to me. 233 00:15:28.320 --> 00:15:30.100 I think when I was about 16, 234 00:15:30.280 --> 00:15:33.190 I was performing and doing music at boarding school. 235 00:15:33.370 --> 00:15:36.720 And I remember saying to people, "I'm gonna do this forever." 236 00:15:36.890 --> 00:15:40.590 They were like, "Sure. And why don't you reanimate dinosaurs while you're at it?" 237 00:15:40.760 --> 00:15:42.420 You know, it was that ridiculous. 238 00:15:43.330 --> 00:15:45.120 But I've been really blessed in my life 239 00:15:45.290 --> 00:15:49.120 with an ability to not give up, and it came from my dad. 240 00:15:49.300 --> 00:15:50.690 He's the first person that said it to me, 241 00:15:50.860 --> 00:15:52.340 and would often say it to me, 242 00:15:52.520 --> 00:15:54.170 and I now say it to my son. 243 00:15:54.910 --> 00:15:57.570 My dad is a circus ringmaster really, 244 00:15:57.740 --> 00:15:59.610 but he was told to be an accountant. 245 00:15:59.960 --> 00:16:02.530 And in my mum, I could feel a certain frustration 246 00:16:02.700 --> 00:16:05.530 that she wasn't able to do what she really loved, which is music. 247 00:16:06.140 --> 00:16:09.100 So, with both of them, there was a subconscious thing 248 00:16:09.270 --> 00:16:13.360 that if you really feel that you're supposed to do something, go for it. 249 00:16:13.540 --> 00:16:16.240 And it gave me this great sense of possibility 250 00:16:16.800 --> 00:16:19.590 and then that philosophy became A Head Full Of Dreams. 251 00:16:21.330 --> 00:16:25.550 He has a relentless and infectious energy for music and for life 252 00:16:25.720 --> 00:16:28.700 and it's incredible to have shared a journey 253 00:16:28.250 --> 00:16:29.990 because we're very different people. 254 00:16:30.680 --> 00:16:33.380 Chris always has a very clear idea about where he wants to be, 255 00:16:33.770 --> 00:16:35.340 what he wants to be doing next. 256 00:16:36.390 --> 00:16:41.480 We, Jon Buckland, Chris Martin, Will Champion and Guy Berryman, 257 00:16:41.650 --> 00:16:44.520 aka The Coldplay, are gonna go on to be such a huge band, 258 00:16:44.700 --> 00:16:49.100 and this will be on national television within four years, four years. 259 00:16:49.180 --> 00:16:51.970 This is now 26th June, 1998. 260 00:16:52.140 --> 00:16:54.710 By the 26th of June, 2002, 261 00:16:54.880 --> 00:16:57.670 The Coldplay or the band, whatever they're called then, 262 00:16:57.840 --> 00:17:00.200 will be known just all over, man. 263 00:17:00.190 --> 00:17:03.410 -We're gonna be so big. -[bandmates chattering] 264 00:17:03.590 --> 00:17:06.890 So Guy, Will, Jon, and Chris, Don't you forget, all right? 265 00:17:07.590 --> 00:17:09.940 Massive. Absolutely huge. 266 00:17:10.250 --> 00:17:12.250 ["Politik" playing] 267 00:17:46.800 --> 00:17:49.290 -[song ends] -[cheering] 268 00:17:56.160 --> 00:17:57.640 Every record is your first and last. 269 00:17:57.820 --> 00:17:59.380 That's the way you should really treat it. 270 00:17:59.560 --> 00:18:01.560 We're not under the impression that we have a right 271 00:18:01.730 --> 00:18:03.950 to just amble into these massive arenas 272 00:18:04.130 --> 00:18:06.650 and play to the same kind of numbers that we played to on the last tour. 273 00:18:06.820 --> 00:18:08.870 We're starting again at rock bottom. 274 00:18:09.400 --> 00:18:11.220 -Well, not quite rock bottom-- -[Chris] Sort of drop bottom soft. 275 00:18:11.390 --> 00:18:13.530 -[Will] Yeah. -[Chris] But that's good, I think. 276 00:18:13.700 --> 00:18:15.790 As ridiculous as it sounds, I still feel like we're trying to make it. 277 00:18:17.140 --> 00:18:18.920 [radio DJ] Hey, our friend Chris Martin is in studio with us now. 278 00:18:19.100 --> 00:18:21.100 And he's from a little band called Coldplay. 279 00:18:21.270 --> 00:18:22.880 Their new record is called A Head Full Of Dreams. 280 00:18:23.600 --> 00:18:26.110 Aren't you so delighted, though, when you crawl out of the cave 281 00:18:26.280 --> 00:18:28.930 where you boys make your magic that the world still cares? 282 00:18:29.110 --> 00:18:32.850 [Chris] Definitely. And right now we're going on tour for another 18 months or so. 283 00:18:33.200 --> 00:18:34.500 That's when the real payoff happens. 284 00:18:36.940 --> 00:18:38.770 You can't take anything for granted. 285 00:18:38.940 --> 00:18:40.510 As fast as the ascent has been, 286 00:18:40.680 --> 00:18:43.210 the descent can be four or five times as fast. 287 00:18:43.770 --> 00:18:45.250 Having done like a week of rehearsing, 288 00:18:45.430 --> 00:18:47.800 we did like a practice gig. 289 00:18:47.260 --> 00:18:48.520 It was basically like us saying good-bye. 290 00:18:48.690 --> 00:18:50.300 We're going away for a year and a half. 291 00:18:50.480 --> 00:18:52.220 At the end of it, I got this overwhelming feeling 292 00:18:52.390 --> 00:18:53.780 that everyone was being nice about it, 293 00:18:53.960 --> 00:18:56.500 but actually we sounded absolutely terrible. 294 00:18:56.220 --> 00:18:58.620 We definitely felt like we had to kind of earn our stripes again. 295 00:18:59.490 --> 00:19:01.790 Hey, how are you doing? 296 00:19:01.970 --> 00:19:04.620 [radio DJ] The brand-new album is so different from the last album. 297 00:19:04.800 --> 00:19:07.410 So much energy, so much color, so much light. 298 00:19:07.580 --> 00:19:10.760 [Chris] Absolutely. We wanted to just make the album we always dreamed of. 299 00:19:10.930 --> 00:19:14.150 But now we're a little nervy, of course, 'cause we don't know what anyone will think. 300 00:19:14.330 --> 00:19:16.420 But it's just like a dream come true, the whole thing. 301 00:19:16.590 --> 00:19:18.700 This might just work. 302 00:19:18.240 --> 00:19:22.550 [guitar playing] 303 00:19:22.730 --> 00:19:24.730 It was just time for us to make an album 304 00:19:24.900 --> 00:19:27.690 about hope and love and togetherness, 305 00:19:27.860 --> 00:19:29.690 you know, embracing all the sounds that we love 306 00:19:29.860 --> 00:19:31.520 and all the styles that we like. 307 00:19:32.350 --> 00:19:35.170 I think some people will just say, "Oh, fuck off. This is hippy nonsense." 308 00:19:35.350 --> 00:19:36.740 But that's okay. 309 00:19:36.910 --> 00:19:38.260 This is the first tour where we feel like, 310 00:19:38.440 --> 00:19:40.900 yeah, that's how we want it to be. 311 00:19:40.880 --> 00:19:42.790 I think every other tour up to this one has been, 312 00:19:42.960 --> 00:19:45.790 "One day we'll have this kind of song and production." 313 00:19:45.970 --> 00:19:47.750 This Head Full of Dreams tour is the first time 314 00:19:47.920 --> 00:19:49.880 we've got what we were always hoping for. 315 00:19:50.600 --> 00:19:53.890 -["Amazing Day" playing] -[sings] 316 00:20:38.370 --> 00:20:41.940 [female interviewer] There's four of you in the band. Who's in charge? Who's the boss? 317 00:20:42.110 --> 00:20:44.370 [Chris]We have a fifth member called Phil. 318 00:20:44.550 --> 00:20:47.290 Nobody sees him because he's too good-looking, 319 00:20:47.460 --> 00:20:50.300 and he pulls all the strings. 320 00:20:50.200 --> 00:20:52.470 -[interviewer] Does he actually exist? -Phil is real. 321 00:20:52.640 --> 00:20:54.600 I would like to rephrase that.Phil is real. 322 00:20:54.780 --> 00:20:57.520 He's-- Can you not see him? 323 00:20:57.690 --> 00:20:59.470 He's sitting right there. 324 00:20:59.650 --> 00:21:01.520 He's next to Guy. He doesn't speak much. 325 00:21:01.690 --> 00:21:03.480 No, he doesn't show up on TV. 326 00:21:04.480 --> 00:21:06.830 So, Phil Harvey was our first manager. 327 00:21:07.000 --> 00:21:09.620 He paid for us to record our first EP. 328 00:21:10.270 --> 00:21:12.660 He's a sort of outsider on the inside. 329 00:21:12.840 --> 00:21:17.600 He's able to view with a much better perspective than sometimes we can. 330 00:21:17.230 --> 00:21:19.600 The difference between having four and five people 331 00:21:19.230 --> 00:21:23.200 in a democracy is actually crucial, because someone will win. 332 00:21:23.190 --> 00:21:25.200 You don't get a stalemate. 333 00:21:25.410 --> 00:21:29.300 It's probably even healthier than a democracy because no one can be voted out. 334 00:21:29.200 --> 00:21:30.680 There's no elections. 335 00:21:30.850 --> 00:21:33.730 It's like a democratic five-way dictatorship. 336 00:21:33.900 --> 00:21:34.940 [Chris chuckles] 337 00:21:35.120 --> 00:21:37.300 So, how much for--400 each. 338 00:21:37.210 --> 00:21:38.950 400 each?Yes, sir. 339 00:21:39.120 --> 00:21:42.260 What?You make it done sir, three pieces for... 340 00:21:42.430 --> 00:21:44.480 1,000 four.Let's call it 600. 341 00:21:45.220 --> 00:21:47.130 Take. 1,000.That's terrible negotiating. 342 00:21:47.310 --> 00:21:49.000 [all laughing] 343 00:21:49.530 --> 00:21:52.480 The important thing when you're in a new city is not to look like a tourist. 344 00:21:52.660 --> 00:21:53.660 Right, Phil?Just blend in. 345 00:21:53.830 --> 00:21:54.920 Just make sure you're prepared 346 00:21:55.100 --> 00:21:56.230 for any eventuality. 347 00:21:56.400 --> 00:21:58.710 Yeah, be safe and be discreet and... 348 00:21:58.880 --> 00:22:01.140 I think we'll be okay.All right? 349 00:22:01.320 --> 00:22:04.850 So, me and Chris, we got sent to the same boarding school when we were 13. 350 00:22:05.370 --> 00:22:08.760 That was how we met, and, uh, he's been my best friend ever since. 351 00:22:09.760 --> 00:22:11.980 I think, subconsciously, I spent a long time, 352 00:22:12.160 --> 00:22:14.300 almost in denial of my upbringing. 353 00:22:14.680 --> 00:22:16.380 I was raised very religious, 354 00:22:16.860 --> 00:22:18.990 so there's a sort of constant self-doubt. 355 00:22:20.800 --> 00:22:22.780 I came from a very small school in Devon 356 00:22:22.950 --> 00:22:25.820 and then went to this much bigger school in Dorset. 357 00:22:25.100 --> 00:22:29.220 There, I realized, "Oh, this is gonna be tough." 358 00:22:29.390 --> 00:22:30.740 In retrospect, it was great preparation 359 00:22:30.910 --> 00:22:34.570 for being in Coldplay, the abuse. [laughs] 360 00:22:34.740 --> 00:22:37.660 I think people were pretty fucking mean to him. 361 00:22:37.830 --> 00:22:41.580 I think there was also a certain vulnerability about him. 362 00:22:41.750 --> 00:22:45.490 There was a few guys in my year who seemed to have it a bit more together 363 00:22:45.670 --> 00:22:47.540 and were twice as big as everybody else, 364 00:22:47.710 --> 00:22:50.720 and one of them was this guy Phil with the most perfect hair. 365 00:22:50.890 --> 00:22:53.700 And he basically took pity on me, I think. 366 00:22:53.850 --> 00:22:57.770 We were in a couple of bands together at school, but I never lasted long. 367 00:22:57.940 --> 00:23:01.420 I wanted it so badly, but I just had zero talent. 368 00:23:01.600 --> 00:23:03.860 Our blues band was called the Rocking Honkies, 369 00:23:04.300 --> 00:23:05.780 and it was as bad as it sounds. 370 00:23:05.950 --> 00:23:08.210 [man] We're gonna go backstage with the Honkies. 371 00:23:08.390 --> 00:23:09.690 Add your comments on it. 372 00:23:09.870 --> 00:23:12.430 Well, Tim, we're the rocking, tonking, 373 00:23:12.610 --> 00:23:16.220 rocking, tonking, rocking, fucking honkies. 374 00:23:16.390 --> 00:23:20.750 [blues music playing] 375 00:23:20.920 --> 00:23:23.710 -Chris Martin on the piano! -[audience cheering, whistling] 376 00:23:23.880 --> 00:23:28.490 We know each other so well now that we know what buttons not to push. 377 00:23:28.670 --> 00:23:32.320 Honestly, I feel better friends with the four of them now than I ever have. 378 00:23:32.500 --> 00:23:34.630 Chris kind of explained it to me the other day, 379 00:23:34.800 --> 00:23:37.590 'cause we had a band meeting, and he said, "It's really nice nowadays, 380 00:23:37.760 --> 00:23:40.940 I know when I don't have to say anything 'cause I know when Will's gonna say something, 381 00:23:41.120 --> 00:23:42.600 I know when Guy's gonna say something." 382 00:23:42.770 --> 00:23:45.420 So, major disagreements are rare. 383 00:23:46.160 --> 00:23:49.820 We've had our moments as a band, but we came through them. 384 00:23:49.990 --> 00:23:53.910 A four-way marriage is a tricky proposition. [laughs] 385 00:23:54.800 --> 00:23:57.610 It's difficult because we work so hard on keeping each other happy, the four of us. 386 00:23:57.780 --> 00:24:00.390 But sometimes things do need to be said, 387 00:24:00.570 --> 00:24:03.700 and I've learnt over the years that that has to be me, 388 00:24:03.880 --> 00:24:07.660 the sort of unofficial "spanner in the works thrower." 389 00:24:12.630 --> 00:24:15.110 What songs are going on A Head Full Of Dreams? 390 00:24:15.280 --> 00:24:16.800 I think we all agree that... 391 00:24:17.890 --> 00:24:19.370 we might not all be in agreement. 392 00:24:19.550 --> 00:24:20.980 [all laughing] 393 00:24:21.150 --> 00:24:24.110 [Will] But I think there are eight songs 394 00:24:24.290 --> 00:24:27.600 which I would like to think that we won't have any disagreement about. 395 00:24:27.770 --> 00:24:30.690 -Yes. -This might be too much for me. 396 00:24:30.860 --> 00:24:32.640 [Will] Okay.[simultaneous talking] 397 00:24:32.820 --> 00:24:36.740 I'm worried that we might be about to really piss each other off. 398 00:24:36.910 --> 00:24:39.170 We've gotta be honest. This week we can't... 399 00:24:39.350 --> 00:24:43.260 -We have to have this. -All right. What are they? 400 00:24:43.440 --> 00:24:46.140 My feeling is "Hymn for the Weekend." 401 00:24:46.310 --> 00:24:48.360 -All agreed? Agreed? -[Phil] Agreed. 402 00:24:48.530 --> 00:24:49.790 -[Chris] Carried, carried. -[Phil] Yeah. 403 00:24:49.970 --> 00:24:51.450 [band playfully mocking]"Everglow"? 404 00:24:51.620 --> 00:24:53.840 Agreed.[band members laughing] 405 00:24:54.100 --> 00:24:55.410 "Amazing Day." 406 00:24:55.580 --> 00:24:57.150 [mutters][Jonny laughing] 407 00:25:01.110 --> 00:25:04.370 But I don't wanna be a dick. My part is to keep the band together. 408 00:25:04.550 --> 00:25:06.630 [Will] Of course, but...I'll do whatever you say. 409 00:25:06.810 --> 00:25:08.860 [Will] I'm not gonna walk out of the band just because-- 410 00:25:09.300 --> 00:25:11.120 So, that is on the definites. 411 00:25:11.290 --> 00:25:12.510 "Up and Up."That's on my definites. 412 00:25:12.680 --> 00:25:14.820 [Jonny] I would like it on there. 413 00:25:14.990 --> 00:25:19.170 It has to be, really, because that's an example of a crucial story bit. 414 00:25:19.340 --> 00:25:21.690 Well, we've definitely made an EP. 415 00:25:22.690 --> 00:25:25.870 None of us are particularly confrontational, 416 00:25:26.500 --> 00:25:28.480 but sometimes it can absolutely be fraught 417 00:25:28.660 --> 00:25:30.900 and there are definitely arguments. 418 00:25:30.270 --> 00:25:31.750 Everybody has a say, you know, 419 00:25:31.920 --> 00:25:34.880 that's the foundation of our band really, is equality. 420 00:25:35.600 --> 00:25:38.600 We decided that down in Camden from the outset. 421 00:25:38.710 --> 00:25:40.450 This is our area. This is our area. 422 00:25:41.500 --> 00:25:42.760 I'll show ya. 423 00:25:42.930 --> 00:25:44.590 Just over there, that road up there. 424 00:25:44.760 --> 00:25:47.810 Just up here is where it all happened. It's our Cavern. 425 00:25:47.980 --> 00:25:49.370 This is where it began. 426 00:25:49.550 --> 00:25:50.980 -[Jonny] Camden? -[Chris] Yeah, at Camden. 427 00:25:51.160 --> 00:25:53.680 [Jonny] Beginning of rock legend. 428 00:25:53.860 --> 00:25:55.730 -[Jonny] This was it. -[Will] Wow. 429 00:25:55.900 --> 00:25:56.990 So... 430 00:25:57.160 --> 00:25:58.730 -[Jonny] 268. -[Will] Yeah. 431 00:25:58.900 --> 00:26:00.860 -[Jonny] Been repainted. -[Will] Looks a lot nicer. 432 00:26:01.990 --> 00:26:06.170 This is where we first started rehearsing when Will first joined the band. 433 00:26:06.350 --> 00:26:09.310 My old flat where Chris and I used to live. 434 00:26:09.480 --> 00:26:12.310 [Jonny] We are in Camden Road, we're The Coldplay. 435 00:26:12.480 --> 00:26:14.100 [Chris] Come on through, I'll show you. 436 00:26:14.180 --> 00:26:16.100 -[Jonny] There goes Guy. -[Chris] To the left down there. 437 00:26:17.750 --> 00:26:19.930 -[Will] Who lived in there? -[Jonny] This was Chris's room. 438 00:26:20.880 --> 00:26:22.450 -[Jonny] We played in here. -[Will] Yeah. 439 00:26:22.880 --> 00:26:25.200 Basically we go through a simple stretch routine 440 00:26:25.190 --> 00:26:26.710 while singing some songs as well. 441 00:26:26.890 --> 00:26:28.500 I don't know if you can see that where you are. 442 00:26:28.670 --> 00:26:31.760 This was Jonny's bedroom and our band rehearsal room. 443 00:26:31.940 --> 00:26:35.810 Uh, Chris and I normally stand together. We raise the right arm. 444 00:26:35.980 --> 00:26:38.600 Right one.Just bring it round to the side. 445 00:26:38.770 --> 00:26:40.730 [laughing][chattering] 446 00:26:40.900 --> 00:26:42.780 Did you just get your arse out, Jonny? 447 00:26:42.950 --> 00:26:45.170 -[Will] It's pretty small, isn't it? -[Jonny] It really is. 448 00:26:45.340 --> 00:26:47.430 For a full band and a bed. 449 00:26:47.610 --> 00:26:50.480 [Jonny] It's funny to think that it all stemmed from this bedroom. 450 00:26:51.480 --> 00:26:54.390 [Will] A few days after the PanicEP, we had our first rehearsal 451 00:26:54.570 --> 00:26:57.900 and on that evening, I phoned up this promoter 452 00:26:57.270 --> 00:26:59.790 at the Laurel Tree in Camden and said, "Can we have a gig?" 453 00:26:59.970 --> 00:27:01.920 Thinking it might be in six, eight weeks' time. 454 00:27:02.100 --> 00:27:04.100 [laughs] He said, "Yeah, next Sunday." 455 00:27:04.270 --> 00:27:07.410 -[Jonny laughing] -"What's your name?" "We haven't got one yet." 456 00:27:07.580 --> 00:27:10.190 That was it. We had to think of a name 'cause we were printing flyers. 457 00:27:10.370 --> 00:27:12.930 So, we came up with a really terrible name. 458 00:27:14.550 --> 00:27:16.700 There's an old piece of paper that Chris has. 459 00:27:16.240 --> 00:27:18.240 It's like a list of things for the band. 460 00:27:18.420 --> 00:27:20.120 One is to get a drummer. [laughs] 461 00:27:20.290 --> 00:27:23.550 Gig one, gig two, gig three, gig four, get signed. 462 00:27:24.470 --> 00:27:27.780 It wasn't until Phil came along that things started to change. 463 00:27:28.470 --> 00:27:31.400 I was always going down to visit Chris down in London 464 00:27:31.210 --> 00:27:33.690 and I would share a bed with Jonny. 465 00:27:33.870 --> 00:27:37.350 Obviously I came down for the first show when they were Star Fish. 466 00:27:39.960 --> 00:27:42.220 It was in a total dive in Camden. 467 00:27:47.540 --> 00:27:50.630 [singing] 468 00:27:50.800 --> 00:27:54.110 Our first gig in the Laurel Tree was, I think, 469 00:27:54.280 --> 00:27:57.890 probably the most terrifying experience I've ever had in my life. 470 00:27:58.980 --> 00:28:01.290 I felt so sick before it. 471 00:28:02.810 --> 00:28:05.300 I've never been so nervous, I don't think. 472 00:28:05.200 --> 00:28:07.600 We expected about 20 people. 473 00:28:07.770 --> 00:28:11.300 It was sold out and we thought, "Wow, this is a bit weird." 474 00:28:12.260 --> 00:28:15.560 That's the great thing about college, you know. It made us look popular. 475 00:28:15.740 --> 00:28:18.130 Whereas, in fact, they were just there to pull. 476 00:28:18.310 --> 00:28:19.700 [Jonny] It's really small, isn't it? 477 00:28:19.870 --> 00:28:21.570 My pedal board wouldn't fit on this stage. 478 00:28:22.400 --> 00:28:25.140 -[Will] It's fantastic, though. -[Jonny] It doesn't feel like 20 years ago. 479 00:28:26.530 --> 00:28:28.320 [Jonny] We did a couple of gigs here, didn't we? 480 00:28:28.490 --> 00:28:31.360 [Will] I think this was just one without a drum kit. 481 00:28:31.750 --> 00:28:33.670 Yeah. The band that was supporting us had a kit, 482 00:28:33.840 --> 00:28:36.110 and so we asked them if we could use theirs and they said yes, 483 00:28:36.280 --> 00:28:38.280 but then the promoter cut their set short. 484 00:28:38.450 --> 00:28:41.590 Yeah. They got quite cross and they took their kit home. 485 00:28:41.760 --> 00:28:43.850 I was pleading with them, "Please, don't take it. 486 00:28:44.300 --> 00:28:46.700 This is only our second-ever show." 487 00:28:56.820 --> 00:28:59.690 Absolutely terrifying in every way, but incredible and wonderful. 488 00:28:59.870 --> 00:29:04.390 Our second gig as people, but our first gig as Coldplay. 489 00:29:04.570 --> 00:29:06.920 -The Coldplay. -Oh, The Coldplay, yeah. 490 00:29:07.900 --> 00:29:08.530 Where did our name come from? 491 00:29:08.700 --> 00:29:10.790 A friend of ours had a band called Coldplay, 492 00:29:10.970 --> 00:29:15.100 and they decided they didn't like the name, so we just stole it. 493 00:29:15.190 --> 00:29:17.970 They said it was a rubbish name and they didn't want it anymore. 494 00:29:18.150 --> 00:29:20.760 Turned out to be a really hard word to pronounce to people. 495 00:29:20.930 --> 00:29:23.460 You say you're in a band. "What's the band called?" Coldplay. 496 00:29:23.630 --> 00:29:25.890 "What Goldblade? Cold Cut?" 497 00:29:26.700 --> 00:29:28.720 -It's really hard. [laughs] -Gold Blend. 498 00:29:28.900 --> 00:29:31.770 I still don't feel that we've quite got the name right, 499 00:29:31.940 --> 00:29:35.120 [laughing] but I think we might be a bit late to change it. 500 00:29:35.300 --> 00:29:38.340 Every show seemed like a milestone really. 501 00:29:38.520 --> 00:29:40.600 I remember the feeling and the buzz in these rooms, 502 00:29:40.780 --> 00:29:44.170 the sweat dripping off the ceiling, smoke, and the sticky floors. 503 00:29:44.650 --> 00:29:46.610 The toilet circuit, as it's known, 504 00:29:46.790 --> 00:29:49.960 that kind of made us realize, this is gonna be hard work. 505 00:29:50.140 --> 00:29:52.620 You do have to put the time and effort into it. 506 00:29:52.790 --> 00:29:55.140 We were prepared to do that for as long as it took, 507 00:29:55.320 --> 00:29:57.360 just carrying on and getting skanked 508 00:29:57.530 --> 00:30:00.800 by money-grabbing, shady Camden promoters. 509 00:30:00.970 --> 00:30:03.580 I think in the back of my head, I must've been thinking, 510 00:30:03.760 --> 00:30:05.930 "Yeah, I'd like to be involved in this." 511 00:30:06.110 --> 00:30:08.630 And then I remember Chris telling me how they were getting ripped off, 512 00:30:08.810 --> 00:30:11.630 and I thought, "Maybe I could do a better job." 513 00:30:11.810 --> 00:30:14.420 He dropped out of university to come and manage us, 514 00:30:14.600 --> 00:30:17.800 which was an extraordinarily selfless move. 515 00:30:17.250 --> 00:30:19.470 Then it went to the next level. 516 00:30:19.640 --> 00:30:22.120 [Chris] Deep in the lair of rock and roll, we find Mr. William Champion. 517 00:30:22.300 --> 00:30:24.400 -Bit nervous? -Uh, little bit. 518 00:30:24.210 --> 00:30:26.610 -[Chris]Where's the Harvey character? -Where? 519 00:30:26.780 --> 00:30:29.220 I think I took it pretty seriously from the moment I came on board. 520 00:30:29.390 --> 00:30:33.500 I had a book, I remember called "How to Manage a Band." 521 00:30:33.220 --> 00:30:35.310 I had the longest list of people to approach, 522 00:30:35.480 --> 00:30:39.100 but no one wanted to take my call and I was quite down on myself. 523 00:30:39.530 --> 00:30:42.580 I think what kept us going was the songs kept getting better, 524 00:30:42.750 --> 00:30:44.490 the shows kept getting better. 525 00:30:44.670 --> 00:30:47.110 I think Chris always had enough self-belief for all of us, 526 00:30:47.280 --> 00:30:48.930 you know what I mean? 527 00:30:49.110 --> 00:30:51.500 The Falcon was the first time that Steve Lamacq came. 528 00:30:51.670 --> 00:30:54.680 Fuck me. Steve Lamacq's in the audience, so we're, like, wow. 529 00:30:54.850 --> 00:30:57.590 He's like the Yoda of radio in Britain. 530 00:30:57.770 --> 00:30:59.940 He came to us before anybody else. 531 00:31:00.120 --> 00:31:02.860 I couldn't believe it. I started sweating. Steve Lamacq, Steve Lamacq. 532 00:31:03.400 --> 00:31:04.560 I remember Lamacq calling me. 533 00:31:04.730 --> 00:31:06.390 "Phil, this is the first time I've ever offered 534 00:31:06.560 --> 00:31:09.170 a Radio 1 evening session to an unsigned act. 535 00:31:09.350 --> 00:31:10.780 Are you guys up for it?" 536 00:31:10.960 --> 00:31:12.220 -Sorry, mate, thank you. -Cheers. 537 00:31:12.390 --> 00:31:16.900 Got accosted by some autograph hunters. 538 00:31:16.270 --> 00:31:19.100 They weren't looking for our autograph. They were looking for Bryan Ferry's. 539 00:31:19.180 --> 00:31:20.530 Apparently, he lives round here. 540 00:31:28.410 --> 00:31:30.280 [Lamacq] It'sLamacq Live from Radio 1, 541 00:31:30.450 --> 00:31:32.760 and we can go across now to our Maida Vale studios. 542 00:31:32.930 --> 00:31:35.200 Hello, Coldplay? 543 00:31:35.200 --> 00:31:36.760 -[Chris] Hello, Steve. -[Will] All right, Steve. 544 00:31:36.940 --> 00:31:38.420 [Lamacq] You had a single out, didn't you? 545 00:31:38.590 --> 00:31:40.700 I didn't even know you had a record out. 546 00:31:40.250 --> 00:31:42.120 [Chris] We put it in your pigeonhole. 547 00:31:42.290 --> 00:31:43.800 -You didn't listen to it, you bastard. -[laughter] 548 00:31:43.250 --> 00:31:44.950 I'm not gonna say that. 549 00:31:45.120 --> 00:31:47.820 [Lamacq] What's the first song you're gonna do? 550 00:31:47.990 --> 00:31:49.650 [Chris] We're gonna do a song called "Bigger Stronger," which was our single in May. 551 00:31:49.820 --> 00:31:51.470 [Lamacq] It might've passed people by. 552 00:31:51.650 --> 00:31:53.780 All right, it's Coldplay then, live on Radio 1. 553 00:31:53.950 --> 00:31:55.170 [Chris] Thank you, Steve. 554 00:31:55.350 --> 00:31:58.900 ["Bigger Stronger" playing] 555 00:32:13.710 --> 00:32:15.630 It was a really intense period of time 556 00:32:15.800 --> 00:32:18.720 because we were so determined to not fail. 557 00:32:18.890 --> 00:32:21.290 We just weren't gonna give up until we got somewhere 558 00:32:21.460 --> 00:32:24.300 and made an album and got a record deal. 559 00:32:24.200 --> 00:32:26.160 I could tell the songs-- they were real songs, 560 00:32:26.340 --> 00:32:28.120 and I just thought, 561 00:32:28.290 --> 00:32:30.600 "Okay, this could be something that becomes part of my life." 562 00:32:30.770 --> 00:32:33.780 And then within a few weeks, it was everything. 563 00:32:35.430 --> 00:32:37.830 I was in the bathroom in my mum and dad's house, 564 00:32:37.100 --> 00:32:39.000 reading the NME. 565 00:32:39.170 --> 00:32:41.830 It said "20 New Bands for 1999." 566 00:32:42.000 --> 00:32:44.140 And sure enough there was Muse, Elbow, 567 00:32:44.310 --> 00:32:46.180 Gay Dad, Bellatrix, 568 00:32:46.360 --> 00:32:48.700 and then it came to Coldplay and I fainted, basically. 569 00:32:48.880 --> 00:32:50.880 Yeah, Chris fell off the toilet. 570 00:32:51.600 --> 00:32:53.840 I basically had a Doc Brown from Back to the Future moment. 571 00:32:54.200 --> 00:32:56.600 And I called Will, I called Jon, I called Guy. 572 00:32:56.230 --> 00:32:57.930 I was like, "Have you seen this?" 573 00:32:58.110 --> 00:33:00.890 It said, "Bigger Stronger" was their no-key debut release. 574 00:33:01.700 --> 00:33:03.940 Expect copies of it to be worth a small mortgage come Christmas." 575 00:33:04.110 --> 00:33:05.550 Fucking hell, man. 576 00:33:05.720 --> 00:33:08.380 One paragraph changed our entire lives. 577 00:33:08.550 --> 00:33:11.950 The next show after that NMEtip-- 578 00:33:12.120 --> 00:33:14.780 I just remember it being rammed wall-to-wall. 579 00:33:17.560 --> 00:33:19.690 [Phil] Things happened really quick after that. 580 00:33:19.870 --> 00:33:22.130 Loads of different record companies, the ones that had stonewalled me, 581 00:33:22.300 --> 00:33:24.610 they all came back and said, "Oh, found your demo again." 582 00:33:24.790 --> 00:33:25.920 It was amazing. 583 00:33:26.900 --> 00:33:28.700 Yeah, April 15, 1999, 584 00:33:28.880 --> 00:33:30.880 we signed, didn't we, in Trafalgar Square. 585 00:33:31.500 --> 00:33:33.710 We got loads of offers, but it was always gonna be Parlophone, 586 00:33:33.880 --> 00:33:35.360 the home of the Beatles. 587 00:33:35.540 --> 00:33:38.100 And they had Radiohead, they had Supergrass. 588 00:33:38.280 --> 00:33:39.580 I remember it very well, 589 00:33:39.760 --> 00:33:41.500 the feeling of, "We have something now." 590 00:33:41.670 --> 00:33:45.850 But it goes back to Chris's list. It was a tick done. 591 00:33:46.200 --> 00:33:48.300 Now let's get on with the important work. 592 00:33:48.770 --> 00:33:50.200 I definitely don't remember 593 00:33:50.380 --> 00:33:52.680 it being a sense of, wow, we've made it. 594 00:33:52.860 --> 00:33:55.380 It was more like a sense of, okay, this is the beginning. 595 00:33:55.560 --> 00:33:56.900 [cheering] 596 00:33:59.860 --> 00:34:01.430 Yeah, boys. 597 00:34:27.330 --> 00:34:30.460 We did our first UK tour with seven guys on a bus. 598 00:34:30.630 --> 00:34:32.770 We couldn't believe our luck. 599 00:34:32.940 --> 00:34:35.590 It's amazing to still be doing the same thing almost 20 years later. 600 00:34:42.780 --> 00:34:43.730 It's been a constant evolution. 601 00:34:43.910 --> 00:34:45.610 So, it doesn't feel like 602 00:34:45.780 --> 00:34:48.900 we've suddenly jumped from playing a small pub in Camden 603 00:34:48.260 --> 00:34:50.740 to a massive stadium in Saão Paulo. 604 00:34:50.910 --> 00:34:52.790 I think sometimes it's that gradual process 605 00:34:52.960 --> 00:34:55.920 that clouds your feeling of quite how far you've come. 606 00:35:03.100 --> 00:35:06.360 [Guy] But the scale of things going on around us is absolutely immense. 607 00:35:06.540 --> 00:35:07.800 [Chris] Hoppy, where's Hoppy gone? 608 00:35:07.970 --> 00:35:10.600 Would you come up on stage a second? 609 00:35:10.240 --> 00:35:12.850 Everyone, this is Hoppy, he's been doing our guitars for 20 years. 610 00:35:17.420 --> 00:35:20.340 He's been with us since we were traveling around in a tiny little van, 611 00:35:20.510 --> 00:35:23.560 smaller than this stage and playing to maybe 20 people. 612 00:35:23.730 --> 00:35:26.910 And all that time he's been with us and been patient, and so have a lot of our crew, 613 00:35:27.800 --> 00:35:28.740 and we wanna send love out to them 614 00:35:28.910 --> 00:35:31.390 because they work so hard to make this thing possible. 615 00:35:32.300 --> 00:35:34.180 The crew have been incredible. 616 00:35:34.350 --> 00:35:36.830 There's been a handful that have been with us from the very beginning. 617 00:35:38.140 --> 00:35:39.880 They're legends within the industry now, 618 00:35:40.500 --> 00:35:41.880 which is wonderful. 619 00:35:43.230 --> 00:35:44.880 [Chris] Everyone has this conception of us, 620 00:35:45.500 --> 00:35:47.800 sort of like we've been made up by a big record company, 621 00:35:47.970 --> 00:35:49.490 like some sort of indie boy band, 622 00:35:49.670 --> 00:35:51.760 but we've done it all ourselves really. 623 00:35:51.930 --> 00:35:55.940 Our manager's our best mate, and we produce the record. 624 00:35:56.110 --> 00:35:57.420 That's what we get a buzz off, 625 00:35:57.590 --> 00:35:59.810 is the sort of homemade-ness of it. 626 00:35:59.980 --> 00:36:01.590 But no one really sees that 627 00:36:01.770 --> 00:36:04.120 'cause they see the slick TV adverts and stuff. 628 00:36:05.380 --> 00:36:07.510 So what other lyrics could go on T-shirts? 629 00:36:07.690 --> 00:36:11.990 It'd be a bit morose to have "We never change, do we?" Wouldn't it? 630 00:36:12.170 --> 00:36:14.260 That would be funny if you wore it all the time. 631 00:36:14.430 --> 00:36:15.870 [laughter] 632 00:36:16.260 --> 00:36:19.700 "Can anybody fly this thing?"[Chris] Good one, Hops. 633 00:36:19.870 --> 00:36:21.740 [Jonny] That's my favorite line of any of our songs. 634 00:36:21.920 --> 00:36:23.900 Yeah, same. 635 00:36:23.270 --> 00:36:24.790 When you're on your first album, 636 00:36:24.970 --> 00:36:28.840 a 14.99 WHSmith globe is about as big as production gets. 637 00:36:29.100 --> 00:36:32.100 But now we have, like, a multimedia, 3-D thing. 638 00:36:32.760 --> 00:36:33.930 [Will] What's the scale? 639 00:36:34.100 --> 00:36:35.930 [Chris] One to one. 640 00:36:36.110 --> 00:36:38.200 So, the real thing will be bigger?[Will] Twice the size. 641 00:36:38.370 --> 00:36:39.890 Twice the size.At least. 642 00:36:40.700 --> 00:36:41.850 [Chris] So, these are the tickets we've sold. 643 00:36:42.300 --> 00:36:43.590 [Guy] Pretty much everyone's still there. 644 00:36:43.770 --> 00:36:46.680 We've just kinda kept adding people along the way, 645 00:36:46.860 --> 00:36:48.210 one big family. 646 00:36:48.380 --> 00:36:49.680 Musically in the past, 647 00:36:49.860 --> 00:36:51.430 I think we felt a lot of pressure 648 00:36:51.600 --> 00:36:53.510 to have everything come from the four of us. 649 00:36:53.690 --> 00:36:55.300 We started collaborating with people 650 00:36:55.470 --> 00:36:58.170 just 'cause it opened up a new way of making music. 651 00:36:58.350 --> 00:36:59.350 [Chris] 652 00:37:01.570 --> 00:37:03.440 [woman] 653 00:37:04.180 --> 00:37:06.400 [both singing] 654 00:37:08.140 --> 00:37:09.750 Can they film this?Course. 655 00:37:09.920 --> 00:37:12.360 -[Will] It's Chris's phone. -[laughs] 656 00:37:12.530 --> 00:37:16.800 [Chris and Beyoncé singing "Hymn for the Weekend"] 657 00:37:16.970 --> 00:37:19.200 We still have that homemade philosophy, 658 00:37:19.190 --> 00:37:22.410 but now we have a very open door policy. 659 00:37:22.590 --> 00:37:25.160 Basically if you show up, you might get a shot. [chuckles] 660 00:37:25.330 --> 00:37:29.700 But it helps if you're, like, a legend. [laughs] 661 00:37:31.420 --> 00:37:33.250 Oh, that sounds so great.Thank you. 662 00:37:33.430 --> 00:37:35.250 Let's just do that right now.Okay. 663 00:37:35.430 --> 00:37:36.820 [Chris] The studio we recorded with Beyoncé 664 00:37:36.990 --> 00:37:38.600 was actually my son's bedroom, 665 00:37:38.780 --> 00:37:40.950 so we had to make it look like a studio a little bit. 666 00:37:41.130 --> 00:37:42.100 He wants me to do it softer again. 667 00:37:43.300 --> 00:37:46.350 [Chris] And just make her feel as special as she is. 668 00:37:49.660 --> 00:37:52.100 ["Hymn for the Weekend" playing] 669 00:38:17.210 --> 00:38:18.820 ["Hymn for the Weekend" continues] 670 00:38:47.150 --> 00:38:48.630 It might be strange for some people 671 00:38:48.800 --> 00:38:50.370 that Stargate are producing a song 672 00:38:50.550 --> 00:38:53.460 which Noel Gallagher's on, that Beyoncé is also on. 673 00:38:53.640 --> 00:38:55.770 Even for me it took a while to get my head around it. 674 00:38:56.250 --> 00:38:59.420 Oasis was such a pivotal band for us in the mid-'90s. 675 00:39:11.000 --> 00:39:13.260 [Chris] So, it was just like, this is called A Head Full of Dreams. 676 00:39:13.440 --> 00:39:15.220 It should be about making dreams come true. 677 00:39:15.400 --> 00:39:18.570 And one of our dreams was to have Noel play on something. 678 00:39:33.330 --> 00:39:35.980 Noel Gallagher, by his own admission, is a bit of a grump 679 00:39:36.160 --> 00:39:39.720 and doesn't share my worldview in any way at all. 680 00:39:39.900 --> 00:39:42.600 That's the whole point of the album. It's like, everyone's all right, 681 00:39:42.770 --> 00:39:45.560 even the people that don't really like the concept of this album 682 00:39:45.730 --> 00:39:47.990 have shown up to play on it. [laughing] 683 00:39:48.170 --> 00:39:49.740 So, thank you, Noel. 684 00:39:50.870 --> 00:39:52.740 [Mat] I noticed that your kids were credited. 685 00:39:52.910 --> 00:39:55.130 [Chris] Right, for better or worse, 686 00:39:55.300 --> 00:39:57.610 if you want your kids to appear on your album you have to strike a deal. 687 00:39:57.790 --> 00:39:59.400 First of all, they have to like the song. 688 00:39:59.570 --> 00:40:02.900 Second of all, there has to be maybe a pizza involved. 689 00:40:02.270 --> 00:40:03.840 It's basically bribery. 690 00:40:04.100 --> 00:40:05.710 -That was so beautiful. -[applause] 691 00:40:05.880 --> 00:40:07.320 Generally with A Head Full of Dreams, 692 00:40:07.490 --> 00:40:09.450 we just asked anyone who was around if they would sing. 693 00:40:09.620 --> 00:40:11.760 We wanted to try and embrace all the things that we love 694 00:40:11.930 --> 00:40:13.670 and the people that we think are awesome. 695 00:40:14.280 --> 00:40:15.850 Just the idea of inclusivity. 696 00:40:17.240 --> 00:40:19.890 ["Everglow" playing] 697 00:40:27.290 --> 00:40:29.160 ["Everglow" continues] 698 00:41:16.780 --> 00:41:18.100 [cheers and applause] 699 00:41:21.780 --> 00:41:24.790 [woman] You started off as four friends just playing together, 700 00:41:24.960 --> 00:41:27.490 and you became the biggest rock band in the world. 701 00:41:27.660 --> 00:41:31.180 I was wondering, what did you lose in that process? 702 00:41:31.360 --> 00:41:33.620 -Our drummer. -[laughter] 703 00:41:35.360 --> 00:41:38.230 Very early on, I learnt that without the five of us, 704 00:41:38.410 --> 00:41:40.190 we just can't be Coldplay. 705 00:41:40.370 --> 00:41:43.110 I lost sight of what makes a band a band. 706 00:41:43.280 --> 00:41:46.240 The only thing we have going for us is the friendship. 707 00:41:46.980 --> 00:41:49.590 And the course of our band could've dramatically changed 708 00:41:49.770 --> 00:41:52.810 because we basically kicked Will out. 709 00:41:53.420 --> 00:41:56.120 It was kind of like the darkest and worst point 710 00:41:56.300 --> 00:41:57.950 in our time together. 711 00:41:59.400 --> 00:42:01.780 The excitement, everything we'd done was focused on getting signed. 712 00:42:01.950 --> 00:42:03.520 We got signed and thought, "Oh, God." 713 00:42:03.700 --> 00:42:05.480 Yeah, what do we do now? 714 00:42:06.440 --> 00:42:09.220 [Will] I got to a certain point whereby I didn't know enough about how to play the drums 715 00:42:09.400 --> 00:42:11.920 in order to keep up with the music that was being written. 716 00:42:17.360 --> 00:42:20.320 [Will] I certainly wasn't good enough to go through the rigors of recording. 717 00:42:22.800 --> 00:42:25.540 Shall we leave it and go on to another one?Yeah. 718 00:42:25.720 --> 00:42:29.460 We were working with a producer that was very meticulous about perfection. 719 00:42:29.630 --> 00:42:32.240 And it was all about, "Will's drumming isn't up to scratch." 720 00:42:32.420 --> 00:42:35.340 And we believed it, you know, we believed it. 721 00:42:36.340 --> 00:42:37.730 Things got very difficult. 722 00:42:37.900 --> 00:42:39.250 Chris and I had a... 723 00:42:39.430 --> 00:42:43.130 I left the band, which was absolutely miserable. 724 00:42:43.300 --> 00:42:45.650 I was just a bit of a dick to Will, 725 00:42:45.820 --> 00:42:48.700 and, you know, we didn't know what we were doing. 726 00:42:48.870 --> 00:42:53.400 So, Will left, and we did some auditions. 727 00:42:53.570 --> 00:42:55.490 And I think probably doing those auditions, 728 00:42:55.660 --> 00:42:59.500 it really kind of struck us that this was awful. 729 00:42:59.230 --> 00:43:02.930 I just woke up and I was like, "This is totally wrong." 730 00:43:03.100 --> 00:43:07.500 You know, we said, "Look, please will you come back?" Um... 731 00:43:07.670 --> 00:43:09.200 And thank God he did. 732 00:43:09.200 --> 00:43:10.890 If we'd gone down a different path, 733 00:43:11.700 --> 00:43:14.300 I just know that we would have at some point failed. 734 00:43:25.210 --> 00:43:26.430 [Chris laughing] 735 00:43:26.600 --> 00:43:28.470 This is it.Woof! 736 00:43:28.650 --> 00:43:30.260 Coldplay![shouting] 737 00:43:30.430 --> 00:43:32.610 I am glad it happened 738 00:43:32.780 --> 00:43:35.900 because I think it was an incredibly important lesson 739 00:43:35.260 --> 00:43:38.530 as to what we should hold on to most of all. 740 00:43:38.700 --> 00:43:41.570 [Chris] This is what we started, this is what we're gonna continue. 741 00:43:41.750 --> 00:43:43.100 Will, Will. 742 00:43:43.270 --> 00:43:45.230 The drummer always gets a lot of stick, 743 00:43:45.410 --> 00:43:48.600 if you'll excuse the turn of phrase. 744 00:43:48.230 --> 00:43:53.200 If I've got any advice to give to any aspiring bands, 745 00:43:53.200 --> 00:43:56.590 it's just don't fuck around with your drummer. 746 00:43:56.760 --> 00:44:00.990 A band is a magic thing, and everyone improves together. 747 00:44:01.160 --> 00:44:04.120 That's what's since given Will his power. 748 00:44:04.290 --> 00:44:06.510 He's like the base of a statue, 749 00:44:06.690 --> 00:44:09.470 and without that, the thing topples. 750 00:44:09.650 --> 00:44:12.430 The truth of it is that, really, without the other three, 751 00:44:12.610 --> 00:44:14.910 each of us would be kind of screwed. 752 00:44:16.180 --> 00:44:18.130 I just couldn't do it on my own. 753 00:44:19.220 --> 00:44:20.660 I couldn't do it. 754 00:44:27.270 --> 00:44:28.670 Jonny.Yeah. 755 00:44:28.840 --> 00:44:30.970 ["Freak Me" by Silk playing on cell phone] 756 00:44:34.630 --> 00:44:36.500 Great track.I love that. 757 00:44:44.460 --> 00:44:45.640 Well... 758 00:44:49.950 --> 00:44:51.120 This is great. 759 00:44:53.260 --> 00:44:54.950 Great. Thanks. 760 00:44:55.130 --> 00:44:58.400 Do you want us to speak French?Yeah, that would be wonderful. 761 00:45:00.740 --> 00:45:03.740 Parachuteswas made at a time when we had a lot of emotions 762 00:45:03.920 --> 00:45:07.310 without necessarily knowing what they were or how to deal with them. 763 00:45:07.490 --> 00:45:09.360 Will's mum was really sick. 764 00:45:09.530 --> 00:45:11.750 None of us had any idea how to help him through that. 765 00:45:11.930 --> 00:45:14.100 He didn't know how to express it. 766 00:45:14.190 --> 00:45:17.760 She was ill for a couple of years and doing really well, in fact, got much better 767 00:45:17.930 --> 00:45:19.980 and then unfortunately, got much worse again. 768 00:45:20.150 --> 00:45:23.110 And it's a very strange time. 769 00:45:23.280 --> 00:45:25.160 She was in bands. She loved music. 770 00:45:25.330 --> 00:45:26.720 It was her life, you know. 771 00:45:26.900 --> 00:45:29.340 It's telling that where I went was to go 772 00:45:29.510 --> 00:45:31.250 and hang out with the band. 773 00:45:31.420 --> 00:45:34.300 I went up to their flat and told them what was going on. 774 00:45:34.470 --> 00:45:37.430 I didn't really have any kind of tools to deal with it, 775 00:45:37.600 --> 00:45:41.740 I think I just threw myself into this extraordinary new life that I had. 776 00:45:41.910 --> 00:45:44.650 I mean, it's obviously massively significant 777 00:45:44.830 --> 00:45:46.700 when you lose a parent anyway, 778 00:45:46.870 --> 00:45:49.400 but definitely more poignant for the fact 779 00:45:49.570 --> 00:45:51.920 that it was something that she was so passionate about. 780 00:45:52.100 --> 00:45:54.320 She died in May of 2000, 781 00:45:54.490 --> 00:45:57.100 and our album was released in July of that year. 782 00:45:58.150 --> 00:46:00.150 You're speaking to us in quite a nervous state 783 00:46:00.320 --> 00:46:02.630 because we're just approaching crunch time. 784 00:46:02.800 --> 00:46:06.200 It's kinda make-or-break for us in the next two weeks. 785 00:46:06.200 --> 00:46:07.980 We'd had quite a hard time in the studio 786 00:46:08.160 --> 00:46:11.300 and our confidence was kind of wavering a bit. 787 00:46:11.200 --> 00:46:12.940 We didn't really know what we were doing 788 00:46:13.120 --> 00:46:16.120 and we didn't really know what sort of band we wanted to be. 789 00:46:16.300 --> 00:46:18.430 We almost split up over those songs. 790 00:46:18.600 --> 00:46:20.690 The amount of times we'd play and go, "That was really good," 791 00:46:20.860 --> 00:46:23.430 and then we'd listen to it and one of us would get upset. 792 00:46:24.480 --> 00:46:25.700 Chris called us in and said, 793 00:46:25.870 --> 00:46:27.870 "Listen to this, I've got this new song." 794 00:46:28.500 --> 00:46:30.740 And it was kind of acoustic-y and sounded a bit like Neil Young, 795 00:46:30.920 --> 00:46:32.660 slow and countryish. 796 00:46:34.440 --> 00:46:36.490 Jonny played a big, distorted riff over it 797 00:46:36.660 --> 00:46:38.140 and then it was born, really. 798 00:46:38.320 --> 00:46:41.760 ["Yellow" playing] 799 00:46:41.930 --> 00:46:44.200 We went through hell recording that album. 800 00:46:44.190 --> 00:46:48.200 But when our confidence or our enthusiasm was waning, 801 00:46:48.370 --> 00:46:51.240 it'd always be Chris that was like, "We've gotta get this right." 802 00:46:52.640 --> 00:46:55.460 We care about we do to a stupid degree. 803 00:46:55.640 --> 00:46:57.380 We care when people slag us off. 804 00:46:57.550 --> 00:46:59.860 We care about being told we're not this and we're not that. 805 00:47:00.300 --> 00:47:01.990 There were so many miserable hours in the studio, 806 00:47:02.170 --> 00:47:03.860 but it was all worth it in the end. 807 00:47:04.400 --> 00:47:06.870 I didn't push for it in any way, but it was a lovely gesture 808 00:47:07.400 --> 00:47:09.910 that the guys wanted to put a little line in the album sleeve 809 00:47:10.900 --> 00:47:13.180 about the album being dedicated to my mum. 810 00:47:13.350 --> 00:47:15.480 So, I'm grateful for that 811 00:47:15.660 --> 00:47:18.180 and it's something that she would've been very proud of. 812 00:47:18.360 --> 00:47:20.360 ["Yellow" continues] 813 00:47:22.400 --> 00:47:26.150 All right, our album's out! Our album's out! 814 00:47:26.320 --> 00:47:28.540 We never thought we'd see the day, to be honest. 815 00:47:29.930 --> 00:47:32.500 ["Yellow" playing] 816 00:47:37.810 --> 00:47:40.860 [man] Times are not that great these days, but there is a beacon of light now and again. 817 00:47:41.300 --> 00:47:42.730 The album itself is calledParachutes, 818 00:47:42.900 --> 00:47:45.250 the single is "Yellow," and the band is Coldplay. 819 00:47:45.430 --> 00:47:47.600 [man] 820 00:47:47.780 --> 00:47:50.390 Two boxes of Kitekat, Coldplay Parachutes, 821 00:47:50.560 --> 00:47:53.260 some Hobnobs. Please. 822 00:47:53.430 --> 00:47:56.260 ["Yellow" continues] 823 00:48:09.970 --> 00:48:14.330 Mat, hi, it's day one of this one-day video shoot. 824 00:48:14.500 --> 00:48:16.700 I feel good. I feel skinny. 825 00:48:23.640 --> 00:48:26.550 [man] Another Top of the Pops debut now for four London lads 826 00:48:26.730 --> 00:48:28.600 fresh from their very first headline tour. 827 00:48:28.780 --> 00:48:29.950 This is Coldplay. 828 00:48:30.120 --> 00:48:32.950 ["Yellow" continues] 829 00:48:33.130 --> 00:48:36.870 [man] You guys sold over 35,000 copies in Holland already. 830 00:48:37.400 --> 00:48:40.000 [Chris] Yesterday we just hit one million in the world. 831 00:48:40.180 --> 00:48:44.220 Three years ago, girls wouldn't even sit next to us at a bus stop. 832 00:48:44.400 --> 00:48:45.920 And now they surround us. 833 00:48:51.190 --> 00:48:54.500 [man] The highest new entry and a brand-new number-one album: 834 00:48:54.670 --> 00:48:57.280 Coldplay andParachutes. 835 00:48:57.460 --> 00:49:00.330 I don't know how to introduce this right, but hopefully this time next year, 836 00:49:00.500 --> 00:49:02.500 you'll sing along with it because it'll be a hit, 837 00:49:02.680 --> 00:49:03.940 and it's called "Yellow." 838 00:49:04.110 --> 00:49:06.770 ["Yellow" continues] 839 00:49:08.340 --> 00:49:12.300 [audience singing along] 840 00:49:12.470 --> 00:49:14.210 [reporter] Their debut albumParachutes 841 00:49:14.390 --> 00:49:16.740 has clocked up an incredible three million worldwide. 842 00:49:16.910 --> 00:49:20.910 Not bad for four lads with an average age of 22. 843 00:49:21.900 --> 00:49:22.830 ["Yellow" continues] 844 00:50:18.970 --> 00:50:22.370 Merci tout le monde, thank you so much. 845 00:50:24.930 --> 00:50:27.850 People always said, "You'll get fed up with that song," 846 00:50:28.300 --> 00:50:30.160 and I haven't yet. 847 00:50:30.330 --> 00:50:33.730 But I just-- I'm not sure if it's a classic. 848 00:50:35.250 --> 00:50:37.820 My name is Chris, the singer of Coldplay. 849 00:50:37.990 --> 00:50:40.400 The multimillion platinum 850 00:50:40.210 --> 00:50:42.780 super-selling record of all time 851 00:50:42.950 --> 00:50:44.390 was Parachutes. 852 00:50:44.560 --> 00:50:45.950 And we need to do a follow-up. 853 00:50:46.130 --> 00:50:47.430 And in order to do this follow-up, 854 00:50:47.610 --> 00:50:49.900 we need to work extremely hard. 855 00:50:49.260 --> 00:50:50.870 This is the nerve center of Coldplay 856 00:50:51.500 --> 00:50:52.310 where everything gets done. 857 00:50:52.480 --> 00:50:54.570 Let's go in and see who's doing what. 858 00:50:59.620 --> 00:51:01.230 Will. 859 00:51:01.410 --> 00:51:03.540 You're the drummer of Coldplay. What are you doing? 860 00:51:03.710 --> 00:51:05.930 I'm just doing some work on the new album. 861 00:51:13.770 --> 00:51:16.680 That has to be his favorite sound, an orchestra tuning up. 862 00:51:21.860 --> 00:51:25.130 What's the verdict in there? It seems like no one really... 863 00:51:25.300 --> 00:51:27.390 -[producer] We think it's great. -[Chris] Okay. 864 00:51:27.560 --> 00:51:29.650 -[Chris] I mean, there's no room for mediocrity. -[producer] No, absolutely not. 865 00:51:29.820 --> 00:51:31.780 -[Chris] If it's shit, then tell me. -[producer] It's fucking great. 866 00:51:31.960 --> 00:51:33.350 Keep going, man. 867 00:51:36.700 --> 00:51:39.570 But I'll say this even if everyone hates it, you know, 868 00:51:39.750 --> 00:51:41.180 I wanted us to make a record 869 00:51:41.360 --> 00:51:43.400 that we could die happy after we've made it, 870 00:51:43.580 --> 00:51:44.880 and that's what I absolutely mean, 871 00:51:45.600 --> 00:51:47.230 and it sounds incredibly pretentious, 872 00:51:47.410 --> 00:51:49.370 but there's no point in being in a band 873 00:51:49.540 --> 00:51:52.240 unless you're trying to make the best thing ever. 874 00:52:01.340 --> 00:52:03.600 The Phil-har-fucking-monic. 875 00:52:04.600 --> 00:52:06.250 The Phil Harvey-monic. 876 00:52:06.430 --> 00:52:08.260 -[woman in orchestra] What? -[Chris] It sounds great. 877 00:52:08.430 --> 00:52:10.870 Just come in with attack, as if you really love the band. 878 00:52:11.400 --> 00:52:13.130 -[all laughing] -[Chris] Imagine. 879 00:52:14.000 --> 00:52:15.180 Here we go. 880 00:52:20.350 --> 00:52:22.920 I don't think we were satisfied with the first album 881 00:52:23.100 --> 00:52:26.230 which made us work harder for the second one, I think. 882 00:52:26.400 --> 00:52:29.100 There's no recipe that we were trying to repeat. 883 00:52:31.600 --> 00:52:33.600 Oh, man, did you hear it? 884 00:52:33.240 --> 00:52:36.540 Did you hear Jonny's riff? It's amazing. It's amazing. 885 00:52:36.720 --> 00:52:40.110 It's just Guy's bass playing that lets the whole shop down. You know? 886 00:52:41.590 --> 00:52:44.640 'Cause you spend all your time videoing them, that's why. 887 00:52:45.640 --> 00:52:46.860 Guy, please, man. 888 00:52:48.120 --> 00:52:49.990 There was much more gusto on this 889 00:52:50.170 --> 00:52:52.820 to just forget your sort of personal, mental, 890 00:52:52.990 --> 00:52:54.780 or physical health. 891 00:52:54.950 --> 00:52:57.960 We just wouldn't stop until what we were trying to do was right. 892 00:52:58.130 --> 00:53:00.390 We could get someone else. Pino Palladino. 893 00:53:02.270 --> 00:53:04.310 [interviewer] Is there a downside? I mean, you as-- 894 00:53:04.490 --> 00:53:08.140 [Chris] Anyone who says there's a downside to what we do is talking utter shit. 895 00:53:08.320 --> 00:53:10.320 Of course we stress and we worry about it 896 00:53:10.490 --> 00:53:12.450 and we put everything possible into it 897 00:53:12.620 --> 00:53:15.190 at the expense of friendships and everything. 898 00:53:17.500 --> 00:53:19.720 But there's no downside to being in a band. 899 00:53:19.890 --> 00:53:22.980 [interviewer] Is there a downside though to being the face of the band? 900 00:53:23.500 --> 00:53:25.550 No. 901 00:53:25.720 --> 00:53:28.860 Chris has done nothing but think about the album for seven months, 902 00:53:29.300 --> 00:53:31.600 striving for absolute perfection. 903 00:53:31.770 --> 00:53:33.210 He doesn't sleep really. 904 00:53:34.430 --> 00:53:36.430 He's been so incredibly focused, 905 00:53:36.600 --> 00:53:39.950 probably to the detriment of a lot of other things in his life, 906 00:53:40.130 --> 00:53:43.870 whereas I find it quite easy to just walk away and go home. 907 00:53:44.500 --> 00:53:47.270 Especially when we're mixing and you have to listen to the same song 80 times in a day. 908 00:53:47.440 --> 00:53:50.500 By then, it all sounds exactly the same. 909 00:53:53.930 --> 00:53:58.190 Well, Chris just went in one weekend, he was in the studio on his own, 910 00:53:58.360 --> 00:54:01.670 and then we all came back on the Monday and he goes, "I got this song." 911 00:54:01.850 --> 00:54:04.550 And we just recorded it straight down as it was 912 00:54:04.720 --> 00:54:06.940 and we kept that original take. 913 00:54:08.420 --> 00:54:10.290 This is new. "Scientist." 914 00:54:11.120 --> 00:54:14.820 ["The Scientist" playing] 915 00:54:51.290 --> 00:54:53.250 It was just all there straightaway, 916 00:54:53.420 --> 00:54:56.160 in such an immediate, exciting moment. 917 00:54:56.340 --> 00:54:57.860 Best moment of the entire record for me 918 00:54:58.300 --> 00:54:59.510 was when we'd come back to this song 919 00:54:59.690 --> 00:55:02.390 and I just heard through a wall this riff, 920 00:55:02.560 --> 00:55:05.300 and that's my favorite bit of music on the record. 921 00:55:05.480 --> 00:55:08.960 ["The Scientist" continues] 922 00:55:40.120 --> 00:55:41.860 Hello, boys. 923 00:55:42.300 --> 00:55:44.910 Before we went to America we just thought, "Really? 924 00:55:45.800 --> 00:55:48.610 Are we sure? No one's gonna like us there." [laughs] 925 00:55:48.780 --> 00:55:50.390 There was no false modesty here. 926 00:55:50.560 --> 00:55:55.180 I had no fucking clue how to promote a record in the States. 927 00:55:55.350 --> 00:55:57.660 I was lucky enough to meet Dave Holmes, 928 00:55:57.830 --> 00:55:59.830 and he came on as the US manager. 929 00:56:00.100 --> 00:56:03.620 Very quickly he was just the overall mastermind. 930 00:56:03.800 --> 00:56:06.540 I was a fan of their music from the first couple of EPs, 931 00:56:06.710 --> 00:56:11.190 but I'll never forget the day I got a master copy of A Rush of Blood. 932 00:56:11.370 --> 00:56:13.590 That's when I really did believe, 933 00:56:13.760 --> 00:56:16.280 "Okay, these guys have the ability to go to great heights." 934 00:56:22.470 --> 00:56:24.470 Dave very quickly took the reins. 935 00:56:24.640 --> 00:56:27.170 Now he's just the big daddy. 936 00:56:27.340 --> 00:56:29.300 They were up for whatever it took. 937 00:56:29.470 --> 00:56:30.740 Let's take America. 938 00:56:30.910 --> 00:56:34.390 But initially the reaction wasn't great. 939 00:56:34.570 --> 00:56:37.130 Modern rock radio station would put on a big festival, 940 00:56:37.310 --> 00:56:40.350 and we'd be sandwiched in between some of these really heavy bands, 941 00:56:40.530 --> 00:56:41.960 and it was pretty demoralizing. 942 00:56:42.140 --> 00:56:44.360 We'd have a lot of projectiles thrown at us. 943 00:56:44.530 --> 00:56:46.970 Has anyone here got our album? 944 00:56:47.140 --> 00:56:49.320 Right, flipping you. 945 00:56:49.490 --> 00:56:52.450 Nice job, great. One person. 946 00:56:52.630 --> 00:56:54.410 I remember we played a radio show in DC 947 00:56:54.590 --> 00:56:58.550 and someone chucked a CD at Chris and hit him in the head. 948 00:56:58.720 --> 00:57:01.420 And came back in the dressing room and he went, "Thanks a lot, Dave." 949 00:57:04.900 --> 00:57:08.210 I felt awful. Here I was telling them that this was a good idea, 950 00:57:08.380 --> 00:57:11.430 and I'm sure they were like, "What the fuck are we doing this for?" 951 00:57:16.800 --> 00:57:19.570 I think at the time we felt completely different to everybody else, 952 00:57:19.740 --> 00:57:24.350 but I think that actually worked for us rather than against us. 953 00:57:24.530 --> 00:57:28.500 If somebody said a year ago we were gonna do well in America, we probably would've laughed, 954 00:57:28.230 --> 00:57:31.450 because it's not the kind of music you'd associate with the American music scene. 955 00:57:31.620 --> 00:57:34.540 They've never said no to hard work 956 00:57:34.710 --> 00:57:37.200 and I'm sure there were times that they hated my guts, 957 00:57:37.190 --> 00:57:40.930 and I'm sure there were times when they were really wondering if this was worth it. 958 00:57:41.110 --> 00:57:44.110 Is this actually gonna result in anything? But it did. 959 00:57:44.290 --> 00:57:47.420 Plowing across America, it felt difficult at the time, 960 00:57:47.590 --> 00:57:52.210 but looking back on it now they were, in many ways, the most rewarding days, 961 00:57:52.380 --> 00:57:53.910 the days I look back with most fondness. 962 00:57:54.800 --> 00:57:57.800 We were just kids, we didn't know what was gonna happen, 963 00:57:57.260 --> 00:57:59.400 but we never gave up. 964 00:57:59.210 --> 00:58:02.220 ["The Scientist" playing] 965 00:58:03.830 --> 00:58:06.220 So, American success, does it matter to you guys? 966 00:58:06.390 --> 00:58:09.920 As long as everyone that buys one of our records is into it, 967 00:58:10.900 --> 00:58:13.840 we don't care if it's 10 million people or 30 million people, 968 00:58:14.100 --> 00:58:17.360 as long as it's over five million people. 969 00:58:20.320 --> 00:58:22.450 I'm not gonna sit and talk about any bad times 970 00:58:22.630 --> 00:58:24.280 because there wasn't any bad times really, 971 00:58:24.460 --> 00:58:26.760 not in the grand scheme of things. 972 00:58:26.940 --> 00:58:31.860 But it was weird, you know, when it crossed over into that mainstream media thing. 973 00:58:32.300 --> 00:58:33.770 We started our band together 974 00:58:33.950 --> 00:58:37.160 and there was a democracy and this kind of concept of equality, 975 00:58:37.340 --> 00:58:40.210 and then it was slightly strange when the press focused on Chris 976 00:58:40.390 --> 00:58:42.740 and his relationship with Gwyneth. 977 00:58:42.910 --> 00:58:47.310 I think for a brief moment it felt like, "Well, what about us?" 978 00:58:47.480 --> 00:58:52.220 But I think it's probably been pretty awful for him at times. 979 00:58:52.400 --> 00:58:54.920 As amusing as it might be at first, 980 00:58:55.100 --> 00:58:59.620 after a while, it can feel pretty intrusive, pretty claustrophobic. 981 00:58:59.800 --> 00:59:01.410 The thing that you've dreamt of your whole life 982 00:59:01.580 --> 00:59:04.760 has turned out to not be quite as happy and as innocent 983 00:59:04.930 --> 00:59:07.700 as it might have felt. 984 00:59:08.810 --> 00:59:12.550 I always wanted to be in the NME. That's all I really cared about. 985 00:59:12.720 --> 00:59:14.160 I think we all did. 986 00:59:14.330 --> 00:59:15.990 I never really wanted any other recognition 987 00:59:16.160 --> 00:59:18.860 other than what we were doing on a musical level. 988 00:59:19.300 --> 00:59:21.170 But tabloid attention, as awful as it is, 989 00:59:21.340 --> 00:59:25.170 it's a sign that you're sort of doing something right. 990 00:59:31.310 --> 00:59:34.500 When I get recognized, I love it. I do. 991 00:59:35.480 --> 00:59:37.220 You know? That's why we're at a cool level. 992 00:59:37.400 --> 00:59:39.920 Because the novelty hasn't worn off 993 00:59:40.100 --> 00:59:41.660 and, you know... 994 00:59:43.450 --> 00:59:45.230 It's really exciting, 'cause the only people that really recognize us 995 00:59:45.410 --> 00:59:47.190 are people who actually like our record. 996 00:59:47.370 --> 00:59:49.110 I don't know how people like Madonna or someone 997 00:59:49.280 --> 00:59:52.370 could handle that level of fame because... 998 00:59:52.550 --> 00:59:54.980 you do have to just become a recluse, I reckon. 999 01:00:06.690 --> 01:00:08.650 Okay, mate, you go first. 1000 01:00:24.580 --> 01:00:27.580 [crowd cheering and screaming] 1001 01:00:40.160 --> 01:00:42.330 Sorry, I didn't-- I'm sorry. I didn't-- 1002 01:00:44.680 --> 01:00:50.120 [singing "Something Just Like This"] 1003 01:01:34.730 --> 01:01:36.820 Music is just everywhere. 1004 01:01:36.100 --> 01:01:38.700 The whole universe is music. 1005 01:01:38.870 --> 01:01:42.260 You can just walk down the street, it's a kind of music. 1006 01:01:42.440 --> 01:01:45.740 There's always something in the day that's inspiring. 1007 01:01:45.920 --> 01:01:48.660 [shrieking] 1008 01:01:48.840 --> 01:01:50.320 [bell clangs] 1009 01:01:50.490 --> 01:01:52.270 When we first started recording, 1010 01:01:52.450 --> 01:01:54.840 Chris had a little four-track cassette machine 1011 01:01:55.100 --> 01:01:57.240 and that's how we put things down. 1012 01:01:57.410 --> 01:02:00.760 It's before we had mobile phones and laptops and stuff to record on. 1013 01:02:00.930 --> 01:02:03.200 [song playing, audio rewinding] 1014 01:02:07.680 --> 01:02:09.160 I'll show you my book. 1015 01:02:11.290 --> 01:02:12.950 Huh? Huh? 1016 01:02:14.250 --> 01:02:17.400 Look at that. See? Huh? 1017 01:02:17.210 --> 01:02:21.170 If I should lose that, we'd be-- What would we do? 1018 01:02:21.350 --> 01:02:23.870 -What's in the book? -Get Travis to give us some songs. 1019 01:02:25.180 --> 01:02:26.570 Just girls' numbers. 1020 01:02:26.740 --> 01:02:29.660 And designs for stage costumes. 1021 01:02:32.530 --> 01:02:36.100 My way of making sense of the day is to sit down and sing about it. 1022 01:02:36.190 --> 01:02:38.540 I suppose it's like writing a diary. 1023 01:02:40.930 --> 01:02:42.930 No one really knows where songs come from. 1024 01:02:43.110 --> 01:02:44.890 You don't know how, where, or why, 1025 01:02:45.700 --> 01:02:47.110 or whether any more will come. 1026 01:02:51.240 --> 01:02:54.950 All of our biggest ones take 10 minutes, 1027 01:02:55.120 --> 01:02:59.730 but you only get them by sitting for hours and hours on the other ones, 1028 01:02:59.910 --> 01:03:04.400 and then suddenly one comes through and you just receive it. 1029 01:03:08.960 --> 01:03:10.440 You might take it to Jonny, Will and Guy, 1030 01:03:10.610 --> 01:03:13.270 and they add their bits and it's like a production line. 1031 01:03:15.140 --> 01:03:19.100 And sometimes they say, okay, and sometimes they say, no way. 1032 01:03:19.270 --> 01:03:22.100 It's the "okay-no way" spectrum. 1033 01:03:22.190 --> 01:03:24.280 When we hear a new song, 1034 01:03:24.450 --> 01:03:27.410 Chris and I have a tendency to be relentlessly positive. 1035 01:03:27.590 --> 01:03:29.240 They're always like, 1036 01:03:29.410 --> 01:03:31.370 "Yeah, I like it, yes. I think it could be good. Yeah." 1037 01:03:31.550 --> 01:03:34.720 And me and Guy are sat, sort of fuming, saying, 1038 01:03:34.900 --> 01:03:38.380 "Boy, this is a fucking waste of time. Let's get on to the next one." 1039 01:03:38.550 --> 01:03:42.470 It's difficult. If Chris comes in with a song, if I'm just not into it, 1040 01:03:42.640 --> 01:03:45.560 that is the thing that I just hate the most. 1041 01:03:45.730 --> 01:03:48.820 You're putting yourself in the firing line for somebody to say, 1042 01:03:48.100 --> 01:03:51.220 "Well, you go and write a better one then." 1043 01:03:51.390 --> 01:03:54.920 You've got the life or death of the song in your hands, 'cause they're quite sensitive. 1044 01:03:55.900 --> 01:03:58.700 But any kind of inkling that it's not the best song they've ever written, 1045 01:03:58.880 --> 01:04:00.620 means it tends to get chucked out. 1046 01:04:00.790 --> 01:04:03.660 I'd say my hit ratio within the group 1047 01:04:03.840 --> 01:04:06.230 is probably one in ten maybe. 1048 01:04:06.410 --> 01:04:09.410 Any one of those fucking cunts can veto it. 1049 01:04:09.580 --> 01:04:11.760 It is heartbreaking, but they're always right. 1050 01:04:11.930 --> 01:04:13.680 I know that once we put a song out in the world, 1051 01:04:13.850 --> 01:04:15.680 we're gonna have lots of people who say it's not very good, 1052 01:04:15.850 --> 01:04:17.550 so it's probably best that the five of us at least agree. 1053 01:04:17.720 --> 01:04:20.200 We can't have one of us say, "I told you it was shit." 1054 01:04:20.380 --> 01:04:24.640 ♪ Play him a song that you think is fun♪ 1055 01:04:24.820 --> 01:04:27.990 ♪ He'll say, "I don't really like that one"♪ 1056 01:04:28.170 --> 01:04:29.870 ♪ I'm scared of Phil♪ 1057 01:04:30.400 --> 01:04:31.910 ♪ I don't know why♪ 1058 01:04:32.900 --> 01:04:35.260 ♪ But not as scared as all of us are of Guy♪ 1059 01:04:35.440 --> 01:04:37.920 [all laughing] 1060 01:04:40.660 --> 01:04:42.620 That's the one! 1061 01:04:42.790 --> 01:04:44.490 ♪ Sometimes it feels like We're just their minions♪ 1062 01:04:44.660 --> 01:04:47.530 ♪ Will and Guy and their fucking opinions♪ 1063 01:04:47.710 --> 01:04:49.890 [all laughing] 1064 01:04:52.150 --> 01:04:54.590 Oh! That's too good. 1065 01:04:58.240 --> 01:05:00.590 Generally, that's how it works. Normally, either ideas 1066 01:05:00.770 --> 01:05:03.900 or sort of fully formed songs always came from Chris. 1067 01:05:04.940 --> 01:05:07.600 Most often, he'd play it to Jonny first, 1068 01:05:08.640 --> 01:05:10.600 Guy would have a listen, 1069 01:05:10.780 --> 01:05:13.340 and then it would come to me. 1070 01:05:13.520 --> 01:05:16.170 It's our job as, you know, the rest of the band 1071 01:05:16.350 --> 01:05:18.650 to just basically sort of not fuck that up 1072 01:05:18.830 --> 01:05:21.500 because it's really good. 1073 01:05:32.890 --> 01:05:34.490 We're gonna jump together. 1074 01:05:34.670 --> 01:05:36.320 We're gonna jump together. 1075 01:05:36.500 --> 01:05:40.720 We gonna-- One, two, one, two, three, go! 1076 01:05:40.890 --> 01:05:46.590 ["Charlie Brown" playing] 1077 01:06:22.800 --> 01:06:24.630 [woman] What's it like being Jonny in Coldplay? 1078 01:06:24.810 --> 01:06:28.680 Uh, I don't know. I've never been anyone else. 1079 01:06:28.850 --> 01:06:31.420 Well, Jonny is just my hero. 1080 01:06:31.600 --> 01:06:34.380 I spend my entire life trying to pull him out of the shadows 1081 01:06:34.550 --> 01:06:37.380 because he's very humble about himself. 1082 01:06:37.560 --> 01:06:40.520 I love playing live and I love playing the songs to people, 1083 01:06:40.690 --> 01:06:44.780 but I love making new music most of all, I think. 1084 01:06:44.960 --> 01:06:46.480 Okay, ready? 1085 01:06:46.650 --> 01:06:48.220 Two, three, four. 1086 01:06:48.390 --> 01:06:50.530 ♪ Lovers♪ 1087 01:06:50.700 --> 01:06:53.490 Jonny was always very shy, but with no reason to be, 1088 01:06:53.660 --> 01:06:56.190 because he was the most talented. 1089 01:06:56.360 --> 01:06:58.320 That's the key of our band, really, 1090 01:06:58.490 --> 01:07:01.930 the way that Chris's melodies and Jonny's guitar sit together. 1091 01:07:02.110 --> 01:07:04.450 No! 1092 01:07:04.630 --> 01:07:07.760 Oh, fucking hell. Is there a keyboard anywhere? 1093 01:07:07.940 --> 01:07:09.680 Our personalities fitted together. 1094 01:07:09.850 --> 01:07:11.550 We couldn't have two of us like Chris, 1095 01:07:11.720 --> 01:07:14.470 and we couldn't have two of us like me. It just wouldn't work. 1096 01:07:14.640 --> 01:07:16.160 It's gonna be great when we record it properly. 1097 01:07:18.470 --> 01:07:19.990 The songwriting has changed, I think. 1098 01:07:20.170 --> 01:07:21.690 These days it depends who's there, 1099 01:07:21.860 --> 01:07:23.650 because we live in different parts of the world. 1100 01:07:23.820 --> 01:07:26.300 -Did it get anything in there? -[guitar note] 1101 01:07:26.480 --> 01:07:28.570 When we started recording A Head Full of Dreams, 1102 01:07:28.740 --> 01:07:30.780 Guy, Will, and I were in the studio in London, 1103 01:07:30.960 --> 01:07:32.920 working on a track which was "Legends," 1104 01:07:33.900 --> 01:07:35.440 and we could never quite get it right. 1105 01:07:35.620 --> 01:07:37.840 I went to LA, worked in Chris's house, 1106 01:07:38.100 --> 01:07:39.840 trying to get a good guitar riff for it. 1107 01:07:40.100 --> 01:07:43.100 Just sort of fumbling around in the dark. 1108 01:07:43.280 --> 01:07:47.200 He started playing this melody, like, slow. 1109 01:07:47.190 --> 01:07:50.700 [vocalizing] 1110 01:07:52.160 --> 01:07:53.760 [chuckles] 1111 01:07:53.940 --> 01:07:55.550 His guitar just gets me going. 1112 01:07:55.720 --> 01:07:58.250 I was like, there's something amazing about that. 1113 01:07:58.420 --> 01:08:01.210 You could take the rest of the song away and I don't think anyone would notice. 1114 01:08:05.820 --> 01:08:07.130 And that's what happened. 1115 01:08:08.470 --> 01:08:11.900 [singing "Adventure of a Lifetime"] 1116 01:08:19.830 --> 01:08:23.360 Okay, trust me everybody. This is gonna be great. 1117 01:08:26.280 --> 01:08:28.450 Everybody go low. 1118 01:08:28.630 --> 01:08:30.410 Everybody get down. Shh! 1119 01:08:30.580 --> 01:08:32.720 Everybody go low. 1120 01:08:32.890 --> 01:08:34.500 Stay low. 1121 01:08:35.630 --> 01:08:38.420 One, two, one, two... 1122 01:08:38.590 --> 01:08:42.730 ["Adventure Of A Lifetime" continues] 1123 01:09:06.360 --> 01:09:08.580 [cheering]Thank you, everybody. 1124 01:09:08.750 --> 01:09:12.890 Okay, hands up, who wants "Adventure Of A Lifetime" to be our first single? 1125 01:09:13.600 --> 01:09:16.630 Our friendship's really changed, definitely, from the early days. 1126 01:09:16.800 --> 01:09:19.200 Okay, that's great. So, we agree. 1127 01:09:19.200 --> 01:09:22.380 It's very free communication. We kind of talk every day. 1128 01:09:22.550 --> 01:09:25.990 But, yeah, that can involve a lot of locking of horns. 1129 01:09:33.990 --> 01:09:37.130 Often the atmosphere in the studio is very tense, yeah. 1130 01:09:37.300 --> 01:09:40.390 And there's lots of laughter, but it can get quite heavy. 1131 01:09:47.230 --> 01:09:52.710 [Phil] Sometimes I get called in and there's, like, stony faces and no one's speaking, 1132 01:09:52.880 --> 01:09:54.760 and I can tell they're in the middle of some argument. 1133 01:09:54.930 --> 01:09:58.190 That's the bit of my job that's hard. 1134 01:10:00.110 --> 01:10:02.200 [Chris] Hey, Phil?[all laughing] 1135 01:10:03.460 --> 01:10:05.720 We've had a terrible fight. 1136 01:10:06.590 --> 01:10:08.680 We had a terrible fight. 1137 01:10:08.860 --> 01:10:11.210 [Phil] Sometimes I look back and I don't think I've changed at all. 1138 01:10:11.380 --> 01:10:14.300 I just don't. Not in the way that Chris has changed. 1139 01:10:14.470 --> 01:10:15.910 He's evolved so much as a person. 1140 01:10:16.800 --> 01:10:17.100 But then there's loads of things that haven't changed, 1141 01:10:18.170 --> 01:10:20.690 like his ability to make me laugh like no one else. 1142 01:10:20.870 --> 01:10:22.780 If you look at this Venn diagram that I'm doing, 1143 01:10:22.960 --> 01:10:26.740 it splits the set into old Coldplay songs, 1144 01:10:26.920 --> 01:10:28.570 new Coldplay songs. 1145 01:10:28.750 --> 01:10:30.440 What do you think about singles to album track ratio? 1146 01:10:30.620 --> 01:10:34.360 Well, at the moment, it's like a 60/40 split of new. 1147 01:10:34.530 --> 01:10:38.890 But if you minus the metric we took from the first quarter against merch sales, 1148 01:10:39.600 --> 01:10:43.590 it's the basic fractal that we learnt from REM and U2, 1149 01:10:43.760 --> 01:10:46.500 who we now refer to as RE2, 1150 01:10:46.680 --> 01:10:48.370 the band that we're aspiring to be, 1151 01:10:48.550 --> 01:10:51.770 plus Radiohead and Beyoncé and Jay-Z at the same time, 1152 01:10:51.940 --> 01:10:53.420 moving through to Young Thug. 1153 01:10:53.600 --> 01:10:56.690 That leaves us with this, which is our set list. 1154 01:10:57.600 --> 01:10:59.210 There's definite pros and cons 1155 01:10:59.390 --> 01:11:01.520 to working with someone that you're that close with. 1156 01:11:01.690 --> 01:11:04.390 Chris would be the first to say that as well. 1157 01:11:04.560 --> 01:11:07.650 It can get a bit messy, definitely. 1158 01:11:07.830 --> 01:11:10.140 [singing "Animals"] 1159 01:11:10.310 --> 01:11:14.360 Well, I've left the band probably two times, I think. 1160 01:11:14.530 --> 01:11:18.710 The first time was 'cause I got really ill. It was basically exhaustion. 1161 01:11:18.880 --> 01:11:21.100 I'll always remember. It was the day of the Brit Awards. 1162 01:11:21.280 --> 01:11:23.600 The Best British Group. 1163 01:11:23.230 --> 01:11:25.540 -Yes! -Coldplay. 1164 01:11:25.720 --> 01:11:28.280 We won Best Band and Best Album 1165 01:11:28.460 --> 01:11:30.110 and I'd had this feeling inside me 1166 01:11:30.290 --> 01:11:32.590 that it should be the best day of my life, 1167 01:11:32.770 --> 01:11:36.200 but I just felt so totally exhausted. 1168 01:11:36.380 --> 01:11:38.730 It was not a happy memory at all. 1169 01:11:38.900 --> 01:11:41.820 This is the weirdest thing that's ever happened to us. 1170 01:11:41.990 --> 01:11:45.780 And we're really made up. So thank you very much. 1171 01:11:45.950 --> 01:11:47.560 But then I came back 1172 01:11:47.740 --> 01:11:49.390 and we made A Rush of Blood to the Head. 1173 01:11:49.570 --> 01:11:53.530 That was even more stressful than the first one 1174 01:11:53.700 --> 01:11:57.270 and my relationship with Chris in particular was quite strained 1175 01:11:57.440 --> 01:11:59.310 and something had to give. 1176 01:12:07.980 --> 01:12:12.720 I think the dynamic between singer and manager is a specific one, 1177 01:12:12.890 --> 01:12:15.640 and it just didn't really suit our friendship. 1178 01:12:15.810 --> 01:12:17.720 So I quit. 1179 01:12:18.510 --> 01:12:20.250 Phil got a bit burnt out 1180 01:12:20.420 --> 01:12:23.300 and wanted to do something different. 1181 01:12:23.210 --> 01:12:26.800 He moved almost as far away from us as he possibly could 1182 01:12:26.250 --> 01:12:29.560 by going to South America and then Australia. [laughs] 1183 01:12:29.740 --> 01:12:32.220 I think he was trying to tell us something. 1184 01:12:32.390 --> 01:12:34.500 He wasn't with us for one album, 1185 01:12:34.220 --> 01:12:36.960 and that was when we sorely missed him. 1186 01:12:37.140 --> 01:12:41.440 We made decisions that weren't as good as they could've been. 1187 01:12:41.620 --> 01:12:43.230 We seem to sort of give up before we've-- 1188 01:12:43.400 --> 01:12:44.930 No, it's just-- Does that sound right? 1189 01:12:45.100 --> 01:12:46.970 I don't understand. Is that the right pattern? 1190 01:12:47.150 --> 01:12:50.230 I don't think we were very functional in that period. 1191 01:12:50.410 --> 01:12:52.930 I think we lost our way a bit, yes. 1192 01:12:53.110 --> 01:12:55.700 I think we felt a lot of pressure 1193 01:12:55.240 --> 01:12:57.280 to make some kind of grand album. 1194 01:12:57.460 --> 01:12:59.640 There were strange headlines in the press 1195 01:12:59.810 --> 01:13:02.120 about the EMI share price and all of that stuff. 1196 01:13:02.290 --> 01:13:04.770 We didn't even know what a share price was back then. 1197 01:13:04.940 --> 01:13:08.860 We spent day after day after day of getting nowhere. 1198 01:13:09.400 --> 01:13:11.340 It came out in addictions and it came out in tension, 1199 01:13:11.520 --> 01:13:13.100 and at the time, it was a real struggle. 1200 01:13:14.170 --> 01:13:17.350 One year later and we've got precisely nothing finished. 1201 01:13:19.900 --> 01:13:21.480 What a fucking cunt. Bollocks! 1202 01:13:22.880 --> 01:13:25.180 And you don't film any of the arguments. 1203 01:13:25.360 --> 01:13:26.840 There was a lot of questioning, 1204 01:13:27.100 --> 01:13:28.710 like, "Should we do this, should we do that?" 1205 01:13:28.880 --> 01:13:30.410 So, it's shite. 1206 01:13:32.450 --> 01:13:34.450 We have to start all of it again. 1207 01:13:35.450 --> 01:13:38.370 We've lost the plot! 1208 01:13:38.540 --> 01:13:41.150 I was so worried about what everyone else thought. 1209 01:13:41.330 --> 01:13:43.420 We just totally spun out, you know. 1210 01:13:43.590 --> 01:13:45.160 So, what do you want me to do, then? 1211 01:13:45.330 --> 01:13:46.990 In general, the bigger you get as a band, 1212 01:13:47.160 --> 01:13:50.690 all the kind of machinery around you gets bigger and bigger 1213 01:13:50.860 --> 01:13:52.340 and there's more things to get in the way 1214 01:13:52.520 --> 01:13:55.390 of just four people playing music together. 1215 01:13:55.560 --> 01:14:00.900 [Chris singing] 1216 01:14:00.260 --> 01:14:02.000 No, no, no. 1217 01:14:02.180 --> 01:14:05.440 You've gotta do that-- [imitates drums] thing for that verse. 1218 01:14:05.610 --> 01:14:07.790 That was the first time we'd been in that situation 1219 01:14:07.970 --> 01:14:10.500 and didn't know how to deal with all of that stuff. 1220 01:14:10.230 --> 01:14:12.660 If Phil had been around, it might have been different. 1221 01:14:12.840 --> 01:14:14.840 That's just normal, is it? 1222 01:14:57.100 --> 01:15:00.450 You don't let me sing any nouns or things. 1223 01:15:01.890 --> 01:15:04.940 Like anything that's a thing is immediately banned. 1224 01:15:08.980 --> 01:15:11.460 And freedom. You hate riffs, freedom and nouns. 1225 01:15:21.340 --> 01:15:24.100 I think the process was probably the least enjoyable of all our records, definitely. 1226 01:15:25.170 --> 01:15:28.130 We were going through some weird shit that time. 1227 01:15:28.310 --> 01:15:29.610 But Dave was amazing, 1228 01:15:29.790 --> 01:15:31.530 and luckily we had the song "Fix You" 1229 01:15:31.700 --> 01:15:33.440 to get us through that period. 1230 01:15:34.700 --> 01:15:37.580 What's that you sing at the end? What are the lyrics? 1231 01:15:37.750 --> 01:15:39.190 Tears stream down your face 1232 01:15:39.360 --> 01:15:41.930 when you lose something you can't replace. 1233 01:15:42.100 --> 01:15:45.370 Tears stream down your face and I, I, I, I, I... 1234 01:15:45.540 --> 01:15:46.800 Right. 1235 01:15:48.460 --> 01:15:50.240 -Yeah. -Is that shit? 1236 01:15:50.410 --> 01:15:51.850 No, it sounds good. 1237 01:15:52.200 --> 01:15:53.900 I just was wondering if it could be sort of 1238 01:15:54.700 --> 01:15:56.680 made into something which makes a bit more sense. 1239 01:15:57.940 --> 01:15:59.770 Can you take a tiny bit of reverb off? 1240 01:16:00.470 --> 01:16:01.950 That's cool, thanks. 1241 01:16:04.210 --> 01:16:09.350 [singing "Fix You"] 1242 01:16:32.890 --> 01:16:36.770 ["Fix You" continues playing] 1243 01:17:50.270 --> 01:17:54.280 [audience singing "Fix You"] 1244 01:18:13.380 --> 01:18:15.650 That's the most self-conscious I've ever been 1245 01:18:15.820 --> 01:18:18.260 about people not liking what we were doing 1246 01:18:18.430 --> 01:18:20.780 because I wasn't really sure if I liked it. 1247 01:18:20.960 --> 01:18:23.440 It was a strange period of time. 1248 01:18:23.610 --> 01:18:27.500 [singing] 1249 01:18:28.490 --> 01:18:31.840 When you read something that is critical, 1250 01:18:32.100 --> 01:18:33.450 you always give it much more weight 1251 01:18:33.620 --> 01:18:36.280 than anything you read that's kind. 1252 01:18:36.450 --> 01:18:39.100 [laughs] And they can write a whole article that's nice 1253 01:18:39.280 --> 01:18:41.450 and just have one line that's a bit shitty, 1254 01:18:41.630 --> 01:18:44.200 and that's the only line you'll remember. 1255 01:18:44.370 --> 01:18:46.550 Alan McGee of Creation Records 1256 01:18:46.720 --> 01:18:51.700 has come out and said that your music was bed wetters' music. 1257 01:18:51.250 --> 01:18:53.380 How did you feel about that? What was your response? 1258 01:18:53.550 --> 01:18:55.560 We wet our beds. 1259 01:18:57.250 --> 01:18:59.210 You can't please everybody, right? 1260 01:18:59.390 --> 01:19:01.100 If that's what you're chasing you're just gonna fail, 1261 01:19:02.170 --> 01:19:04.560 because it's just not possible. 1262 01:19:04.740 --> 01:19:07.390 [singing] 1263 01:19:09.610 --> 01:19:10.880 [Chris] Shucks. 1264 01:19:21.230 --> 01:19:22.890 It's okay. I get it. 1265 01:19:23.600 --> 01:19:25.850 I think it's important to have figures of ridicule. 1266 01:19:26.200 --> 01:19:27.680 I don't mind being one of them. 1267 01:19:27.850 --> 01:19:29.630 The only time it's awkward is if you bump into someone 1268 01:19:29.810 --> 01:19:32.200 who's made a joke about you. 1269 01:19:32.380 --> 01:19:35.340 In the old days, I used to get really angry. [laughs] 1270 01:19:35.510 --> 01:19:37.730 But I changed my whole philosophy. 1271 01:19:37.900 --> 01:19:40.950 The only thing I complain about in our job is that 1272 01:19:41.120 --> 01:19:42.560 if you're the sort of person who worries, 1273 01:19:42.730 --> 01:19:45.430 you have so much time to sit and worry 1274 01:19:45.610 --> 01:19:47.170 that you just worry and worry and worry. 1275 01:19:47.350 --> 01:19:50.000 I spent quite a lot of years being anxious 1276 01:19:50.180 --> 01:19:51.960 about the people that didn't like us 1277 01:19:52.140 --> 01:19:55.180 without focusing enough on the people that do. 1278 01:19:55.350 --> 01:19:56.440 It's hard to explain. 1279 01:20:00.400 --> 01:20:01.320 I'm not. 1280 01:20:01.490 --> 01:20:02.930 You are.Apart from-- 1281 01:20:09.190 --> 01:20:11.200 No, Iknow, Guy. 1282 01:20:11.200 --> 01:20:13.940 But if I wasn't a perfectionist, we'd still be playing the Falcon. 1283 01:20:14.110 --> 01:20:16.110 So? But you'd be doing it very well. 1284 01:20:17.550 --> 01:20:19.770 I think everything we've done is shit. 1285 01:20:19.940 --> 01:20:22.340 That's why I keep trying to do new stuff. 1286 01:20:25.340 --> 01:20:29.480 That's my gut feeling. That's what fires you up to do the next thing. 1287 01:20:29.650 --> 01:20:33.900 In the early days, I think there used to be a lot more arguments, 1288 01:20:33.260 --> 01:20:35.480 particularly between Chris and myself. 1289 01:20:35.660 --> 01:20:38.140 I was probably much more opinionated back then, 1290 01:20:38.310 --> 01:20:41.570 which I think was probably a huge pain in the ass 1291 01:20:41.750 --> 01:20:44.190 for everyone. 1292 01:20:44.360 --> 01:20:47.150 I don't know if I was trying to get away from myself or if I wasn't comfortable with myself, 1293 01:20:47.320 --> 01:20:50.720 but I definitely had a drinking problem. 1294 01:20:50.890 --> 01:20:55.370 It doesn't make for the happiest of times. 1295 01:20:55.550 --> 01:20:57.940 Chris definitely wears his heart on his sleeve. 1296 01:20:58.110 --> 01:21:03.120 Will, Jonny, and myself are much more guarded emotionally, 1297 01:21:03.290 --> 01:21:05.430 and that's probably why so many bands have split up, 1298 01:21:05.600 --> 01:21:10.600 because they haven't learned how to accept each other's differences. 1299 01:21:10.780 --> 01:21:13.910 There was a time where I was like, "Everyone needs to just follow my feelings." 1300 01:21:14.900 --> 01:21:16.350 At a certain point I was like, "If this carries on like this, 1301 01:21:16.520 --> 01:21:18.610 then one of them's gonna leave." 1302 01:21:21.220 --> 01:21:25.490 It might be like, "We don't wanna deal with this temperamental idiot all day." 1303 01:21:25.660 --> 01:21:27.230 ♪ What a cunt♪ 1304 01:21:27.400 --> 01:21:30.670 Only 32 concerts to go before the end of Coldplay. 1305 01:21:34.190 --> 01:21:35.980 They've got their own feelings and their own lives. 1306 01:21:36.150 --> 01:21:38.370 Even though they are much harder to read, 1307 01:21:38.550 --> 01:21:41.240 but they still have highs and lows. 1308 01:21:41.420 --> 01:21:43.460 Fucking mic stand keeps hitting me in the face. 1309 01:21:43.640 --> 01:21:45.550 It's like singing into Naseem Hamed. 1310 01:21:45.730 --> 01:21:48.600 I'm learning how to deal with the peaks and the troughs a bit better. 1311 01:21:48.770 --> 01:21:50.990 Please sort it out.Understood. 1312 01:21:51.170 --> 01:21:54.100 Every cliché that there is, we've been through it. 1313 01:21:55.170 --> 01:21:57.610 We just never felt like it was important to talk about. 1314 01:21:57.780 --> 01:22:00.700 Any group of five men who have got to their late 30s 1315 01:22:00.870 --> 01:22:03.960 probably gonna have been through depression, addiction, 1316 01:22:04.140 --> 01:22:05.570 divorce, everything, 1317 01:22:05.750 --> 01:22:07.360 even if it was five accountants. 1318 01:22:07.530 --> 01:22:09.620 We've been through so much together. 1319 01:22:09.790 --> 01:22:12.360 But what's incredible to me is that we've stuck together as a pack. 1320 01:22:33.210 --> 01:22:35.520 Everywhere we go, whatever we're going through, 1321 01:22:35.690 --> 01:22:38.800 we can close the door and sit down as a group 1322 01:22:38.260 --> 01:22:41.690 and either laugh about it or commiserate or celebrate. 1323 01:22:50.180 --> 01:22:52.270 I could sit with Jon, Will and Guy and Phil 1324 01:22:52.440 --> 01:22:53.750 just for hours right now 1325 01:22:53.930 --> 01:22:55.710 and just talk about anything. 1326 01:23:12.200 --> 01:23:14.770 [all singing "Fix You"] 1327 01:23:17.170 --> 01:23:21.400 I think that X&Yhad been a bit of a slog for all of us, 1328 01:23:21.210 --> 01:23:22.740 whereas getting back in the studio 1329 01:23:22.910 --> 01:23:24.820 and doing Viva became exciting again. 1330 01:23:25.000 --> 01:23:27.650 [singing continues] 1331 01:23:29.480 --> 01:23:32.500 We definitely missed Phil and we realized how much we missed him 1332 01:23:32.220 --> 01:23:34.570 when he came back into the fold. 1333 01:23:34.750 --> 01:23:37.490 Yeah, Phil came back in in glorious technicolor again, 1334 01:23:37.660 --> 01:23:40.600 and that's when we bought our own little place 1335 01:23:40.230 --> 01:23:43.580 and really tried to reconnect as friends. 1336 01:23:43.760 --> 01:23:46.600 When I came back, I was not coming back as a manager. 1337 01:23:46.240 --> 01:23:48.590 Dave Holmes was doing that much better than I ever could. 1338 01:23:48.760 --> 01:23:50.850 I was coming back as a bandmate, 1339 01:23:51.300 --> 01:23:52.550 just doing all the fun stuff. 1340 01:23:52.720 --> 01:23:55.300 We finally got our band home. 1341 01:23:55.200 --> 01:23:58.290 That really brought everything back into focus. 1342 01:23:58.470 --> 01:24:01.300 You know, it was our own studio, our own HQ. 1343 01:24:04.260 --> 01:24:07.170 It was new territory for us. We didn't really know how to behave. 1344 01:24:07.350 --> 01:24:09.830 I think we wanted a producer to give us some ideas about 1345 01:24:10.000 --> 01:24:13.000 how we can present the next phase of our band. 1346 01:24:13.180 --> 01:24:16.700 We wanted to find someone who had the same effect on us 1347 01:24:16.880 --> 01:24:21.600 as Brian Eno did on U2 and David Bowie and Talking Heads, 1348 01:24:21.230 --> 01:24:23.150 all these incredible bands that we love. 1349 01:24:23.320 --> 01:24:26.800 And so we asked Brian, "Do you know anyone?" 1350 01:24:26.970 --> 01:24:29.540 And he said, "Well, I wouldn't mind having a go." 1351 01:24:29.720 --> 01:24:31.540 So, we were looking for the new Brian Eno 1352 01:24:31.720 --> 01:24:34.550 and we found the old Brian Eno. 1353 01:24:36.940 --> 01:24:38.640 I think he only becomes interested in a band 1354 01:24:38.810 --> 01:24:41.420 when they get massive and terrible at the same time, 1355 01:24:41.600 --> 01:24:45.210 because he sees an opportunity to keep you massive, but make you good. 1356 01:24:46.650 --> 01:24:49.130 It's very much like a having a lovely, cuddly headmaster 1357 01:24:49.300 --> 01:24:52.390 quietly directing proceedings without ever raising his voice. 1358 01:24:52.560 --> 01:24:53.610 He's like a sort of wizard-type figure, 1359 01:24:53.780 --> 01:24:55.870 like a Gandalf or a Dumbledore 1360 01:24:56.500 --> 01:24:58.610 who comes in and sprinkles magic all over the place 1361 01:24:58.790 --> 01:25:00.230 and then disappears for a bit, 1362 01:25:00.400 --> 01:25:02.400 or says, "I really like that song, 1363 01:25:02.570 --> 01:25:04.490 but have you thought about playing it backwards and in French?" 1364 01:25:12.280 --> 01:25:15.700 He's a relentless experimenter. 1365 01:25:15.240 --> 01:25:18.200 He's not afraid for it to sound silly. He's not afraid to fail. 1366 01:25:18.200 --> 01:25:22.700 It can be sublimely ridiculous, some of the stuff that we're doing. 1367 01:25:26.470 --> 01:25:28.770 He kicked me out of the band for a few weeks. 1368 01:25:28.950 --> 01:25:31.400 At that time, I could be quite strong-minded 1369 01:25:31.210 --> 01:25:32.780 in terms of it has to sound like this. 1370 01:25:32.950 --> 01:25:35.610 So, he taught us to let everyone get to the end of their idea 1371 01:25:35.780 --> 01:25:37.870 before any judgment is passed. 1372 01:25:38.500 --> 01:25:41.660 [all singing "Lost!"] 1373 01:25:46.660 --> 01:25:49.530 We went to Barcelona and we did a sort of singing trip with him, 1374 01:25:49.710 --> 01:25:52.190 which is one of the key elements on that record, 1375 01:25:52.360 --> 01:25:54.500 the sound of lots of voices together. 1376 01:25:54.670 --> 01:25:56.630 [singing continues] 1377 01:25:56.800 --> 01:26:00.850 The thing that sparked Viva La Vida was the big sing-along chants. 1378 01:26:05.290 --> 01:26:08.470 The most purely joyous bit for me is that communal thing. 1379 01:26:08.640 --> 01:26:11.300 What's the next one? Oh, "Viva La Vida"? 1380 01:26:11.210 --> 01:26:12.910 Nothing can beat a chant live. 1381 01:26:13.800 --> 01:26:14.990 [vocalizing] 1382 01:26:15.170 --> 01:26:17.260 I love sing-alongs more than anything. 1383 01:26:17.430 --> 01:26:19.300 [all vocalizing] 1384 01:26:19.480 --> 01:26:22.480 ["Viva La Vida" playing] 1385 01:27:09.140 --> 01:27:12.180 Through the course of the next album, Mylo Xyloto, 1386 01:27:12.360 --> 01:27:15.880 it was pretty clear that I was doing well in some parts of my life 1387 01:27:16.600 --> 01:27:17.970 and really not well in others. 1388 01:27:18.150 --> 01:27:20.280 When we're on tour, it's such a little bubble 1389 01:27:20.450 --> 01:27:22.450 that you become institutionalized, 1390 01:27:22.630 --> 01:27:24.240 and this is why a lot of front men 1391 01:27:24.410 --> 01:27:26.550 have problems in their personal life. 1392 01:27:26.720 --> 01:27:28.110 [sighs] 1393 01:27:28.290 --> 01:27:29.850 Towards the end of the Mylotour, 1394 01:27:30.300 --> 01:27:33.160 it was a very difficult period for about a year or so 1395 01:27:33.340 --> 01:27:37.300 of feeling completely worthless and nothing to anybody. 1396 01:27:37.470 --> 01:27:39.800 I was just like, I'm a mess, really, 1397 01:27:39.250 --> 01:27:42.730 because I can't enjoy the great things around me. 1398 01:27:42.910 --> 01:27:46.870 Then, of course, I went through a breakup with Gwyneth. 1399 01:27:48.500 --> 01:27:49.650 Listen, man, I'm never gonna moan. 1400 01:27:49.830 --> 01:27:51.140 I'm grateful for everything. 1401 01:27:51.310 --> 01:27:53.750 But it was pretty touch and go. 1402 01:27:53.920 --> 01:27:56.970 It was evident that things were very difficult for Chris 1403 01:27:57.140 --> 01:27:59.320 and that he was unhappy. 1404 01:27:59.490 --> 01:28:01.670 We sort of felt helpless in a way, you know, 1405 01:28:01.840 --> 01:28:07.280 naturally it's distressing when your friend is going through something so traumatic. 1406 01:28:07.460 --> 01:28:09.410 He was in a lot of pain. 1407 01:28:09.590 --> 01:28:12.770 Your mind can go to the worst-case scenario. 1408 01:28:12.940 --> 01:28:14.640 I was worried about him to the extent that 1409 01:28:14.810 --> 01:28:17.380 I was just really glad to get a text in the morning 1410 01:28:17.550 --> 01:28:19.820 just to know he was okay. 1411 01:28:19.990 --> 01:28:22.950 And almost when he was at his absolute lowest, 1412 01:28:23.120 --> 01:28:25.560 that was when we started making Ghost Stories. 1413 01:28:27.350 --> 01:28:28.780 What we decided to do on Ghost Stories 1414 01:28:28.950 --> 01:28:31.260 was to really be honest about it. 1415 01:28:31.440 --> 01:28:32.830 I don't wanna bullshit, 1416 01:28:33.000 --> 01:28:35.920 because I need to sing it to get through the day. 1417 01:28:37.750 --> 01:28:40.500 We all set up a studio in Guy's house. 1418 01:28:40.230 --> 01:28:42.710 I think that was all that Chris was capable of. 1419 01:28:42.880 --> 01:28:46.760 I remember it as being a healing time for him. 1420 01:28:46.930 --> 01:28:50.240 I think he started to smile a bit more around then. 1421 01:28:53.150 --> 01:28:56.370 [singing "True Love"] 1422 01:29:07.820 --> 01:29:09.100 He was having a really hard time. 1423 01:29:10.170 --> 01:29:13.260 Yeah, we definitely felt very protective towards him. 1424 01:29:13.440 --> 01:29:15.220 Chris's life is different from mine. 1425 01:29:15.390 --> 01:29:17.400 He has very much a public life. 1426 01:29:17.570 --> 01:29:20.270 People know what's going on, or like to think they know. 1427 01:29:20.440 --> 01:29:24.620 So we were worried about him letting people in too far, 1428 01:29:24.790 --> 01:29:27.670 but this was what he wanted to do. 1429 01:29:27.840 --> 01:29:30.840 [singing "True Love"] 1430 01:29:35.200 --> 01:29:37.200 I think Chris needed to get it out of his system 1431 01:29:37.200 --> 01:29:40.380 and he needed to express those things in those songs. 1432 01:29:40.550 --> 01:29:43.470 Of course, it was a very personal album, and I like it for that reason. 1433 01:29:43.640 --> 01:29:46.770 I like it for its bravery and its honesty. 1434 01:29:46.950 --> 01:29:51.560 What we wanted to do was to provide the comfort that music has always given him. 1435 01:29:51.730 --> 01:29:56.300 That's the only way that we could really help him was to be musical friends. 1436 01:29:57.610 --> 01:29:59.520 When some of us have been going through harder times, 1437 01:29:59.700 --> 01:30:02.180 it's the band that really picks each other up. 1438 01:30:02.350 --> 01:30:05.700 That really is an amazing thing to have in your life. 1439 01:30:05.880 --> 01:30:10.360 Whenever anyone needs anything, really, everybody's there. 1440 01:30:10.530 --> 01:30:14.580 It has evolved into much more than just friendship. 1441 01:30:14.760 --> 01:30:17.110 We are more like a family now. 1442 01:30:17.280 --> 01:30:19.370 It was a challenging period. 1443 01:30:19.540 --> 01:30:23.680 It was a sort of journey from ultimate loneliness to ultimate togetherness. 1444 01:30:25.770 --> 01:30:27.680 Come on, come on, come on. Come on. 1445 01:30:27.860 --> 01:30:29.810 Bring it.Bring it in. 1446 01:30:29.990 --> 01:30:31.990 Phil, you wanna lead?Come on in. 1447 01:30:46.480 --> 01:30:49.140 It's been a long journey up to this point. 1448 01:30:49.310 --> 01:30:52.450 The period that we've been a band has been such a shifting time in music. 1449 01:30:52.620 --> 01:30:55.840 It's just not a time where you can take something for granted. 1450 01:30:56.200 --> 01:30:58.670 I think we were very lucky to have each other 1451 01:30:58.840 --> 01:31:00.930 and lucky in many other ways as well. 1452 01:31:01.110 --> 01:31:03.940 I feel like I've been running for years. 1453 01:31:04.110 --> 01:31:05.900 It's the first time since I've joined the band 1454 01:31:06.700 --> 01:31:08.770 I've actually stopped and looked back. 1455 01:31:08.940 --> 01:31:13.290 It really does feel like a lifetime ago that we started. 1456 01:31:13.470 --> 01:31:15.860 [audience cheering]Hello. 1457 01:31:25.650 --> 01:31:29.610 What's still the same is our passion to make music together. 1458 01:31:29.790 --> 01:31:32.530 I wouldn't wanna do what I do if I wasn't with my friends. 1459 01:31:32.700 --> 01:31:35.530 I think the gang mentality is still definitely there, 1460 01:31:35.710 --> 01:31:37.930 but it's just the gang's got a bit bigger. 1461 01:31:38.100 --> 01:31:42.410 That initial dream, at the time we had it, that seemed like the final point, 1462 01:31:42.580 --> 01:31:45.460 and what I've realized is, actually that's just the beginning. 1463 01:31:45.630 --> 01:31:47.810 I don't feel like we've got to a final destination. 1464 01:31:47.980 --> 01:31:50.640 ["Paradise" playing] 1465 01:32:17.570 --> 01:32:19.450 I don't want to stop playing. 1466 01:32:19.620 --> 01:32:21.800 I don't wanna stop this. 1467 01:32:21.970 --> 01:32:24.100 Don't want to stop this. 1468 01:32:27.890 --> 01:32:29.410 Let's turn it up. Let's turn it up. 1469 01:32:29.590 --> 01:32:31.410 Let's turn it up. Let's turn it up. 1470 01:32:31.590 --> 01:32:33.720 Let's turn it up. Let's turn it up. 1471 01:32:45.860 --> 01:32:47.910 I really don't look back. You know? 1472 01:32:48.800 --> 01:32:49.740 I just feel weird about it. 1473 01:32:49.910 --> 01:32:52.700 Like Phil said the other day, because I was about to turn 40, 1474 01:32:52.870 --> 01:32:56.790 you should write a letter to your 17-year-old self and tell him what you're up to, 1475 01:32:56.960 --> 01:32:59.620 'cause his head would just explode. 1476 01:32:59.790 --> 01:33:03.600 The first few years, you try to make yourself feel different to everybody else. 1477 01:33:03.230 --> 01:33:07.540 But in the last few years, I feel like the journey's just been to remind me and us 1478 01:33:07.710 --> 01:33:11.720 that we're all in the same tribe on the same little planet in space, 1479 01:33:11.890 --> 01:33:15.940 and more than ever, it feels like that's what we're part of: 1480 01:33:16.110 --> 01:33:17.460 one big band. 1481 01:33:18.980 --> 01:33:21.730 [Mat] So, what next?I don't know what's next. 1482 01:33:21.900 --> 01:33:24.730 We've been trying to get to this place for a long time. 1483 01:33:24.900 --> 01:33:28.860 I'd be very surprised if there was another conventional Coldplay album. 1484 01:33:29.400 --> 01:33:31.340 It feels like the finale of the story, 1485 01:33:31.520 --> 01:33:33.870 or the end of a movie. 1486 01:33:34.400 --> 01:33:37.960 It doesn't surprise me that he's saying now is the end of an era, it's the end of something, 1487 01:33:38.130 --> 01:33:40.480 'cause it really is in his mind. 1488 01:33:40.660 --> 01:33:44.840 But I hope it's not really the end of things. 1489 01:33:45.100 --> 01:33:46.880 Literally happens every album. 1490 01:33:47.600 --> 01:33:49.970 "This might be our last one." And it hasn't been yet. 1491 01:33:50.150 --> 01:33:53.600 I'm just looking forward to what happens next. 1492 01:33:53.240 --> 01:33:54.890 We've been together for 20 years 1493 01:33:55.600 --> 01:33:57.850 and achieved so many things that we wanted to achieve. 1494 01:33:58.200 --> 01:34:00.810 I mean, it has just been the most amazing ride so far. 1495 01:34:00.980 --> 01:34:02.680 I'm grateful for the whole journey. 1496 01:34:02.850 --> 01:34:05.200 I have faith in the future. 1497 01:34:05.380 --> 01:34:06.730 I trust life. 1498 01:34:12.820 --> 01:34:15.870 First of all, thank you all so much for being here. 1499 01:34:16.400 --> 01:34:18.830 You're all actually a part of the band. Isn't that crazy? 1500 01:34:19.000 --> 01:34:23.900 Even though some of you might be ashamed to say it, you're all members of Coldplay. 1501 01:34:23.270 --> 01:34:25.310 We got one more song if you wanna do it. 1502 01:34:25.480 --> 01:34:26.790 Yay! 1503 01:34:26.970 --> 01:34:28.490 Thank you for that lovely response. 1504 01:34:28.660 --> 01:34:30.710 You get top marks from me. 1505 01:34:30.880 --> 01:34:33.890 One, two, three and... 1506 01:34:34.600 --> 01:34:37.410 ["Up & Up" playing] 1507 01:34:47.200 --> 01:34:51.210 ["Up & Up" continues playing] 1508 01:36:10.590 --> 01:36:14.300 ["Up & Up" continues playing] 1509 01:36:22.990 --> 01:36:24.100 My friends...[audience cheering] 1510 01:36:26.430 --> 01:36:29.220 this is the end of A Head Full of Dreamstour. 1511 01:36:30.900 --> 01:36:32.900 Back where it all began. 1512 01:36:32.260 --> 01:36:35.480 Thank you, everybody all around the world, 1513 01:36:35.660 --> 01:36:37.310 at home and abroad, 1514 01:36:38.920 --> 01:36:41.600 for being the best part of our show 1515 01:36:41.230 --> 01:36:44.760 and for keeping your and our heads full of dreams. 1516 01:36:46.450 --> 01:36:47.580 We're in this together. 1517 01:36:49.190 --> 01:36:50.590 We're one big band. 1518 01:36:52.280 --> 01:36:56.420 Everything is possible if you never give up 1519 01:36:57.290 --> 01:36:59.160 and if you believe in love. 1520 01:37:00.680 --> 01:37:03.800 [singing] 1521 01:37:25.880 --> 01:37:28.540 [cheering] 1522 01:38:04.750 --> 01:38:08.660 [audience cheering, singing] 1523 01:38:56.450 --> 01:39:00.500 [Chris singing "In My Place"] 1524 01:39:49.330 --> 01:39:52.900 If you're watching this, it means we haven't flopped. 1525 01:39:53.700 --> 01:39:55.210 So, thanks a lot for not making us flop. 1526 01:39:55.380 --> 01:39:57.430 If you're not watching this, we have flopped, 1527 01:39:57.600 --> 01:40:00.560 so I can say what the fuck I want. 1528 01:40:00.730 --> 01:40:03.820 [singing off-key] 1529 01:40:07.350 --> 01:40:09.920 [laughing]Come on. We'll get past it. 1530 01:40:10.900 --> 01:40:13.570 If you're watching this--Obviously, they're watching this. 1531 01:40:13.750 --> 01:40:16.840 It should be "You're watching this." Not if. 1532 01:40:17.100 --> 01:40:18.360 Let's go. 1533 01:40:18.530 --> 01:40:20.540 Let's go and sell some fucking records. 1534 01:40:20.710 --> 01:40:23.230 It's time to go home.Tell them we formed at college. 1535 01:40:23.410 --> 01:40:26.600 I don't care. I don't like Alan McGee. 1536 01:40:26.240 --> 01:40:28.670 Can you sing that note again, please?Yeah. 1537 01:40:28.850 --> 01:40:31.550 [high-pitched note] 1538 01:40:31.720 --> 01:40:35.300 I think this song is brilliant.I think it's good too. 1539 01:40:35.200 --> 01:40:38.340 What do you think, Will? 1540 01:40:38.510 --> 01:40:40.210 I think the second half is great. 1541 01:40:40.380 --> 01:40:43.910 [high-pitched note continues] 1542 01:40:44.800 --> 01:40:46.740 We are probably the only band in England 1543 01:40:46.910 --> 01:40:49.430 where at least two of the members have got webbed feet. 1544 01:40:49.610 --> 01:40:53.520 -Who's got webbed feet? -We're all bluffing now, aren't we? 1545 01:40:53.700 --> 01:40:57.400 The reason I knew, we were on tour. We had a shower. 1546 01:40:57.570 --> 01:41:02.530 And every morning, there'd be two sets of normal footprints and two flippers. 1547 01:41:02.710 --> 01:41:04.100 [Guy] Two flippers? 1548 01:41:04.880 --> 01:41:07.500 [all singing] 1549 01:41:07.670 --> 01:41:10.200 I can fucking see you laughing! 1550 01:41:10.190 --> 01:41:12.200 A lot of people think... 1551 01:41:13.460 --> 01:41:15.680 we're not rock and roll. 1552 01:41:15.850 --> 01:41:19.990 But I ask you, is having pastries before eight o'clock not rock and roll? 1553 01:41:20.160 --> 01:41:21.900 In what fucking universe? 1554 01:41:30.610 --> 01:41:34.910 Ladies and gentlemen, you may remember a year ago this band was formed-- 1555 01:41:35.900 --> 01:41:38.220 [unintelligible] 1556 01:41:38.400 --> 01:41:41.400 [shouting] 1557 01:41:43.180 --> 01:41:44.710 Fucking pathetic! 1558 01:41:44.880 --> 01:41:47.880 [piano playing, Chris imitating dance beat] 1559 01:41:51.280 --> 01:41:53.720 [singing in falsetto] 1560 01:42:07.120 --> 01:42:09.990 [rapping] 1561 01:42:20.180 --> 01:42:22.220 [imitating beat] 1562 01:42:27.490 --> 01:42:29.600 I'm gonna be sick. 1563 01:42:29.230 --> 01:42:33.230 ["Life Is For Living" playing] 131626

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