Coldplay
A Rush of Blood to the Head
[Capitol; 2002]
Rating: 5.1
Though my hopes were briefly raised by a frazzled Christopher Lloyd in 1985, it's painfully obvious now
that time travel doesn't exist as a human technological capability. This being overwhelmingly the case, I
will try my best to transport with words, and paint a picture of another time-- a time ever so slightly
more innocent, when terrorism wasn't being used as an excuse to crush civil liberties and drop bombs on
mustachioed megalomaniacs. So, drag that bottle of Orbitz out of the back of the closet, put X-Files
on the VHS, and journey back with me to the year 2000.
It was a wondrous time-- we were still fascinated by the three zeros that had signified the birth of the
new millennium, and many were relieved to have escaped judgment from an infinite, intangible being. Then,
toward the end of the year, we began to hear rumblings from the many-headed hydra of UK rock journalism
that some amazing new music had come to usher us into the New World. This music was deemed fascinating,
uncompromising and utterly prizeworthy by our English brethren, who spoke in hushed tones of how it was
to be the coming of "the next Radiohead," or perhaps more tellingly, "the next Travis."
This new music was produced by a band of four affable blue-collar lads from Europe's island neighbor who
called themselves Coldplay, and before you knew it, there was no escaping their lead-off single, "Yellow",
as it burned itself into the national consciousness via extensive radio exposure and ABC promotional spots.
I, myself, was never too taken with that single, though I openly admit to enjoying the album it was culled
from, Parachutes. It was innocuous, to be sure, but it was also honestly rendered, and the opening
three songs, effortless and hummable as they were, were hard to deny.
Two years and a veritable avalanche of press later, A Rush of Blood to the Head has Coldplay taking
a second shot at it, and to be perfectly honest, what they throw at the wall doesn't stick quite as well.
I will credit them where it's due: they've admirably eschewed cloning their debut album, a path that would
have been all too easy to take given that record's critical and commercial success. But while the sound of
this album is more expansive, the influences a bit less obvious, and the approach more varied, the guys
forgot to tote along their initial strength: the songs.
Atmospherically, a couple of these tracks are remarkable-- particularly "Daylight", with its swooping guitar
and synth lines. Even its strings, which echo melodies from Suede's last album, lend a sense of drama to a
song that otherwise wouldn't hold much. Midtempo non-rockers "Green Eyes" and "Warning Sign" stretch the
most obvious thread back to Parachutes with their lovelorn lyrics and slightly more developed
melodies. And there are also a couple of "memo to listener: we can rock, too!" moments, specifically "A
Whisper" and the lite-apocalypse of opener "Politik". The latter essentially takes the blueprint of
"Yellow"-- namely, the slamming, repetitive strumming of clean electric guitar-- and builds a more spacious
song from it, one with more rattle and hum, but less melodic substance. Martin's double-tracked vocals
hover curiously low in the mix and the band thrashes earnestly, but all the listener really comes away with
is a nebular dustcloud and the sense that Coldplay want to break out of their box.
Part of the blame for moments like these rests on producer Ken Nelson, who doesn't seem to know what to do
with the band's expanded sound this time out. He alternately dries up the quietest passages and drenches
the louder sections with Martin Hannett-sized reverb tides. It takes a lot of discretion to handle that
sound, and the folly of Nelson and the band (who co-produced) often comes at the expense of the vocals,
which frequently get lost in the haze.
And that's a shame because vocalist Chris Martin has improved since the band's not-so-humble beginnings--
his voice is dramatically fuller than in the past, and he falters less on the higher notes. But, of course,
he's still far from foolproof: at times, his attempts to broaden his palette don't pan out, such as during
the regrettable midsection of "Clocks", where he barely bothers to add a melody to the central lyric "nothing
else compares." To his credit, he does manage a pretty good verse melody here, but then he oddly shies
away from what should be the hook at the end, tentatively trailing off as though he's not sure it's
good enough.
That could very well be the case, too, as it's been widely posited that Coldplay nearly didn't make this
album at all, fearing that they didn't have the depth to provide an adequate follow-up to their debut. I'll
avoid the obvious cheap shot there and instead offer that they indeed still might. Parachutes proved
that Coldplay have at least a nascent songwriting capability, and A Rush of Blood to the Head shows
them testing themselves musically, so it seems logical that if their third album were to combine those
strengths they might finally start to sound like the band the UK press is always going on about.
After over a half-dozen listens, I still haven't taken anything away from A Rush of Blood to the Head
(by contrast, I recognized Parachutes' "Don't Panic" for the relatively tight song it is after hearing
it once), and my girl, who was much more a fan of Parachutes than I was, sums it up as "boring."
She's pretty much got it right. Coldplay may claw their way back from this, but it'll be a pretty steep
climb.
-Joe Tangari, September 9th, 2002