Coldplay
Everyday Life
Parlophone
AFTER THEIR platinum 2015 pop move, A Head Full of Dreams, and a two-year tour that shifted $523 million in tickets, easy-listening rock champs Coldplay have made an album that aspires to more than stadium-packing. This is positive: When Ed Sheeran becomes your gold standard, it would seem time for a rethink. Evoking an Eighties-inscribed notion of ambition, Everyday Life is a double LP, Coldplay’s rangiest and deepest release by a mile.
Divided into halves titled (wait for it) “Sunrise” and “Sunset,” the band taps into storefront gospel, Nigerian Afrobeat, and Sufi qawwali music. There are choirs, orchestral strings, and interpolations of the Janis Joplin signature “Cry Baby,” and late Scottish indie rocker Scott Hutchison’s “Los Angeles, Be Kind.” Strikingly, the lyrics and sound bites…
