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| | X&Y | | | Music Artist : | | Coldplay | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Capitol | | Release Date : | | 2005-06-07 | | Store Price : | | $11.94 | | Artistopia's Price: $10.99 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. Square One 2. What If? 3. White Shadows 4. Fix You 5. Talk 6. X&Y 7. Speed Of Sound 8. A Message 9. Low 10. Hardest Part 11. Swallowed In The Sea 12. Twisted Logic
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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good overall buy Submitted on: 2009-11-17 |
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| The disc came in excellent condition and played well. The only downfall was the broken case, which wasn't a big deal to me. |
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Some excellent songs Submitted on: 2009-11-05 |
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| I recently saw an independent movie called Young At Heart. One of the songs in that movie really touched me, and, of course, it was written by Coldplay. I'm a real fan of this group and have been for quite some time. The album was an older one that I didn't have, but I have enjoyed many of the songs. |
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Bigger? Yes. Bolder? Yes. Better? Hmm... Submitted on: 2009-09-12 |
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'X&Y' is the sound of Coldplay graduating from clubs to stadiums. The songs, arrangements, and production here are all cranked up several notches to create a huge arena-rock sound. It could be seen as a blatant grab for American glory, or is it a middle finger to those critics who claimed they didn't really "rock"? Or maybe it's a bit of both. It's much bigger and bolder than anything Coldplay have done before, but is it better?
Sort of.
The best thing about such a huge sound is that the rock tracks are given a real kick. The fantastic opener 'Square One' and the Radiohead-influenced closer 'Twisted Logic' are the two best songs here, and also the two biggest departures from the typical Coldplay sound. The other rockers; 'Low', the retro 'White Shadows' and the Kraftwerk rewrite 'Talk' also have strong riffs and memorable choruses. Another plus is that the instrumentalists are given greater exposure, and for the first time Coldplay sound like a proper band and not Chris Martin's backup group.
On the negative side, the ballads are now blown up to epic arena-rock proportions. Gone is the simple beauty of 'Sparks' or 'Amsterdam'. Here, everything follows the rock ballad cliche to a fault, starting with a simple piano/guitar passage and building up to the Wall of Sound conclusion. Another minus is Chris Martin's weak lyrics; Coldplay's early songs had plenty of raw emotion to make up for the clumsy lyrics, but here the stadium gloss just makes everything seem banal and cliched. It's ironic that such a self-consciously 'big' album doesn't actually have anything important or interesting to say.
The good mostly outweighs the bad, I suppose, although some fans of Coldplay's early work might find this a bit pompous and overblown. Still, six pretty strong songs (the five rock songs mentioned above, plus 'What If', the best of the ballads) make the album worthwhile. It's just hard not to wish the rest of the album, and the lyrics, reached a similar level. |
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Cold streak Submitted on: 2009-08-26 |
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3 1/2
Frighteningly accessible equal-chromasone-entertainer delivers the goods, if not to the soul-stirring levels of their previously praised release, at a memorable consistency that only suffers a brief flabby section. |
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Loving ever minute of it! Submitted on: 2009-08-09 |
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| Definitely a must buy for anyone interested in Coldplay or a Coldplay fan. It is also very different from their newest album, Viva La Vida, so don't expect the same type of feelings with this album. However, still a great buy! |
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