Coldplay and N.E.R.D. CD Reviews

Courtesy of Capitol Records
Both Coldplay and N.E.R.D. have something to prove on their new albums, and neither disappoint. Kidzworld has the reviews.
Coldplay :: Viva La Vida
Since they released
Parachutes in 2000, Coldplay have been the posterboys for melodic and sometime melodramatic
pop-rock. With
Viva La Vida, or Death and All His Friends, Coldplay tries to
experiment and push the envelope as they strive to become a
legendary rock band in the pattern of U2. For a lot of bands this would be very difficult, but Coldplay succeeds on this album. Songs like
Violet Hill and Viva La Vida have perfect melodies and just enough power to rock out a
concert hall, and other tracks like
Lost! and Yes, add a healthy dose of experimentational,
symphonic sound to become something we haven’t quite heard before. Basically, Coldplay
floats just far enough away from Chris Martin’s standard
piano ballad equations, and
shake things up without moving things out of place.

Courtesy of Interscope
Fun Facts
The album title, Viva La Vida, takes its name from a painting by 20th century Mexican artist Frida Kahlo.
The album sold 125,000 copies in its first day in the UK.
Parts of the album were recorded in churches and other historical locations in South America and Spain while the band toured.
The album is only 47 minutes long because Coldplay wanted the listener to be able to enjoy the entire album at once, like while driving to or from work.
Hot Tracks
Violet Hill,
Lost!, Viva La Vida.
Rating: 



N.E.R.D :: Seeing Sounds
As the
Neptunes, Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo create
sick beats for stars like Madonna and
Justin Timberlake, so when they team up with Shae Haley to mix a healthy dose of rock and
hip hop as N.E.R.D., you’re guaranteed to get something you haven’t heard before. In the past, N.E.R.D. has dropped huge
club rocking singles like Rockstar and She Wants to Move, and
Everbody Nose and
Spaz follow their classic chanting chorus plus
hyper mish-mash of
electro-rock beats. N.E.R.D. is sometimes
silly, funky, soulful, and
hardcore, and always some combination of sound that is guaranteed to
invade the airwaves.
Fun Facts
N.E.R.D. stands for No-one Ever Really Dies.
The album’s second single, Spaz, was featured in a commercial for the Microsoft Zune.
From April to June 2008, N.E.R.D. toured with Kanye West’s Glow in the Dark Tour.
The album title was inspired by synethesia, a neurological phenomenon that combines two different senses.
Hot Tracks
Everybody Nose, Spaz, Yeah You.
Rating:


Related Stories:
Alanis Morissette and Kerli CD Review
Mariah Carey and Hilary McRae CD Review
Leona Lewis and Melanie C CD Review
More Great Music
Read more: Music Source