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AOBASHI HOUR 20250621 24:00- #AOBASHI
Tommy february6 - Lonely in Gorgeous (instrumental)
GLX-E feat. 厎čă˘ăŤ - ăăăăBEAT
Valdok - The Power Of The Tao (Homma Honganji Remix)
Mark Broom, Gene Richards Jr - Ride This D (Mark Broom Remix)
Cobblestone Jazz - Generations (Edit)
Axwell - Feel The Vibe (Original Mix)
Fragma - Toca Me (Inpetto 2008 Mix)
Oldplay, (Frank, Vintage Culture - Oldplay -Remix- LOST (Frank Ocean & Vintage Culture)
talk & select : hide shino
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BEE
I remember when I was first stung by a bee I was 5 years oldPlaying under a tree Looking at the flowers Wanting one to pick me I saw the prettiest flower Agreeing with the beePlucked it up And out of anger It stung me MAP
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Jonny in Coldplay's 2003 Tour Diary Documentary âĄ
#jonny buckland#coldplay#2003 Coldplay#AROBTTH era#coldplay documentary#oldplay#young coldplay#Only Jonny can make smoking look good
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time is so short & im sure
there must be something more
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Old photos of Coldplay
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omg
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is it too bad that i really liked these âremixedâ songs on keyboard?
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In the driveway, he asked a favour. He wanted to modify a few of the things he said. "Please don't have me say anything unpleasant about Coldplay and Radiohead," he said. "There's no point to it, it just looks silly and mean. They're perfectly good bands, they're just not to my taste." You called them Oldplay and Radiodead. "I know. But I say a lot of things I don't mean."
- Morrissey, Word â June 2003
#morrissey#PLEASE he's such a sweetheart underneath it all#in this house we do like radiohead though#but i luv silly and mean moz
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Coldplay for NME: âThis is our period of having no fearâ

Inspired by space, hard rock and, erm, emojis, Chris and co.âs ninth album âMusic Of The Spheresâ is the sound of a band fearlessly entering a whole new orbit.
You can be Chris Martin, the lead singer of Coldplay, the 21st centuryâs biggest band, and still be keen to learn a thing or two. You can walk into any stadium or arena on this planet, light the place up with multi-coloured wristbands while thrilling hundreds of thousands of people, and still think youâve not quite nailed the move as a frontman. That, it seems, is about to change.
âIâve always wanted to do a move called the âTill Hammerâ, he tells NME, referring to Rammsteinâs frontman Till Lindermannâs trademark trick, usually reserved for their punishing performance of âDu Hastâ. âItâs where you go like thisâŚâ he says, leaping up from the bench weâre sat on in a central London park into a surf stance, slightly side-on; his feet rock back and forth, the head starts swinging and the hammer â a clenched fist â comes down against his right thigh in time to an imaginary guitar riff. Consider this âMartinâs Malletâ.

Weâre discussing âPeople Of The Prideâ, one of the highlights of Coldplayâs ninth album âMusic Of The Spheresâ, out today (October 15). The song opens with a bone-crunching guitar riff â the band collectively cite Muse, Depeche Mode and Rammstein as inspirations â as it segues between serene, spacey chords and plenty of opportunities to let the hammer drop. âThatâs our Rammstein cover that isnât actually a cover,â Martin laughs.
For years, that song had been their Moby Dick. The opening verse, which references a man âwho swears heâs Godâ and âwalks around like he owns the fucking lotâ, was written in the âViva La Vidaâ-era back in 2008, and until now only existed as a brooding piano-led demo. They struggled for years to nail it, but they were inspired last year to finish the song and speak of the people âsewing up of rags into revolution flagsâ who want âto be free to fall in love with who we wantâ.
âA lot of it came from the Black Lives Matter and Gay Pride marches where people using their voice to say âthis situation is ridiculousâ, so I think itâs our âThis situation is ridiculousâ song,â Martin says. âWeâre quite polite about it, though, as opposed to saying, âYou fucking arseholes!â But this is about human politics. This is the politics that believes that everyone on the planet has a right to be themselves. And I think whether youâre an old soft-rock superstar, or a young whippersnapper, youâre allowed to believe that.â
A few days later, we see the move in action at Coldplayâs intimate show at Londonâs Shepherdâs Bush Empire as blows rain down during the songâs monstrous opening. Itâs typical of the experience of listening to their buoyant record âMusic Of The Spheresâ, where playful pop magic meets earnest human politics; after two decades together, few bands, if any, are able to combine the two and do it with such ease and joy.
âThis album is our period of having no rules or fear about what people think or say about us,â Martin says. âWeâve already had all the good and bad reviews in the world and if we worry about the response, it makes you a little more cautious. Thereâs a part of you that has to accept that weâre an older band, we were never the new âcool young thingâ⌠but in a strange way itâs quite liberating. Thereâs no pressure on us, we just get to do what we love.â
Martinâs response to those questioning the use of emojis for song titles (three of the tracks are âđŞâ, ââ¨â and ââ¤ď¸â) is fitting for this era: âWell, why not? Thatâs our whole attitude to everything.â
We last found the band at a delightfully experimental juncture. 2019âs âEveryday Lifeâ served as a subtle riposte â though the band donât seem to give a shit â to those who miss âOldplayâ and the turn-of-the-century indie-rock they brought to âParachutesâ (2000) and âA Rush Of Blood Of The Headâ (2002). Instead, there were sprawling compositions and collaborations with Femi and Made Kuti (son and grandson of Afrobeats pioneer, Fela) and Palestinian oud group, Le Trio Joubran. The NME review proclaimed it proof that âColdplay are more adventurous than theyâre often given credit forâ, and described its stunning performance at the Citadel in Amman, Jordan as an âaudacious undertakingâ.The project was bolstered by the pattern theyâve slipped into: for every day-glo pop bonanza record, thereâs been a mellower response album. Following their sparkling fifth album âMylo Xylotoâ (2011), came the gloomy âGhost Storiesâ (2014); after âA Head Full of Dreamsâ (2016), they burrowed down for âEveryday Lifeâ. Guitarist Jonny Buckland explains: âKnowing that the big one is coming allows us to go a lot smaller and to not worry about that; we can be much more insular about what music we make sense.â
This album â the big one â is one they had an inkling would be next for years; in fact, as bassist Guy Berryman mentions on Zoom the day prior, the band often have a title and concept in mind before the music arrives. âItâs just a device to provide a framework into which we can work thematically,â he says. âThe name âMusic Of The Spheresâ has been something weâve been talking about for many years now.â
So, for the uninitiated, what is âMusic Of The Spheresâ, then?
âItâs a set of songs located in a distant galaxy⌠that we made up,â Martin says, with a glint in his eye, clearly aware at how daft the whole thing can be if you take it too seriously. âItâs where we can be totally free from any pressure of what weâve done before and how we should sound. That freedom of location allows us to speak about what it means to be human. It seems a bit sci-fi and everything, but really itâs a bunch of love songs. Itâs not even really set in space. It could all be set in Margate too; it just depends what the music videos and artworks look like â we could have dancing fish and chips salesmen insteadâŚâ
Itâs typical of the high-concept, sweeping visions that Martin and the rest of the band are prone to: âMylo Xylotoâ, after all, was a rock opera in which an âOrwellianâ dictatorship waged a war on sound and colour. But once youâve conquered planet Earth the way Coldplay have â including four Glastonbury Festival headline sets and bagged eight consecutive UK Number One albums â then dreaming big, or at least appearing to do so, is par for the course.
And âMusic Of The Spheresâ provides a palette for some moments of sheer brilliance; thereâs the tubthumping âPeople Of The Prideâ, â80s excess on charming âHumankindâ and the albumâs sublime, 10-minute closer âColoraturaâ, their biggest musical flex in years. Contributions come from pop heavyweight Selena Gomez (âLet Somebody Goâ), as well as US R&B duo We Are King and Jacob Collier (âHuman Heartâ), alongside scene-setting instrumentals and interludes.
The recordâs clear vision, the band say, was realised by producer Max Martin (whoâs worked with The Weeknd and Taylor Swift), who Berryman describes âas such a brilliant captain. I think we knew itâd always be this bigger sound, but when Max agreed to work with us, it was like, âLetâs really go for it; letâs have no limitationsâ.â
This openness led the band to work with pop titans, BTS, who appear on the collaborative single âMy Universeâ, where Martin and the group trade lines and flit between Korean and English for the bandâs most charming â and likely soon-to-be â biggest collaboration yet.
âTheyâve got such amazing energy,â Berryman says. âWe hung out with them recently in New York, and even though thereâs a bit of a language barrier, it didnât feel awkward or uncomfortable at all. When a situation like that arises, the easiest thing can be to say ânoâ to a collaboration like that because theyâre different, or theyâre from a different genre or a different country. Thereâs so many historical situations where that collaboration wouldnât have happened.
Drummer Will Champion agrees: âThis notion that change is a bad thing is crazy â we want to grow and embrace music and culture from all over the world. Thatâs the spirit of this album, trying to get rid of all those barriers we put up between us and other people.â
Connectivity is the prevailing theme of this album, both emotionally, physically and spiritually. Itâs most evident on âHigher Powerâ, where Martin is âdown on my kneesâ, reaching out and upwards on a âheavenly phoneâ. He recently described himself as having a âreally hard timeâ, and is considering the role his evangelical childhood had on him. Have things improved?
âThat was just a questioning time of life that Iâm in, but yeah â itâs OK,â he says today. âIt turns out Iâm a completely normal human being with some stuff to sort out. There are things that when I get older that I canât keep thinking that anymore or doing that anymore. Itâs just about growing up. And lots of people in our job have been able to grow up and ignore dealing with certain stuff because youâre doing OK or youâre famous, and then you get to a certain point and you realise thatâs not the answer to every question. Iâm just trying to improve my life and where I can improve.â
And was that lockdown-inspired? Martin had previously said that his ego had taken a big check as a result of his being still for once.
âThe adrenaline of touring or being all this everyday can be amazing,â Martin says, âbut it can sometimes be a distraction; if this was all taken away, who are you? How are you being useful? Itâs OK, I think thatâs why weâre here on earth to figure out what we need to figure out.â
Next year, the band head out on their first full run of shows in over five years, with three dates slated for Londonâs Wembley Stadium in August. A return to Glastonbury Festival isnât a part of it (says Martin: âGlastonbury is our spiritual home, but even your parents say you need to leave home sometimesâ) but itâs a seismic event for different reasons. Back in 2019, they said that they wouldnât be touring âEveryday Lifeâ due to the impact on the environment of large-scale tours like their own. Theyâve spent the period taking influence from artists like Massive Attack and Billie Eilish, whoâve been leading the way in making live music safer for the environment.âI think weâve made a great start at the moment,â explains Berryman. âWhatever we end up doing, will be a Phase One, but there always has to be an improvement and a continual cycle. If you want to pick holes, and Iâm sure someone can and will, I think thatâs fine: what you have to do is embrace the idea of continued progress. It has to be an ever-evolving situation.â
Martin adds: âThe reason that we did the BMW commercial [the car manufacturer recently used âHigher Powerâ for their range of electric vehicles] was because they are giving us these batteries for the show that we can power with left-over restaurant oil and solar power. We also have this kinetic flooring in the front section of the audience, so when they move up and down the audience will create power. Itâs a long way to go, but we want to get on with what we can do.â
The band are already considering their next challenge. Champion says that theyâll probably celebrate the release of âMusic Of The Spheresâ by âworking on the new musicâ; Martin is similarly coy about what Vol.2 in the âMusic Of The Spheresâ series sounds like, but heâs sure of one thing: âWeâre going to make 12 albums. Because itâs a lot to pour everything into making them. I love it and itâs amazing, but itâs very intense too. I feel like because I know that challenge is finite, making this music doesnât feel difficult, it feels like, âThis is what weâre supposed to be doingâ.â
Wait, what? You think itâs three more Coldplay albums and then out?
âI donât think thatâs what weâll do,â he replies. âI know thatâs what weâll do in terms of studio albums.â
Crikey. Well, whatâs left to achieve between now and the end, then? Going to try and squeeze in a Bond theme, perhaps?
âWe kept trying to write one for 20 years, but never submitted them,â Martin laughs. âWe have Bond themes for about five movies, but theyâre not very good, to be honest. Also I donât know if weâre spiritually on the same trip as James. As much as I like the films, I donât know if us singing would do it for him. Heâd be like, âThatâs not what Iâm into at all, fellas. I like guns and shit. All this hippie stuff just isnât going to workâ.â
They instead love what Billie and her brother, Finneas, did with âNo Time To Dieâ, their eponymous theme for the recent 25th Bond movie, and enjoyed a recent collaboration at the Global Citizen concert in New York last month, where the sibling duo nailed âFix Youââs second verse. Finneas enthusiastically told NME that the experience was âsurrealâ.
âIt was equally wonderful singing with them,â says Chris. âI mean, [Finneas and Billie] wrote âOcean Eyesâ. I know when a song is great when my body goes into absolute furious jealousy for a minute â when I heard that song, I was like, âYou fucking bastardsâ. But then I have to go âthis is really inspiringâ and it becomes fandom; I love how much of a bond those two have.â
If we are, indeed, hurtling along the final stretch of Coldplayâs recording career, then âMusic Of The Spheresâ is a fine one to usher it in. Theyâve found an ample middle ground of everything that makes the band tick: stadium anthems, pop megahits and space-rock epics are nestled into deeper experimentation, and even some of your favourite emojis. As Martin shrugs: âWeâve got nothing to lose at this point.â
[link]
#coldplay#chris martin#jon#jonny buckland#guy berryman#will champion#people of the pride#my universe#đŞ#â¨#â¤ď¸#music of the spheres
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A playlist of little known Coldplay songs, mostly early 2000s.
Everyone of us is hurt And everyone of us is scarred Everyone of us is scared Not you
Your eyes closed Your head hurts Your eyes feel so low Everyone of us is scared Everyone of us is hurt Everyone of us has hope For you
#i love the lyrics in these old songs...there's this sense of fear and desperation that they've really lost since then#their recent music has arbitrary imagery like my shoe's untied...the older lyrics are more emotional and universal#coldplay#music#b-sides
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MUSE PLAYLIST .
post  3  -  5  songs  that  remind  you  of  your  muse. rules:     repost,  donât  reblog.
  01 .  I LIVED ; ONE REPUBLIC .    hope when you take the jump, you donât fear the fall  /  hope when the water rises, you build a wall  / hope if everybody runs  /  you choose to stay
  02 .  TO BE HUMAN ; SIA FT. LABRINTH.     just âcause i predicted this /  doesnât make it any easier to live with  / &  whatâs the point of knowinâ it  /  if you canât change it?
  03 .  WALK ME HOME ; P!NK .    thereâs something in the way i wanna cry  /  that makes me think weâll make it out alive  /  so come on and show me how weâre good  /  i think we can do some good, mhm
  04 .  IN MY WORLD [COVER] ; AMALEE.    how did it all end up like this?  /  i see the path iâve long avoided  /  but now that all my hesitationâs gone / fate can screw itself & die
  05 .  SKY FULL OF STARS ; COLDPLAY    'cause youâre a sky /  âcause youâre a sky full of stars  /  iâm gonna give you my heart
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Meet the Designers: Cate McCrea, Set
We are so excited to be producing in a non-theatrical venue for the very first time! Our amazing design team is hard at work planning the transformation of this big white room from a blank gallery space into the (very distinct) worlds of the two plays weâre producing later this month!

Today we wanted to introduce you to our set designer, Cate McCrea. Cate has designed the sets for all of our previous shows...clearly we are huge fans, and for good reason. Hereâs what she has to say about designing the sets for this rep.Â

Does your process change when you set out to design two shows in rep as opposed to a single show? How? Yes and no: really, the process itself doesn't change, but the central concerns and questions employed in designing a set become amplified. In any scenic world-building process, you want to establish a certain vocabulary and set of reference points that add up to transform a room into a theatrical space. When working with pairs of plays in rep, you're building in multiple transformations -- one space is created, and then it becomes another -- Â and two intersecting networks of references. There's a duality or even a two-facedness to the final product, because neither set stands alone; everything is to be taken in the context of the other.Â
Is there something in the relationship between Restaurant in D Major and Lysistrata that has influenced your approach to designing this set of plays? The point of intersection between these two plays, for me, is the venue they'll be performed in: each of them relates to the charismatic gallery space differently, and I think those relationships end up commenting on or even just underlining the play-ness of the plays, the way that each exists as a theatrical enterprise and the quality or texture of space that it carves out of the room. I like to start with the architectural reality (where will we, the audience, be?) and then work from there to find a thematic or visual dialogue between the two pieces (how or in what way will we be there?)
Here are some of Cateâs drawings. Join us in Bushwick from April 29 - May 7 to see her ideas realized!


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Coldplay donât deserve the bad rap
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if u love me, wonât u let me know?
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All the high school piano players in #2003 played this fire đš @coldplay #clocks #arushofbloodtothehead #oldplay #sundayafternoonmusic
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on our way to see chris and the rest of #Coldplay #oldplay #aheadfullofdreamstour #tuesdate with @karenina413
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