9 August 2008: Maishima, Osaka, Japan

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Summer Sonic 2008, Osaka
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Summer Sonic 2008, Osaka

Contents

Setlist

  1. Life In Technicolor
  2. Violet Hill
  3. Politik
  4. In My Place
  5. Viva La Vida
  6. 42
  7. Fix You
  8. Chinese Sleep Chant
  9. God Put A Smile Upon Your Face
  10. Speed of Sound
  11. Only One of the World's Flowers (SMAP Cover)
  12. Yellow
  13. Lost!
  14. The Scientist (Side Stage - Acoustic)
  15. Death Will Never Conquer (Side Stage - Acoustic - Will)
  16. Talk (Remix Video Interlude)
    Encore
  17. Clocks (with Alicia Keyes)
  18. Lovers In Japan
  19. Death And All His Friends
  20. The Escapist

Photos

Photos from this show can be found at Coldplaying.com in the Gallery thread for Osaka. http://www.coldplaying.com/forum/gallery/showgallery.php/cat/1518


Fan Reviews

All fan reviews have been submitted to us by the members of Coldplaying.com[1], unless stated otherwise.



Media Reviews

SUMMER SONIC: Coldplay's Only Festival Date in 2008 - The Definitive Report

Well, had you asked me what I thought of them a month or two ago, just before Coldplay released 'Livin La Vida Loca' (or whatever it was called), I would have told you quite firmly, 'Interesting to read about because Chris Martin seems constantly on the edge of a nervous breakdown, but too fucking boring to ever actually put on the record.'

Then they released their fourth, Brian Eno produced album. The big cheesy choruses were replaced by evokative ambiances and daring, meandering new approaches to making music (relative to their old stuff, at least). Suddnely, they relased something as musically interesting as their press presence had always suggested they could be.

And so it was with new-found confidence in their avante-garde leanings that the band headlined Summer Sonic in a way that no other band could pull off...

continued...

The show climaxed with the band being joined onstage by Alicia Keyes, who played piano on ‘Clocks’. She didn't have a microphone so just waved a lot, looking a bit lost and awe-struck. It was still very good, mind you. He introduced her on stage as ‘the most beautiful woman in the world… except for my wife.’ I'm guessing he caught a glimpse of Gwenyth stood looking disapprovingly in the wings so added that final compensatory clause as an afterthought so as to avoid martial bickering all the way home.

Against a backdrop depicting the French Romantic painting by Eugène Delacroix, ‘Liberty Leading The People’, used as the bands album artwork for ‘Viva La Vida’, they performed in costumes aping the style of French Revolutionaries, just like they've been doing on the rest of the tour - giving them a way more interesting visual edge than back in the days when they used to dress like geography teachers.

Perhaps trying to compensate for Coldplay's last festival headline slot at Fuji Rock a few years back, where Chris Martin walked out on stage and shouted 'SAYONARA!' (Japanese for 'Goodbye') after one song, the curly haired choir-boy spent a remarkable amount of the performance communicating in admirable, if often confused, Japanese. Not that anyone minded. Even if his grammar was up shit creek, all was forgiven when he broke into a section of a song by Japanese pop-juggernauts SMAP. The response was frenetic.

Early on in the set, during ‘Politik’, Martin changed the lyrics of the song to sing, ‘Sixty thousands Japanese people watching us / Let Alicia Keyes always play with us’, giving a hint of the special performance that was still to come. He also seemed to spend a lot of the performance running off the stage and through the crowd.

Elsewhere the band performed all the songs you'd expect to hear, reflecting all stages of their career. For 'The Scientist’, all four members of the band ran into a specially constructed podium in the middle of the crowd, performing a stripped-down acoustic version of the song, followed by a harmonica enfused 'DWNC'. I got a video of that, but I can't really post it here, sorry, but if you're wiley you might find it elsewhere on the web (ssshhh!).

They even gave Tokyo a reson to dance, playing a thumping remix of talk, and a spruced-up, Wah-wah enhanced version of 'God Put A Smile Upon Your Face' that sounded like the Doctor Who theme tune.

Then, after they finished, there was a massive firework display.

http://www.nme.com/blog/index.php?bl...&c=1&tb=1&pb=1


Videos









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