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Coldplay performed the song at the 2009 Grammy Awards. They opened it with a rendition of "Lost?" but Jay-Z joined singer Chris Martin on stage and rapped over the piano solo. This version is also referred to as "Lost+" by the website and was released digitally. "Lost-" is an instrumental track, identical to "Lost!" but without vocals.
Coldplay collaborated with Australian-British singer Kylie Minogue (pictured in 2018) for charity single "Lhuna" in 2008. Coldplay worked with producer Brian Eno (pictured in 2015) for the albums Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends and Mylo Xyloto. "Lost+", a remix of "Lost!" features vocals from rapper Jay-Z (pictured in 2010).
Coldplay: Parachutes: "Life is for Living" begins at 5:39 of the final track "Everything's Not Lost". X&Y: "Til Kingdom Come" at the end of the album; this was hidden, but frequently mentioned in interviews with the band promoting X&Y.
“Moon Music,” Coldplay’s 10th studio effort, marks the band’s highest opening week in the U.S. since 2015’s “A Head Full Of Dreams,” and is their first Billboard 200 No. 1 since 2014 ...
"Miracles (Someone Special)" is a song by British rock band Coldplay and American rapper Big Sean. [2] It was released on 14 July 2017 as part of the Kaleidoscope EP, a companion piece to their seventh studio album, A Head Full of Dreams (2015). [3] It was the first time the band featured a rapper in one of their tracks since Jay-Z's "Lost+". [4]
"Something Just Like This" is a song by American electronic music duo the Chainsmokers and British rock band Coldplay. [2] It was released on February 22, 2017, as the second single from the former's debut album, Memories...Do Not Open, and as the lead single of the latter's thirteenth extended play, Kaleidoscope EP.
"Brothers & Sisters" is a song by British rock band Coldplay. It was released as their debut single by Fierce Panda Records in 26 April 1999, following the extended play Safety (1998). The single peaked at number 92 on the UK Singles Chart and 1,500 copies of its vinyl edition were issued in a special wrap-around picture sleeve.
"Hymn for the Weekend" received generally positive reviews from critics. Jody Rosen of Billboard called it "the album's grooviest". [7] Helen Brown of The Daily Telegraph wrote: "Beyoncé makes more of her appearance on 'Hymn for the Weekend', bringing her chunky harmonies and no-nonsense brass section to a peppy little excursion into indie R&B which opens with a paradisiacal fanfare and finds ...