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"Sparks" has been ranked among Coldplay's best works by Billboard, [5] and Consequence. [4] The former also included the song on their "40 Best Deep Cuts of 2000" list, pointing out that it contains "many of the touchstones that would become synonymous with the British rock band in the ensuing decades", from the hopeless romanticism of the lyrics to the use of interjections. [6]
A Wave (Coldplay song) Adventure of a Lifetime; Aeterna (song) Alien Hits / Alien Radio; Aliens (song) All Good Things (Come to an End) All I Can Think About Is You; All My Love (Coldplay song) Amsterdam (Coldplay song) Angelsong; Another's Arms; Arabesque (Coldplay song) The Astronaut (song) Atlas (Coldplay song)
Coldplay at the Barclays Arena in 2017. British rock band Coldplay have written or co-written every song in their discography, with the exception of several covers. They were formed in London by Chris Martin (vocals, piano), Jonny Buckland (lead guitar), Guy Berryman (bass guitar), Will Champion (drums, percussion) and Phil Harvey (management). [1]
The Hardest Part (Coldplay song) A Head Full of Dreams (song) High Speed (Coldplay song) Higher Power (Coldplay song) A Hopeful Transmission; Houston (Coldplay song) Hurts Like Heaven; Hymn for the Weekend; Hypnotised (Coldplay song)
"Beat the Clock" is a 1979 song by the American pop and rock duo Sparks. Produced by famed disco producer Giorgio Moroder, it was released as the fourth single from the band's eighth studio album No. 1 in Heaven. The song peaked at number 10 in August 1979 and spent six weeks in the UK Singles Chart. [1]
"Clocks" is a song by British rock band Coldplay, released on 17 March 2003 via Parlophone Records in the United Kingdom. It was written and composed as a collaboration among all the members of the band for their second album, A Rush of Blood to the Head.
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"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 ...