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coldplay went into 'sound' video virtually blind: vmas behind the camera
by james montgomery
08.17.05
it's been said there are only two sure things in life: death and taxes.
well, you can probably add another item to that list: massive first-week
numbers for coldplay albums.
the band's much-anticipated third album, x&y, moved more than 730,000
copies in its first week of release , only further cementing coldplay's
status as one of rock's few sure bets in an era of bling, bentleys and
general un-rockingness. in fact, you could make the argument that they
are such a huge act that they don't even need to make a music video to
sell records. and you'd probably be right.
this only made director mark romanek's job a whole lot more difficult.
tapped to helm the video for "speed of sound", the first single
from x&y, his mission was to make a beautiful, stately, emotional
video for a band that didn't really need a beautiful, stately or emotional
video. or a video at all, for that matter. but romanek's talent lies in
his ability to read between the company lines, somewhere beneath the profit
margins. he knew that while coldplay really didn't need a video, their
fans did.
after all, they'd been waiting for almost three years for the follow-up
to the band's mega-smash a rush of blood to the head, and had stayed loyal
to the band though x&y's initial recording — and subsequent
scrapping. to them, the video for "speed of sound" needed to
be beautiful, stately and emotional, and a whole lot more.
and obviously he succeeded. "speed of sound" is nominated for
four video music awards, including video of the year. but back then, he
had no idea how the whole thing would turn out, which is why, when he's
asked about it even now, romanek can still remember the unique kind of
pressure he was feeling heading into the shoot.
"i guess i did feel a little extra pressure on this one," he
says. "there was a lot of anticipation for this cd, and the band
took a long time recording and mixing it. they also put a lot of trust
in me, so i guess with all these things, the pressure was definitely there.
i do videos pretty rarely these days. i kind of wait for something special
to come along, so i tend to put a lot of pressure on myself anyway. i
do try and make something sincere, interesting and well-crafted each time."
and just how would he choose to address all that pressure? well, for starters,
he eliminated everything flashy and over-the-top. not the band's style,
he says. and then, just for kicks, he decided to eliminate pretty much
everything else. for a guy who's made a career out of taking risks —
from jay-z being gunned down at the end of the "99 problems"
video to placing a fragile johnny cash front-and-center in the powerful
"hurt" clip — this was par for the course.
"i really didn't see a way to convey the subtle theme of the song
with conceptual imagery, so i decided to just let the lyrics speak for
themselves. instead, i tried — using light and color — to
create a visual analog to the band's soaring, ecstatic sound," he
says. "since the entire video was to be comprised of shots of the
band performing, i felt like a little mystery should be created, so that
you don't see everything all at once too early."
and so "speed of sound" opens in the pitch-black, followed by
a single, solitary light framing frontman chris martin as he reaches skyward
— prometheus-like — out of the shadows. as the song begins
to pick up steam, slowly building to its anthemic, ebola-catchy chorus,
viewers begin to notice a few soft twinkles of light framing the silhouetted
bandmembers. once the chorus hits, the lights erupt, swallowing the band
in a very surreal, very expensive, luminous shower courtesy of a two-story-high
led wall.
"this was the first time this many of these particular led fixtures
have ever been assembled anywhere. we had 640 of these meter-long fixtures.
they were imported from hong kong," romanek says. "they're not
rentable, so we had to purchase them all. it took three days to construct
and wire up the wall, and another four days to program the 'show.' we
got an isolated track of chris' vocals so that some of the animations
could be literally triggered by his voice."
if coldplay were a bit unsure of romanek's directorial decisions, they
sure didn't show it. in fact they went with his pitch without even reading
a proper treatment. which is, well, very coldplay of them.
"the band were pretty trusting of me. i told them about it over the
phone, and said there was really no way to describe it. they said, 'sounds
great!'" romanek laughs. "they didn't see anything until they
showed up the day before the shoot for their wardrobe fitting. it's not
that they didn't care. they cared deeply. they just trusted me, which,
as i said above, was a lot of responsibility."
and romanek rewarded their blind faith by producing a video-of-the-year-nominated
clip. though it's little more than the band performing before a massive
wall of light, that doesn't take away from its austere-yet-awesome beauty.
and for romanek, who's gone flashy, high-tech and grimy in the past, making
the clip was an exercise in shimmering restraint. the end result is a
video that he's endlessly proud of.
"the video is really just a document of the band performing the song
with striking state-of-the-art lighting effects. by shooting hand-held,
there were several instances where the band's movements and the camera's
movement created these little elegant surprises," he says. "i
do like the shot of chris spreading his arms out in this ecstatic way
with the lights changing in a rainbow of hues behind him. and the close-up
images of [drummer] will [champion] are quite striking i think. i just
tried to make something that created its 'meaning' using more abstract,
less literal means, which, for me, is how coldplay's songs impact the
listener."
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here to view the article at mtv.com
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