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Music of the Spheres (subtitled Vol. I From Earth with Love) is the ninth studio album by Coldplay, released on 15 October 2021 by Parlophone in the United Kingdom and Atlantic Records in the United States. The album is the follow-up of their 2019 album Everyday Life and was produced by Max Martin and co-produced by Oscar Holter and Bill Rahko. It features guest appearances from Selena Gomez, We Are King, Jacob Collier, and BTS. It also features returning contributions from English electronic producer Jon Hopkins, who is a long-time contributor of the band and had previously worked on their fourth studio album, Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends.

Music of the Spheres — Coldplay's second space-themed concept album after X&Y (2005) — is set in a fictional solar system called The Spheres, which contains nine planets, three natural satellites, a star and a nebula, with each of them corresponding to a certain track on the record. According to Chris Martin, its concept and themes were inspired by the Star Wars film franchise, which made him wonder what other artists and music could be like across the universe. Musically, the album explores genres such as synth-pop, pop rock, space rock, space music, as well as ambient sensibilities.

Music of the Spheres received mixed reviews from critics, many of whom criticised the album's overtly pop-oriented sensibilities and style. However, the closing track "Coloratura" received widespread critical acclaim, largely for its lengthy, unconventional structure and production. Three singles supported the album: "Higher Power", "My Universe", and "Let Somebody Go", whilst "Coloratura", "People of the Pride", "Biutyful", and "Humankind" were released as promotional singles. "Higher Power" was nominated for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance at the 64th Annual Grammy Awards, and "My Universe" topped at United States' Billboard Hot 100. The album earned nods for Album of the Year and Best Pop Vocal Album at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards, marking the band's third nomination in both categories. It debuted atop the UK Albums Chart as the first project since Ed Sheeran's No.6 Collaborations Project (2019) to sell over 100,000 units during its first week. To support the album, Coldplay embarked on the Music of the Spheres World Tour in March 2022.

Background and inspiration[]

The idea for a second space-themed record had been envisioned by the band for over a decade. The first mention of such theme was in a Roadie #42's blog post published on the band's website in 2010, which reports Chris Martin proposing a project in the studio of building “a solar system”.[1] However, Phil Harvey stated in November 2021 that such project was actually more directly linked to the band's fifth studio album, Mylo Xyloto (2011), and its era than the current work, although acknowledging Music of the Spheres as “a sort of extension” from the Mylo Xyloto universe.[2] The title Music of the Spheres surged around 2016 after the release of their seventh studio album, A Head Full of Dreams, while its initial development might started during the end of the A Head Full of Dreams Tour in late 2017.[3][4]

Music of the Spheres + FFTF2024 (Everyday Life)

Music of the Spheres is teased in the physical booklets of Everyday Life.

At the time their eighth studio album Everyday Life was released in November 2019, the booklets for the record's physical pressings featured two additional pages, with a 1930s black-and-white photo of a billboard in a field advertising the words “Music of the Spheres”, as well as displaying in smaller writing “Coldplay coming soon” in the bottom left corner, alongside an early graphic of this album's artwork. The picture also featured a car parked near the advertising board, with its number plate reading “FFTF2024”.[5][6] Other hints to future material were purportedly hidden within the official music video for "Champion of the World", as well as in a few interviews during the promotion of Everyday Life.[7]

Chris had stated that the theme for the album's music was inspired by “wonder[ing] what musicians are like across the universe” after watching the fictional Mos Eisley cantina band Figrin D'an and the Modal Nodes perform in the Star Wars film franchise.[8] In another statement, he said that the band “have been imagining for the last couple of years what bands and artists might sound like in another galaxy”.[9]

Production and recording[]

Music of the Spheres was mainly produced by Swedish record producer Max Martin. He has written or co-written 25 Billboard Hot 100 number-one songs, most of which he has also produced or co-produced, including Katy Perry's "I Kissed a Girl" (2008), Maroon 5's "One More Night" (2012), Taylor Swift's "Shake It Off" and "Blank Space" (2014), and The Weeknd's "Blinding Lights" and "Save Your Tears" (2019-2021). For the band, he had previously co-produced two tracks from their 2019 eighth studio album, Everyday Life: "Orphans" and "Champion of the World", also being featured as an additional keyboardist on the former. He achieved his 25th Billboard Hot 100 number-one song with "My Universe", the second single from this album.

Chris and Max first met in Sweden at a Rihanna concert in 2016, and they started sharing mutuous feeling of wanting to work together someday, with the rest of the band also sharing the same feeling later on. He is considered by them as “a new band member”, as they acknowledged their intentions to keep working with him as their current producer in future projects, starting with Music of the Spheres.[10]

MOTS recording session

Chris in studio with Bill Rahko, Oscar Holter and Max Martin (L-R)

In an interview, Chris stated that Max was deeply involved on the songwriting process, helping to decide which songs would be included for the record as well. He explained: “By the time we came to Max, I think we wanted to get there at the point where we're like, 'You do your thing and we'll do our thing. And if it works, amazing. And if it doesn't, no one loses anything.' Max is our producer right now for anything we do. So just before "Higher Power" arrived, I'd done a whole session with him auditioning songs for [this] album. But "Higher Power" didn't exist then. So we'd been through this whole process of him saying, 'Yes, no, maybe, change this.' Real Mr. Miyagi stuff. I think that for whatever reason where he is in his life and where we are in ours, it felt really fresh for both parties. And I think he didn't know if I was going to let him that deeply in, if you see what I mean. You'd have to ask him, but I think it's been more enjoyable for him than us just saying, 'Here's the song, don't touch it but add some sparkly stuff.' It hasn't been like that at all. It's been very much like, 'Okay, here's the very basics. What do you think?'”[11]

Will Champion said that one of the reasons of feeling certain relief while working with Max “is that he is very conscious of not filling too many gaps”, with Guy Berryman complementing that a sound will not be impressive by just “adding another layer of sound and another layer of sound”, comparing it to a mix of “too many colours together, [but] you always end up with brown”. Jonny Buckland cited as example the track "Humankind", which was the hardest song to be recorded in the album, as “[they] couldn't get the feel of it right until the end of the sessions.”[12]

Promotion[]

The promotion for Music of the Spheres started with the creation of website and social media account titled Alien Radio FM. On April 18, 2021, the Twitter account shared its first post, which read, “Transmission incoming. Standby.” On 23 April, the first billboards featuring bright neon purple characters (called Kaotican) started to appear on subways and big cities around the world. Fans quickly deciphered the poster's language, which read: “Coldplay Higher Power May Seven”. Similar posts would follow, which all teased the lead single, "Higher Power".[13]

On 29 April, Coldplay confirmed on their social media accounts that a new single called "Higher Power" would in fact be released on 7 May 2021. Branded as a form of “extraterrestrial transmission”, the band previewed the performance video to French European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet aboard the International Space Station (ISS) prior to its public release.[14][15]

After the end of the promotion cycle of "Higher Power", band's creative director and fifth member Phil Harvey teased a possible announcement on 19 July.[16] During the next day, the album artwork and its track listing were revealed through Alien Radio FM, while the album trailer entitled "Overtura", which features a snippet for each song, was posted on the band's YouTube channel and social media. Coldplay also mentioned in a handwritten note that "Coloratura" would be released as an excerpt from the album on 23 July, while the next official single would follow in September.[17] On 23 September, "My Universe", a collaboration between Coldplay and South Korean K-pop boy band BTS, was released as the second single off the album.

On 7 October 2021, Coldplay announced that an album launch event for Music of the Spheres, entitled "The Atmospheres", would be held in four cities across the world (Berlin, London, New York, and Tokyo) on 15 and 16 October. In each city, there would be a “custom-built installation” that enabled fans to “be transported to The Spheres – the distant solar system that plays host to the band's latest album, where each of the twelve tracks is twinned with a different planet." During the event, fans would have the opportunity to "create their own alien language messages, snap selfies in the augmented reality photobooth, and even help to power the experience through bespoke kinetic walkways.” According to the band, the event was made possible by partnering with Amazon Music.[18]

Ahead of the release of Music of the Spheres, Coldplay, in partnership with Spotify, held digital cryptic billboards which unveiled new songs lyrics from the project. Located on five continents, the first display appeared on October 11, in Westfield Shepherds Bush, London, and featured lyrics to "Biutyful" alongside a Spotify code, which redirected fans to a Music of the Spheres playlist when scanned.[19] Running with the hashtag #SpotTheSpheres, additional billboards were unveiled in the lead-up to the album's release as a set of coordinates delivered via Spotify canvases were daily updated and uncovering more locational details across the world. The billboards featured the lyrics in English, the local language they were displayed, and in the corresponding language to the fictional planet that the song represents.[20][21]

About the partnership with Spotify, Coldplay released a statement saying, "We have the best fans in the world and together with Spotify, we wanted to create a quest atmosphere to reveal the lyrics from our new album. We hope that fans will enjoy looking for new lyrics wherever they are hidden.”[22] Lyrics for "Biutyful" were revealed in London; for "Humankind" in Moscow; for "Let Somebody Go" in Los Angeles; for "Human Heart" in São Paulo; and for "People of the Pride" in Johannesburg.[23]

EPs[]

Three extended plays, exclusive for streaming services only, were released to promote the album: Live from Climate Pledge Arena (Amazon Music), Infinity Station Sessions (Apple Music), and Spotify Singles (Spotify). All three EPs feature at least one track from Music of the Spheres.

Tour[]

On 14 October 2021, a day before the worldwide release of Music of the Spheres, Coldplay officially announced a world tour in 2022 to support the album.[24] The band had not toured for their previous album, Everyday Life, as they had decided to pause touring until they could work out how to ensure that it would be environmentally friendly. This vision will be realized in the Music of the Spheres tour: alongside the announcement of the tour, the band released a detailed plan setting out how they would ensure that the tour would have a minimal impact on the environment and would result in 50% less carbon dioxide generated than during the A Head Full of Dreams Tour. The plan was developed over two years by Coldplay and a number of leading environmental experts, and features a number of innovative sustainability strategies. The band have joined forces with BMW to create the first "mobile, rechargeable show battery" to power each concert on the tour, and have announced that the tour's stage will be built from "a combination of lightweight, low-carbon and re-usable materials (including bamboo and recycled steel) that can be properly reused or recycled at the end of the tour". They have also pledged to plant one tree for every ticket sold for the tour in partnership with One Tree Planted.[25]

Concept and style[]

Music of the Spheres is set in a fictional solar system called The Spheres, which consists of nine planets, three natural satellites, one star, and one nebula. Each track on the album represents a celestial body in The Spheres. Following the album's track listing, they are: Neon Moon I ("Music of the Spheres"), Kaotica ("Higher Power"),Echo ("Humankind"), Kubik ("Alien Choir"), Calypso ("Let Somebody Go"), Supersolis ("Human Heart"), Ultra ("People of the Pride"), Floris ("Biutyful"), Neon Moon II ("Music of the Spheres II"), Epiphane ("My Universe"), Infinity Station ("Infinity Sign"), and Coloratura ("Coloratura"). An unnamed natural satellite orbits Echo, while both Neon Moons orbit Epiphane. A lost planet called Aurora is also part of the solar system, although no track represents it yet. Each celestial body in The Spheres also has its own language: EL 1 for Neon Moon I, Kaotican for Kaotica, Mirror Text for Echo, Qblok for Kubik, Aquamarine for Calypso, Supersolar for Supersolis, Voltik for Ultra, Bloom for Floris, EL 2 for Neon Moon II, Spheric for Epiphane, Infinitum for Infinity Station, Coloraturan for Coloratura, and Aurow1 for Aurora.

Five tracks on the album have their titles stylised as emojis: "Music of the Spheres", "Alien Choir", "Human Heart", "Music of the Spheres II", and "Infinity Sign". Spotify, however, is the only platform that displays them as actual emojis (on mobile), while on Apple Music, Tidal, Deezer, Amazon Music, etc., they are written with Unicode characters instead ("⦵", "*✧", "♡", "❍", and "∞", respectively). Chris revealed in May 2021 that the band was in negotiation with streaming platforms to title the songs using emojis, although the situation was proven "tricky" as some service providers were opposed to the idea at the time.[26] In an interview with iHeartRadio, Chris explained the intent of titling the songs that way. “Emojis are part of the way you write language, and why is that any different to the letter 'B'? [...] So, an emoji is like a word letter, right? It looks cooler to have a heart instead of calling the song "Human Heart". So, we had to ask all the streaming services, like, 'What version of emojis would you let us use, what can you handle?' But really they're all supposed to be just straight up emojis.” He also noted that the songs were meant to be stylised as emojis ever since the beginning of the album development.[27]

Singles[]

  • "Higher Power" was released on 7 May 2021 as the lead single promoting the album. A performance video for the song, labeled as "Extraterrestrial Transmission" and directed by Paul Dugdale, premiered on Coldplay's YouTube channel at 12:01 A.M. BST on the same day. The official music video was later released on 8 June 2021.
  • "My Universe", a collaboration with South Korean K-pop group BTS, was released on 24 September 2021 as the second single promoting the album. The music video was released on 30 September 2021.
  • "Let Somebody Go", a collaboration with American singer Selena Gomez, was released as the third official single on 7 February 2022, with the official music video being released in the same day.
  • "Biutyful", featuring the fictional alien puppet band The Weirdos, was released as the fourth single off the album on 6 July 2022, with the official music video being released in the same day.

Promotional singles[]

  • "Coloratura", the closing track on the record, was released on 23 July 2021 as the first promotional single of the album. It is the longest piece of music ever released by the band, clocking in at over 10 minutes.
  • "People of the Pride" was released to adult album alternative radio in the United States as the record's second promotional single on 7 March 2022, and to modern rock radio on 8 March 2022. A official music video was released on 15 March 2022.

Track listing[]

Standard edition[]

No. Title Writer(s) Producers Length
1. "Music of the Spheres" (stylised as "Ringed-planet") Guy BerrymanJonny BucklandWill ChampionChris Martin • Max Martin • Bill Rahko • Daniel Green • Rik Simpson • Federico Vindver M. Martin • Rahko • Green • Simpson • Vindver 0:53
2. "Higher Power" Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Vindver • Denise Carite M. Martin • Oscar Holter • Rahko • Green • Simpson 3:26
3. "Humankind" Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Green • Vindver • Jon Hopkins • Stephen Fry M. Martin • Oscar Holter • Rahko 4:26
4. "Alien Choir" (stylised as "Sparkles") Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Hopkins M. Martin • Rahko • Hopkins 0:53
5. "Let Somebody Go" (with Selena Gomez) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Apple Martin • Leland Wayne • Olivia Waithe M. Martin • Holter • Rahko 4:01
6. "Human Heart" (stylised as "Red-heart") (with We Are King and Jacob Collier) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Amber Strother • Paris Strother • Jacob Collier M. Martin • Holter • Rahko 3:08
7. "People of the Pride" Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Rahko • Derek Dixie • Samuel Falson • Jesse Rogg M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Green • Simpson 3:37
8. "Biutyful" (with The Weirdos) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Davide Rossi M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Green • Simpson • Vidver • Angel Lopez 3:12
9. "Music of the Spheres II" (stylised as "Globe-showing-americas") Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin M. Martin • Rahko 0:21
10. "My Universe" (with BTS) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • RM • Suga • J-Hope M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Simpson • Green 3:46
11. "Infinity Sign" (stylised as "♾") Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Hopkins M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Simpson • Green • Hopkins 3:46
12. "Coloratura" Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • John Metcalfe • P. Strother • Rossi M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Green • Simpson 10:17
Total length: 41:50

Japanese edition (bonus track)[]

No. Title Writer(s) Producers Length
13. "Higher Power" (Acoustic Version) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Vindver • Carite M. Martin • Holter • Rahko 3:34
14. "Higher Power" (Tiësto Remix) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Vindver • Carite M. Martin • Holter • Rahko 3:49
Total length: 49:13

Digital Deluxe Edition[]

No. Title Writer(s) Producers Length
13. "Higher Power" (Acoustic Version) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Vindver • Carite M. Martin • Holter • Rahko 3:34
14. "My Universe" (Acoustic Version) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • RM • Suga • J-Hope M. Martin • Holter • Rahko 3:43
15. "My Universe" (Supernova 7 Mix) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • RM • Suga • J-Hope M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • Green • Berryman 4:39
16. "My Universe" (Suga's Remix) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • RM • Suga • J-Hope M. Martin • Holter • Rahko 3:08
17. "My Universe" (Orchestral Mix) Berryman • Buckland • Champion • C. Martin • M. Martin • Holter • Rahko • RM • Suga • J-Hope • Rossi • Matt Hales Rossi • Hales 4:19
Total length: 61:13

Critical reception[]

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
AnyDecentMusic? 5.0/10
Metacritic 55/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/Template:PluralStar fullStar fullStar fullStar empty
Clash 5/10
The Daily Telegraph 3/Template:PluralStar fullStar fullStar emptyStar empty
Financial Times 2/Template:PluralStar fullStar emptyStar emptyStar empty
The Guardian 2/Template:PluralStar fullStar emptyStar emptyStar empty
The Independent 3/Template:PluralStar fullStar fullStar emptyStar empty
Pitchfork 5.1/10
NME 4/Template:PluralStar fullStar fullStar fullStar empty
Rolling Stone 3/Template:PluralStar fullStar fullStar emptyStar empty
The Times 2/Template:PluralStar fullStar emptyStar emptyStar empty

Music of the Spheres received generally mixed reviews from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has an average score of 55 out of 100 based on 18 reviews, which indicates "mixed or average reviews". This makes it the band's lowest-scoring album to date on the website.[28] Ludovic Hunter-Tilney of the Financial Times gave the album two stars out of five, praising its cheerful lyrics but criticising its superficial feeling.[29] This sentiment was echoed by Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph, which called the album a "giddy sugar rush" and gave it three stars out of five.[30] Alexis Petridis of The Guardian also gave the album two stars out of five, calling its pop tones a "desperate" attempt by the band to stay on top of the record charts.[31] Rhian Daly of NME gave the album four stars out of five, and said that "While Music of the Spheres feels like quintessential Coldplay, there are some more surprising moments buried in its tracklist".[32] Neil Z. Yeung of AllMusic also gave the album four stars out of five, calling it "[the band's] most unabashedly pop-centric and optimistic album to date". He elaborated thus: "This sci-fi concept piece is the spiritual successor to technicolor predecessors Mylo Xyloto and A Head Full of Dreams – outpacing both with its sharp focus and lean runtime – while maintaining the boundary-pushing energy heard on the Kaleidoscope EP and Everyday Life."[33]

Many of the critics, however, praised the closing track, "Coloratura". AllMusic's Neil Z. Yeung commented that "while they typically end their albums on a grand, uplifting note, ["Coloratura"] takes the prize for ambition and sheer beauty."[34] Ella Kemp, writing for Rolling Stone UK, said that the song "might be the most dazzling thing Coldplay have ever done, a sprawling Pink Floyd-esque experiment which pays off infinitely".[35] Will Hodgkinson of The Times described it as a "forward-thinking vision of a melodic utopia with shades of Pink Floyd at their most hopeful". Jeremy Levine of PopMatters praised the track for taking "plenty of structural risks that allow it to achieve a surprising level of intimacy. It's still a little lyrically over-the-top, but the variations in tone, as well as the climactic use of the band's retro instrumentation, leave us with at least one flicker of Coldplay's brilliance".[36] Ludovic Hunter-Tilney of the Financial Times felt the album's concept "only really registers" on "Coloratura", praising the elaborate orchestrations and "more sophisticated lyrics than the gaucheries of the previous songs." Tilney concluded that it "exposes the rest of the album's superficiality."[37] Paolo Ragusa of Consequence agreed, saying that the song "really flesh out what this record is supposed to sound like: sprawling, odd, and unique."[38] Bobby Olivier of Spin, on the other hand, wrote that it was "overlong",[39] while David Cobbald of The Line of Best Fit said it "lacks a sense of originality, as all of emotions and lyrics have in way appeared in their music previously."[40]

References[]

  1. http://timeline.coldplay.com/article/roadie-42-blog-118/
  2. https://youtu.be/fEjNrw6C5w8?t=362
  3. https://youtu.be/fEjNrw6C5w8?t=399
  4. https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/magazines/panache/coldplays-music-gets-galactic-band-experiment-with-waves-of-airy-melodies-for-music-of-the-spheres/articleshow/87010573.cms?from=mdr
  5. https://preview.redd.it/ruupolr0yf141.jpg?width=960&crop=smart&auto=webp&s=a0e1e0bb1a35bdc495166a12983292b6035261c6
  6. https://twitter.com/coldplay_center/status/1204478642157490176
  7. https://www.nme.com/news/music/coldplay-reportedly-working-on-new-album-called-music-of-the-spheres-2874180
  8. https://retropopmagazine.com/chris-martin-coldplays-star-wars-moon-space/
  9. https://youtu.be/O-pm6IWc1Pk
  10. https://youtu.be/u-fapoeNIv8
  11. https://www.music-news.com/news/UK/140357/Chris-Martin-The-less-you-give-a-f-k-about-what-anyone-thinks-the-more-you-re-completely-free
  12. https://twitter.com/coldplay/status/1450553467462901760
  13. https://www.nme.com/news/music/coldplay-tease-new-project-alien-radio-in-mysterious-social-media-clip-2928760
  14. https://www.vulture.com/2021/05/coldplay-drops-new-single-higher-power-music-video.html
  15. https://pitchfork.com/news/listen-to-coldplays-new-song-higher-power/
  16. https://twitter.com/coldplay/status/1417188567009345542
  17. https://twitter.com/coldplay/status/1417501479263477770
  18. https://www.nme.com/news/music/coldplay-immersive-london-event-the-atmospheres-3064837%3famp
  19. https://www.billboard.com/articles/news/9643466/coldplay-music-of-the-spheres-lyric-billboard
  20. https://www.campaignlive.co.uk/article/spotify-teases-new-coldplay-album-spotthespheres-cryptic-billboard/1729985
  21. https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/coldplay-music-of-spheres-billboards-1240079/
  22. https://twitter.com/coldplayxtra/status/1447509904068075520
  23. https://newsroom.spotify.com/2021-10-14/coldplay-challenges-fans-to-a-global-scavenger-hunt-and-shares-lyrics-from-their-upcoming-album-that-are-out-of-this-universe/
  24. https://www.coldplay.com/music-of-the-spheres-world-tour-announced/
  25. https://sustainability.coldplay.com/
  26. https://youtu.be/BhIkDi-GHxY?t=423
  27. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tENxczVMx54
  28. https://www.metacritic.com/music/music-of-the-spheres/coldplay
  29. https://www.ft.com/content/b38800d1-9a3d-4fac-a0d2-3c4c29d226dc
  30. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/what-to-listen-to/coldplay-music-spheres-review-like-zero-gravity-soft-play-area/
  31. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/oct/14/coldplay-music-of-the-spheres-review-bts-selena-gomez
  32. https://www.nme.com/reviews/album/coldplay-music-of-the-spheres-review-3070711
  33. https://www.allmusic.com/album/music-of-the-spheres-mw0003559619
  34. https://www.allmusic.com/album/music-of-the-spheres-mw0003559619
  35. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FAixEj6XEAUDqW0?format=jpg&name=large
  36. https://www.popmatters.com/coldplay-music-of-spheres-review
  37. https://www.ft.com/content/b38800d1-9a3d-4fac-a0d2-3c4c29d226dc
  38. https://consequence.net/2021/10/music-of-the-spheres-coldplay-album-review/
  39. https://www.spin.com/2021/10/coldplay-music-of-the-spheres-album-review/
  40. https://www.thelineofbestfit.com/reviews/albums/coldplay-music-of-the-spheres-album-review


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