[00:01.60]...really means what he's singing [00:09.54]But when you become famous or other [00:12.19]You realize it's nonsense, you know, this isn't, you know [00:15.24]Everyone's just a normal person [00:17.20]Everyone, even the pope, you know [00:19.77]Or he's a great person, but, everyone is essentially made as the same thing [00:27.23]And if you start thinking you're more important or better than someone [00:32.34]Then you just become an idiot, I think [00:34.93]And I have days when I act like an idiot when nobody likes me [00:38.31]So, I start to get feet on the ground [00:42.91]On the first he stands out, cause he's got such a wide range [00:45.84]Like a range you can hit the very high nose and the low nose [00:49.39]It was all these contemporary singer alongs [00:51.80]Like Damon Albarn from Blur, and Liam Gallagher from Oasis [00:56.47]They're very monotone and haven't got that range [00:58.64]Whereas he will use his voice as musical instrument [01:02.99]They don't really add anything extra to the music [01:05.24]I think Chris Martin's voice is very integral to their sounds [01:11.98]It's umm, he's got a great range as well [01:15.97]So it can express so many different parts of what he's tryin' to portray [01:25.76]I just went on a trip to Haiti [01:28.39]Which is why where they have teach us and trade (?) [01:30.65]And, I don't know but, when you scold child and you didn't joke [01:37.83]And if you read about all the terrible things in the world [01:40.78]The deforestation, the chemical plants, and you know, oil drills everywhere [01:49.08]You don't really think about it [01:50.42]And then when you go somewhere where it's been completely destroyed by industry [01:54.85]And corruption [02:02.66]Coldplay's music itself is very good [02:04.95]But Chris Martin's voice, you know, [02:06.75]Really stands up against the masses. It's really... [02:10.99]And with the lyrics, like compounded with the lyrics [02:14.72]It just becomes so full, you know [02:19.40]Such a... really makes people feel what he's saying [02:24.42]The eldest child of an accountant, and a teacher [02:26.90]Chris forms his first band at elementary school before going to Sherborne private school [02:32.50]Here he met his future manager, Phil Harvey, at the age of 14 [02:36.80]Together, they shared a passion for music and the love of the band U2 [02:42.20]At Sherborne, Chris's interest in music grew [02:45.94]He was in a couple of school band [02:47.81]Identity crisis, a sort of teen patshot boys (?) [02:51.48]And Rock & Honkeys, which covered standards like sitting on the dock of the bay and mustang selling [02:57.36]He also developed the love of playing the piano [03:00.37]But like every keyboard player [03:02.38]He desperately wanted to be the front man