"Viva la Vida" (/ˈvvə lə ˈvdə/ VEE-və lə VEE-də, Spanish: [ˈbiβa la ˈβiða]; Spanish for 'Long Live Life') is a song by British rock band Coldplay. It was written by all members of the band for their fourth album, Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends (2008). The lyrics to the song contain historical and Christian references (King of France Louis XVI, Roman cavalry choirs and the French Revolution), and the track is built around a looping string section in unison with a digitally processed piano, with other layers gradually being added as the song builds.

"Viva la Vida"
Single by Coldplay
from the album Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends
B-side"Death Will Never Conquer"
Released7 May 2008 (2008-05-07) (album version)
25 May 2008 (2008-05-25) (single version)
Recorded2007–2008
Genre
Length
  • 4:01 (album version)
  • 4:04 (single version)
  • 3:45 (radio edit)
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Coldplay singles chronology
"Violet Hill"
(2008)
"Viva la Vida"
(2008)
"Lost!"
(2008)
Music video
"Viva la Vida" on YouTube
"Viva la Vida" (Alternative Version) on YouTube

The track was first made available as part of the album pre-order on 7 May 2008, being released individually on 25 May 2008 as the album's second single. Debuting to critical acclaim and commercial success, "Viva la Vida" reached the top spot of the UK Singles Chart and Billboard Hot 100, becoming the band's first number-one single in both the U.S. and U.K. The song also won the Grammy Award for Song of the Year at the 51st Annual Grammy Awards in 2009.

Background

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The song's Spanish title, "Viva la Vida", is taken from a painting by 20th-century Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. In Spanish, viva translates to "long live",[4] so "Long Live Life" is an accurate translation and the painting reflects the artistic irony of acclaiming life while suffering physically.[5] When asked about the album's title, referring to Frida Kahlo's strength, enduring polio, a broken spine, and a decade of chronic pain, lead singer Chris Martin said: "She went through a lot of pain, of course, and then she started a big painting in her house that said 'Viva la Vida', I just loved the boldness of it."[6]

During the album's production, "Viva la Vida" was one of the songs that had polarised each member's opinion over which version they should choose. In an interview, Martin recalled: "We did quite a few different versions and went round the houses a bit and eventually settled on those treatments for it."[7]

Composition

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"Viva la Vida" soars in with a grandiose instrumental arrangement and sweeping lyrics detailing the pain of being deposed from a lofty position. The big sound of the song constantly verges on becoming overblown, but Coldplay knows how to walk the tightrope perfectly. Bells and chimes and orchestral swells are all there on the chorus, but Chris Martin's voice still pierces through like a clarion call. Lyrically, the pain of the protagonist is clear, but the sweep of words about Jerusalem bells, Roman cavalry, and Saint Peter give "Viva la Vida" an air of intelligence rare in today's most popular pop songs.

Bill Lamb, About.com.[8]

The lyrics to "Viva la Vida" are narrated by a protagonist who says he "used to rule the world". Martin has explained the song lyric "I know Saint Peter won't call my name" in an interview with Q magazine: "It's about ... You're not on the list" to enter the pearly gates.[9] When asked about the song, bass guitarist Guy Berryman said: "It's a story about a king who's lost his kingdom, and all the album's artwork is based on the idea of revolutionaries and guerrillas. There's this slightly anti-authoritarian viewpoint that's crept into some of the lyrics and it's some of the pay-off between being surrounded by governments on one side, but also we're human beings with emotions and we're all going to die and the stupidity of what we have to put up with every day. Hence the album title."[10]

The song is written in the key of A♭ major. Its main chord progression is D♭5/E♭7/A♭/Fm. The time signature is 4
4
and the tempo is 138 beats per minute. Unlike the then-typical arrangement of Coldplay songs, in which either the guitar or piano is the prominent instrument, the track mostly consists of a string section and a digital piano playing the song's upbeat riff, along with a steady bass drum beat, percussion (including a timpano and a church bell), bass guitar, and Martin's vocals; there is limited use of electric guitar. All the strings are arranged and conducted by violinist Davide Rossi, who is one of the main collaborators of the album. Rossi's strings comprise the main driving force throughout the song, with a strong beginning loop that supports Martin's voice, until the choruses where the symphonic power of the orchestra takes its fullest shape. The prominent chords played by the string section throughout the song (and in the chorus of "Rainy Day", another of the band's songs) are very similar to those used by "Viva la Vida" co-producer Brian Eno in his piece "An Ending (Ascent)", meaning they could have been suggested partially for the song by Eno.[11]

Release and promotion

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Will Champion with the timpano and church bell used in the song

"Viva la Vida" was first made available on the iTunes Store on 7 May 2008.[12] The song was part of the pre-order marketing for Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends, which also included the exclusive acoustic versions of "Lost!" and "Lovers in Japan".[13] On 25 May 2008, the band released it for individual purchase globally.[14] However, since the track was already being given away as a free download to those who had pre-ordered the album, it remained ineligible for the UK Singles Chart until the album was released on 12 June 2008.[15] "Viva la Vida" was well-downloaded in the internet, becoming iTunes' best-selling song of 2008.[16]

The song was used as part of Apple Inc.'s iPod + iTunes advertisement campaign.[17][18] Coldplay performed the song live for the first time at the 2008 MTV Movie Awards.[19][20] It has since gone on to make many media appearances, including being featured throughout the episode "A Person of Interest" from the paranormal drama Medium, as a song played on the radio in the episode "We're Not in Kansas Anymore" from the teen drama 90210,[21] used as bumper music on Bill Bennett's "Morning in America" radio talk show, and on the international soundtrack to the Brazilian soap opera A Favorita which helped push "Viva la Vida" up the charts in Brazil, where the telenovela had been shown.[22]

In 2009, Solange Knowles covered the song.[23] Lady Gaga also covered the song for BBC Radio 1.[24] Moreover, live versions of the song have appeared on the 2009 live album LeftRightLeftRightLeft,[25] the 2012 album Live 2012, and the 2018 album Live in Buenos Aires. It was also used in an episode entitled "Million Dollar Maybe" of The Simpsons. The song was covered in the seventh series of The X Factor by the boyband One Direction in 2010. In 2024, the season 2 finale of Pachinko ends with a cover by Rosé of the Korean pop group Blackpink.[26]

Music videos

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Chris Martin as the king in the Anton Corbijn video

The official music video for "Viva la Vida" was directed by Hype Williams and premiered at Coldplay's official website on 1 August 2008.[27] The video depicts the band performing against a blurry, warped version of Eugène Delacroix's painting La Liberté guidant le peuple, ending with the band members crumbling into rose petals.[28]

A second, alternate video was shot in The Hague, the Netherlands, directed by Anton Corbijn and released alongside the first.[29][30] This second version is a tribute to Corbijn's video for Depeche Mode's "Enjoy the Silence" and portrays Chris Martin as the king from whose perspective the song is sung. During the video, he carries Delacroix's painting. At the end, he hangs the picture up in a white stall on top of a hill. As he sings the last chorus, his bandmates surface heading his way, tying in loose ends from the "Violet Hill" video.

Critical reception

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Champion performing "Viva la Vida" during the Viva la Vida Tour in 2009.

"Viva la Vida" received widespread critical acclaim. In the Entertainment Weekly review of the album, critic Chris Willman wrote: "Take the title track ... on which [Martin] imagines himself as a paranoid monarch. 'Who would ever want to be king?' Martin asks. 'Revolutionaries wait/For my head on a silver plate!' The confident majesty of the music, however, belies how he and his bandmates have invigorated their rock-lite reign."[17] Josh Hathaway from The Plain Dealer noted "Viva la Vida" as the "catchiest" song on the album.[31] Chris Jones of the BBC noted: "The string/brass mutations that bolster a track like 'Viva La Vida' ... conjure tunes so sweetly melancholy."[32] In the IGN review, critic Chad Grischow wrote, "It is their one and only foray into unabashed orchestral pop, but the punchy strut of the strings and fantastic marching vocals make it far too charming and lively to dislike, and even harder not to love."[33]

"Viva la Vida" was nominated for "Record of the Year", and won "Song of the Year", and "Best Pop Performance by a Duo or a Group" at the 2009 Grammy Awards.[34][35] This song also won the Ivor Novello Award for "Best Selling British Single".[36] The song was included in Rolling Stone's annual "100 Best Songs" of 2008 at number nine;[37] it was also voted number two on Rolling Stone's Readers' Rock List: Best Songs of 2008.[38] "Viva la Vida" was also listed at number five on Blender's 1001 Downloads: The Top 144 Songs of 2008,[39] as well in the number eight position on Village Voice's Pazz and Jop list.[40] "Viva la Vida" has been sampled in several other songs, including Flo Rida's "Be on You", Mac Miller's "Cut the Check" featuring Chief Keef and Drake's "Congratulations" from his So Far Gone mixtape. In 2019, Billboard ranked the song number seven on their list of the 50 greatest Coldplay songs.[41] In 2021, American Songwriter ranked the song number one on their list of the 10 greatest Coldplay songs.[42]

Rankings

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"Viva la Vida" on select critic rankings
Publisher Year Listicle Rank Ref.
BBC America 2015 100 Greatest British Songs of the 21st Century So Far 33 [43]
Billboard 2023 The 500 Best Pop Songs of All Time 144 [44]
Cleveland 2015 The 50 Greatest Summer Songs Since 2000 44 [45]
MTV Australia 2013 The Official Top 1000 All Time Classics Placed [46]
NPO Radio 2 2010 Top 2000 7 [47]
PopMatters 2008 The Best Singles of 2008 26 [48]
Rolling Stone 2008 100 Best Singles of 2008 9 [49]
2011 100 Best Songs of the 2000s 68 [50]
RTÉ Gold 2023 Top 100 Story Songs 14 [51]
Sveriges Radio 2024 The World's 300 Best Songs 270 [52]
WYEP-FM 2020 Greatest Songs of the Past 30 Years Placed [53]

Chart performance

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"Viva la Vida" became Coldplay's highest charting single. Fueled by digital sales,[54] the song was their first to reach the top of the Billboard Hot 100 and their second to enter the Top 10 in the United States.[55] It was the first song by a British act to reach number one in the UK Singles Chart and Billboard Hot 100 simultaneously since Rod Stewart's "Maggie May", released in 1971.[56] "Viva la Vida" also went on to become the band's highest-charting single in American radio, becoming their first top-ten hit on the Hot 100 Airplay where it peaked at number eight.[57] Similarly, it was their first number-one single on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart.[58] On the Billboard Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks, the song has become the band's first number one, as well as the first single on the Capitol Records label to ever top the chart.[59] The single has been certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.[60] The song also became one of the first six tracks to reach the 4 million mark in paid digital downloads.[61]

The single was also successful in the United Kingdom. Although the song had been disqualified from the UK charts due to initially being available only by pre-ordering the album on iTunes, it became eligible to chart after the album was released. "Viva la Vida" hit number one on the UK Singles Chart, becoming Coldplay's first chart-topping single in the UK.[62]

In Canada, the single made a "Hot Shot Debut" at number four on the Canadian Hot 100 on the issue of 24 May, making it Coldplay's highest debut there.[63] It is also one of Coldplay's three highest-charting singles in Australia, reaching number two (both "A Sky Full of Stars" and "Something Just Like This" matched this peak in 2014 and 2017, respectively). In the week starting 27 November 2023, the single once again returned to the same charts, entering at number 28.[64] In New Zealand, the song was less successful, only peaking at number 16; however, the song stayed in the top 40 for 27 non-consecutive weeks. In Spain, the single peaked at No. 2 and achieved Triple Platinum status due to the 120,000 copies sold. It also had a strong airplay on the Spanish radio stations.

Sporting usage

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Martin performing "Viva la Vida" during the band's 2008 Viva la Vida Tour

During the 2008–09 season, the German football club Hamburger SV used "Viva la Vida" as their goal celebration song. It's also the goal celebration song of the German football club Hannover 96. The song also became the anthem of Spanish football club FC Barcelona during the 2008–09 season. It turned out to be a season of unprecedented success for the Spanish club in 2009, as they won all six competitions they could possibly be involved in, which no football club has managed before in history. The song was selected by the manager of the club, Pep Guardiola – himself a Coldplay fan – to help motivate and encourage his team. It was often played at the Camp Nou before the start of a Barcelona match. The song was also played during Pep Guardiola's farewell before his final match coaching Barcelona at the Nou Camp, a 4–0 victory against Espanyol on 5 May 2012.[65] The song was also played on Gerard Pique's final game at the Camp Nou on November 5, 2022, marking the end of his 25-year-long career with FC Barcelona. UEFA used "Viva la Vida" as the goal celebration song for the 2012 UEFA Champions League Final[66] and Europa League Final.

The National Hockey League's New York Rangers played "Viva la Vida" at Madison Square Garden after victories during the 2011 season.[67] The song was used by the Vancouver Canucks in a tribute video during Markus Näslund's number retirement ceremony held in Vancouver's Rogers Arena. It was also used in Game 7 of the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals when the Boston Bruins won the Stanley Cup on Vancouver Ice. The Kansas City Chiefs play the song at the end of home games in Arrowhead Stadium. Additionally, it is also used by the Kansas City Royals to celebrate home runs and wins at Kauffman Stadium. This was the at-bat music of Scott Rolen, former third baseman of the Cincinnati Reds. The song was also used pre-match during every 2008 Rugby League World Cup game before the two teams took to the field and in the band's Super Bowl 50 halftime show in 2016 at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California. It was used at 2020 Tokyo Olympics as victory song when Canada Women's National Soccer Team won gold medal on August 6, 2021, the song was also used in a music video to honour Phil Taylor in his retirement at the 2018 PDC World Darts Championship.

Plagiarism allegations

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Coldplay were first accused of plagiarism of "The Songs I Didn't Write" by American alternative band Creaky Boards, for the melody of "Viva la Vida".[68] Creaky Boards' band member Andrew Hoepfner claimed that Martin had heard them playing the song at a live show in October 2007.[69] The band released a video clip, in which it compares sections of both songs.[69] Coldplay denied the claim. Band spokesman Murray Chambers said Martin was working in AIR Studios in London at that time, having checked the singer's diary.[70] In addition, Coldplay had recorded a demo version of "Viva la Vida" in March 2007, long before Creaky Boards performed it live in October of the same year.[69] Creaky Boards later retracted the accusations and speculated that both songs may have been inspired by the video game The Legend of Zelda.[70]

On 4 December 2008, American guitarist Joe Satriani filed a copyright infringement suit against Coldplay in Los Angeles.[71][72] The suit claims that "Viva la Vida" incorporates "substantial, original portions" of his instrumental track "If I Could Fly" from his 2004 album Is There Love in Space?[73] The band has denied the allegation, saying the similarities were "entirely coincidental".[74] On 14 September 2009, the case was dismissed by the California Central District Court, with both parties potentially agreeing to an out-of-court settlement.[75]

In May 2009, Yusuf Islam stated that the song is very similar to his song "Foreigner Suite," recorded under his former stage name, Cat Stevens. He said "My son brought it to my attention and said: 'Doesn't that sound like 'Foreigner Suite?'"[76] Islam said that any legal action he might take "depends on how well Satriani does."[76] Coldplay drummer Will Champion denied the claim, stating, "We're confident we haven't done anything wrong."[77] In June 2009, Islam later said, "They did copy my song but I don't think they did it on purpose," adding, "I don't want them to think I am angry with them. I'd love to sit down and have a cup of tea with them and let them know it's okay."[78]

In a documentary for Sveriges Television (2011) American music professor Dr. Lawrence Ferrara showed that the melody structures of "Viva la Vida", "If I Could Fly" and "Foreigner Suite" were very similar to the composition "Se tu m'ami" by the Italian composer Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, who died in 1736. "Obviously this is a work that we would call in the 'public domain'", Dr. Ferrara said.[79][80]

Chris Martin once said that the plagiarism allegations were inspiring him and added: "If everyone's trying to take away our best song, then we'd better write 25 better ones!"[81] Will Champion has also talked about the accusation saying, "For some reason, God only knows why, the successful songs seem to be the ones that are accused of being stolen."[82]

Formats and track listings

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Digital download
No.TitleLength
1."Viva la Vida" (new edit)4:04
CD single
No.TitleLength
1."Viva la Vida"4:01
2."Death Will Never Conquer"1:18
Promotional CD single
No.TitleLength
1."Viva la Vida" (radio edit)3:45
2."Viva la Vida" (album version)4:01

Credits and personnel

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Additional personnel

Live version

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Live version's artwork

The song and "Lost+" were performed live at the 51st Annual Grammy Awards, which took place at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, on 8 February 2009. Coldplay performed a medley of "Lost+" and "Viva la Vida" at the ceremony. American rapper Jay-Z, who was the guest vocalist on "Lost+", performed "Lost+" with Coldplay onstage. The performance was recorded and released on 8 February 2009.

Track listing
Lost+ (featuring Jay-Z) / Viva la Vida (Live At the 51st Annual Grammy Awards)
No.TitleLength
1."Lost+ (featuring Jay-Z) / Viva la Vida"5:35
2."Lost+ (featuring Jay-Z) / Viva la Vida" (Video)5:35

Charts

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Certifications and sales

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Certifications and sales for "Viva la Vida"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[193] 9× Platinum 630,000
Belgium (BEA)[194] Platinum  
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[195]
DMS
Platinum 60,000
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[195] Gold 30,000
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[196] 3× Platinum 270,000
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[197] Gold 5,875[197]
Germany (BVMI)[198] 3× Platinum 900,000
Italy 30,000[199]
Italy (FIMI)[200]
Sales since 2009
4× Platinum 200,000
Japan (RIAJ)[201]
PC download
Gold 100,000*
New Zealand (RMNZ)[202] 5× Platinum 150,000
Portugal (AFP)[203] 5× Platinum 50,000
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[204] 8× Platinum 480,000
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[205] Platinum 30,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[206] 5× Platinum 3,000,000
United States (RIAA)[208] 5× Platinum 5,000,000 / 6,131,000[207]
Ringtone
Canada (Music Canada)[209] Gold 20,000*
Japan (RIAJ)[210] Gold 100,000*
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[211] Gold 10,000*
Streaming
Greece (IFPI Greece)[212] Platinum 2,000,000

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
Streaming-only figures based on certification alone.

Cover versions

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Swedish singer Darin's cover of the song reached number 1 on 30 October 2009 on the Swedish Singles Chart[213] and was certified Gold by the GLF in 2010.[214] The song appears on Darin's 2010 album Lovekiller. In 2010, it was yet again included as the B-side of Darin's "You're Out of My Life" single, reaching No. 3 in the Swedish Singles Chart. Coldplay's original single had already charted in Sweden for a total of 49 weeks between 15 May 2008 and 23 October 2009, peaking at number seven.[215] Weezer recorded a cover of the song for the deluxe version of their 2010 album Hurley.

See also

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References

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