unilad homepage
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • World News
    • Crime
    • Health
    • Money
    • Sport
    • Travel
  • Film and TV
    • Netflix
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
People are only just realizing where Coldplay’s Chris Martin grew up and say it makes ‘so much sense’

Home> Music> News

Updated 14:53 29 Oct 2024 GMTPublished 14:52 29 Oct 2024 GMT

People are only just realizing where Coldplay’s Chris Martin grew up and say it makes ‘so much sense’

Music fans have spotted the influence in Coldplay's songs over the years

Ellie Kemp

Ellie Kemp

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover
Featured Image Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images/NDZ/Star Max/GC Images

Topics: Africa, Music, Entertainment, Celebrity, UK News, News

Ellie Kemp
Ellie Kemp

Ellie joined UNILAD in 2024, specialising in SEO and trending content. She moved from Reach PLC where she worked as a senior journalist at the UK’s largest regional news title, the Manchester Evening News. She also covered TV and entertainment for national brands including the Mirror, Star and Express. In her spare time, Ellie enjoys watching true crime documentaries and curating the perfect Spotify playlist.

X

@EllieKempOnline

Advert

Advert

Advert

Coldplay fans are only just discovering where frontman Chris Martin spent a lot of time growing up - and they reckon it makes 'so much sense'.

Love them or hate them, Coldplay have established themselves as one of the best-selling music acts of all-time, distributing more than 100 million albums worldwide.

Who can forget when Viva La Vida dominated both the airwaves and charts in 2008?

The four-piece, consisting of Chris Martin, Jonny Buckland, Guy Berryman, and Will Champion, are also famed for their visually stunning live shows.

Advert

But music fans are only just realizing that Martin spent quite a chunk of time growing up abroad, which helped in shaping Coldplay's sound.

Chris Martin spent a lot of time abroad as an adolescent (Jim Dyson/Redferns)
Chris Martin spent a lot of time abroad as an adolescent (Jim Dyson/Redferns)

Born in Exeter, England, Martin went on to study at University College London, where he formed Coldplay in 1997.

But the Grammy-winning musician spent a lot of his adolescence in Zimbabwe, southern Africa.

His mom, music teacher Alison Martin, is from Rhodesia - now modern-day Zimbabwe - and Martin said 'half his family' is from the country.

In a 2008 Rolling Stone interview, Martin spoke about the Afro-pop and high-life influences in 'Strawberry Death,' from the album Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends.

“My Mum comes from Zimbabwe, so I spent a lot of time there. I used to work in [Shed Studios] where people played [Afrobeat].”

And in a 2017 interview with BBC Radio 1, he shed further light on his time in Zimbabwe.

Discussing Paul Simon's 1986 hit 'Graceland,' he said: "I was 10 years old and I was living in Zimbabwe, which is where half my family is from, and this record was playing.

"I was trying to get the attention of another 10 year old girl. There was no texting in those days, but she was doing the eighties equivalent of not texting me back and I remember this song playing and thinking 'at least the music is awesome'."

Fans have since taken to TikTok to share the discovery.

@estduncan posted a video of herself listening to Coldplay's Adventure of a Lifetime, writing: "It's kinda crazy how Coldplay's lead Chris Martin grew up in Zimbabwe in his teens and worked in a local music studio with Zim guitarists so Coldplay has African influences in their music."

Taking to the comments, fans thought they recognized sungura music in Coldplay's songs - a popular Zimbabwean genre, known for its upbeat rhythms, fast-paced guitar riffs, and catchy lyrics.

One fan typed: "No way. This makes this makes so much sense in terms of that guitar [riff]. Sounds like Sungura music", as a second agreed: "I knew the guitar sounded like Sungura, you can hear it so clearly."

A third chimed in: "I remember when this song came out, uncles on fb made edits of sungura dancers dancing to this song lol."

The more you know!

Choose your content:

a day ago
5 days ago
6 days ago
  • Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Recording Academy
    a day ago

    Lady Gaga ‘heartbroken’ after doctor advises her to cancel concert over health issue

    The singer had been due to perform in Canada ahead of her return to the US

    Music
  • Brad Barket/Getty Images for Fast Company
    a day ago

    Multiple major brands cancel sponsorship of music festival over Kanye West booking

    The rapper has been booked as the headliner for one the UK's biggest music festivals

    Music
  • Aaron J. Thornton/WireImage
    5 days ago

    Gucci Mane 'robbed and kidnapped at gunpoint' as fellow rapper Pooh Shiesty and more charged

    Nine people have been charged in relation to the incident that took place in Dallas, Texas

    Music
  • Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
    6 days ago

    Coachella attendees face $360 check for dinner garden party

    The dining experience hopes to ‘reconnect diners to the land' of California

    Music
  • Fans of Wu-Tang Clan are only just realizing what the meaning is behind their band name
  • Coldplay fans say Chris Martin is 'traumatized' after CEO was caught with employee at jumbotron
  • People are only just discovering the ridiculous amount celebrities have to pay to get a star on the Walk of Fame
  • How Sharon Osbourne granted Ozzy Osbourne final wish just weeks before death as she releases emotional tribute