Super Bowl Halftime Show Coldplay, Bruno Mars, Beyonce
The Super Bowl 50 setlist included: "Yellow", "Viva La Vida", "Paradise", "Adventure of a Lifetime", "Uptown Funk", "Formation", "Clocks", and "Fix You"/"Up and Up". The Super Bowl 50 halftime show took place on February 7, 2016, at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara as part of Super Bowl 50. The Denver Broncos crowned themselves as NFL champions with a dominant 24-10 victory over the Carolina Panthers. The show was headlined by the British rock band Coldplay, who invited Beyoncé (6:13), Gustavo Dudamel, Bruno Mars (4:40), Mark Ronson, the University of California Marching Band, and the Youth Orchestra Los Angeles (YOLA) as guest performers. The show attracted over 115.5 million viewers, making it the most-watched halftime set by a group and male act.
Moreover, the band placed all of their studio albums on the Billboard 200 chart after the concert, while Beyoncé became the subject of controversy for performing "Formation", since she had aligned herself with the Black Lives Matter movement. Similarly, conservatives accused Coldplay of promoting a "gay agenda". Despite its mixed reception from music critics on contemporary reviews, the show has been since ranked among the best in Super Bowl history by The Athletic, Parade, Rolling Stone, and The Telegraph. The Super Bowl setlist included: "Yellow", "Viva La Vida", "Paradise", "Adventure of a Lifetime", "Uptown Funk", "Formation", "Clocks", and "Fix You"/"Up and Up". Source: Wikipedia
Vanity Fair review: As Chris Martin and Coldplay emerged, you could almost feel the crowd's restlessness, knowing that a different performer (Beyoncé) was waiting in the wings.
Chris Martin acquitted himself well, bouncing around like a kernel bursting in a popcorn machine, and working through a series of his band’s buoyant hits. But the show kicked into an entirely different gear when Marc Ronson emerged, in a shimmering gold and black jacket, signaling the start of what we’ll refer to as the entrée of the show, featuring former halftime show performers Bruno Mars and, of course, Beyoncé. Mars—while he has not attained the level of celebrity of many of his pop-music peers—is an unarguably skilled artist, and there’s something refreshing about his no-frills exuberance. You get the sense he leaves the stage and his manager pats him on the back and says, “That was great,” and Mars just sort of nods and grabs a bottle of water and then checks his phone.
Mars’s high-energy “Uptown Funk” led to the moment everyone was waiting for: the emergence of Beyonce Knowles. There isn’t much to say about Beyoncé’s performance that likely wasn’t already said in the emoji-laden tweets and exclamation-mark-filled text messages you were no doubt inundated with during the performance; may we as a population never take for granted the intensity, precision, and grandeur of a Beyoncé performance. She began with her newest single “Formation,” shooting her leg up in a perfect high kick as if scratching her back, before meeting Mars for a sort of dance-off to “Uptown Funk” and “Crazy in Love” in the center of the stage (this match-up did little favors for Mars—though, there is no one who’s going to come off well in a dance-off with Beyoncé). As if remembering this was technically Coldplay’s halftime show, Mars and Beyonce then let Martin join them for a surprisingly effective joint performance of “Uptown Funk”—and eventually Coldplay’s “Up and Up.” (Martin got a nice moment right before the finale to sing “Fix You” and remind us that, you know, he’s a pretty phenomenal musician himself.)
All in all, it was a perfectly entertaining #superbowl show. Our only regret: no cameo—not even a single cutaway shot!—to #coldplay Chris Martin’s ex-wife and Beyonce’s bestie, Gwyneth Paltrow.
Видео Super Bowl Halftime Show Coldplay, Bruno Mars, Beyonce канала Cal Vid
Moreover, the band placed all of their studio albums on the Billboard 200 chart after the concert, while Beyoncé became the subject of controversy for performing "Formation", since she had aligned herself with the Black Lives Matter movement. Similarly, conservatives accused Coldplay of promoting a "gay agenda". Despite its mixed reception from music critics on contemporary reviews, the show has been since ranked among the best in Super Bowl history by The Athletic, Parade, Rolling Stone, and The Telegraph. The Super Bowl setlist included: "Yellow", "Viva La Vida", "Paradise", "Adventure of a Lifetime", "Uptown Funk", "Formation", "Clocks", and "Fix You"/"Up and Up". Source: Wikipedia
Vanity Fair review: As Chris Martin and Coldplay emerged, you could almost feel the crowd's restlessness, knowing that a different performer (Beyoncé) was waiting in the wings.
Chris Martin acquitted himself well, bouncing around like a kernel bursting in a popcorn machine, and working through a series of his band’s buoyant hits. But the show kicked into an entirely different gear when Marc Ronson emerged, in a shimmering gold and black jacket, signaling the start of what we’ll refer to as the entrée of the show, featuring former halftime show performers Bruno Mars and, of course, Beyoncé. Mars—while he has not attained the level of celebrity of many of his pop-music peers—is an unarguably skilled artist, and there’s something refreshing about his no-frills exuberance. You get the sense he leaves the stage and his manager pats him on the back and says, “That was great,” and Mars just sort of nods and grabs a bottle of water and then checks his phone.
Mars’s high-energy “Uptown Funk” led to the moment everyone was waiting for: the emergence of Beyonce Knowles. There isn’t much to say about Beyoncé’s performance that likely wasn’t already said in the emoji-laden tweets and exclamation-mark-filled text messages you were no doubt inundated with during the performance; may we as a population never take for granted the intensity, precision, and grandeur of a Beyoncé performance. She began with her newest single “Formation,” shooting her leg up in a perfect high kick as if scratching her back, before meeting Mars for a sort of dance-off to “Uptown Funk” and “Crazy in Love” in the center of the stage (this match-up did little favors for Mars—though, there is no one who’s going to come off well in a dance-off with Beyoncé). As if remembering this was technically Coldplay’s halftime show, Mars and Beyonce then let Martin join them for a surprisingly effective joint performance of “Uptown Funk”—and eventually Coldplay’s “Up and Up.” (Martin got a nice moment right before the finale to sing “Fix You” and remind us that, you know, he’s a pretty phenomenal musician himself.)
All in all, it was a perfectly entertaining #superbowl show. Our only regret: no cameo—not even a single cutaway shot!—to #coldplay Chris Martin’s ex-wife and Beyonce’s bestie, Gwyneth Paltrow.
Видео Super Bowl Halftime Show Coldplay, Bruno Mars, Beyonce канала Cal Vid
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