Coldplay frontman Chris Martin has praised a local Oasis tribute band while in Melbourne for the Music Of The Spheres world tour.
The 47-year-old was visiting a recording studio while on tour when he overheard Shakerfaker rehearsing their versions of Oasis hits.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Coldplay rocks Melbourne.
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Martin told the group how impressed he was by their rendition.
“Everyone, meet Shakerfaker’s newest fan,” the band posted on Instagram alongside a group photo with Martin.
“You might know him from Coldplay, but we know him as the charming bloke who popped his head into our rehearsal room.
“Chris said, ‘Sorry to interrupt but you sound terrific,’ which was nice. He looked over our set for Saturday and approved.
“Enjoy your stay, Chris. Thanks for coming to say ‘yellow’.”
It comes after Coldplay made history on Wednesday night when the UK band performed for the first time without one of their four founding members.
Just before night one of their Music Of The Spheres tour at Marvel Stadium, bassist Guy Berryman fell ill, leaving the other members of the iconic group to carry on without him.
In an Instagram post after the show, the band said: “Tonight was the first time in our band’s history that we’ve played a show without all four members onstage.
“Guy was taken ill unexpectedly just before the show. Thank you for carrying us through it.”
Earlier frontman Chris Martin addressed the packed stadium, telling fans: “It’s a shame, but we waited until the last minute to tell you that our beautiful bass player Guy is very, very sick.
“I’m sorry for those who were waiting to see him; he won’t be able to play today.
“But we’ll have a slightly different show, and we’ll do our best to make it amazing because we’re in Melbourne with all of you beautiful people.”
Filling in for Berryman was Bill Rahko, Coldplay’s co-producer and engineer, who donned one of the band’s signature space helmets and stepped in on bass.
Martin kept the crowd’s spirits high, joking: “If you notice mistakes, it’s because we only had about an hour to figure it out ... and we have a strange, alien, weird friend character playing bass.
“So you’ll hear Guy, but you just won’t see him. Because he’s vomiting.”
The Music Of The Spheres tour has been a massive success, grossing more than $US1 billion ($A1.5 billion) since its start nearly three years ago, Billboard reported.
Following their two-night run in Melbourne, Coldplay heads to Sydney’s Accor Stadium for another two-night stint.
Coldplay’s Melbourne and Sydney dates come almost a year after they visited Australia and controversially only performed in Perth.
The band has not performed in Sydney or Melbourne since November 2016.
On that tour, the band performed five concerts in three states, NSW, Queensland and Victoria — with Western Australia missing out.
Coldplay’s Music Of The Spheres world tour has sold more than six million tickets since it launched early in 2022.