Cosmo's Factory

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 42:51

eMusic Review

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John Swenson

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Fogerty gets political on CCR's fifth album.
2000 | Label: Fantasy

John Fogerty's songs on Cosmo's Factory are the observations of a man being pushed to the limits of his good will. Fogerty's earliest writing had been scrupulously apolitical, but on the band's fifth album he expands on the social and political commentary that punctuated previous records. "Ramble Tamble" is the story of a band on the run, hounded by political forces that want to put Fogerty and his "Travelin 'Band" out of business. In this context, Fogerty's version of Bo Diddley's oft-covered blues "Before You Accuse Me" takes on new meaning. Even Fogerty's beloved American landscape has turned hostile in "Better Run Through the Jungle" as he sees himself in the sights of "200 million guns," a clear reference to the U.S. population count at the time. Fogerty's only recourse is to "leave the sinkin 'ship behind" and retreat to the rural joys of the redwood forest in the exhilarating "Up Around the Bend." Off the road and away from the strife, Fogerty can put it all in perspective while "Lookin 'Out My Back Door," but he clearly misses the optimism of his earlier vision in the heart-rending lament "Who'll Stop the Rain?" Fogerty can't help but end on… read more »

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Download this!

EEMUSIC-008C9B1B

This album was huge at the time it was released & loaded with hits but not just top 40 fluff. This is great timeless rock & roll. It has something rare-you can listen to the whole thing & every song is good.

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Good to have this again!

DavidB

Thanks, Emusic! My 8-track wore out decades ago!

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Skip the greatest hits, start here

EMUSIC-01F486ED

If you've never listened to the pure heart and energy that is CCR, my sugggestion is to get a hold of this album. A few nicely done covers, and great originals including my personal favorite, the epic "RAMBLE TAMBLE", which you won't find on a greatest hits CD. -JB

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Prime Example

emanym

Does anyone else thinks this sounds too much like John Fogerty's solo work? Come on, I'm only joking. If you don't know about Fogerty's legal battle after he left the band, then just like John, you're not laughing either. Seriously, this album is the one that hooked me on the band way back when--despite "Ooby Dooby"!

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Say WHAT?!

timabouttown

Six of these 11 tracks make Chronicles, and they're really, really good ones. Yet still misses getting named as an emu editor's green PICK label! Insane. Wouldn't any three of them be enough? Then throw in another "best of" caliber song (As Long As I Can See the Light), and a couple more killer covers (Before You Accuse Me, Ooby Dooby -- Roy Orbison's first record!), and what's missing? Only the green PICK label. Maybe the idea is that if you buy Chronicle, you don't need this. Silly, that's backwards. Better yet, buy 'em all, but by any definition, this is one of the highlights of the CCR canon...or anyone else's.

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cosmos, factory

bigmc9898

that is doug clifford on the 10 speed, tom fogerty is in the back, stu cook on the left in front of john fogerty. one of my all time favorite albums, the first rock album i ever listen to it is what got me hooked on rock and roll, not a bad song on it and it is the real C.C.R. not a fake thank you john fogerty you have written some of my favorite music

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Original???

jmax119

I have been looking on this site for REAL originals.It seems like there is some question about whether these are the real artists playing these songs.When I played "Long As I Can See The Light" I knew I found one. Nobody could fake it that good.

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Alright, guys! I'll download also....

gsnoorky

Davemonkey raises a good point: FM radio crucified us with constant bombardment of CCR's hits, along with so many other familiar bands' hits'. I loved this record before that. It started me with rock after I heard "Up around the bend" at age 13 (I loved the guitar hook!). Fogerty is a genius and legend! This is CCR's classic lineup--unfortunately, John's brother Tom (the guy sitting on the ten-speed on the album cover) later died.... Fantasy is the correct label--the album cover is authentic, also. This is the "real McCoy," (condensed to mp3, of course)! It is authentic yet overly familiar....

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CCR

wns3

Re:"Long As I Can See The Light". I could take or leave the blues. I bought this album way back when. I always played a new album start to finish all the way through. No lifting the needle if I didn't like the tune(that way I'd know what to skip over later, or to save my reel-to-reel tape for the primo tunes). Anyway the first time I heard "Long As I Can See The Light" I got goose bumps. I still listen to it often in my Mp3s. It still gives me goose bumps after nearly 40 years! Tell me that's not a great tune.

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Still 100% worth listening to!!!

vbhn

My first LP back in 1970 and still a favourite. The best Creedence ever!!! Recomended to anyone who likes good American rock-music.

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They Say All Media Guide

Throughout 1969 and into 1970, CCR toured incessantly and recorded nearly as much. Appropriately, Cosmo’s Factory’s first single was the working band’s anthem “Travelin’ Band,” a funny, piledriving rocker with a blaring horn section — the first indication their sonic palette was broadening. Two more singles appeared prior to the album’s release, backed by John Fogerty originals that rivaled the A-side or paled just slightly. When it came time to assemble a full album, Fogerty had only one original left, the claustrophobic, paranoid rocker “Ramble Tamble.” Unlike some extended instrumentals, this was dramatic and had a direction — a distinction made clear by the meandering jam that brings CCR’s version of “I Heard It Through the Grapevine” to 11 minutes. Even if it wanders, their take on the Marvin Gaye classic isn’t unpleasant, and their faithful, exuberant takes on the Sun classics “Ooby Dooby” and “My Baby Left Me” are joyous tributes. Still, the heart of the album lays in those six fantastic songs released on singles. “Up Around the Bend” is a searing rocker, one of their best, balanced by the menacing murkiness of “Run Through the Jungle.” “Who’ll Stop the Rain”‘s poignant melody and melancholy undertow has a counterpart in Fogerty’s dope song, “Lookin’ out My Back Door,” a charming, bright shuffle, filled with dancing animals and domestic bliss – he had never been as sweet and silly as he is here. On “Long as I Can See the Light,” the record’s final song, he again finds solace in home, anchored by a soulful, laid-back groove. It hits a comforting, elegiac note, the perfect way to draw Cosmo’s Factory — an album made during stress and chaos, filled with raging rockers, covers, and intense jams — to a close. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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