Green Cosmos

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Green Cosmos album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 15:36

eMusic Features

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eMerging Artists

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

At eMusic, we take pride in being the place you hear about artists first. Whether it's through our eMusic Selects program - which brought you the first releases by Best Coast, Crystal Stilts, Strand of Oaks and more - or our Breaking Artist features, our editorial team is always on the grind to bring you the best new artists first. Our eMerging Artists station is your chance to be first on the Next Big Thing. more »

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eMusic Yearbook: 2005

By Chuck Eddy, eMusic Contributor

Indie-rock in the '00s was hardly the same animal as indie-rock two decades before, and much of the blame should probably go to Nirvana. In the '80s, labels like SST and Touch & Go were built on testosterone. But when grunge went multiplatinum in the '90s, rock bands brandishing palpable physicality suddenly qualified as mainstream again, and the bigger indies started adopting a more effete and introverted aesthetic. So if you skim down a list… more »

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eMusic Yearbook: 2004

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

James Joyce wrote that his weapons as an artist would be "silence, exile and cunning." Silence isn't generally useful for musicians, and cunning comes with the territory for anyone who wants to play the pop-music game of one-upmanship. In 2004, though, a lot of the best indie records latched onto exile as a weapon, or as a metaphor, or even as their central subject. The international political landscape had collapsed into a mess of lies,… more »

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The eMusic Top 10: Rock, Rot or Rule?

By Ronald Thomas Clontle, eMusic Contributor

Ronald Thomas Clontle is the author of Rock, Rot & Rule, a controversial music reference book that purports to be "the ultimate argument settler" when it comes to rating an artist's worth. In the book, the uncompromising Clontle ranks thousands of artists under the three headings listed in the book's title (rock = good, rot = bad, rule = great), based on various stringent criteria and extensive surveys. With the newly updated 2007 edition of… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Initially released only in Japan and later in the U.S. via Menlo Park, Deerhoof’s Green Cosmos EP shows off a less manic side of the band than their usual modus operandi. The bright, brassy rocker “Come See the Duck” (based on the way the song sounds, the duck must be fire-breathing and six feet tall) is the closest the EP gets to Deerhoof’s quintessential approach; even though Green Cosmos is only seven songs long, the band spends the rest of the EP trying on as many different sounds and feelings as they can cram into it. The production is surprisingly lush, with songs like the jazzy “Hot Mint Air Balloon” boasting brass and xylophones and “Spiral Golden Town” moving from trippy symphonic samples to an odd — but totally Deerhoof — fusion of chamber-pop, synth-pop and big-beat. Elsewhere, the band goes gentle: “Malalauma” is delicately psychedelic, with an appropriately Asian feel, while Satomi Matsuzaki’s meowed vocals on “Koneko Kitten” make the track that much more adorable. Since Green Cosmos is so short, its eclectic sound doesn’t stick around long enough to feel scattered. Instead, it just reaffirms Deerhoof’s unspoken manifesto — that music should be fun — and offers a nice, bite-size portion of their crazy sweetness. – Heather Phares

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