Cosmic Thing

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Nirvana made a lot of things irrelevant when Nevermind was released in 1991. Among the most unfortunate casualties caught inside the blast radius were the B-52's. Just two years prior, they had released their very first mainstream breakthrough album, Cosmic Thing. This album was featherweight, sun-kissed, playfully pansexual and, most importantly, danceable. Tracks like "Love Shack" and "Roam" reminded us there could be fun without responsibility. Alternately kitschy and lazy (I still insist that "Deadbeat Club" was a slacker anthem long before Beck's "Loser"), Cosmic Thing took the B-52's signature Trekkie-camp sensibility and slowed it down just enough to click on MTV and portable radios wonderfully. And let's be honest, anyway: would you rather road-trip to Kurt's sad refrain of "Well, whatever, nevermind" or Fred Schneider belting out, "The whole shack shimmies!!" at the top of his lungs? On second thought, don't answer that. --Todd Levin

Music Review:

  1. Debut
  2. Deluxe
  3. Dilate
  4. Electro-Shock Blues
  5. Elegantly Wasted
  6. Fables of the Reconstruction
  7. Faith [Deluxe Edition] [Original recording remastered]
  8. Familiar to Millions [Explicit Lyrics] [Live]
  9. Feel Good Inc. [CD-single] [Import]
  10. Gish

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Dragyyn [Live]

Pini/Solomon

Preludes Etudes Elegie: Piano Works

Music: Blast the Speakers, Vol. 2

Private Collection Ep [CD-single] [Import]

Progressive History X

O Melhor Do Sertao [Import]

Shaq Diesel

Romania: Music For Strings From Transylvania [Import]

Pachelbel: Hexachordum Appollinis; Chaconne in Fm; Chaconne Theme and Variations in D

Nuit des Gitans [Import]

Shortest Day

Nothin But Bass

In The Balance

The Psychomodo