Format: MP3, ~192 Kbps VBR Contextual Help marker
Length: 62:49
Genre: Pop
Record Label: ESL Music, Inc.

The Cosmic Game

Latest Price: $8.38 Contextual Help marker
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1 Play Button
Marching the Hate Machines (Into the Sun)
4:01 $0.53 Buy Song 2
2 Play Button
Warning Shots
5:02 $0.49 Buy Song 1
3 Play Button
Revolution Solution Top Track Icon
3:42 $0.52 Buy Song 2
4 Play Button
The Cosmic Game
2:19 $0.49 Buy Song
5 Play Button
Satyam Shivam Sundaram Top Track Icon
with Gunjan
4:07 $0.55 Buy Song 1
6 Play Button
Amerimacka
with Notch
5:42 $0.52 Buy Song 1
7 Play Button
Ambicion Eterna (Eternal Ambition)
3:44 $0.49 Buy Song
8 Play Button
Pela Janela (Through the Window)
3:41 $0.57 Buy Song 3
9 Play Button
Sol Tapado (The Covered Sun)
3:58 $0.55 Buy Song 1
10 Play Button
The Heart's a Lonely Hunter Top Track Icon
4:04 $0.58 Buy Song 4
11 Play Button
Holographic Universe
with Gunjan
3:42 $0.56 Buy Song 2
12 Play Button
Doors of Perception
with Gunjan
3:16 $0.52 Buy Song 1
13 Play Button
Wires and Watchtowers
with Sista Pat
4:19 $0.49 Buy Song
14 Play Button
The Supreme Illusion
with Gunjan
4:10 $0.51 Buy Song 1
15 Play Button
The Time We Lost Our Way
with Lou Lou
4:12 $0.49 Buy Song
16 Play Button
A Gentle Dissolve
2:50 $0.52 Buy Song

The Cosmic Game - Review

The ingredients -- electronic beats, dub, soft Brazilian tones, sitars, and women singing in foreign languages -- are entirely the same, but Thievery Corporation have never sounded so genuine. Despite the same old sound and a busy release schedule leading up to it, The Cosmic Game comes across as fresh as a debut and surprisingly indifferent toward being the in thing. What it is is music for music's sake, all laid out with the utmost care, giving listeners a fully thought-out album that makes the "forward" button on your CD player purposeless. Effortlessly flowing from the indie-grooving "Marching the Hate Machines (Into the Sun)" with the Flaming Lips to reggae to samba to psychedelia and beyond, the album is trimmed of all fat. Instrumentals with clever grooves sometimes overstayed their welcome on previous Thievery albums, but here they're whittled down to interludes when need be and positioned as chillout segues between the more striking numbers. The druggy, Perry Farrell-inna-reggae-style "Revolution Solution" is one of these stunners, but the superstars don't own all the highlights. As dank, Jamaican-flavored horns echo into the distance, siren Sista Pat lures listeners into the deep world of "Wires and Watchtowers" while soulful crooner Notch takes things uptown on the cool "Amerimacka" before the Corp turn the tune into one of their stickiest dub outings yet. The pleasant "The Heart's a Lonely Hunter" deserves mention because David Byrne guests on vocals, and while it's very good, it's the most forgettable number on this outing. The track brings a very slight reminder of when Thievery Corporation have let ambition trump the meaningful and meaty, but the otherwise purposeful and certain Cosmic Game is so darkly delicious you have to admit it's their masterwork. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide

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