The B-52's
Cosmic Thing

Reprise    9 25854-2  (1989)

Rock/Pop
CD, 10   Tracks, 47:11  Length
01 Cosmic Thing Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 03:52
02 Dry County Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 04:54
03 Deadbeat Club Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 04:47
04 Love Shack Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 05:21
05 Junebug Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 05:07
06 Roam Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson; Robert Waldrop 04:55
07 Bushfire Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 04:57
08 Channel Z Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 04:49
09 Topaz Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 04:21
10 Follow Your Bliss Kate Pierson; Fred Schneider; Keith Strickland; Cindy Wilson 04:08
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Percussion Fred Schneider
Vocals Cindy Wilson
Keyboards Kate Pierson
Guitar Keith Strickland
Musician The B-52's
Producer Don Was; Nile Rodgers
Engineer Dave Cook; Tom Durack
Cover by Manhattan Design
Personal Details
Index # 133
Owner Dave
Tags New Wave, Pop Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Many observers were prepared to write off the B-52's after the release of Bouncing Off the Satellites. Granted, the album was completed in the wake of Ricky Wilson's death, but the group appeared bereft of new musical ideas and were sounding rather stale. In other words, the last thing anyone expected was a first-class return to form, which is what they got with Cosmic Thing. Working with producers Don Was and Nile Rodgers, the B-52's updated their sound with shiny new surfaces and deep, funky grooves -- it was the same basic pattern as before, only refurbished and contemporized. Just as importantly, they had their best set of songs since at least Wild Planet, possibly since their debut. "Cosmic Thing" and "Channel Z" were great up-tempo rockers; "Roam" had a groovy beat blessed with a great Cindy Wilson vocal; and "Deadbeat Club" was one of their rare successful reflective numbers. Then there was "Love Shack," an irresistible dance number with delightfully silly lyrics and hooks as big as a whale that unbelievably gave the group a long-awaited Top Ten hit. The thing is, Cosmic Thing would already have been considered a triumphant return without its commercial success. The big sales were just the icing on the cake. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine (allmusic.com)