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59 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars WHEN THE MUSIC STILL MATTERED
Given their legendary status today it is difficult to believe that Creedence Clearwater Revival was widely regarded as a rather "light weight" band in its time. Some of rock's more celebrated tastemakers even turned up their noses and pronounced Creedence Clearwater Revival a bubblegum act. "After all, what are their little pop songs compared with Jimi Hendrix? The...
Published on April 29, 2004 by Crabby Apple Mick Lee

versus
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great album, questionable remaster
I've always loved this CD! it is one of my all-time favorites and truly a classic.

That said, I'm very wary of remasters in general. I just picked up this CD and didn't know it was a remaster until I started listening to it. It doesn't sound "right" to me. It doesn't sound like the album I used to have way back when. I can't exactly put my finger on it, but...
Published 6 months ago by tim-bobby


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59 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars WHEN THE MUSIC STILL MATTERED, April 29, 2004
By 
Crabby Apple Mick Lee (INDIANAPOLIS, IN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
Given their legendary status today it is difficult to believe that Creedence Clearwater Revival was widely regarded as a rather "light weight" band in its time. Some of rock's more celebrated tastemakers even turned up their noses and pronounced Creedence Clearwater Revival a bubblegum act. "After all, what are their little pop songs compared with Jimi Hendrix? The Beatles? Jefferson Airplane?" As time has gone by, Creedence Clearwater Revival has stood with the best of them. Unfortunately, like most of the great 1960's rock bands, Creedence Clearwater Revival would not survive long into the next decade. The Beatles were no more by the spring of 1970. Hendrix would die in the Fall of the same year. Jim Morrison died in the early Summer of 1971. And Creedence Clearwater Revival disintegrated by 1972. In spite of the fact that for years all of the band members lurked in obscurity (John Fogerty deliberately so), with the release of their very first greatest hits compilation, Creedence Gold, their stature has only grown and their song catalogue has traveled well over the years.

Unlike most, Creedence Clearwater Revival has been served very well by the various "best of" packages that have been issued over the years. So why bother with the original albums? Individual cases can be made for the others; but Cosmo Factory is one of the greatest rock albums made. With its kind of cheesy cover it is easy to misjudge Cosmos Factory as a piece of junk. But appearances are deceiving. Inside are eleven cuts which have burned their way into the modern American songbook.

"Run Through The Jungle" and "Up Around The Bend" were put out over the radio as a pair and were the first songs the public heard off the album. The radio DJ at the time explained that the record company was trying to find out which song the public liked so that they could issue a single. As it turned out both were popular which aided the sales of the album itself. This started a cascade "hits" from Cosmos Factory-five from one album in all. The remaining six cuts began to have lives of their own on the fledgling FM album rock stations all over the country.

"Travelin' Band" was wildly popular. "Lookin' Out My Back Door" was so universally appealing that country music quickly adopted the song as one of its own. "Who'll Stop The Rain" became almost transcendental as 1970 saw one of the most terrible and traumatic periods of the Vietnam War. "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" struck us as particularly cool running at over eleven minutes-revamped as it was into the swamp rock idiom. Even kids who weren't drawn to Motown loved the song.

"Ramble Tamble" was basically built around a single riff; but what a hell of a riff it is. We tend to regard "Before You Accuse Me". "Ooby Dooby" and "My Baby Left Me" as mere covers and album fillers. Long time listening, however, shows this assessment underestimates their appeal and warmth. Their use anticipated by a few years the revival of 1950's era rock in the 1970's. Finally, "Long As I Can See The Light" has grown to be a sentimental favorite although it has never been a "hit" on the popular charts or the FM play list.

Cosmos Factory caught sense of the time. It looked back to the uneasy recent past, picking up what it could, and moved forward to a bright but uncharted and uncertain future. Looking back, no one could have told you what was to happen. The Vietnam War ended with nothing anyone on any side of the controversy could be proud of. Race relations went on to become more angry and bitter. The much-touted "Age Of Aquarius" was found to be an empty promise. Musically, the "Next Beatles" never came. Indeed, the music of the 1970's was a subject of deep disappointment at the time. (Although assessments for the music of that era have grown more positive.) It turns out that some of the surest footing into the "future to be" is found on this album. God bless ya, boys.

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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Screw the "Singles Rock" review. This Album Kicks Ass!!, July 18, 2003
By 
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
Amazon.com reviewers have no idea what they're talking about. Yes, this album has many popular singles on it, but that's not all. Every single song on this album is amazing and this is by far Creedence Clearwater Revival's best album. I was never really excited by any CCR album as I was excited with this one.
It combines every good quality of CCR on to one wonderful album. It has the extended/jam tracks that are essential to any southern rock album, in my opinion. "Ramble Tamble" is a 7-minute rocker that just makes want to get up and start playing air guitar. While most people dispose of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" as excessive or filler, I find it to be one of the best songs on the album. CCR adapted the song as well as any other artist could have. Surprisingly, John Fogerty puts about a pretty damn good 7 minute guitar solo, proving that he is one of the most underrated guitar players of the seventies.
Also included on this album are the fifties covers/sounding tunes that Fogerty loves so much. "My Baby Left Me" and "Ooby Dooby" are both fifties covers, but are still both awesome. In fact I've come to like the 50's type songs CCR does as well as any of their other stuff because of the ones they do on this album. Truly great.
Of course, there are the wonderfully written and catchy pop-like southern rock (for lack of a better style name) songs that Fogerty and CCR are most famous for. For example "Travelin' Band" which is perhaps my favorite CCR song ever, "Who'll Stop the Rain" which is as catchy as any XTC song, though totally different, "Up Around the Bend" which is catchy in a way only John Fogerty can achieve, "Lookin' Out My Back Door" a tale of a Southern home in a Southern city which is of course another gem, and "Long As I Can See the Light", a good way to end this amazing album on a high, but slow, note.
I cannot stress enough how good this album is. It is up there with such amazing southern rock albums as "Allman Brothers Live At the FIllmore East" and "Pronounced Leh-nerd Skeh-nerd", and may be even more impressive than those two. No matter who you are, you have to have this album!!!!!! Though amazon.com was incorrect in simply calling it a singles album, they were completely justified in rating it an ESSENTIAL ALBUM. Buy it NOW
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My FAVORITE CCR album!, February 19, 2000
By 
Henry R. Kujawa ("The Forbidden Zone" (Camden, NJ)) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
CCR's 5th album must have been the PEAK of their run; so many great, inspired songs here! After the sprawling borderline-progressive opener "Ramble Tamble" it's almost a greatest hits album! "Travelin' Band" (on my short list of "loudest songs ever recorded" and the current show-closer-- what could POSSIBLY come after it?), "Ooby Dooby", "Lookin' Out My Back Door" (definitely a Buck Owens fan), "Run Through The Jungle", "Up Around The Bend", "Who'll Stop The Rain" (remember when BOTH sides of a 45 were "A"-side material?), "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" (a version that stands well against Marvin Gaye's AND Gladys Knight's-- isn't it amazing that at 11:05 it doesn't seem "too long"? ) and "Long as I Can See the Light". WOW!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 8 hits out of 11 tracks pretty much says it all, August 30, 1998
By 
BigBad (Victoria, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
This album is a rarity if only for the sheer amount of hit songs it spawned. Creedence was the ultimate singles group of its day, and this record (released in 1970) really exemplifies that fact, showcasing their good-ole' jugband swamp rock. Let's face it; many of their other albums were quite patchy (some even lacklustre at worst), but this one is consistently excellent, featuring many of their most fun and catchy tunes. 'Cosmo' rolls on like Proud Mary, integrating many hit-and-run favourites like "Up Around The Bend", "Travellin' Band", "Lookin' Out My Back Door" and "Ooby Dooby" (their silliest track) with folky stuff such as "Who'll Stop The Rain" and a brooding Vietnam War song "Run Through The Jungle". This album features their version of Marvin Gaye's "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" in all of its 11 minute+ glory (no shortcuts here) plus an energetic opener jam named "Ramble Tamble" and a soulful closer "Long As I Can See The Light", making for one of the finest pop albums of 1970. If you want Creedence at their very best, go for this one - it's as good as any greatest hits compilation.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Really Rocks, August 29, 2004
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
For many years I was a classical music snob and didn't pay much attention to rock bands. CCR was probably one of the first really "rocking" band to win me over to rock and roll. This is undoubtedly their best album. I agree with one reviewer that the album cover was cheesy and didn't really reveal how good the contents were. If you can only own one CCR album, this should be the one. This is an essential for your collection. This is good music, even though "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" does get a little tedious before it ends. A little shorter version might have been a good idea.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cosmo's Factory, December 3, 2010
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This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)

*********************
Track listing:
*********************

1. Ramble Tamble
2. Before You Accuse Me
3. Travelin' Band
4. Ooby Dooby
5. Lookin' Out My Back Door
6. Run Through the Jungle
7. Up Around the Bend
8. My Baby Left Me
9. Who'll Stop the Rain
10. I Heard It Through the Grapevine
11. Long as I Can See the Light
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of their greatest, January 6, 2006
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
Apart from their flawed first & last albums, Creedence actually never made anything short of perfect, short of classic, or short of 'greatest', so I can't say if this record is better than 'Willy And The Poor Boys', for example... actually my main point must be, that any serious fan of music in general should have all their classic albums, while anybody who really LIKES creedence should ALSO acquire their inconsistent but mostly marvellous debut, & their chaotic last album (which nonetheless includes such classics as 'Sweet Hitch-Hiker' and 'Someday Never Comes')

'Cosmo's Factory' opens with 'Ramble Tamble', a joyous & exhilerating rocker, a true anthem for a world that never was (or was it? !). It changes midway into a slower, almost Abbey Road-era Beatlesque song. The next song is a cover of the classic 'Before You Accuse Me', &, not to offend anybody else who has covered it, but this definently THE version of that song.
The following song, 'Travelin' Band' is one of their greatest ever, a simply wonderful slice of a rockabilly-like stomper, recalling figures such as Gene Vincent & the King himself.
The next song, the cover 'Ooby Dooby', is sort of a comedown from the skies, but it still works, though it is eclipsed by the next classic, 'Lookin' Out My Back Door', a lazy, gleamin' jewel of a rock song with a divine intro, followed by another classic, the paranoid, screeching rock of Creedence's great anti-Vietnam song, 'Run Through The Jungle'.
The third, & arguably greatest, classic in a row follows; 'Up Around The Bend' is driven by a marvellous riff & is the purest Creedence, simply breathtaking, lifegiving...
In this way, the cover of 'My Baby Left Me' could be seen as a disappointment, but few songs could have held the atmosphere of 'Up Around The Bend', and succesfully followed it ('Bad Moon Arising' actually works wonders on the 'Platinum' best-of, where it sounds so perfect just after 'Up Around The Bend' that I was surprised they didn't come off the same album...). Anyway 'My Baby Left Me' is a great song, but it's not 'Bad Moon Rising'... not that that matters, for the last three tracks are almost-classics all the way, from the brilliant 'Who'll Stop The Rain' through 'I Heard It Through The Grapevine', again the best version of that classic song, to the pure Creedence 'Long As I Can See The Light', that shimmers till the end of the album.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ****1/2, November 19, 2003
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
"Cosmo's Factory" is often considered Creedence's best record.
Some (including me) would say that "Green River" and "Willy And The Poor Boys" are more consistent records, but there is no doubt that this album features some of the group's best songs.

The opening track, the long, meandering instrumental "Ramble Tamble", is not one of them, though, and CCR's takes on "Ooby Dooby" and "My Baby Left Me" are pretty good, but nothing special, and they pale by comparison to John Fogerty's originals.

Fogerty wrote some of his best songs for "Cosmo's Factory", which produced no fewer than six hit singles, every one of them peaking in the top five. "Up Around The Bend" and "Travelin' Band" are glorious, piledriving rockers; "Who'll Stop The Rain" is one of Fogerty's true classics, a wonderful folk-rock song with thoughful lyrics and a great melody, and the #2 hit "Long As I Can See The Light" is a glorious slow soul tune and one of the most underrated songs in Creedence's catalogue.

The group's rendition of the Marvin Gaye classic "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" is excellent as well, sporting a great riff, and Fogerty does a great Bo Diddley on "Before You Accuse Me".
All in all, there are a couple of lesser songs here, but most of "Cosmo's" is simply magnificent, capturing the spirit and versatility of Creedence Clearwater Revival in general, and John Fogerty in particular. One or two forgettable songs have snuck onto the disc, sure, but almost all of what is here is excellent, and "Cosmo's Factory" is a must-have for any self-respecting Creedence fan.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This album was my First outing with Rock & Roll, December 26, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
My Name Is Garr Norick. I First heard this album when I was about 4 years old. I am 15 now. I normally don't like rock & roll except for CCR, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, etc. I Discovered this album accidentally when my mom bought it at a thrift shop. This Album Is the greatest of the great. I just yesterday ordered "Willy & The Poor Boys", "Creedence Clearwater Revival", "Green River" & "Bayou Country" from amazon on cd. This album is the Pinnacle of Rock & Roll! Buy It Today!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Great American Band hits their peak, October 4, 2008
This review is from: Cosmo's Factory (Audio CD)
With Concord Music Group having purchased the Fantasy catalog, the fortieth anniversary of Creedence Clearwater Revival's debut LP provides a suitable opportunity for a fresh round of reissues. All six of the original foursome's albums (from 1968's Creedence Clearwater Revival through 1970's Pendulum) have been struck from new digital masters and augmented by previously unreleased tracks. Those who purchased the 2001 box set can pick up most of the bonus tracks separately as digital downloads (the two longest bonuses are CD-only). Those who didn't buy the box, and think they'll buy all six reissues may want to consider the box set for its inclusion of pre-Creedence work from the Blue Velvets and Golliwogs, the seventh CCR album Mardi Gras, the 1970-71 live recordings and several box-only bonuses. But for those just wanting to pick up a few favorite albums, these reissues are the ticket. Each is presented in a digipack with original front and back cover album art and a 16-page booklet with photos, credits and new liner notes.

Creedence's fifth studio album, Cosmo's Factory, expands upon the gains of their previous two releases even as it returns to the jamming, psychedelic roots and enthusiastic cover songs of the band's 1968 debut. The result sums up the band's evolution with socially-charged guitar jams ("Ramble Tamble"), concise, iconic hit singles ("Travelin' Band," "Up Around the Bend" and "Lookin' Out My Back Door"), memorable B-sides ("Who'll Stop the Rain," "Run Through the Jungle" and "Long As I Can See the Light"), heartfelt throwbacks ("Before You Accuse Me," "Ooby Dooby" and "My Baby Left Me"), and a tour de force eleven minute reworking of Marvin Gaye's "I Heard It Through the Grapevine." Rhythm guitarist Tom Fogerty would stick around for the next LP (Pendulum), but this one's actually the more fitting summation of the original foursome's 2-1/2 year run. John Fogerty might well have sensed this was the high point as he sings "Lookin' Out My Back Door" weary but satisfied, and "Long As I Can See the Light" as an elegy.

Given that all three B-sides should have marked their own time on the charts, one can easily imagine this album spinning off six hits, with the lengthy album tracks tucked away on the late night radio waves of underground FM. Legacy's 2008 CD reissue adds three bonus tracks, including a post-LP studio take of "Travelin' Band" recorded without horns, a previously unreleased live version of "Up Around the Bend" from the group's final European tour and a 1970 studio jam of "Born on the Bayou" featuring Booker T. on organ. If you're only going to buy one Creedence LP, this is as good as it gets. Of course, that could equally well be said about Green River or Willy and the Poor Boys, and perhaps even Bayou Country. Best bet: get them all. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]
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Cosmo's Factory
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