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| The Cosmic Game | 
| List Price: $15.98 Buy New: $9.99 You Save: $5.99 (37%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $6.59
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 77 reviews) Sales Rank: 2967 Category: Music
Artist: Thievery Corporation Publisher: Eighteenth Street Studio: Eighteenth Street Manufacturer: Eighteenth Street Label: Eighteenth Street Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 81 UPC: 795103008120 EAN: 0795103008120 ASIN: B0006ZXJ3E
Release Date: February 22, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| | Marching the Hate Machines (Into the Sun) featuring the Flaming Lips | | | Warning Shots featuring Sleepy Wonder and Gunjan | | | The Revolution Solution featuring Perry Farrell | | | The Cosmic Gate | | | Satyam Shivam Sundaram featuring Gunjan | | | Amerimacka featuring Notch | | | Ambicion Eterna (Eternal Ambition) featuring Verny Varela | | | Pela Janela (Through the Window) featuring Gigi Rezende | | | Sol Tapado featuring Patrick de Santos | | | The Heart's a Lonely Hunter featuring David Byrne | | | Holographic Universe | | | Doors of Perception featuring Gunjan | | | Wires and Watchtowers featuring Sista Pat | | | The Supreme Illusion featuring Gunjan | | | The Time We Lost Out Way featuring Loulou | | | A Gentle Dissolve |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description The most fully-realized Thievery set to date, their fourth studio record packs an all-star punch, with cameos by FLAMING LIPS, PERRY FARRELL, DAVID BYRNE, and more of their usually lovely futuristic bossa/lounge/downtempo sound. Check out ThieveryCorporation.com to launch soon.
Amazon.com There's always been a psychedelic edge to Rob Garza and Eric Hilton's Thievery Corporation project. 2000's Mirror Conspiracy is a downtempo classic precisely because of its druggy expansiveness; sober listeners and saucer-eyed trippers alike could find common ground. Similarly esoteric and nocturnal, The Cosmic Game floats around the room on a wave of mystic beats and guest vocals from Perry Farrell, The Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne, and David Byrne. Garza and Hilton are less devoted to non-electronic sources here than they were on The Richest Man in Babylon or The Outernational Sound, though their fascination with dub rhythms and world music remains intact. A fair amount of armchair travel is involved as you go from the late, late-night, beach-club-in-Jamaica sound of "Amerimacka," to the Brazilian percussion of "Ambicion Eterna" and "Pela Janela." But more than anything, the record feels like a return to the duo's own ethereal sonic roots. It's a nice blend of their music over the last half-decade for longtime fans, and a hazy glide down the rabbit hole for newcomers. --Matthew Cooke
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| Customer Reviews: Read 72 more reviews...
  Eddy Review November 30, 2008 Discovered on an Internet radio. I love the "dynamics" rythms. Some songs make me remind of west indies sounds. Eddy
  Opposing forces October 28, 2008 3 1/2
I always end up wishing this electronic group stuck to the non-lyric tracks. It is on those more refined productions where studio finesse really kicks in and their diverse palate of electro-world influence becomes noticeable. Unfortunately, cluttered side-by-side with run of the mill vocal appeasements, Thievery Corporation miss the mark of attaining the kind of flow you would think they were aiming for in the first place.
  More of the same, but with some intriguing steps towards psychadelia August 25, 2008 In most respects, Thievery Corporation's 2005 album THE COSMIC GAME is a further refinement of the global lounge styles they had explored in previous efforts. There's Asian female vocals and sitar ("Satyam Shivam Sundaram"), echoes of Brazil ("Pela Janela"), and a rastaman glorifying Hallie Salassie ("Warning Shots"). The duo of Rob Garza and Eric Hilton, who ran an elite lounge in Washington DC that would accept only the finest dress and comportment, also continue their theme (its sincerity is questionable) of the Third World masses held down by the Man; witness the songs "Revolution Solution" and "Amerimacka" where Perry Farrell and Notch deliver such lines "The toil of the many goes to the fortunate few" and "Land of the free built on slavery." Most tracks are banal, musically fluff and nothing that compels a purchase if you've already got THE MIRROR CONSPIRACY and THE RICHEST MAN IN BABYLON.
Yet, there are a couple of songs where Thievery Corporation ventured in a new direction that should have been featured more heavily on this album. The opening "Marching the Hate Machines (Into the Sun)" and "Sol Tapado" are clearly influenced by 1960s psychadelia, and the "Pink Floyd meets dub" soundworld creates a chillout vibe much more effectively than Thievery Corporation's now played-out World music extravaganza.
  Classic 'Thievery' riffs and groovy beats June 18, 2008 This is yet another high-quality, gold-standard Thievery Corp release. Fantastic reggae & Indian influenced riffs and groovy beats. I love albums you can just listen to from beginning to end without having to skip a song; always the case with their music. Stick the cd into your player and then sit 'relax' with a special friend or party with a bunch of pals and chill out. Love this album. So far I've love all their albums that I've come across, inclu "Sounds (Songs?) from the Thievery HiFi" and DJ Kicks and "Richest Man in Babylon". I need to investigate what else is out there. "Versions" in on order.
  Outstanding April 9, 2008 The CD is awesome. I have "The Mirror Conspiracy" as well. "The Cosmic Game" is the one I just bought. It groves very well, its a great CD for the car ride home from a hard days work. As well as a great soundtrack for a clam dinner party with friends. If you like Thievery Corporation, this album is a must have.
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