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Creedence Clearwater Revival: Cosmo’s Factory album review

Creedence Clearwater Revival were unstoppable between 1969 and ’70, outselling The Beatles with five monster-selling albums and a seemingly endless run of chart singles. Leader John Fogerty’s songs recalled the golden age of rock’n’roll – ringing guitars, hooks, brusque solos – while also chiming with the urgency and discord of the countercultural era. 

By the time of fourth album Cosmo’s Factory, however, released in July 1970, CCR were beginning to play against type; the seven-minute Ramble Tamble (an echo of previous long-form pieces like Graveyard Train and Keep On Chooglin’) is more experimental than anything Fogerty had hitherto attempted. What begins as roaring rockabilly soon settles into an explorative kind of bluesy psychedelia, before the band ramp up the pace again for the finale. Similarly, an epic I Heard It Through The Grapevine dilutes the sweetness of Marvin Gaye’s version by turning it into a free guitar jam over a steady funk groove. 

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