Chris Bell
I Am The Cosmos
Label ©  Rykodisc
Release Year  1978
Length  54:14
Genre  Pop-Rock
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  C-0080
Bitrate  192 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      I Am The Cosmos  
       3:50  
      2.  
      Better Save Yourself  
       4:29  
      3.  
      Speed Of Sound  
       5:15  
      4.  
      Get Away  
       3:29  
      5.  
      You And Your Sister  
       3:14  
      6.  
      Make A Scene  
       4:12  
      7.  
      Look Up  
       3:18  
      8.  
      I Got Kinda Lost  
       2:45  
      9.  
      There Was A Light  
       3:21  
      10.  
      Fight At The Table  
       3:44  
      11.  
      I Don't Know  
       3:25  
      12.  
      Though I Know She Lies  
       3:38  
      13.  
      I Am The Cosmos (Slow Version)  
       3:42  
      14.  
      You And Your SIster (Country Version)  
       2:58  
      15.  
      You And Your SIster (Acoustic Version)  
       2:54  
    Additional info: | top
      Artist Chris Bell
      Work I Am The Cosmos
      Year 1978, 1992 Rykodisc RCD 10222
      URL http://www.ready-steady-go.org.uk/bell.htm
      Genre indie
      Subgenre acoustic
      Type of Recording studio
      Duration 54:14
      Number of Songs 15


      Unreleased for over 15 years, I Am the Cosmos is nevertheless an enduring testament to the brilliance of Chris Bell; lyrically poignant and melodically stunning, this lone solo album is proof positive of his underappreciated pop mastery. While cuts like "Get Away," "I Got Kinda Lost," and "Fight at the Table" recall the glowing, energetic power-pop of Bell's earlier work, the majority of the songs on I Am the Cosmos are more reflective and deeply personal; the title track is a harrowingly schizophrenic tale of romantic despair, while other cuts like the lurching "Better Save Yourself" and the lovely "Look Up" are infused with a spiritual power largely missing from his Big Star material. The album's highlight, "You and Your Sister" -- which features backing vocals from none other than Bell's Big Star mate Alex Chilton -- is simply one of the great unknown love songs in the pop canon, a luminous and fragile ballad almost otherworldly in its beauty.
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