The Cosmopolitans

Location:
New York, Virginia, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
New Wave / Pop Punk / Garage
Site(s):
Label:
Bacchus Archives / Dionysus Records
Type:
Indie
New Retrospective CD OUT NOW!
"WiLd MoOsE PaRTy - New Wave Pom Pom Girls Gone Go-Go,NYC 1980-1981"Includes Previously Unreleased Recordings + VINTAGE 1980 VIDEO!



Available on AMAZON and iTUNES



2009 Reunion Show at Cat's Cradle - Free Advice - BUY IT HERE!



Los Angeles-based Dionysus Records has released the long-awaited retrospective CD of this acclaimed early-80s New Wave party band! Titled Wild Moose Party: New Wave Pom Pom Girls Gone Go-Go NYC 1980, the enhanced CD features all three classic out-of-print Shake Records tracks, many unreleased studio and live recordings, and -- perhaps best of all -- the original pre-MTV video of "(How to Keep Your) Husband Happy," featuring Mitch Easter and Faye Hunter (pre-Let's Active!) and footage of the band playing on New Jersey's legendary Uncle Floyd Show!
The CD can be found in stores and online now! Visit your favorite music store, and ask for it by name!



about The Cosmopolitans
The Cosmopolitans were a nifty little dance troupe-turned-rock combo that caught the fancy of swinging New Yorkers at the height of the punk/New Wave era. They are best-remembered for cutting one of the most infectious singles of the era: "(How to Keep Your) Husband Happy" b/w "Wild Moose Party" and "Dancin' Lesson," on the same Shake Records label that put out early releases by the dB's, Richard Hell and others.
As the Seventies bled into the Eighties, the Cosmopolitans' delightfully absurd and danceable party-rock creations inspired normally sedentary, shoe-gazing clubgoers to move their two left feet to the beat. Old Sixties dance steps like the Frug, the Jerk and the Swim were reborn, and hot new Eighties inventions like the "dB Drop" and the "Fleshtone Flank Step" - consult the aforementioned "Dancin' Lesson" for further elaboration - were brought to the floors of the hippest downtown rock clubs, including CBGB's, Max's Kansas City, Irving Plaza, Club 57, the Ritz, the Peppermint Lounge and Tier Three.
The group also ventured uptown (Hurrah) and over the river (Maxwell's, in Hoboken). In the anything-goes Eighties, these high-stepping terpsichoreans helped many a young man and woman make a splash at their next New Wave cotillion.
If Sam the Sham had been Samantha, if the Kingsmen had been Queens, if the Swingin' Medallions had been sorority sisters instead of frat boys, and if all of them had a schooled background in modern dance, then you might have some idea of the devilishly unique space the Cosmopolitans occupied. Think Shangri-La's meet Fleshtones, if you can wrap your mind around such a concept. The Cosmopolitans simultaneously referenced Sixties girl-group pop and party music; the DIY spirit of late-Seventies punk and power pop; the angular, driving minimalism of early-Eighties New Wave; and a timeless, well-cultivated sense of the absurd. And during their brief lifespan as a band, people got it. And now, you can too. Use the links above to get your copy of Wild Moose Party now!
Portions of the above text taken from Parke Puterbaugh's liner notes; check the blog post above to read the liner notes in their entirety



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