Cosmogramma
Cosmogramma is the third studio album by American electronic music producer Steven Ellison, professionally known as Flying Lotus, released on May 3, 2010, by Warp Records.[1] The 17-track record, which runs for 45 minutes and 36 seconds, represents a pivotal work in Ellison's discography, blending experimental electronic music with influences from jazz, hip-hop, IDM, and glitch.[2][3][4] Produced primarily by Flying Lotus, Cosmogramma features dense, layered arrangements that spill across tracks, creating a continuous, cosmic soundscape inspired by Ellison's exploration of jazz genealogy and digital experimentation.[3][5] Guest contributions include vocals from Thom Yorke on "...And the World Laughs With You," saxophone from Ravi Coltrane, bass from Thundercat, strings arranged by Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, vocalists Laura Darlington and Niki Randa, and harp from Rebekah Raff.[6][7] Upon release, Cosmogramma received widespread critical acclaim for its innovative fusion of genres and intricate production, earning a Metacritic score of 86 out of 100 based on 26 reviews and Pitchfork's "Best New Music" designation with an 8.8 rating.[8][3] Notable tracks such as "Zodiac Shit," "Do the Astral Plane," and "Satelllliiiiiiite" highlight the album's dynamic range, from frenetic beats to ethereal atmospheres, solidifying its status as a landmark in experimental electronic music.[3][7]Background and Inspiration
Personal Influences
Steven Ellison, known professionally as Flying Lotus, experienced profound personal losses that deeply informed the emotional foundation of Cosmogramma. On October 31, 2008, his mother succumbed to complications from diabetes, an event that plunged Ellison into grief and existential reflection. This sudden death occurred just as he began conceptualizing the album, prompting him to record the sounds of her hospital life-support machines, which he later incorporated subtly into the tracks as a haunting personal imprint. In a 2010 interview, Ellison reflected on the impact, stating, "I decided that if I was going to speak after that experience, it better be something honest, and deeper than a record that was just made for the times. I wanted to do something that made her proud. Something that could last forever, hopefully."[9] Compounding this loss was the passing of Ellison's great-aunt, Alice Coltrane, in January 2007, 21 months earlier. As a revered jazz pianist, composer, and spiritual leader who founded an ashram in Agoura, California, Coltrane's legacy profoundly shaped Ellison's upbringing and artistic worldview, with her Sunday organ sessions serving as his "church experience." Her music, particularly albums like Lord of Lords (1972), which Ellison interpreted as her meditation on her husband John Coltrane's death, provided a framework for processing familial grief. The album's title, Cosmogramma, stemmed from Ellison mishearing Coltrane's discourse on "cosmic drama" as a term evoking the study of the universe, heaven, and hell—a concept that haunted him and infused the work with cosmic spirituality.[10][11][12] These bereavements catalyzed Ellison's exploration of themes central to the album's inception: grief as a transformative force, spirituality as a conduit for transcendence, and the enduring bonds of family heritage. Turning to Coltrane's devotional jazz for solace after his mother's death, Ellison wove these elements into a narrative of astral journeys and emotional catharsis, briefly drawing on lucid dreaming experiences to envision otherworldly realms. This personal turmoil inspired a deliberate pivot toward a more experimental sound, blending electronic abstraction with live instrumentation like harp and strings—evoking his family's jazz roots—while eschewing conventional beats for an intimate, orchestral expanse that honored his losses. As Ellison noted in 2010, the album became a "space opera" channeling his grief into a "burning light" of universal inquiry.[13][12][11]Conceptual Development
The title Cosmogramma originated from a mishearing by Steven Ellison (Flying Lotus) of the phrase "cosmic drama" during one of his great-aunt Alice Coltrane's spiritual discourses at her Sai Anantam ashram, which he interpreted as a term evoking a map of the universe encompassing heaven and hell.[13][14] This invention captured the album's exploratory essence, drawing directly from Coltrane's legacy of blending jazz improvisation with mystical themes.[10] At its core, Cosmogramma revolves around motifs of lucid dreaming and out-of-body experiences, conceptualized by Ellison as a "space opera" or interstellar journey that transcends earthly boundaries.[13][10] These ideas intersect with Afrofuturism, manifesting in the album's fusion of astral jazz traditions with electronic futurism, echoing influences like Sun Ra while envisioning Black diasporic narratives in cosmic realms.[15][16] The album marked an evolution from Ellison's prior release Los Angeles (2008), which emphasized hip-hop-inflected beats and urban vignettes, toward a more cohesive, narrative-driven structure resembling a dream-like odyssey with seamless transitions across tracks.[13][16] This shift broke from rigid hip-hop conventions, incorporating layered, theatrical elements to evoke a psychedelic voyage.[12][10] Ellison integrated spiritual and cosmic elements by channeling jazz heritage—particularly Alice Coltrane's devotional music and her responses to personal loss, such as John Coltrane's death—into a framework of mysticism that probes eternity and interconnectivity.[12][15] This vision was deepened by his own experiences of grief, including the death of his mother in 2008, following the passing of Alice Coltrane in 2007, transforming raw emotion into an otherworldly tribute.[16][10]Production
Recording Sessions
The recording sessions for Cosmogramma took place from October 2008 through 2009 in producer Steven Ellison's apartment in Los Angeles.[13][17] This period immediately followed the release of Ellison's previous album, Los Angeles, and coincided with significant personal turmoil.[10] Ellison utilized a casual, home-based recording environment, relying on basic equipment in his living space rather than a professional studio, which allowed for an intimate and experimental workflow.[18] Despite this unpolished setup, the sessions yielded a densely layered and sophisticated sound that demanded extensive post-production refinement.[13] The process was marked by emotional challenges, particularly the intensity of grieving Ellison's mother, who passed away on October 31, 2008, from diabetes complications while he recorded ambient sounds at her hospital bedside.[17][13] This grief permeated the sessions, transforming them into a cathartic outlet amid the producer's familial losses.[16][19] Following the core recording, mastering was handled by Daddy Kev of Low End Theory and Alpha Pup Records, a process that Ellison oversaw and which extended over four months to achieve the album's intricate sonic balance—far longer than the typical few days or hours for such work.[17][13]Key Collaborations
One of the defining aspects of Cosmogramma was Flying Lotus's strategic collaborations with a diverse array of musicians, which infused the album's electronic foundations with live jazz and orchestral elements, creating a hybrid sound that evoked cosmic exploration and spiritual depth.[20] These partnerships, often involving family ties and long-standing creative relationships, elevated the production by incorporating organic instrumentation that contrasted and complemented the synthetic beats and samples.[21] Thundercat, the bassist and vocalist (real name Stephen Bruner), provided foundational contributions across multiple tracks, including bass lines on "Pickled!", "Intro//A Cosmic Drama", "Zodiac Shit", "...And the World Laughs With You", "MmmHmm" (where he also co-wrote and sang), "Satelllliiiiiiiteee", "Dance of the Pseudo Nymph" (with additional vocals), and "Galaxy in Janaki".[22] His fluid, melodic bass playing bridged the album's electronic rhythms with jazz improvisation, adding emotional warmth and propulsion that made tracks feel alive and improvisational, as Flying Lotus noted calling him in to "make things even crazier."[20][13] Ravi Coltrane, the tenor saxophonist and Flying Lotus's cousin, contributed saxophone solos on "Arkestry" and "German Haircut", drawing from his jazz heritage as the son of John and Alice Coltrane to infuse the album with spiritual, free-jazz echoes.[22] These performances helped anchor the electronic experimentation in traditional jazz phrasing, enhancing the thematic sense of astral journeying.[21] Similarly, string arranger and violinist Miguel Atwood-Ferguson orchestrated lush string sections throughout, including on tracks like "Zodiac Shit" and "Intro//A Cosmic Drama", where his arrangements evoked the orchestral grandeur of Alice Coltrane's work while layering over glitchy electronics to create a seamless fusion.[22][20] Vocal features added ethereal and introspective layers, with Thom Yorke delivering haunting vocals and co-writing on "...And the World Laughs With You", a track born from a swift collaboration facilitated by Mary-Anne Hobbs after Yorke heard Flying Lotus's earlier material.[23][22] Yorke's contribution, reflecting themes of shared joy and personal isolation, blended his falsetto with delicate beats to heighten the song's emotional resonance and underscore the album's lucid dreaming motifs.[13] Niki Randa provided soulful vocals on tracks such as "Intro//A Cosmic Drama", bringing a human, textured quality that softened the electronic edges and complemented the jazz-infused arrangements.[22][21] Other contributors, including harpist Rebekah Raff on several tracks like "Computer Love // Since I Left You" and vocalist Laura Darlington on "Table Tennis" (co-written), further emphasized live instrumentation's role in elevating the production, with their inputs fostering a collaborative environment that merged improvisational jazz spontaneity with electronic precision.[22][20] This interplay not only enriched Cosmogramma's sonic palette but also solidified Flying Lotus's reputation for innovative genre-blending.[13]Technical Production
Flying Lotus, also known as Steven Ellison, crafted Cosmogramma using a combination of digital and analog tools to build its intricate soundscapes. He primarily employed a laptop running Ableton Live software for composition and arrangement, alongside an MPC sampler and drum machine for rhythmic foundations and sample manipulation.[24] Live instruments, including strings, bass, saxophone, trumpet, keyboards, and harp, were recorded and layered into the tracks to add organic depth and texture.[25] The album's production relied on techniques such as multi-tracking to create dense, overlapping layers of sound, allowing disparate elements to coexist in a chaotic yet cohesive manner. Ellison sampled recordings from live jazz sessions, which were then processed and integrated into the compositions, drawing on improvisational jazz elements for rhythmic and melodic complexity. Experimental sound design was achieved through digital processing methods, including side-chain pumping to synchronize sustained elements like pads and vocals with kick drums for rhythmic emphasis, ducking to tuck reverbs and echoes beneath leads for increased density, and envelope following to enhance low-frequency content aligned with percussion.[26][27] These digital manipulations in Ableton Live and via plug-ins enabled the incorporation of chiptune aesthetics through 8-bit-like synth emulations, dubstep-inspired wobbles and bass drops, and free jazz improvisation via altered samples, resulting in a fusion of electronic and acoustic timbres. Collaborators such as Thundercat provided bass and vocal inputs that were digitally layered into the mix. In post-production, the tracks were mixed to emphasize a maximalist, densely packed sonic palette, with final mastering handled by Daddy Kev to polish the overall clarity and impact.[27][28][4]Musical Composition
Overall Style and Influences
Cosmogramma is classified as an electronica and IDM album with prominent nu jazz elements, incorporating Afrofuturist and maximalist characteristics that blend futuristic soundscapes with expansive, layered compositions.[3][29] The album's style draws from a wide array of genres, including psychedelic hip-hop and glitch electronics, creating a dense sonic palette that defies traditional categorization.[3] Its Afrofuturist traits are evident in the cosmic, otherworldly themes infused with Black musical heritage, while maximalism manifests in the intricate, multi-layered arrangements that evoke a sense of interstellar exploration.[10][11] The album's influences span ambient textures, P-Funk grooves, soulful undertones, techno rhythms, and free jazz improvisation, all deeply tied to producer Steven Ellison's familial and cultural heritage.[29][10] Central to this is the impact of his great-aunt Alice Coltrane, whose spiritual jazz and harp work inspire the album's ethereal harp lines and improvisational flair, reflecting Ellison's upbringing in a lineage connected to Motown soul and cosmic jazz traditions.[11][10] P-Funk and soul elements nod to his grandmother's Motown songwriting roots, while free jazz draws from late-1960s Impulse! Records innovations, and techno/ambient influences add electronic propulsion and atmospheric depth.[29][10] These sources converge to honor Ellison's Los Angeles upbringing, blending West Coast psychedelia with global electronic currents.[11] Compared to Ellison's prior works like Los Angeles (2008), Cosmogramma marks a shift toward a more orchestral and narrative-driven sound, with up to 80 layers per track forming a cohesive "space opera" rather than standalone beats.[10][3] This evolution emphasizes interconnected movements where rhythms, melodies, and textures spill across tracks, fostering a "cosmic" atmosphere of improvisation and density.[3] The eclectic layering—featuring skittering beats, live strings, harp, and bass—creates unstable yet interlocking elements that reward repeated listens, prioritizing holistic immersion over isolated hooks.[10][3]Track Analysis
The album Cosmogramma comprises 17 tracks totaling 45:36, sequenced to unfold as a continuous sonic journey divided into three distinct passages: an initial aggressive, videogame-inspired section, a heady astral interlude, and a concluding downtempo jazz-heavy resolution, encouraging repeated listens to appreciate its layered interconnections.[3][30] "Clock Catcher," the opening track, serves as an introductory ambient piece with fierce, off-kilter hi-hats and fast-paced rhythms that establish an energetic, disorienting momentum right from the start.[31] In contrast, "Zodiac Shit" introduces dubstep-infused elements through vertiginous bass drops and sun-dappled orchestral flourishes reminiscent of Van Dyke Parks, blending heavy, loping bass thumps with sputtering electronic textures to create a physically rumbling intensity.[31][3] The track "...And the World Laughs With You" features Thom Yorke's subtly manipulated vocals, woven delicately into glitchy, bright synth arrangements that highlight the producer's confident integration of guest contributions, evoking a sense of ethereal collaboration amid the album's digital jazz framework.[3][32] Further along, "Do the Astral Plane" contributes to the mid-album astral stretch with unstable yet interlocking sonic elements, including thunderous drum intros and string parts that transition seamlessly into surrounding pieces.[3][32] As the closing spiritual piece, "Galaxy in Janaki" acts as a swooning resolution, incorporating harp arrangements, Thundercat's bass, and recurring motifs from earlier tracks—such as percolating strings and orchestral shimmers—to synthesize the album's disparate ideas into a cohesive, Frankenstein-like tapestry.[31][32] Tracks interconnect narratively through abrupt yet purposeful transitions, with bits of one spilling into the next like an avant-garde jazz improvisation, reinforced by shared motifs of digital jazz instability and Alice Coltrane-inspired spiritual undertones that build from scattershot sketches to a mature, introspective climax.[3][31] This rationale for the compact 45:36 runtime emphasizes density over sprawl, allowing the album's eclectic fusions of hip-hop, IDM, and free jazz to cohere as a single, evolving movement.[32][30]Promotion and Release
Promotional Activities
To build anticipation for the album, Flying Lotus embarked on a promotional tour across Canada, Europe, and the United States starting in early 2010. The itinerary included stops in major cities to showcase material from Cosmogramma and generate buzz ahead of its release.[33][34] Tracks such as "Zodiac Shit" were highlighted in promotional efforts, with an animated music video directed by Lilfuchs released through Adult Swim to extend the album's visual and thematic reach.[35][36] A key element of the campaign was the development and free release of the Cosmogramma Fieldlines augmented reality application in April 2010. Created using openFrameworks, the app allowed users to point a webcam at the album's cover artwork or printed markers to generate interactive 3D animations, particle effects, and soundscapes inspired by the record's cosmic motifs, fostering deeper fan engagement.[37][38][39] Flying Lotus also participated in preview interviews and features in outlets like Pitchfork, where he discussed the album's experimental fusion of jazz, hip-hop, and electronic elements, as well as notable guest appearances, to tease its conceptual depth.[40][6]Release and Formats
Cosmogramma was released on May 3, 2010, in the United Kingdom by Warp Records, with the United States release following on May 4, 2010.[41][30] The album was made available in multiple formats, including a standard CD edition, a double vinyl LP in a gatefold sleeve, and digital download options such as MP3 and FLAC files.[4][42] Limited editions included a CD pressing with a golden slipcase and various vinyl reissues, such as a 2019 black and white marbled edition exclusive to certain retailers and a 2023 limited edition silver vinyl pressing of 500 copies.[4][43] On April 16, 2011, Flying Lotus released Cosmogramma Alt Takes, a follow-up EP featuring B-sides and alternate versions from the album's sessions, issued as a limited-edition 12-inch vinyl for Record Store Day.[44]Artwork and Visual Elements
Cover Artwork
The cover artwork for Cosmogramma was created by artist Leigh J. McCloskey, drawn from his extensive Codex Tor series of illuminated books, which comprises over 500 hand-drawn and painted images spanning 21 years across three volumes: Winter Solstice, Summer Solstice, and Equinox - Mysterium Magnum.[45] This series served as the primary visual source, with the album's front cover excerpted from Codex Tor Book One: Summer Solstice, while additional interior elements, including the gatefold spread, were selected from Codex Tor Equinox: Mysterium Magnum Grail.[46] McCloskey, a painter, actor, and philosopher, collaborated closely with album producer Steven Ellison (Flying Lotus), who regarded him as a key artistic mentor; Ellison personally selected the images from McCloskey's voluminous folios to align with the album's exploratory themes.[47] The artwork's symbolism emphasizes cosmic and mystical imagery, reflecting themes of spirituality, universal interconnectedness, and human consciousness as a "cultivated garden" of hidden realities.[45] Intricate motifs include swirling alchemical symbols, gnostic emblems of illumination, and fluid, wave-like patterns evoking the cosmos's dynamic energy and ancient esoteric knowledge, which mirror the album's fusion of jazz, electronic, and psychedelic elements.[46] These designs, rendered in vibrant inks on heavy stock paper, draw from McCloskey's spontaneous creative process, blending Renaissance-inspired illumination with modern philosophical inquiry into love, beauty, and transcendent vision.[45] For physical releases, the artwork was adapted into a semi-gloss gatefold sleeve for the double vinyl edition, allowing the full spread of cosmic illustrations to unfold and immerse listeners in the thematic depth.[22] This packaging included custom printed inner sleeves featuring credits and additional graphics from the Codex Tor series, enhancing the tactile experience while preserving the artwork's intricate details on high-quality cardstock.[22] The collaboration between McCloskey and Ellison extended to on-site sessions where they explored the paintings' essence through gestural interactions, ensuring the visuals captured the album's dreamlike, otherworldly intent.[48]Augmented Media
The Cosmogramma Fieldlines application was released in April 2010 as a free augmented reality tool developed by artist Aaron Meyers using the openFrameworks platform, specifically to accompany Flying Lotus's album Cosmogramma.[38] Designed for Mac and Windows computers equipped with a webcam and sufficient graphics processing, the app allowed users to scan the album's physical cover artwork—created by painter Leigh J. McCloskey—triggering dynamic visualizations of flowing, magnetic field lines that responded to user movements or mouse interactions.[49] These ethereal animations incorporated sound elements from the album, such as harp textures performed by Rebekah Raff, creating an immersive, interactive extension of the artwork's cosmic themes.[49] Integrated directly with the physical album packaging, the app enhanced the user experience by transforming static CD or vinyl booklets into portals for real-time audio-visual effects, requiring users to hold the artwork in front of their webcam to activate the AR overlay.[37] This feature encouraged tactile engagement with the tangible release formats, bridging the gap between physical media and digital interactivity in an era when AR was emerging as a novel promotional medium.[38] As a pioneering blend of music, visual art, and early 2010s technology, the app served as an innovative promotional element ahead of the album's May 3, 2010, release on Warp Records, offering fans a preview of its experimental ethos through free downloads from the official Flying Lotus website.[37] No official updates or mobile adaptations to the app have been documented, and while subsequent vinyl reissues of Cosmogramma in 2014 and 2019 maintained the core artwork, they did not incorporate or revive the AR functionality.[49]Reception and Legacy
Critical Reception
Cosmogramma received widespread critical acclaim upon its release in 2010, earning a Metacritic score of 86 out of 100 based on 26 reviews, indicating universal acclaim.[8] Critics praised the album's innovative fusion of genres, including jazz, hip-hop, electronic, and IDM elements, which created a unique sonic landscape that pushed the boundaries of electronic and jazz music. Pitchfork described it as "an intricate, challenging record that fuses his loves—jazz, hip-hop, videogame sounds, IDM—into something unique," highlighting tracks like "...And the World Laughs With You" featuring Thom Yorke as advancing avant-garde jazz structures into groovy, experimental territory.[3] The Guardian commended its expansion into new territories such as P-funk, nu-yorica, and house, noting that despite the disparate parts, they cohere into "an abiding mood of vivacity and sunniness," marking a thrilling evolution from Flying Lotus's prior work.[29] Reviewers also emphasized the album's emotional depth, with Pitchfork calling pieces like "Satelllliiiiiiite" among the dreamiest in the producer's catalog, evoking a sense of cosmic introspection.[3] Some critics, however, noted challenges with the album's density and accessibility, pointing to its layered complexity as potentially overwhelming on initial listens. Pitchfork observed that certain tracks sound "almost frustratingly unstable until you hear it a few times," requiring multiple plays to fully appreciate the intricate arrangements.[3] Despite these reservations, the consensus viewed Cosmogramma as a landmark achievement in genre-blending electronic music.[8]Accolades and Long-Term Impact
Upon its release, Cosmogramma garnered significant acclaim, topping Exclaim!'s year-end list for the best electronic albums of 2010. It also placed 19th on Pitchfork's top 50 albums of 2010, highlighting its innovative fusion of genres.[50] In retrospective decade rankings, the album ranked 68th on Pitchfork's 200 best albums of the 2010s, ninth on Audioxide's top 10 albums of the decade, and 89th on Best Ever Albums' top 100 of the 2010s.[51] Additionally, it won the Dance/Electronica Album category at the 10th Annual Independent Music Awards in 2011, recognizing its boundary-pushing production. The album's legacy endures as a landmark in electronic and jazz fusion, pioneering a dense, multi-layered sound that blends IDM, hip-hop, and orchestral elements into a cosmic narrative. Its Afrofuturist aesthetic, drawing on themes of spirituality and otherworldliness, has influenced broader discourse in Black speculative music, positioning Flying Lotus alongside figures like Sun Ra in explorations of sonic futurism. This impact is evident in its role in elevating collaborators like Thundercat, whose bass contributions on tracks such as "MmmHmm" marked the start of a pivotal partnership that shaped both artists' careers and advanced genre-blending in contemporary jazz and electronic music. By 2025, marking its 15th anniversary, retrospectives have reaffirmed Cosmogramma's timelessness, with Pitchfork describing it as a fusion of jazz, video-game sounds, post-Dilla hip-hop, and IDM that continues to inspire experimental producers. Everything Is Noise praised its "Afrofuturist maximalism" as an "atmospheric buffet" of soul, jazz, R&B, and noise, underscoring its genre-unifying influence. Commercially, the album sold 33,574 copies in the U.S. by January 2011, while its availability on streaming platforms like Spotify and Apple Music has sustained its relevance, amassing millions of plays and introducing its visionary sound to new generations.Track Listing and Credits
Track Listing
All tracks are written by Steven Ellison (as Flying Lotus), except where noted with co-writes for featured artists.[4] The standard edition of Cosmogramma consists of 17 tracks with a total runtime of 45:36.[52]| No. | Title | Duration | Writer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Clock Catcher | 1:12 | Steven Ellison |
| 2 | Pickled! | 2:13 | Steven Ellison |
| 3 | Nose Art | 1:58 | Steven Ellison |
| 4 | Intro//A Cosmic Drama | 1:14 | Steven Ellison |
| 5 | Zodiac Shit | 2:44 | Steven Ellison |
| 6 | Computer Face//Pure Being | 2:32 | Steven Ellison |
| 7 | ...And the World Laughs with You (featuring Thom Yorke) | 2:55 | Steven Ellison, Thom Yorke |
| 8 | Arkestry | 2:51 | Steven Ellison |
| 9 | MmmHmm (featuring Thundercat) | 4:14 | Steven Ellison, Stephen Bruner |
| 10 | Do the Astral Plane | 3:57 | Steven Ellison |
| 11 | Satelllliiiiiiiteee | 3:49 | Steven Ellison |
| 12 | German Haircut | 1:57 | Steven Ellison |
| 13 | Recoiled | 3:36 | Steven Ellison |
| 14 | Dance of the Pseudo Nymph (featuring Thundercat) | 2:46 | Steven Ellison |
| 15 | Drips//Auntie's Harp | 2:10 | Steven Ellison |
| 16 | Table Tennis (featuring Laura Darlington) | 3:01 | Steven Ellison, Laura Darlington |
| 17 | Galaxy in Janaki | 2:27 | Steven Ellison |
Musicians
- Flying Lotus (Steven Ellison): Producer, composer, arranger, all instruments, mixing[4]
- Thundercat (Stephen Bruner): Bass on tracks 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, 14, 17; vocals on tracks 9 and 14[22]
- Thom Yorke: Vocals on track 7 ("...And the World Laughs With You")[22]
- Laura Darlington: Vocals on track 16 ("Table Tennis")[22]
- Niki Randa: Vocals on track 4 ("Intro//A Cosmic Drama")[22]
- Ravi Coltrane: Tenor saxophone on tracks 8 ("Arkestry") and 12 ("German Haircut")[22]
- Miguel Atwood-Ferguson: Strings arrangements on multiple tracks, including violin and viola[4]
- Rebekah Raff: Harp on tracks 1, 4, 5, 8, 12, 13, 17[22]
- Todd Simon: Trumpet on track 10 ("Do the Astral Plane")[22]
- Richard Eigner: Drums on track 12 ("German Haircut")[22]
- Brian Martinez: Guitar on track 16 ("Table Tennis")[22]
- Dorian Concept: Keyboards on track 11 ("Satelllliiiiiiiteee")[22]
- Low Leaf: Keyboards on track 14 ("Dance of the Pseudo Nymph")[22]
Technical Personnel
- Daddy Kev: Mastering[4]
- Brandy Flower: Design[4]
- Leigh J. McCloskey: Artwork[4]
Commercial Performance
Chart Performance
Upon release in May 2010, Cosmogramma debuted and peaked at number 88 on the US Billboard 200, spending one week on the chart. It also reached number 3 on the Billboard Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart.[21][53] In the United Kingdom, the album entered the Official Albums Chart at its peak of number 60 on May 15, 2010, and remained for one week.[54] It fared better on specialist listings, peaking at number 3 on the Official Independent Albums Chart for five weeks and number 1 on the Official Independent Album Breakers Chart for two weeks in May 2010.[55] Internationally, Cosmogramma charted modestly in Europe, peaking at number 41 on the Belgian Albums Chart for one week in October 2010.[53]| Chart (2010) | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 88 | 1 |
| US Top Dance/Electronic Albums | 3 | N/A |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 60 | 1 |
| UK Independent Albums (OCC) | 3 | 5 |
| Belgium (Ultratop) | 41 | 1 |