Vague Premonition

Vague Premonition is an album by Elevator Through.[4][5] The album was released on April 20, 1999, by Sub Pop on CD; it was released in June 1999 by Sonic Unyon on vinyl.

Vague Premonition
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 20, 1999[1]
Recorded1998
GenreRock, indie
Length44:59
LabelSonic Unyon, Sub Pop[2]
ProducerRick White
Elevator Through chronology
Eerieconsiliation
(1997)
Vague Premonition
(1999)
A Taste of Complete Perspective
(2000)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]

Critical reception

In its 4-star review, The Stranger called the album "four a.m. bedspin guitar music at its glorious best."[6] Tom Schulte, in AllMusic, wrote: "From the remote stretches of Canada's New Brunswick, Elevator vaults off on a tube-driven journey into inner space -- leave your inhibitions behind and get to know yourself."[7] Ben Rayner, in the Toronto Star, thought that "Vague Premonition is heavier and more thought-out than the off-the-cuff EPs White originally turned out alone as Elevator to Hell and, while as quiet/loud schizoid as the rest of his output, less prone to loose-limbed, jammy distractions than most of the Elevator recordings that followed, making it the most enjoyable in terms of short-burst journeys to the centre of one's mind."[8]

Track list

  1. "Energy"
  2. "Rain"
  3. "The Maze"
  4. "No Good Trying"
  5. "Foggy Sea"
  6. "Early Raining April Moon"
  7. "The Only See to Thought
  8. "Comfortable, but Almost"
  9. "Cut Out the Wick"
  10. "The Grip on Me"
  11. "Deep Underground"
  12. "Fluidmonogleestran"
  13. "Vague Premonition"

Personnel

References

  1. Inc, CMJ Network (April 5, 1999). "Upcoming Releases". CMJ New Music Report. CMJ Network, Inc. via Google Books.
  2. Records, Sub Pop. "Vague Premonition". Sub Pop Records.
  3. Allmusic review
  4. Cashen, Norene. "One Floor Below the Basement". Detroit Metro Times.
  5. "Eric's Trip A Love Supreme". exclaim.ca.
  6. "CD Review Revue". The Stranger.
  7. "Vague Premonition - Elevator Through | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic" via www.allmusic.com.
  8. "Ben Rayner's reasons to live". thestar.com. February 21, 2010.



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