Perfect Sound Forever (EP) explained

Perfect Sound Forever
Type:EP
Artist:Pavement
Cover:PavementPerfectSoundForever.jpg
Released:April 15, 1991
Recorded:December 29, 1989–December 30, 1989
Studio:Louder Than You Think Studios (Stockton, California)
Genre:Indie rock, lo-fi, noise pop
Length:11:12
Label:Drag City
Producer:Gary Young[1]
Prev Title:Demolition Plot J-7
Prev Year:1990
Next Title:Slanted and Enchanted
Next Year:1992

Perfect Sound Forever (1991) is the third EP by American indie rock band Pavement. It was released as a 10" on Chicago's Drag City recording label. Its songs were later made available on the Drag City compilation Westing (by Musket & Sextant).

Background

The EP's name came from a line in Sony's 1982 advertising campaign for the first compact discs, which assured potential buyers of the ultimate in both fidelity and longevity.

Village Voice writer Michaelangelo Matos noted Perfect Sound Forever and the band's 1990 EP, Demolition Plot J-7, as "epochal to ... sloppy early-'90s undergrads."[2]

Track listing

All tracks were written by Stephen Malkmus and Scott Kannberg.

Personnel

Pavement

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Milner, Greg. Perfecting Sound Forever: An Aural History of Recorded Music. June 9, 2009. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 9781429957151. Google Books.
  2. Matos, Michaelangelo. "'My House' Is Not a Home". Village Voice, March 30, 2005. Retrieved on July 19, 2021.