Slanted and Enchanted is the debut studio album by American indie rock band Pavement, released on April 20, 1992 by Matador Records. It is the only Pavement album to feature drummer Gary Young.
Slanted and Enchanted was distributed to critics as early as 1991, months before its official release; the original distribution did not feature the entire band, as several members joined during its production.[6] The recording sessions were split between South Makepeace Studios in Brooklyn, New York (recorded December 24, 1990) and Louder Than You Think Studios in Stockton, California (recorded January 13–20, 1991).[7][8]
Release
Singles
The album’s first single, "Summer Babe", appeared in August 1991.[2][3] It was Pavement’s last release of new material for the Chicago-based Drag City label before the band moved to Matador Records. The single contained the B-sides "Mercy Snack (The Laundromat)" and "Baptist Blacktick" that were included on Japanese versions in the CD, and later on the deluxe version of the album. A different mix of "Summer Babe," entitled "Summer Babe (Winter Version)," became the first track on the album. The song would go on to be ranked by Rolling Stone magazine as number 286 in its 2004 list of the 500 greatest songs of all time,[9][10] and as number 292 in the 2011 update of the list.[11]
The album’s second single, "Trigger Cut", was first released in the UK by Big Cat Records on July 13, 1992, before appearing in the US market through Matador the following month.[12]
Album
Slanted and Enchanted was officially released on April 20, 1992, to critical acclaim, originally reaching a peak of number 72 on the UK Albums Chart.[13] As of 2007, the album had sold 150,000 copies.[14]
Packaging
The title Slanted and Enchanted is taken from the title of a cartoon made by Silver Jews frontman David Berman.[15] Its cover art was created by appropriating that of an existing album, Ferrante & Teicher's Keyboard Kapers.[16][17][18]
Slanted and Enchanted: Luxe & Reduxe
In 2002, Matador released Slanted and Enchanted: Luxe & Reduxe, a compilation containing Slanted and Enchanted in its entirety, as well outtakes and other rarities from the same era.[19]Matador Records released Luxe & Reduxe on October 20, 2002,[20] alongside the Slow Century DVD.[19] It features 48 songs, including the entire original disc and, in addition, 3 outtakes of which one is an unreleased song and the other two are alternate takes, plus the B-sides from the "Summer Babe" and "Trigger Cut" singles, 5 songs from two different John Peelsessions, the 4-track EPWatery, Domestic, and 13 tracks of a live performance of the band held at the Brixton Academy in London on December 14, 1992.[21][22]
Slanted and Enchanted received critical acclaim. In a contemporary review of the album, Robert Christgau of The Village Voice was highly positive, writing that Pavement are "always good at both tune and noise" and that the music on Slanted and Enchanted yields "a message complex enough to offer hope ... that the lyrics will catch up".[34] Erik Davis of Spin designated Slanted and Enchanted as the magazine's "Platter du Jour" for March 1992, describing the album as "so fine it occasionally seems too perfect."[35]
Legacy
I think Slanted and Enchanted probably is the best record we made, only because it's less self-conscious and has an unrepeatable energy about it.[36]
Since its release Slanted and Enchanted has appeared on many critics' best-of lists and is frequently cited as being among the most influential indie rock albums of the 1990s. AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine cited the album as "a left-field classic" and "one of the most influential records of the '90s".[1] In 2002, Pitchfork awarded the album their maximum grade of 10.0/10.0 in a review of the album's reissue[37] and ranked it as the fifth greatest album of the 1990s in 2003.[38]Rolling Stone called Slanted and Enchanted "the quintessential indie rock album" and placed it on the magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time[39][40] In 2017, Billboard called it a "slacker masterpiece" and "the definitive indie rock album".[41]
^ abRolling Stone Staff (May 31, 2012). "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. 135: Slanted and Enchanted - Pavement. Retrieved February 21, 2017.
^Weisbard, Eric; Marks, Craig, eds. (1995). "Top 100 Alternative Albums". Spin Alternative Record Guide. New York: Vintage Books. p. 454. ISBN0679755748.