Shoegazer Sunday: The 30th Anniversary of Slowdive’s Just For A Day

On September 2, 1991, Creation Records released Slowdive’s debut album Just for a Day. This was the first Shoegaze album I had ever heard, and in many ways is still my favorite.

1991, you may remember, was a banner year for music. Everything interesting got slapped with the “Alternative” label, but Slowdive was far from the Seattle sound of Nirvana and Pearl Jam dominating the airwaves. The first track I heard off it was “Catch the Breeze”:

From it’s echoey, moody opening to it’s soaring wall of guitar ending I was hooked. But I truly loved closing track “Primal.”

The first seventy-five seconds are the most beautiful music Slowdive ever created, while the rest builds to a melancholy crescendo of loss.

Shoegaze is The Genre That Refuses To Die, and I think Just For A Day is a huge cornerstone.

I hear Slowdive will be releasing a new album as soon as they can book a run at a vinyl pressing plant.

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