Sewn to the Sky is an album by Smog, released in 1990 on Disaster Records.[6][7] Most sources consider it to be Smog's first album, made after the release of several cassette-only recordings.[8][9] It was re-released on Drag City in 1995.[10] The experimental album combined home recording, substandard instruments and repetitive and noisy songwriting structures, and was an early example of the lo-fi genre.
Sewn to the Sky | ||||
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Studio album by Smog | ||||
Released | 1990 (LP on Disaster Records) November 17, 1995 (CD on Drag City) January 30, 1996 (LP on Drag City) 2001 (CD on Drag City) | |||
Genre | Experimental music | |||
Length | 37:58 | |||
Label | Disaster Records, Drag City[1] | |||
Smog chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Pitchfork Media | 8.0/10[4] |
The New Rolling Stone Album Guide | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The track "A Jar of Sand" was re-recorded for the 'Neath the Puke Tree EP in 2000.
The album was recorded in Georgia and Maryland.[11] The liner notes state that it was recorded on a "dumpster Portastudio." Spin wrote that the recording "found [Callahan] relishing the process, with little regard for form or the guitar he was still learning to really play."[12]
Trouser Press wrote: "Suffused with the vague gray atmospherics suggested by the band’s name, Sewn to the Sky is primitive and promising."[1] The New Yorker wrote that the album is a "discordant, inscrutable, and periodically frustrating collection of mostly instrumental, low-fidelity noise, and contains few hints of the lucid and tender folk music that he would be making almost thirty years later."[13]
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Studio albums |
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Singles |
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