- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
Spring Tides is a success partly because it is consistent in sound and structure, but it still manages to slip through a variety subtle mood changes and elicit several emotional reactions from its listeners. Jeniferever should gain some fans with this.
-
Overall, Spring Tides is the record Jeniferever have undoubtedly spent the past thirteen years of their existence building towards; an epochal moment that was well worth the wait, and can only whet the appetite in further anticipation of where their next journey of discovery will take them--in their own time, of course.
-
Amongst the other songs of Spring Tides it only serves to pull you further under the hypnotic spell of Jeniferever.
-
UncutJeniferever rise above cliches with 10 beautiful songs that take the Sigur Rose blueprint and expand on it. [May 2009, p.89]
-
Jeniferever shows some serious potential on this album, but much of it remains to be realized.
-
Pretty, but all too forgettable.
-
It is the sheer imposing length of nearly every one of the ten songs here--only the uncharacteristically forthright 'Sparrow Hills' manages to keep the running time under five minutes, while most of the other songs are content to wind on well beyond that--is ultimately what ends up turning Spring Tides into something of a chore when it should be gently captivating.