Pop Matters
Portland-based trio Pseudosix, sounds like a record of sinister prophecies, revealed by a poet who knows how to sugar a thorn. It's a singer's record of unstably lush harmonies, like Neil Young and the Beach Boys bleeding out into a warm bath. I haven't been able to stop playing this record, no matter my mood, because I always end up molding myself back into its drift.

Splendid Zine
Days of Delay is one of those albums for which listening is an active exercise rather than just a passive absorption. What you find, when you listen closely, is an album full of paranoia and death.

Ghettoblaster Magazine
Pseudosix's LP, Days of Delay, plays like a book of lullaby spells, soothing and yet drawn from a deep, black cup of melancholy and madness. The cradle will fall, but you'll be blissfully unwound when it lands.

Indieworkshop.com
"Days of Delay" rated among top ten albums of 2003. This album gets better everytime I hear it. It's soft and quiet but harsh and heavy with burdens and discontentment. Sometimes it just sounds really good to be pissed off quietly.

Stylus Magazine
Is it possible to be accidentally menacing? I would guess no, myself, but if you can, Pseudosix has cornered that particular market. From the way singer Tim Perry calmy sings "I don't like your jokes, and I don't like your apathy/None of the that weight is of value to me," to the hallucinogenic repetition of "Chasing You Down," Pseudosix's debut effort of vaguely rootsy, hushed indie rock remains disconcerting from start to finish.

Punk International
"Days of Delay" has a timeless, but ancient quality to it, a damp, bucolic atmosphere giving it that starkly beautiful, intentionally underproduced sound. It almost sounds like some kind of decades-old recording recently excavated.
A-

Sponic Zine
I feel the undeserved elation of discovery that Columbus must have felt when I sat down to listen to Pseudosix. This record is truly one of the best that I've heard this year. Lyrically and musically, I intend to spend the next few months unearthing several more layers of unadulterated enjoyment and appreciation from this album.
Rating: 5 out of 5 "logos"

Cracked
The uplifting dialectic between melancholy and big harmonies, between major and minor chords, between just a guy with a guitar sitting close to the mic late at night and a full band blasting away in the studio, is explored a lot on this record. But that is all unimportant in a the light of those great moments of sparking songwriting genius and the light of blessings all around, of which this record offers at least half a dozen.

Mundane Sounds
This Portland trio has a number of good things going for them. Days of Delay is definately worth checking out.

Babysue
Dreamy cool sounds abound on Days of Delay...making this one of the great standout albums of 2003.

Rating: 5+ out of 6