Superstition (Siouxsie and the Banshees album)

[1] The band widened their musical influences with the arrival of musician Talvin Singh, who played tablas on the songs "Kiss Them for Me" and "Silver Waterfalls".

[7] A 180 gram double-vinyl reissue of the original edition, with the fourth side etched, was half-speed mastered by Miles Showell at Abbey Road Studios and released in September 2018.

Upon release, Q rated the album four out of five stars, saying: "They pop it up with sweet string textures on the single 'Kiss Them for Me', bear down on the maritime metaphor of 'Drifter' with doomy foghorn and bells effects, give it the all but Twin Peaks dreamscape for 'Softly'.

"[9] In a four out of five review, Select said that "Kiss Them for Me" was a "passionately laidback" single, "exotic" and "funky", with "an underlying hush of electro pulsebeat" making it dancefloor friendly.

In the same review, "Drifter" was compared to the soundtrack of a Sergio Leone film with a touch of "ethereal sensuality", and "Silver Waterfalls" was qualified as "gorgeous".

[11] Writing in the 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide, Mark Coleman and Mac Randall said that Superstition shares Peepshow's integration of "synthesizers and a lighter pop touch with the Banshees' trademark howl."

Unlike its predecessor, however, they added that the album benefits from the inclusion of a "great single", as "'Kiss Them for Me' weaves a bewitching electronic stitch through Siouxsie's familiar cloth.