Silent Cry | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 16 June 2008 | |||
Recorded | 2007–2008 at the Crypt Studios in London, England | |||
Genre | Alternative rock, post-grunge, power pop | |||
Length | 46:02 (13-track version) | |||
Label | Echo | |||
Producer | Grant Nicholas, Matt Sime | |||
Feeder chronology | ||||
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Singles from Silent Cry | ||||
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Silent Cry is the sixth studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was released by Echo, on 16 June 2008, on CD, deluxe CD, vinyl, and digital download. [1] It was the follow-up to 2005's Pushing the Senses and in terms of all albums, the highly successful singles album in 2006. The first single, "We Are the People", preceded the album, being released on 9 June. It was their last album to feature Mark Richardson on Drums before departing in 2009.
The album was recorded at the Crypt Studios in North London, England, with the help of long-time friend of the band Matt Sime. Like their 1999 album Yesterday Went Too Soon , the album was self-produced. Three tracks ("We Are the People", "Itsumo" and "Fires") feature backing vocals by Sarah Clark- bassist and singer with Bang Bangs, a project signed to Sime's publishing company Black Circle.
Despite the problems that occurred behind the scenes at the band's then record label Echo, which resulted in their dissolution, the album managed to debut at #8 in the official UK Albums Chart, but still became their first ever album not to go silver. The song "Miss You" is also credited to being featured on the video game Midnight Club: Los Angeles.
The album's second and final single, "Tracing Lines / Silent Cry", was released on 25 August as a download only, but failed to chart. [2] It was their last release on Echo after 14 years.
Aggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Metacritic | 56/100 [3] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
The Mirror | [ citation needed ] |
Drowned in Sound | 7/10 [4] |
The Guardian | [5] |
Kerrang! | [ citation needed ] |
NME | 7/10[ citation needed ] |
Rock Louder | [ citation needed ] |
The album was given a mixed response critically, only scoring a 56/100 on the reviews aggregator Metacritic, indicating "average or mixed reviews". [3] Commercially the album also had a poor response in terms of overall sales, failing to gain a silver sales certification. However, in terms of peak chart position the album was a modest success, charting in the UK Albums Chart at a respectable #8, despite first single "We Are the People" not receiving any major mainstream airplay from stations such as BBC Radio 1, making it the first Feeder single since 1997's "Crash" not to be playlisted by the station. (The single itself charted at #25)
In the second week, the album then dropped to #30 and then #60 before leaving the top 75. This meant that the album became their lowest-selling at the time. Frontman Grant Nicholas says it is an album he's "very proud of", despite the underwhelming exposure by the media. Some fans have suggested Echo's financial position at the time of release which was caused by the 2007 global recession, had made the album very hard to promote while the delays in release, resulting from the lack of interest from a buyer of the label, have been contributing factors towards holding the album back. Radio 1 wrote off the album from the start, even before being offered "We Are the People" as a radio play first single proper from the album (ignoring "Miss You" which was a free download). The band could not release the album on a different label, unless they paid an amount of money to be released, due to law stating that the band had to honour the six studio albums contract. In an October 2010 interview with Culture Deluxe, Nicholas cited that there were "Deals on the table, but they wouldn't let it go".
"Tracing Lines" was originally planned to be the next single as a standalone package, but due to radio informing the label that the album's title track "Silent Cry" was a track they wanted to play, the single was extended into a double A-sided release and was a download only single. It failed to chart after receiving no airplay on mainstream radio, and it is believed that if a third single was released, it would have been "Itsumo" due to Feederweb, the band's official website releasing a T-shirt based on the song. A fourth single was then planned to be "Sonorous", with the winners of an earlier video-design competition run by the official website being invited to design a video, but even though this was made, the single release never came to happen due to the underwhelming commercial response of the album and the label being downsized to a copyrights exploitation company. The aforementioned competition was to design a video for "Miss You", with the winning entry included on a future DVD single. As Echo no longer exist as a label, it is impossible this will ever happen. The album's commercial performance also seen the head of the album's promotion project, fired by the label. In the aftermath of these events, the band have refused to play any material from the album at live shows, with Grant Nicholas citing that it "Would bring back unpleasant memories". At the band's 2018 tour celebrating 21 years of releasing music, an acoustic version of the title track would be performed during the show's encore, making it the first time in nine years any material from the album would be performed. Many fans acknowledged Grant playing the song after the shows.
Despite the album's underwhelming sales (less than 50,000 units), [6] the band once again played the main stage of the Reading and Leeds festivals (this time in their highest ever position on the line-up), before taking on their biggest UK tour consisting of 29 different dates. The tour saw the band play at the Brixton Academy after a three year pause, alongside the London Astoria for the last ever time as well as being their last show there as an Echo Label artist. The venue was later torn down the following year. The tour and indeed the campaign for the album ended on December 2, 2008 at the Portsmouth Pyramids Centre.
The following year Feeder released the Seven Sleepers EP , on their Japanese label Victor. It contained two new tracks titled "Seven Sleepers" and "Snowblind", which the band recorded for a self-released tour only EP. As the band were still under contract with Echo at the time, the release did not occur but were instead released as part of the import EP.
Over the next fourteen years, the band’s opinion on its commercial success may have differed. When the band got their tenth U.K. Top 10 album in 2022, the band proclaimed this their landmark achievement. As this album was one of those ten, their opinions on its commercial performance may have changed over the years, looking more towards its highest chart placing instead of its overall performance. In podcasts that have followed in recent years, Nicholas has often cited tracks from the album as the best ones he's written, with "Fires" often getting a mention.
All tracks are written by Grant Nicholas
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "We Are the People" | 4:41 |
2. | "Itsumo" | 4:17 |
3. | "Miss You" | 2:59 |
4. | "Tracing Lines" | 3:47 |
5. | "Silent Cry" | 3:25 |
6. | "Fires" | 3:59 |
7. | "Heads Held High" | 4:04 |
8. | "8.18" | 3:45 |
9. | "Who's the Enemy" | 3:18 |
10. | "Space" | 0:34 |
11. | "Into the Blue" | 2:36 |
12. | "Guided By a Voice" | 3:50 |
13. | "Sonorous" | 4:39 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
14. | "Yeah Yeah" | 3:17 |
15. | "Every Minute" | 2:24 |
16. | "Calling Out for Days" (Japan only) | 3:17 |
Charts (2008) | Peak position |
---|---|
European Top 100 Albums | 29 |
Irish Albums Chart | 82 |
Japanese Albums Chart | 53 |
UK Albums Chart | 8 |
UK iTunes Albums Chart | 3 |
Feeder are a British rock band formed in Newport in 1994. They have released 11 studio albums, 12 compilations, four EPs and 43 singles, spending a combined total of 184 weeks on the singles and albums charts as of 2019, while accumulating 25 top 75 singles between 1997 and 2012. At the peak of their commercial success, Feeder won two Kerrang! Awards in 2001 and 2003; they were inducted into their Hall of Fame in August 2019. Alongside this success, the band have had two albums reach No.1 on the Official Record Store Chart, being "Tallulah" and "Torpedo", a chart which tracks the best selling albums in UK-based independent record shops over the past week.
Grantley Jonathan Nicholas is a Welsh musician and the lead singer and guitarist of the rock band Feeder.
Polythene is the debut studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was released 19 May 1997 on the Echo Label, and then re-issued on 28 October in the same year in an Enhanced CD version, featuring their UK top 40 breakthrough single "High" and its video. The original version of the album was deleted soon after and is relatively rare due to this reason.
Yesterday Went Too Soon is the second studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was released on 30 August 1999 on The Echo Label.
Echo Park is the third studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was their first album since 1999's Yesterday Went Too Soon. The album was recorded at Great Linford Manor in Milton Keynes during most of 2000 and was produced by Gil Norton.
Takashi "Taka" Hirose is a Japanese musician and chef who is the current bass guitarist for the rock band Feeder.
Pushing the Senses is the fifth studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was released on Echo, Liberation Music and PIAS on 31 January 2005 in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and Europe, while being released on Pony Canyon in Japan on 10 February 2005. Despite mixed reviews, the album was a commercial success, in which it was a top five album in Feeder's native United Kingdom, and its lead single "Tumble and Fall" was a top five single. This made the album Feeder's most successful in terms of peak chart position, but did not experience the same chart longevity as presuccessor Comfort in Sound, which spent 36 weeks on the UK top 75 chart in comparison to the 15 weeks spent by Pushing the Senses.
"Buck Rogers" is a song by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was the first single to be taken from their third studio album, Echo Park (2001), and was released on The Echo Label. The track reached number five on the UK Singles Chart after its release on 8 January 2001. The group had originally not intended the track to be one of theirs, as frontman and main songwriter of the band Grant Nicholas originally wrote "Buck Rogers" for SR-71, only for producer Gil Norton and A&R staff of Echo to convince the band they could have a hit with it themselves, after hearing a demo recorded by Feeder. It continues to be played on UK alternative radio stations as a classic hit of its genre. The single has been certified gold in the United Kingdom for sales and streaming figures exceeding 400,000 units.
"High" is a song by Feeder, released as the fourth and final single from their 1997 debut album, Polythene. This track was not included on the album until its re-issue in October of the same year and is seen as a fan anthem.
"Just the Way I'm Feeling" is a song by Welsh rock band Feeder, released as the second single from their fourth album, Comfort in Sound (2002). The song reached number 10 on the UK Singles Chart, giving drummer Mark Richardson his first UK top-10 appearance after near misses with Skunk Anansie (No.11) and Little Angels (No.12).
"Comfort in Sound" is the last single to be taken from Feeder's 2002 album of the same name. It was only available at first on the band's arena tour in December 2003, and was limited to 3,000 copies. A few weeks after the tour, the single was available for download from "Feederweb" with downloadable PDF artwork.
The discography of Feeder, a Welsh-Japanese rock band which formed in 1994, consists of eleven studio albums, twelve compilation albums, four extended plays (EP), and forty singles on The Echo Label, their own label Big Teeth Music, Cooking Vinyl and BMG as well as forty-nine music videos. Alongside charting twelve Top 75 albums domestically, they also have 25 Top 75 singles. In 2022 Feeder became one of the few artists in U.K. chart history, to achieve top 10 albums in at least four different decades, and also one of a very few since the establishment of the Artist Album Chart in 1989, to have at least ten top ten albums. Alongside this success, the band have had two albums reach No.1 on the Official Record Store Chart, being "Tallulah" and "Torpedo", a chart which tracks the best selling albums in UK-based independent record shops over the past week.
Miss You is a track by UK rock band Feeder, which was released on 3 March 2008 as a precursor to the band's upcoming full-length studio album Silent Cry. The song was made available to download for free from the band's official website and was downloaded 8000 times on its first day. It received its first radio play as part Colin Murray's Black Hole segment on BBC Radio 1, a day after its release.
"We Are the People" was the first and only top 40 single from Feeder's sixth studio album, Silent Cry. The single was released on 9 June 2008, receiving its first radio play on Kerrang! Radio, two months before on 14 April. It charted at #25 in the UK becoming Feeder's landmark 20th top 40 single, but also their last to date after follow-up "Tracing Lines / Silent Cry" missed the top 200 alongside being their least successful lead single from any of their albums since 1999. "We Are the People" is also the first Feeder single since 1997's "Crash", to miss the BBC Radio 1 playlist and also the first of their singles since that one to only spend one week on the UK top 75. It was included on XFM's top 100 tracks of 2008 list.
We are the People is a song about change and unity in the world we live in... it's like a call to arms but in a positive and non-violent way. It's time for change and only we the people can do that... I wanted the song to be anthemic and sonically uplifting...
Seven Sleepers is a Japan-only EP by the British rock band Feeder. It was the first ever release by the band after their label, Echo, was downstreamed into a copyrights exploitation company and as a result announced that they would not be releasing any new records or signing any new artists. This meant that Feeder were without a UK record label, and that, for the duration of being unsigned in the UK, they could not release any material in their home country.
Renegades is the seventh studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was released on 5 July 2010. It was the first in a proposed series of two albums to be released in 2010 by the band, before its follow-up was delayed until 2012. It is also the first studio album not to be released on The Echo Label, and also their first since 2002's Comfort In Sound not to feature drummer Mark Richardson, who left the band the previous year.
"Down to the River / This Town" are two songs on a double A-sided single by Feeder, released as the group's third and final single from their seventh album Renegades in 2010, while being their 31st single overall and their third double A-sided single after the 2008 release of "Tracing Lines / Silent Cry". Both tracks like the majority of the Renegades album, started off life as tracks first performed live under their Renegades side-project name, but were both only released commercially as Feeder tracks.
Generation Freakshow is the eighth studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was released on 23 April 2012. It was due to be the second in a series of two albums released in 2010 by the band, following up previous album Renegades. However, the band decided to hold more recording sessions for the album, leading them to delay the album until 2012.
All Bright Electric is the ninth studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder. It was released on 21 September 2016 in Japan and on 7 October 2016 in the UK. Three singles were released from the album, "Universe of Life", "Eskimo" and "Another Day on Earth". The first two of these were Gratis singles from pre-orders of the albums, while the last single was a streaming-track only although no download was released. "Paperweight" had a video made for it but is not classified as a single.
Tallulah is the tenth studio album by Welsh rock band Feeder, released on 9 August 2019 through Believe Music.