Feeder - Silent Cry (Deluxe Edition) (2008)
BAND/ARTIST: Feeder
- Title: Silent Cry (Deluxe Edition)
- Year Of Release: 2008
- Label: The Echo Label Limited
- Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative Rock
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 51:43 min
- Total Size: 380 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. We Are the People
02. Itsumo
03. Miss You
04. Tracing Lines
05. Silent Cry
06. Fires
07. Heads Held High
08. 08:18
09. Who's the Enemy
10. Space
11. Into the Blue
12. Guided By a Voice
13. Sonorous
14. Yeah Yeah
15. Every Minute
01. We Are the People
02. Itsumo
03. Miss You
04. Tracing Lines
05. Silent Cry
06. Fires
07. Heads Held High
08. 08:18
09. Who's the Enemy
10. Space
11. Into the Blue
12. Guided By a Voice
13. Sonorous
14. Yeah Yeah
15. Every Minute
2008 album from the Welsh melodic Rock band, their sixth album overall and first since Pushing the Senses in 2005. Silent Cry sees the band back with a bang, knocking out epic stadium filled Rock anthems, one of the many attributes that makes Feeder on of the UK's premier rock acts. 'Silent Cry' is the sixth album from Welsh indie-rock outfit Feeder. Recorded and produced by the band themselves, the album sees Grant Nicholas and Co. Return to the sound that graced their early releases, a mix of heavy guitars and anthemic songwriting, while creating their most accomplished recording to date. The singles 'Miss You' and 'We Are the People' are included. 15 tracks. Echo.
Feeder have long been the supply teacher of Brit-rock, the Scott Mills of pop-punk if you like--unremarkable yet undeniably able, and somehow proficient or lucky enough to exist beneath the radar, shrewdly outlasting most of their contemporaries. The single most memorable thing about their career is that they once rhymed "Devon" with "Lemon" in nonsensical disregard for lyrical cogency, but their 2006 singles collection contained 20 tracks (yes, TWENTY!), most of them instantly recognisable and entirely affable. None of us will live long enough to find out, but Feeder may well end up rivalling the cockroach in terms of covert resilience. And, as album number 6, Silent Cry, true to form, neither furthers nor hampers their progress. That is to say, it's exactly as good as theyve always been--whatever you consider that to be. You know the drill by now--comfortable runs of clean guitar, Grant Nicholas earnest blue-eyed vocals, add distortion, rinse, repeat, fade. That they manage to squeeze fresh juice from such a well-wrung fruit is credit to a genuine songwriting flair. And though there are equally no real surprises, there are standouts that nudge their alignment just off-centre. Take "Tracing Lines" with its tight beats and itchy minimalism reminding of The Strokes (though also highlighting Nicholas comparative lack of charisma), "Miss You" which thunders along burning adrenaline like Foo Fighters at their most agile and closing track "Sonorous" with hurtling crescendos a la Muse. --James Berry
Feeder have long been the supply teacher of Brit-rock, the Scott Mills of pop-punk if you like--unremarkable yet undeniably able, and somehow proficient or lucky enough to exist beneath the radar, shrewdly outlasting most of their contemporaries. The single most memorable thing about their career is that they once rhymed "Devon" with "Lemon" in nonsensical disregard for lyrical cogency, but their 2006 singles collection contained 20 tracks (yes, TWENTY!), most of them instantly recognisable and entirely affable. None of us will live long enough to find out, but Feeder may well end up rivalling the cockroach in terms of covert resilience. And, as album number 6, Silent Cry, true to form, neither furthers nor hampers their progress. That is to say, it's exactly as good as theyve always been--whatever you consider that to be. You know the drill by now--comfortable runs of clean guitar, Grant Nicholas earnest blue-eyed vocals, add distortion, rinse, repeat, fade. That they manage to squeeze fresh juice from such a well-wrung fruit is credit to a genuine songwriting flair. And though there are equally no real surprises, there are standouts that nudge their alignment just off-centre. Take "Tracing Lines" with its tight beats and itchy minimalism reminding of The Strokes (though also highlighting Nicholas comparative lack of charisma), "Miss You" which thunders along burning adrenaline like Foo Fighters at their most agile and closing track "Sonorous" with hurtling crescendos a la Muse. --James Berry
Rock | Alternative | Indie | FLAC / APE
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