Silent Cry
Silent Cry is the sixth full studio album by rock band Feeder. It was released by Echo, on 16 June 2008, on CD, deluxe CD, vinyl, and digital download. 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 the 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 feature backing vocals by Sarah Clark- bassist and singer with , 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 reach #3 on the UK iTunes album chart, and debuted 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.
The album's second and final single, "Tracing Lines / Silent Cry", was released on 25 August as a download only, but failed to chart. It was their last ever release on Echo after 14 years.
Reception
The album was given a mixed response critically, only scoring a 56/100 on the reviews aggregator Metacritic, indicating "average or mixed reviews". 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.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, 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 offering "We Are the People" as a radio play first single proper from the album. 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, the band once again played the main stage of the Reading and Leeds festivals, before taking on their biggest UK tour consisting of 29 different dates.
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.
Track listing
Charts
Personnel
;Feeder- Grant Nicholas - vocals, guitars, keyboards, production, mixing on "Heads Held High" and "Into the Blue", string arrangements on "Silent Cry" and "Who's the Enemy"
- Taka Hirose - bass
- Mark Richardson - drums
- Matt Sime - production, engineering, mixing on "Heads Held High" and "Into the Blue", string arrangements on "Silent Cry" and "Who's the Enemy"
- Ted Jensen - mastering
- Kevin Metcalfe - sequencing
- Adrian Bushby - mixing
- Helen Atkinson - mixing assistant
- Audrey Riley - string arrangements on "Silent Cry" and "Who's the Enemy"
- Chris Bolster - string engineering on "Silent Cry" and "Who's the Enemy"
- Stephen Marshall - string engineering assistant on "Silent Cry" and "Who's the Enemy"
- Nils Leonard - art direction, illustration and design
- Max Oppenheim - photography
- Perou - photography
- Hank Gidney - image manipulation
- Sarah Clark - backing vocals on "We Are the People", "Itsumo", and "Fires"