Generation Freakshow

Generation Freakshow is the eighth studio album by the Welsh rock band Feeder. It was set to be released on 26 March 2012 but was delayed until 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.

Generation Freakshow
Studio album by
Released23 April 2012
Recorded2009–12
Genre
Length45:47
LabelBig Teeth Music
Producer
Feeder chronology
Renegades
(2010)
Generation Freakshow
(2012)
All Bright Electric
(2016)
Singles from Generation Freakshow
  1. "Borders"
    Released: 30 January 2012
  2. "Children of the Sun"
    Released: 30 April 2012
  3. "Idaho"
    Released: 27 August 2012

Recording and production

In 2010, during the Renegades sessions, a number of tracks were left off the album before then being considered for inclusion for the follow-up to that album.[1] As there were not enough to fit on the album, more were recorded during the closing stages of the year, with the band taking a break from recording on 19 December,[2] before resuming recording on 10 January 2011.[2] Between 16 January and 24 January a production session began in New York City, this included overdubs, guitars and keyboards with frontman Grant Nicholas also flying over to record vocals, while some of the album was already recorded in London.[2] On 19 January 2011 a photo of song lyrics written on a sheet of paper was posted on their official Facebook page.[2] One song was debuted live on tour under three different working titles, with those being "Jessie", "White City Rock" and "Borders".[2] In an interview with Heineken Music, on 27 January 2011 Grant revealed that 19 or 20 songs were in the recording stages, while the album, like Renegades, looked likely to be released domestically on their own Big Teeth Music imprint.[3]

In an interview with The University Observer, Grant describes the album: "Its eclectic, much more eclectic than the Renegades album... Its definitely a more commercial record. I think if you liked Comfort in Sound and you liked Yesterday Went Too Soon, then I think you’ll like this album" ... "There are some real tunes on this and some anthems; there are some rocky moments as well".[1] There were also plans to release a single or a free track download during their February - March tour.[1][3] This later went on to become "Side By Side", which was a chart-eligible paid download in aid of the victims of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. The single charted at #91, marking their first top 100 chart visit since 2008's "We Are the People", while becoming their 25th top 100 single in the process. It ultimately did not appear on the album, although was included as a bonus track on the Japanese release. During their 2011 touring, Feeder introduced drummer Damon Wilson as a live regular and session musician.[4] On 23 September 2011, Grant Nicholas posted on the band's Facebook page that the recording of their studio album was complete with only mixing on the final song to be finalised,[2] before mastering then began on the 30 September in New York.[2] Feeder announced on 10 October that they were doing artwork on the album, before an announcement was made on 14 November, that acoustic versions of some of the songs were being recorded while bassist Taka Hirose was staying in Tokyo.[2] On 29 November 2011, the sequencing process of the album began.[5]

Feeder hosted a trailer on YouTube titled "Coming Soon" on 2 December 2011 and had a message written in Morse code as "-... --- .-. -.. . .-. ...", which translates to "Borders" in standard English. On 6 December 2011 another trailer was released, announcing "Borders" as the first single from the new album, including a four-date tour.[6] "Borders" was released on CD, cassette and 7" on 30 January 2012, with the parent album Generation Freakshow on 23 April 2012. This was the first time Feeder released a cassette single since 2001's "Just a Day"; "Borders" went on to chart at #52. The only track from the sessions of the Renegades album to end up on Generation Freakshow, was that of "Tiny Minds".[7]

Reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic60/100[8]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[9]
BBC Music(positive)[10]
Drowned In Sound[11]
FMV Magazine[12]
The Guardian[13]
Kerrang!
Metro
musicOMH[14]
Q

Generation Freakshow was met with mixed reviews but was commercially more successful than their previous release Renegades. Metro describe Feeder as "keeping a steady musical pace,yet stick to the same predictable formula" when reviewing Generation Freakshow.[15]BBC Music praised the album as "more mature,more considered and less noisy".[16] After two weeks the album had sold 9000 copies in the UK.[17]

The album received a two star rating from The Guardian, being described as "solid yet uninspiring".[18]

Drowned in Sound credited Feeder for creating another strong addition to their back catalogue.[7] Kerrang! were also positive in their review, stating that "the 12 fabulous songs that comprise Generation Freakshow see Feeder striking the canvas with more measured strokes". In response to the critical reception, frontman Grant Nicholas commented that the band have nevertheless, never been critically well received during the whole of their career, while also not being worried about where the release charts, as long as Feeder's fans like the album. In Japan, the album was better received in the media, in the same way that Pushing the Senses was in Austria.

Despite this critical reception, the album was a mid-sized commercial success, charting at #13 in the UK albums chart being an improvement on the #16 of Renegades, which had more positive reviews. Like Renegades, this album was self-released on a shoestring budget with no mainstream radio play for any of the album's tracks, with only alternative stations playing "Borders", while "Children of the Sun" was not as well received. "Borders" also brought Feeder back into the top 75 charts after a near four-year absence, when it charted at #52 in February 2012; none of the singles on Renegades charted. The album also seen the band return to the Brixton Academy after a four-year absence, one of the UK's major gig venues. Before this, the band had returned to the smaller venues within the capital and the rest of the UK.

Meanwhile, in Japan, Generation Freakshow entered the albums chart at #57, a large improvement on the #93 of Renegades and also became Feeder's second-most successful studio album in that country. Generation Freakshow is only one of a few self-released albums or singles to ever record a top 20 placing in the United Kingdom, or a top 60 placing in Japan.

On 24 March 2017, the album was reissued with nine bonus tracks including "Sky Life" as a standalone track which played immediately after "Children of the Sun" as a hidden track on the original release.

Track listing

All songs written by Grant Nicholas. [19]

No.TitleLength
1."Oh My"3:39
2."Borders"3:29
3."Idaho"3:28
4."Hey Johnny"3:27
5."Quiet"5:06
6."Sunrise"4:02
7."Generation Freakshow"2:49
8."Tiny Minds"3:15
9."In All Honesty"2:52
10."Headstrong"3:13
11."Fools Can't Sleep"3:48
12."Children of the Sun" - includes hidden track "Sky Life"6:32 (4:19/2:12)
Japanese edition bonus track[20]
No.TitleLength
13."Side By Side" - includes the album's hidden track "Sky Life"3:46
14."Idaho" (Masafumi Gotoh (Asian Kung-Fu Generation) cover version)3:29
15."Generation Freakshow" (Takeshi Hosomi (The Hiatus) cover version)2:51
UK iTunes bonus track[21]
No.TitleLength
13."Miles Away"3:47
2017 reissue bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
13."Sky Life"2:11
14."Miles Away"3:47
15."No Light"3:14
16."Arms"3:33
17."Coast to Coast"3:00
18."Along the Avenues"2:38
19."Find a Place"3:18
20."Stay If You Want To"2:46
21."Borders (Acoustic)"3:38

Personnel

Production

  • Chris Sheldon - production, engineering, additional engineering on "Tiny Minds", mixing
  • Matt Sime - engineering and additional production on "Tiny Minds"
  • Brian Sperber - mixing, additional backing vocal on "Oh My", additional keyboard on "Hey Johnny"
  • Paul Spong - trumpet on "In All Honesty"
  • Tom Fuller - assistant engineer
  • George Apison - assistant engineer
  • Ted Jensen - mastering
  • Nigel Walton - sequencing
  • Roger Ballen - photography
  • Scarlet Page - photography
gollark: https://lib.rs/crates/generational-arena
gollark: It's possible that I'm misusing the word arena but BEES.
gollark: As I said, the "ærena" thing.
gollark: Sinthorion, CEASE.
gollark: * haevpoot

References

  1. "Musical therapy". The University Observer. Archived from the original on 23 January 2011. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  2. "Feeder Facebook page". Feederweb. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  3. "Feeder Still Hungry". Heineken Music. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  4. "drumstars - Images - Damon Wilson". drumstars.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  5. "Album being sequenced today G". Feederweb. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  6. "Feeder - 'Borders' - The New Single / Coming Soon". Feeder YouTube channel. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  7. "Generation Freakshow Review" Drowned in Sound 23 April Retrieved 29 April 2012
  8. "Generation Freakshow by Feeder Reviews and Tracks". Metacritic. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  9. Generation Freakshow at AllMusic
  10. BBC review
  11. Drowned in Sound review
  12. FMV Magazine review
  13. The Guardian review
  14. musicOMH review
  15. "Feeders Generation Freakshow sticks to same predictable formula" Metro 23 April 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012
  16. "Feeder Generation Freakshow Review" BBC Music 10 April 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012
  17. Sales Figures 6 May 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2012
  18. Feeder:Generation Freakshow-Review The Guardian 22 April 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012
  19. "Feeder - Generation Freakshow - Tracklisting & track lengths - BestBuy.com".
  20. "FEEDERニューアルバムで後藤正文、細美武士とコラボ". natalie.mu (in Japanese). 24 February 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  21. "Feeder - Generation Freakshow". Archived from the original on 31 May 2014. Retrieved 2013-07-26.
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