The eagerly anticipated fourth album from Feeder, and their most assured to date. Echo: 21 October 2002 Last updated: 20 November 2008 The Feeder story could have been so different. Rock's also-rans ...
Feeder have announced details of a special deluxe re-release of their fourth studio album ‘Comfort In Sound’ on 12th September via BMG. Following this the duo of Grant Nicholas and Taka Hirose will ...
FEEDER‘s new album ‘COMFORT IN SOUND’ is said to be heavily influenced by the suicide of drummer JON LEE. The album, the follow-up to 2001’s ‘Echo Park’, will be released in the UK on October 21, ...
There's a scruffy presence in the top floor bar of a smart central London hotel. Grant Nicholas, Feeder's diminutive front man, is slumped in his chair after an appearance on Radio 2. "They're a big ...
FEEDER are to release a new single, only available online or at their forthcoming UK arena shows. The band will release a new version of album title track ‘Comfort In Sound’. The single has been ...
FEEDER - Comfort In Sound (Echo): The suicide of drummer Jon Lee casts an inevitable shadow over Feeder's fourth album, yet Grant Nicholas and Taka Hirose have drawn strength from tragedy to make ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Three years after the death of his band's drummer, Feeder frontman Grant Nicholas feels ready to take on the world again. By Andrew ...
Feeder have established themselves as one of the most consistent UK bands, not only via an extensive back catalogue but also in being one of the most exciting live acts around, nearly three decades ...
Feeder's fourth album is being billed by many as a tribute to drummer Jon Lee following his tragic death earlier this year, although with no disrespect, frontman Grant Nicholas would probably dispute ...
The Feeder story could have been so different. Rock's also-rans for so long, it wasn't until the commercial breakthrough of the Buck Rogers single in January 2001 that people really sat up and took ...
As comebacks go, this one is about as unlikely as it gets. For many years Feeder were just another bog-standard indie band, flogging their dreary brand of gormless power pop to an ever-dwindling ...