Back in 2009 or so, I really got into the habit of adding song lyrics onto websites. Clearly, this was a 14-year-old who knew what to do with his time. One website that I used very, very regularly was letssingit.com Still got my account on there and everything. I went under the name ‘Jammerz’ and, as you can see through this archived link from September 2010, I was the moderator for Feeder’s page on there. I’m very sure the lyrics you see for ‘Tracing Lines’ everywhere now are based on those I originally typed out on LetsSingIt on August 17th 2009. The same day I added the band’s most recent album then, Silent Cry. Got one lyric wrong though. “She’s my direction, down to the south” is very clearly, “Changed my direction, turned to the south.” But the former was what I heard at the time. And that’s how I came to know the song. Writing the lyrics while simultaneously watching its music video via YouTube.
‘Tracing Lines’ took me for a bit of a surprise when I first heard it. Silent Cry, its parent album, was released in 2008. The video for its first single ‘We Are the People’ was maybe played once or twice – that I saw – on TV. I’m not sure I liked it. And the very limited coverage around the album at the time probably made me think Feeder weren’t what they used to be. But fast-forward to 2009, I find ‘Tracing Lines’, and it sounded like one of those classic Feeder songs that could have been included on their ’06 Singles compilation. It made me think why the label or whoever didn’t release this as the “comeback” single instead. Guitarist and songwriter Grant Nicholas can write really good power pop tunes whenever he wants, and ‘Tracing Lines’ comes under that group. Catchy from the get-go with the easy chord progression. Taka Hirose and Mark Richardson respectively join in with the bass guitar and drums alongside the keyboard/guitar lick. An easy-to-follow melody with a standard song structure, the chorus being the usual standout moment. It’s all there, all very nicely executed.
When it comes to what the song’s about, I’ve never stopped to think it through. Even if I did transcribe the words all them years ago, it was more so I could just sing along. But looking at them now and hearing the track, I think ‘Tracing Lines’ is generally about travelling, especially from the point of view of a man in a rock band like Grant Nicholas was and is. He had a dream/vision of being in a band when he was younger, changed his direction in life to follow that path, and now he finds himself going from here to there and back again as he tours and does the things a working musician has to do. He wishes he could take a rest, but he loves what he does and finds new ways to bring enthusiasm into it. The tracing lines part, I think, comes from a notion that we’re all kind of leaving our own footprints behind wherever we go, wherever we travel, but we don’t necessarily see them. In Nicholas’s case, his lines will usually intersect as he goes back to a place he may have been to years before and do so on much more frequent basis than your average person you see on the street. So that’s my take. I hope you enjoy the song too.