Tag Archives: pushing the senses

#1077: Feeder – Pushing the Senses

Feeder, Feeder, Feeder. Don’t believe I’ve ever gone through a whole studio album by the band before. Not sure whether they have a worldwide-recognised bona-fide classic. But they always seem to hit a home run when it comes to their single releases. All the Feeder songs I’ve written about before on here were commercially released as representatives of their parent albums at some point or another. That also includes today’s song ‘Pushing the Senses’, the title track from the band’s 2005 album. Or, if you’re turned off by my subtle dismissal of their studio albums, you can find the track on the fantastic Singles compilation. In my honest opinion, if you want to get to know Feeder, this is the only release you’ll need.

To be even more honest, I don’t have a great emotional investment in this track as I do for a lot of other tracks in this long, long list. That’s to say it’s not a song that I’m usually seeking out to listen to on a regular basis. Nor was there a key moment in my life that I can recall where it played a significant part. In fact, I’m very sure that it was used in a car advert a few years back, wanna say it was one for Mitsubishi for some reason, and that reminded me that the song existed and thus made me revisit it. I’d be singing along to it whenever it came on the TV though. Partly because it used to air a numerous amount of times. But mostly because the car company’s use of the chorus was a smart move. Very melodic. Very memorable.

The usual conclusion to come to when listening to this track is that in some way it’s probably about the band’s former drummer Jon Lee, also a good friend of guitarist/songwriter Grant Nicholas, who committed suicide in January 2002. Many tracks on the albums following on from that year contain lyrics alluding to Nicholas’s feelings on Lee’s passing, but it was Pushing the Senses and 2002’s Comfort in Sound that really captured them in the midst of that sad time. I’ve come to see the track as one that’s about a relationship, one in which the narrator wants to fix things with the significant other just by talking things out when things get tough. Then again, you could take that to be Nicholas wanting to talk to Lee about his own feelings and to try and find some resolve. We could go round in circles here. What matters really is the music, and the gist is that it’s a very driving, forward-looking power pop tune. Gets a thumbs up from me.