Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace Foo Fighters

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/25/2007
  • Sales Rank: 2,950
  • Label: RCA
  • UPC: 886971151626

Listener Rating: (12 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Authenticity" See All

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace

1LISTENThe Pretender 4:29
2LISTENLet It Die 4:05
3LISTENErase/Replace 4:13
4LISTENLong Road to Ruin 3:44
5LISTENCome Alive 5:10
6LISTENStranger Things Have Happened 5:21
7LISTENCheer Up, Boys (Your Make Up Is Running) 3:41
8LISTENSummer's End 4:37
9LISTENBallad of the Beaconsfield Miners 2:32
10LISTENStatues 3:47
11LISTENBut, Honestly 4:35
12LISTENHome 4:53

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Editorial Reviews

It's not quite right to say that the Foo Fighters only have one sound, but why does it always feel like the group constantly mines the same sonic vein? Even on 2007's Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace -- their sixth album and first with producer Gil Norton since their second, 1997's The Colour and the Shape -- the Foos feel familiar, although the group spends some palpable energy weaving together the two sides of their personality that they went out of their way to separate on 2005's In Your Honor, where they divided the set into a disc of electric rockers and a disc of acoustic introspection. Here, the Foos gently slide from side to side, easing from delicate fingerpicked folk (including "Ballad of the Beaconsfield Miners," an instrumental duet between Dave Grohl and guitarist Kaki King) to the surging, muscular hard rockers that have been the group's modern rock radio signature. Echoes never lingers too long in either camp, as it's sequenced with a savvy professionalism that only veteran rockers have. That sense of craft is evident in all the songs, whether it's the subtly sly suite of the opening "The Pretender" -- after a slow build, it crashes into a crushing riff into a chorus, building to a typically insistent chorus before taking a slightly surprising bluesy boogie detour on the bridge -- or the sweet melodic folk-rock "Summer's End," a song as warm and hazy as an August evening. "Summer's End" is one of the unassailable highlights here, and all the rest of the truly memorable tunes on Echoes share its same, strong melodic bent, particularly "Statues," a wide-open, colorful anthem that feels as if it's been resurrected from a late-'70s AOR playlist. These songs place the melody at the forefront and also have a lighter feel than the rockers, which are now suffering from a dogged sobriety. For whatever reason, Dave Grohl has chosen to funnel all of his humor out of the Foo Fighters' music and into their videos or into his myriad side projects. When Grohl wants to rock for fun, he runs off and forms a metal band like Probot, or he'll tour with Queens of the Stone Age or record with Juliette Lewis. When it comes to his own band, he plays it too straight, as almost every rocker on Echoes -- with the notable exception of "Cheer Up Boys (Your Make Up Is Running)," a song that has a riff as nimble as those on the Foos' debut -- is clenched and closed-off, sounding tight and powerful but falling far short of being invigorating. They sound a little labored, especially when compared to the almost effortlessly engaging melodies of the softer songs, the cuts that feel different than the now overly familiar Foo signature sound. And since those cavernous, accomplished rockers are so towering, they wind up overshadowing everything else on Echoes, which may ultimately be the reason why each Foo Fighters album feels kind of the same: Grohl and his band have grown subtly in other areas, but they haven't pushed the sound that came to define them; they've only recycled it. Since this is a sound that's somber, not frivolous, the Foos can sometimes feel like a bit of a chore if they lean too heavily in one direction -- as they do here, where despite the conscious blend of acoustic and electric tunes, the rockers weigh down Echoes more than they should, enough to make this seem like just another Foo Fighters album instead of the consolidation of strengths that it was intended to be. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide



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Customer Reviews

The Finest FF Album Yetby Anonymous

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March 07, 2009: This is one of my favorite albums, and is undoubtedly the Foo Fighters' finest, most refined, most mature cut yet. Gracefully seesawing between woodsy, soulful ballads and songs (Statues, Summer's end, Come Alive, etc) and gripping, ballsy rock songs (Long Road to Ruin, The Pretender, Let it Die to name a few), you really get the best of both Foo worlds here. David Grohl has thought out of the box and proved his true prowess in composition, sonic perfection, timing, and band synthesis. Compare Echoes, Silence, Patience, and Grace to their title album, Foo Fighters and note the difference: raw, slightly immature Nirvana ripoff neo-punk(though classic and good in its own way, yes, a ripoff) versus a glorious melding of style, combined effort, enthusiasm, and excellent experience! I await another Foo album with bated breath.

Genericby Anonymous

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June 11, 2008: This is what they have been making since '95. Boring generic rock. I wish Kurt Cobain wasn't dead. The world would be a better place without this boring music.


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