Feeder Lyrics — by Popularity
271 songs · Page 5 of 6
| 201 | Borders (acoustic) |
| 202 | Born to Love You |
| 203 | Can’t Dance to Disco |
| 204 | Can’t Stand Losing You |
| 205 | Chicken on a Bone |
| 206 | Coast to Coast |
| 207 | Come Back Around |
| 208 | Come Back Around (acoustic) |
| 209 | Criminal |
| 210 | Daily Habit |
| 211 | Decompress |
| 212 | Dive |
| 213 | Divide the Minority |
| 214 | Eskimo |
| 215 | Eyes to the Sky |
| 216 | Fear of Flying |
| 217 | Feel It Again (XXV remix) |
| 218 | Figure You Out |
| 219 | Find a Place |
| 220 | Geezer |
| 221 | Ghosts on Parade |
| 222 | Guillotine |
| 223 | Hide and Seek |
| 224 | Holy Water |
| 225 | Hundred Liars |
| 226 | Infrared Ultraviolet |
| 227 | Insomnia |
| 228 | Just the Way I'm Feeling (orchestral remix) |
| 229 | Just the Way I’m Feeling |
| 230 | Just the Way I’m Feeling (edit) |
| 231 | Kite |
| 232 | Kyoto |
| 233 | Landslide |
| 234 | Lonely Hollow Days |
| 235 | Lost & Found (acoustic version) |
| 236 | Lost in the Wilderness |
| 237 | Magpie |
| 238 | Memory Loss |
| 239 | Miles Away |
| 240 | No Light |
| 241 | Oh Mary |
| 242 | Paperweight |
| 243 | Pictures of Pain |
| 244 | Polythene Girl |
| 245 | Pushing the Senses (Live from Brussels) |
| 246 | Rodeo |
| 247 | Scream |
| 248 | Sending Out Waves |
| 249 | Shapes and Sounds |
| 250 | Slint |
Feeder Albums
Singles
About Feeder
Feeder is a Welsh rock band formed in 1995 who became one of Britain's most enduring alternative rock acts, blending grunge-influenced guitars with melodic sensibilities and electronic elements. Their breakthrough came with albums like "Echo Park" (2001), featuring anthems such as "Buck Rogers" and "Feeling A Moment" that dominated UK rock radio and festival circuits. The band evolved from heavy grunge ("Polythene") to more accessible rock ("Comfort in Sound") while maintaining their signature wall-of-sound approach and Grant Nicholas's distinctive vocals. Despite tragedy striking with bassist Jon Lee's death in 2002, Feeder persevered and continued crafting stadium-ready rock anthems like "Renegades," solidifying their status as stalwarts of British alternative rock across nearly three decades.