In Silico (Pendulum album) explained

In Silico
Type:studio
Artist:Pendulum
Cover:Insilicocover.jpg
Released:12 May 2008
Recorded:2007–2008
Genre:
Length:57:55
Label:
Producer:
Prev Title:Hold Your Colour
Prev Year:2005
Next Title:Live at Brixton Academy
Next Year:2009

In Silico is the second studio album by Australian drum and bass band Pendulum, released in Australia and Europe on 12 May 2008 by Warner Bros. Records and in the United States a day later by Atlantic Records. The album represents a change in sound for the band from their debut album Hold Your Colour away from drum and bass, incorporating more rock and electronic influences. The album peaked at number 2 on the UK Albums Chart on 18 May 2008.[1] Singles from the album include "Granite", "Propane Nightmares", "The Other Side" and "Showdown". Mini discs of the song "The Tempest" were thrown out to the audience of the "Project Rev" live show.

The expression "in silico", from which the album's title is derived, means performed on computer or via computer simulation. However group member Gareth McGrillen also commented on the way it plays upon Nirvana's well-known album title In Utero (which means born naturally or of the uterus) and thus carries extra shades of meaning related to being "born synthetically",[2] thus explaining the album's cover design of a baby or fetus displayed inside a circular design representing a synthetic ovum.

Reception

Critical reception to the album has been mixed, with most of the polarisation coming from Pendulum's shift from drum and bass to a more rock and pop-imbued electronic sound. AllMusic praised that "Pendulum is determined to heal the breach" between rock and electronica;[3] however, The Guardian felt that the sound was "a little dated".[4] Some fans of the first album have criticised In Silico for the change of genre; however, because of the album's popularity, and with singles being played on television music channels such as Kerrang!, Pendulum managed to attract a new group of fans. Q named both lead single "Granite" and "Propane Nightmares" in the top 50 songs of the months in which they were released.

In popular culture

The songs "Granite" and "Showdown" are featured in the off-road video game Pure. "Showdown" appears in the racing video game Forza Motorsport 3. "Granite", "9,000 Miles" and "The Tempest" are also featured in the video game . "Showdown" also appears in the 2008 film in addition to an episode of . Also, part of the song "Mutiny" appears in a Verizon Wireless commercial promoting the LG Dare, and "The Other Side" appears in an episode of EastEnders aired on 6 August 2010. The song "Propane Nightmares" was also used as the main theme for the WWE Pay-per view Cyber Sunday 2008 special and on the release trailer of Just Cause 2. Plus, a remixed version of "Propane Nightmares" by Celldweller appears on the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable videogame . "The Tempest" also appeared in TV spots for the film Ninja Assassin.

Track listing

March mini-mix release

On 26 March 2008, Pendulum released a 12-minute mini-mix of the album – known as In Silico (El-Hornet Mini-Mix) – available only to those who are registered on their website. The track listing is as follows:

  1. "Showdown"
  2. "Granite"
  3. "Granite" (Dillinja remix)
  4. "Granite" (Breakfastaz remix)
  5. "Visions"
  6. "The Other Side"
  7. "Propane Nightmares" (VST remix)
  8. "Different"
  9. "Mutiny"
  10. "Propane Nightmares"
  11. "Propane Nightmares" (VIP remix)
  12. "Propane Nightmares" (Celldweller remix)
  13. "Midnight Runner"
  14. "9000 Miles"
  15. "The Tempest"

Samples

Personnel

Pendulum

Additional personnel

Charts

Year-end charts

Chart (2008)Position
UK Albums (OCC)[5] 73
Chart (2009)Position
UK Albums (OCC)[6] 168

Release history

CountryRelease date
Europe12 May 2008
United States13 May 2008

Notes and References

  1. http://acharts.us/album/35657 "World Music Charts"
  2. http://www.inthenews.co.uk/inconversation/entertainment/music/pendulum-d-n-b-from-down-under-$1175873.htm "Pendulum D 'n' B from Down Under"
  3. Greene, Jo-Ann [{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r1368984|pure_url=yes}} "''In Silico'' Overview"]. AllMusic. Retrieved 11 June 2008.
  4. Cooper, Leonie "Pendulum, In Silico". guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 11 June 2008.
  5. Web site: End of Year Album Chart Top 100 – 2008. Official Charts Company. 25 January 2021.
  6. Web site: UK Year-End 2009. Charts Plus. 1 December 2021.