Silent Letter

Silent Letter is the eighth studio album by American folk rock duo America, released by Capitol Records in June 1979.

It was the first America studio album following the departure of Dan Peek. It was also the first America release on Capitol Records and the last album—and last of seven consecutive—which longtime Beatles producer George Martin produced with America.

It was also their first studio album since their debut to have a title beginning with a letter other than "H". The title itself acknowledges the missing "H" by its wry reference to silent letters in the English language.

The album contains fast-paced disco songs, piano-based power ballads (often sung by Gerry Beckley) and mid-tempo pop rock songs.

Reception
In his AllMusic retrospective review, music critic Steven Thomas Erlewine noted the band's transition from "folky California soft rock" to adult contemporary. He wrote of the album: "The end result may be flawed, but in an enjoyable way. And compared to the records that preceded it and some of albums that followed it, Silent Letter certainly seems like a latter-day highlight for America."

The album was not a commercial success, reaching only number 110 on the Billboard album chart. However, it did produce three minor hit singles. "Only Game in Town" bubbled under the Hot 100 chart, peaking at number 107. "All My Life" and "All Around" narrowly missed the Top 40 on the Adult Contemporary chart, peaking at number 48 and 45 respectively. The former was a big hit in Asia.

Personnel
with:
 * America
 * Gerry Beckley – vocals, guitars, keyboards
 * Dewey Bunnell – vocals, guitars
 * Mike Woods – lead guitar
 * David Dickey – bass
 * Willie Leacox – drums
 * Jim Calire – keyboards, saxophone solo
 * Tom Walsh – percussion