Apr
Review : RingMaster Review Introduces
A very thoughtful and detailed review by Pete RingMaster. Thanks Pete!
“Taken as a whole or split into individual pieces Feorm works wonderfully and is a fulfilling and welcome release that stays inside long after its sounds depart.”
Apr
Release : Feorm 'Feorm'
Release notes
Only able to meet up for weekend recording sessions every few months, Feorm eats, sleeps and makes music during sporadic intensive sessions, in a disused farmhouse, deep in the East Anglian countryside.
The format is simple: one initiates an idea and the others build up a collage of sound around it; record in one or two takes while the ideas are fresh; no restrictions on style or genre.
Details
- Catalogue number: FENT01 / FENT01CD
- Release date: 9 April 2012
- Formats: CD (2 extra tracks) & Download
Buy
Listen / BandCamp
Mar
Review : Record Collector Magazine
We are enormously pleased to get a **** review in this month’s Record Collector! Much thanks to Mischa Pearlman for getting it.
“Limited to 1,000 copies, Feorm’s debut album is an experiment in that ever-impossible task: capturing carpe diem. Somehow, the five-piece not only succeed in doing so, but the results are quite phenomenal. Recorded over a handful of improvised live sessions at a farm in Norfolk, it’s almost possible, in a warm, cosy and slightly trippy swirl of synaesthesia, to see these 12 tracks take shape before your eyes.”

Feb
Artist : Feorm

- Allan Murray: Bass
- Brett Cooper: Drums, percussion
- Paul Corcoran: Electric guitars
- Andrew Lynch: Acoustic & electric guitars
- Pete Warren: Synths, samples & fx
Feorm is an English five-piece instrumental group. The band draws inspiration from the many explorers and experimenters working in electronic and guitar-based music over the past five decades. In their creations can be found traces of 1960s British psychedelia, the German Kosmische Musik of the 1970s, the raw creativity of the post-punk period and the sonic sculptures of post-rock. All put through the Feorm-filter to create something new.
The five members have all made music separately in a variety of different genres, coming together as a group when they challenged each other to merge their different styles in an improvisational format.
Only able to meet up for weekend recording sessions every few months, Feorm eats, sleeps and makes music during sporadic intensive sessions, in a disused farmhouse, deep in the East Anglian countryside.
The format is simple: one initiates an idea and the others build up a collage of sound around it; record in one or two takes while the ideas are fresh; no restrictions on style or genre.

