The Foamers

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THE FOAMERS first got together back in 1996, and were formed in a pub in Epsom, Surrey by Chris, Carlos and Kerem, soon to be joined by Tom. After a few months of writing and practising in true punk rock fashion they recorded a bunch of tracks in a local studio which had been converted from a public toilet. Tent City Records, from New York, got hold of the demo and asked THE FOAMERS to do a record for them, so in June 1999 the band jetted off to the USA to record their debut full length, "6 Pints None the Wiser". With the album (released in June 2000) described as a mix of 4/4 punk, ska and oi, with influences of Snuff and Choking Victim, THE FOAMERS found lots of new fans. Amongst many other gigs, in the summer of 2001 THE FOAMERS embarked on a tour with Leftover Crack, and became friends with the band who are also a massive influence. After a few months THE FOAMERS headed back to the studio to record 3 tracks for release on their own label, Plopstars Recordings. The title track, Football was an anti-hooligan song, and 2 tracks from "6 Pints…" were also included, as recorded live whilst on tour with Capdown. After a show one night at the Underworld, Camden supporting Hellcat punks F-Minus, THE FOAMERS became part of the Household Name family, and plans for the label to release their second album were hatched. Vigourous touring followed, including another tour with Leftover Crack in summer 2002, then with Big D And The Kids Table and Dan Potthast of MU330 in December 2002. 2003 was taken up with touring, writing new songs, and several line up changes. Then towards the end of the year THE FOAMERS descended upon John Hannon's "No" Recording Studios (Hundred Reasons, Capdown, Link80, Five Knuckle, Adequate 7 have all passed through there at one time) to record this, their self-titled second album. It's a lot different to 6 Pints… but it's still THE FOAMERS, tighter, more energised, still none the wiser but boy, are they ready to rock hard… In September 2004 the Foamers split up. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.