Feed Me Explores Chaos and Clarity on His New Album "Felt Sick"
From Intricate Bass Experimentation To Moment Of Quiet Reflection, The Album Captures The Producer’s Most Ambitious Range To Date.

After several years of restless experimentation, UK producer Feed Me returns with Felt Sick — a twelve-track album that explores emotional turbulence through precision sound design and deeply personal storytelling. Known for blending intricate production with unpredictable melody, Feed Me turns his focus inward on a project that captures vulnerability, confusion, and forward motion in equal measure.
The album opens with “Spectral Feel,” a tightly coiled burst of energy that wastes no time setting the pace. From there, the record moves through sharp contrasts. “Innie” drifts into a more spacious mood, its glitchy fragments settling into a laid-back groove. “Fooling Me Twice” drives the tempo forward with syncopated precision, while “Mug” breaks convention completely — trading a house rhythm for a heavy, bass-focused assault. The centerpiece, “Pyro” featuring EMSKI, glows with cinematic intensity, its powerful drops and smoldering vocals balancing heat and fragility.
Vocal features add depth and texture throughout. Rhode brings a ghostly presence to “Under My Skin,” floating above glistening synths that darken with each chorus. Lani Daye appears on “Proud,” delivering a quiet message of self-worth over a mellow drum and bass rhythm. “Rocket Science” lifts the energy with bright synths and cosmic atmospheres, while “Local Wildlife” twists tension into release through distorted builds and shimmering detail. Each track expands the album’s range without losing its emotional center.
The later moments of Felt Sick turn toward resolution. “The Sky, The Limit” rises on hypnotic repetition and house-driven power, channeling a sense of open ambition. “Too Easy” begins in a hazy trap space before flipping into a fast, propulsive groove that embodies transformation. Closing track “Let Monica Go” gathers all these threads, pairing low-end warmth with flickering textures that echo earlier moments — ending the album on a note of quiet clarity.
In support of the release, Feed Me will tour North America with a newly designed live show built around brand new music, immersive visuals, and a narrative that mirrors the emotional tone of the record. Stops include New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, and several more cities across the continent.
Felt Sick captures Feed Me at a moment of transition — an album about tension and resolution, disarray and focus, and an artist who continues to reshape his own boundaries in sound.








































