To date, Sleep Room have made three albums, attracting endorsement by Planet Sound and BBC radio,[6] while winning praise for their performance at the charity event Oxjam[7] in Reading.
Sleep Room take their name from the conspiratorial brainwashing technique allegedly used by the CIA in the early 1970s Project MKUltra, which involved sensory deprivation and sub-conscious behavioural response to sound.
Following a number of gigs in and around Berkshire, Sleep Room embarked on a not so successful recording project at Sound Machine Studios in Fleet, owned a run by a friend of Griffith's.
While drinking in The Hope and Anchor, a pub in Wokingham, Cook came in contact with Griffiths' replacement David Treasure; a talented session musician looking to be part of something more creative than his regular fee-paying cover band work.
This proved to be their breakthrough, and amongst even more critical acclaim,[2][4] Sleep Room attracted support gigs for then signed Reading act The Cooper Temple Clause among others, and a chance to feature in the national music event the Oxjam Festival and even selling albums in America.
In their single "The Souvenir", a song penned in reference to the anxiety suffered by his friend during a break-up, Cook was made to stand in the roof of the barn to sing into the rafters, while Weston had his guitar kicked to spark strange atmospherics.
Distressed by the disappearance of their friend and colleague, Sleep Room continued to write and perform as a three piece, feeling replacing their troubled bassist was a tough task to face.