Spawned from the urge to do something apart from his post-rock band
Fridge,
Kieran Hebden's
Four Tet project balances organic and programmed sounds.
Hebden formed
Fridge with Sam Jeffers and Adam Ilhan while still in high school. When
Fridge went on temporary hiatus for Jeffers and Ilhan to attend college,
Hebden spent time playing with ideas gained from
hip-hop and
electronica that he hadn't had time for while concentrating on the band.
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Eager to experiment,
Hebden bought a computer and began collecting drum and sound samples. Though his tracks sounded contrary,
Hebden produced them all in his flat using only his computer to loop, slice, and paste downloaded samples and rhythms. His first full-length was 1999's Dialogue, which was noticed by
experimental dub pioneer
Pole (Stefan Betke). The two eventually collaborated for a 12", Four Tet vs. Pole, which included an original song by each and a remix of the track done by the other artist. Around the same time,
Fridge was signed to the label Go! Beat, owned by Polydor.
Hebden retained
Four Tet as a side project, however, and released subsequent records
Pause (2001) and
Rounds (2003) through Domino. The No More Mosquitoes EP and the "My Angel Rocks Back and Forth" single preceded the 2005 release of
Everything Ecstatic. In 2006,
Hebden put together two compilations of some of his favorite tracks, LateNightTales and
DJ-Kicks, as well as
Everything Ecstatic Films & Part 2. The two-disc Remixes was also compiled and released that year as were two volumes of his Exchange Session project with
jazz drummer Steve Reid. These two volumes found
Hebden working under his proper name for a change. This trend continued when their third collaboration, Tongues, arrived in 2007. ~ Diana Potts, All Music Guide