
Four Tet makes electronic music that fuses the machines together with a touch of acoustic warmth. In Australia now as part of the Laneway Festival, as well as a show as part of the Sydney Festival, ITM finds out what we can expect from Four Tet. [more]
ITM has just been given the lowdown from Feel & Triple J Soundlab that Kieran Hebden aka Four Tet and Dan Snaith aka Manitoba are very much looking forward to their June visit to Australia (FOUR TET's first). [more]
Visiting Output Recordings’ website, you will no longer be able to browse through the catalogue of amazing artists such as The Rapture, Black Strobe, LCD Soundsystem, Four Tet and Mu. [more]
by tiger_tommy on February 12th, 2009
In a world where the abundance of music festivals has reached saturation point, Perth’s inaugural St Jerome’s Laneways Festival last Friday provided a welcome and thoroughly refreshing change. [more]
As we stood in the forecourt of the old army barracks, bats silhouetted against the night sky, I suddenly felt rush of psychedelic drugs take over my body. I hadn't had any, regrettably, but there was something about this evening that was removed from the ordinary. [more]
The DJ-Kicks imprint rises above the darkened depths of the over-crowded mixtape genre, subtly enticing you to impart with your lovely precious cash through the siren’s lure of big-name (but oh-so credible) guest DJs. [more]
As both a member of now-disbanded electronic / post-rock trio Fridge and through his own solo productions as Four Tet, UK-based producer / musician Kieran Hebden has carved out a distinct presence in the electronic / IDM world [more]
Inspired perhaps by his recent studio/live collaborations alongside Steve Reid, this four track, 31-minute long EP represents something of a stylistic departure for Four Tet’s Kieran Hebden. [more]
Normally I'm not much of a fan of mixed cds, nor particularly of the whole concept of 'late night chill-out lounge' tunes, but in this collection of Kieran Hebden's (aka Four Tet) favourite tracks my worst expectations haven't been realised by any stretch. [more]
Four Tet returns with four tracks of techno (but not techno). The Ringer mini album is a 32 minute, four-track excursion into the kind of wide-open spaces you might find if you set out to make techno with an afrobeat/krautrock sensibility. [more]