ALBUMThere Is Love in You (Expanded Edition)Four Tet
ALBUMRingerFour Tet
ALBUMEverything Ecstatic, Pt. 2Four Tet
Four Tet's Popular Music Videos
Butterflies
Skrillex, Starrah & Four Tet
Teenage Birdsong
Four Tet
Baby
Four Tet
She Moves She
Four Tet
My Angel Rocks Back and Forth
Four Tet
No More Mosquitoes
Four Tet
As Serious As Your Life
Four Tet
Artist Playlists
Four Tet Essentials
From hip-hop to jazz and house—the most adventurous dance floor you've ever visited.
Four Tet: Deep Cuts
Channeling abstract beats into unexpected shapes and styles.
Inspired by Four Tet
A singular style of beatmaking yields bold new sounds.
Four Tet: Influences
A kaleidoscopic look at the UK producer's brain-bending beats and samples.
Four Tet: Chill
Lean back and relax with some of their mellowest cuts.
Artist Biography
Late-’90s London was a dynamic time and place for electronic music: Styles were colliding at an unprecedented pace, and a young Kieran Hebden wasted no time getting involved. He was just 20 when his muscular post-rock outfit, Fridge, signed to Trevor Jackson’s influential Output label in 1997. But the following year, he began pursuing an even more distinctive sound with his electronic solo project, Four Tet. Hebden’s breakbeats weren’t the same ones most dance producers used, and instead of choosing obviously electronic sounds, he opted for warm samples of jazz and folk: reedy horns, harps, unidentifiable instruments from dusty world-music bins. And since the start, he’s remained remarkably true to that singular vision. Hebden began perfecting his sound with 2001’s Pause and 2003’s Rounds—a breezy, brightly colored take on downtempo notable for its pastoral qualities. By 2008’s Ringer EP, recorded at the height of house and techno’s minimalist boom, he began gravitating toward the dance floor, channeling finely honed percussive sounds into rippling rhythms, and 2010’s ecstatic, full-bodied There Is Love in You married his colorful psychedelic sensibilities to his taste in DJ cuts. (“Plastic People” is named for a beloved underground London nightclub Hebden frequented.) In the years since, Four Tet’s music has grown more daring (2015’s Morning/Evening is a 40-minute, two-track meditation on Hindi film music) and doggedly focused on making people dance (“Kool FM” is a rollicking, jungle-sampling tribute to London’s pirate-radio legacy). Though his wide-ranging collaborations (Katy B, Burial, the late free-jazz drummer Steve Reid) and remixes of everyone from Aphex Twin to Omar Souleyman have allowed him to fold an ever-growing array of ideas into his world, Hebden continues to sound like nobody but himself—and, try as they might, no one else sounds quite like him.
More to Know
• Hebden went solo in 1997 and earned widespread acclaim for his third album as Four Tet, 2003’s Rounds, a fixture of year-end best-of lists.
• As of 2020, Four Tet had released 10 full-length LPs, six live albums, and three EPs—and that’s not counting releases under other names. He's also opened for Radiohead and remixed songs by artists like Sia, Lana Del Rey, and Black Sabbath.
• In 2017, Four Tet’s remix of The xx's “A Violent Noise” earned a Grammy nomination for Best Remixed Recording.