Kieran Hebden

Kieran Hebden is a British musician, producer and composer born on September 1, 1977 in Putney, London. Primarily known for his electronic work under the name Four Tet, he has also developed a distinct body of work outside that name, spanning experimental music, improvisation and collaborations in the jazz, rock and avant-garde scenes. Hebden emerged in the late 1990s as a founding member of the post-rock band Fridge, formed with Adem Ilhan and Sam Jeffers, which combined live instrumentation, electronic textures and minimalist influences. Alongside his work with Fridge, he began to explore more abstract, sample-based music under his own name, taking a keen interest in improvisation and the manipulation of acoustic sound. Outside of Four Tet, Hebden is widely recognized for his collaborations with jazz drummer Steve Reid, with whom he released several albums between 2006 and 2008: The Exchange Session Vol. 1 & 2, Tongues and NYC, blending live jazz improvisation and live electronic processing. These works are considered benchmarks in modern jazz experimentation. He has also collaborated with a wide range of artists, including Burial, Thom Yorke, Madvillain and Jon Hopkins, often contributing remixes or productions reflecting his deep interest in rhythm, texture and atmosphere. Albums under his own name favor experimental sound collage, ambient composition and field recording, positioning him as a bridge figure between the worlds of electronica, jazz and avant-garde music. After a final live album with Reid and in collaboration with Mats Gustafson, Live at the South Bank (captured in 2009 and released after Reid's death in 2011), Hebden concentrated on his other projects before resurfacing with William Tyler in 2025 for the ambient album 41 Longfield Street '80s.

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