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Showing posts with label kieran hebden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kieran hebden. Show all posts

Thursday, 19 March 2026

A Thousand Threads


I recently read Neneh Cherry's autobiography A Thousand Threads. It's a reflective and honest look at her extraordinary, bohemian life, a life with moments and people that leave you feeling she was near the centre of almost everything that was interesting. Her childhood was unconventional and filled with experiences. Her mother Moki, a Swedish artist and 60s beatnik met Ahmadu Jah in Stockholm. He was a student on a scholarship, one of six men who left from Sierra Leone to study engineering. They moved in together and Moki got pregnant. Not long after, when she was five months pregnant, Moki found out that Ahmadu and monogamy were incompatible. Neneh was born in 1964. The year before Moki had met musician Don Cherry. When Ahmadu moves on, amicably, Moki and Don get together at a jazz gig in Stockholm and become a couple. Neneh is from thereon the child of three parents. 

Moki and Don spend Neneh's childhood shuttling between a life in idyllic Sweden, the family living in a converted school house that Moki has made the centre of her world, one where art and family life are one and the same, a home and performance space, and life in 70s New York. Don is a heroin addict and when in New York he often disappears for a couple of days to 'take care of some business'. The family accept Don's addiction and work with him and it but the terror of Don not coming home or dying in their flat creates a lifetime of issues for everyone. 

As well as Sweden and new York the family move to London. Neneh is transformed by punk, meets and befriends Ari Up, joins The Slits, starts a relationship with Bruce Smith (drummer in The Pop Group and later The Slits and New Age Steppers), has a child (at 16!), splits up with Bruce, meets Cameron McVeigh (producer of Massive Attack), makes her solo album, appears on Top Of the Pops eight months pregnant... its a whirl of art and culture and life, Neneh constantly inspired and inspiring. 

She's honest too- she admits that the moving around of her childhood was something she continued into her adult life and that maybe her own children might have benefited from a more stable home life. She l about her spiraling alcohol issues that follow Moki's death and the long periods where she writes and releases nothing, totally consumed by being a mother. 

One of the most affecting chapters describes her first visit to Sierra Leone. She arrives in full punk clobber, army boots and trousers, a Clash t- shirt and leather jacket, and as she is taken in by her African relatives she discovers and embraces that side of her family. When she returns to the UK and appears in the Earthbeat video (from The Slits second album) she is wearing the African clothing she brought back with her. 

Writing the book as a grandparent, she is clearly still getting her head round some of it. She is as proud of her achievements as a women and a mother as her ones as a musician. Race and sex are never far from the story. Her upbringing in Sweden as the only mixed race kid in the school. Her fusion of punk, hip hop and street soul into Buffalo Stance. Her adventures as a teen in New York's early 80s downtown clubland. Her first transatlantic flight as a five year old (flying solo, aged five). A trip to Japan as part of Ray Petri's Buffalo posse with The Face. An international smash hit single in the 90s with Youssou N'Dour.  It's all there and more. She's funny, wise and insightful, unapologetic in some ways but clear minded too and has lived a life. 

Some music...

Buffalo Stance is one of the late 80s best pop singles, a streetwise and sassy piece of pop- hip hop scratching and house grooves with Bomb The Bass' Tim Simenon producing (it was worked up from a B-side for a Stock Aitken and Waterman single Looking Good Diving that husband Cameron McVey and Jamie Murphy had recorded). Buffalo was Ray Petri's outfit, a bunch of artists, models, musicians and stylists who enjoyed a burst of fame in mid- to- late London. A Buffalo Stance is an attitude, a mode of survival in urban life- 'We always hang in a buffalo stance/  We do the dive every time we dance'.

Buffalo Stance

Woman came out nearly a decade later, a riposte to James Brown's It's A Man's Man's World and song about female empowerment. Dramatic strings that echo James Brown's, trip hop beats and written at a  time when fame was on the verge of destabilising her completely. 

Woman

Blank Project came out in 2014, an album produced by Keiran Four Tet Hebden. Sparse, minimal, electronics via jazz and soul. Uncompromising. I loved it back in 2014 and haven't listened to it for ages- it still sounds like a powerful piece of music.  

Blank Project


Wednesday, 31 December 2025

2025 Mix For NYE

An hour long mix for New Year's Eve  featuring solely music released in 2025, ambient and largely instrumental although some voices creep in to the Keith Tenniswood remix of Deeply Armed's The Healing and Mogwai's God Gets You Back. 

I was going to do a second mix to go with it, a more uptempo, more vocals based hour long mix but time and circumstances conspired against me. It'll follow at the weekend hopefully. In the meantime this one gives some low key shimmer and emotion to the last day of the year. 

NYE Hour Long 2025 Ambient/ Instrumental Mix

  • Death In Vegas: Lightning Bolt (Live at EartH, 2025)
  • Jamie Lidell and Luke Schneider: The Story Of Your Life
  • SUSS and Six Missing: Old Mission
  • Robin Guthrie: Her Name Is Dulcinea
  • Deeply Armed: The Healing (Keith Tenniswood Remix)
  • Klangkollektor: Isle Of Stonsy
  • Mogwai: God Gets You Back
  • Andy Bell: Pinball Wanderer
  • Sewell And The Gong: Communion Phase
  • Kieran Hebden and William Tyler: Secret City
  • Daniel Avery: Neon Pulse
  • Moon Dust: The Glow (Slowed + Reverb)

The Death In Vegas track Lightning Bolt dates from 2011 and the Trans- Love Energies album but this version was recorded live when DIV played at EartH in Dalston this year, fragile, drifting ambience.

Jamie Lidell and Luke Schneider released A Companion For Spaces Between Dreams, Luke's pedal steel ambient- Americana crossed with Jamie's modular synths and tapes effects. Psychedelic inner voyage music. 

SUSS are also from the ambient- Americana/ cosmic country scene, a trio from New York. This song with Six Missing's electric guitar came out in November. 

Robin Guthrie occasionally tidies up his unreleased files/ shelves and releases music onto Bandcamp, tracks that didn't make albums released in the past- orphan tracks. Her Name Is Dulcinea is one of those, from 2012, that saw the light of day in November this year. Ambient shoegaze/ dream pop for which the word 'ethereal' seems a cliche but also very apt. 

Belfast's Deeply Armed released a 12" called The Healing in the spring complete with remixes by Death In Vegas, Andrew Innes with Brendan Lynch and lone swordsman Keith Tenniswood. The original is ghostly, shamanic psyche/ kraut. Keith strips it down with a primitive drum machine and heartbeat pulse. Low key beauty. 

Klangkollektor's Balearic/ dub instrumentals have been present in two releases in 2025- Dubtapes Volume 2 and The Stockport Tapes (recorded live at Bruk). Isle Of Stonsey adds pedal steel or Hawaiian guitar to the soundscape, a very chilled out, beatific excursion.

Mogwai's The Bad Fire opened with God Gets You Back, stellar guitar picking and FX that builds, going supernova in the second half when the synths, drums and vocals join in. 

Andy Bell's Pinball Wanderer album came out in February and has been played round here every month since. The title track marries late 60s acid folk guitar and cosmische rhythms with Andy's spacious, warm production. 

Sewell And The Gong's Patron Saint of Elsewhere has been one of my favourite records of 2025 and this track, Communion Phase, is as good as any from it- psychedelic, motorik and folky with an optimistic feel.   

Kieran Hebden and William Tyler's 41 Longfield Street Late 80s splices Kieran's laptop beats and productions with William's acoustic and electric guitars to make one of the most affecting albums of 2025- hypnotic, engaging, with an eye on the past (and on Kieran's Dad's record collection in the late 80s, alt- country and Nashville) but avoiding dewy- eyed nostalgia to create something entirely their own. 

Daniel Avery's Tremor album was a departure from his ambient techno of recent years and a swerve into channeling his early 90s industrial rock influences. He toured the album with a full band, guitarist, bassist and drummer kicking up a right old noise alongside his synths and machines. On the album's opener, Neon Pulse, he lulls us into a sense of ambient security, two minutes of gorgeous floaty sci fi synth ambience.

Moon Dust is yet another Richard Norris project this time with Lol Hammond from The Drum Club. Piano and FX, a slowed down and reverb laden way to drift out of this hour's worth of music. 

Wednesday, 8 October 2025

41 Longfield Street

Kieran Hebden (Four Tet) and guitarist William Tyler (formerly of Lambchop) released an album a few weeks ago, 41 Longfield Street Late '80s (Hebden's childhood address where part of his musical upbringing was his father's collection of country and folk music). The first track on the album is the dazzling Lyle Lovett cover, If I Had A Boat, an eleven minute long, softly played melding of ambient electronics and finger picked acoustic guitar that starts out with a hum and drone which becomes ambient noise. At exactly the right moment, Tyler's guitar, buried as part of the drone and wash suddenly snaps to the fore and becomes the song. Tyler's guitar playing, delicate and melodic, two parts, a finger picked top note part and a second descending one underneath, carry the song through the next eight minutes, chords and notes that never sit still with some gentle electronics occasionally wafting in and out. 

It's followed by Spider Ballad, the least Tyler sounding track on the album, seven and a half minutes of electronic beauty, everything Kieran Hebden can do so well- a synth part that rises and falls, move around, gradually altered by FX. Underneath the four four drum prods away, a gentle propulsion. 

William Tyler said he was surprised when he heard the album, that what Kieran had done with the guitar parts they recorded together had become something else. There's a guitar in there somewhere but its not the clean finger picking of If I Had A Boat, the late 80s country gone. As the synths gather and the rhythm becomes more insistent there's an emotive ebbing and flowing, melancholy and possibility- its very evocative. 

The album was recorded together and worked on by Hebden for a two year period, Kieran adding and filtering, cutting and pasting with Tyler's very human acoustic guitar subsumed into the electronics. It's a bit disjointed, the remaining five tracks (all on side two on vinyl) taking in a variety of sounds and feels- stretched out bursts of feedback and ghostly chords (I Want An Antennae) and pastoral folk (When It Rains), a wonderfully reflective five minutes of guitar playing, two or three parts combined, that sound like they were recorded in a log cabin while staring into the flames, that dissolves into squally feedback. Timber repeats the trick, electronic flutter and acoustic guitars piling up, a ringing topline taking the lead. Loretta Guides My Hands Through The Radio is two minutes of sound collage that turns into the album's closer, Secret City, a seven minute excursion that marries Kieran's laptop electronics and Tyler's guitar perfectly, a background cloud of FX and synth drones and some guitar parts- a strummed acoustic and an electric lead both equally central to the song, a song that is sweetly euphoric, cathartic even. Magical and uplifting, Nashville and South London, late 80s and 2025. 

Find it at Bandcamp


Monday, 2 June 2025

Monday's Long Song


Kieran Hebden (otherwise known as Four Tet) and William Tyler (guitarist in among others Silver Jews and Lambchop as well as a solo artist) may not seem like obvious candidates for a collaborative album but they share a love of folk, various cosmic sounds and it turns out late 80s country. There's an album on the way in September called 41 Longfield Street Late 80s and ahead of it is this eleven minute beauty, If I Had A Boat...

If I Had A Boat sets out with a long gentle drone, which builds and shifts, some feedback and static drifting in, and then two minutes in, the faint sound of finger picking on a guitar- then, suddenly the guitar is at the foreground on its own. The synths and Kieran Hebden production parts drift back in as Tyler picks away, and gradually everything is balanced again. This is only six minutes in, there's still half the track to go and the second half is a delight, constantly evolving and revolving, melodies and synths, drones and squiggles, round and round.

If I Had A Boat is a cover of sorts- a long instrumental re- interpretation might be a better description- of a Lyle Lovett song from his 1988 album Pontiac. Lyle was in the news a lot in the late 80s, his idiosyncratic take on country garnering a lot of praise. He was also for a while in a relationship with Julia Roberts after they met making the 1992 film The Player and married in 1993 (divorcing two years later). 

Sunday, 8 May 2022

Half An Hour Of Four Tet

Some Kieran Hebeden/ Four Tet for this week's Sunday half hour. There's an embarrassment of riches in his back catalogue- the difficult part was narrowing it down to just six or seven tracks. Kieran takes the energy and feel of rave and combines it with ambient sounds, skippy laptop drums and Indian instruments to make something which is very much his. 

The mix starts with Teenage Birdsong, one of my favourite Four Tet tracks, taken from his Sixteen Oceans album, a record which reminds me of the first days and weeks of the first lockdown in March and April 2020 like no other. Lahaina Noon is from the Ana Painting EP which came out in 2019, a collaboration with the painter Anna Liber Lewis where he made music and she painted in response to each other. Two Thousand And Seventeen is from 2017's New Energy album. Jamie Xx's remix of Lions came out as part of the Atoms For Peace project in 2014 and Raga To Midi W was part of a collection of unreleased tracks and edits he dropped onto his Soundcloud page in 2020. There's one of his unpronounceable Wingdings tracks on there and it finishes with his epic eight minute remix of Daniel Avery's New Eternity. 

Half An Hour Of Four Tet

  • Teenage Birdsong
  • Lahaina Noon
  • Two Thousand And Seventeen
  • Lion (Jamie Xx Remix)
  • Raga To Midi W
  • ʅ͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡(ƟӨ)ʃ͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡ ꐑ(ཀ ඊູ ఠీੂ೧ູ࿃ूੂ✧✧✧✧✧✧ළඕั࿃ूੂ࿃ूੂ,
  • Quick Eternity (Four Tet Remix)

Wednesday, 20 November 2019

⣎⡇ꉺლ༽இ•̛)ྀ◞ ༎ຶ ༽ৣৢ؞ৢ؞ؖ ꉺლ


A new release from the artist known as ⣎⡇ꉺლ༽இ•̛)ྀ◞ ༎ຶ ༽ৣৢ؞ৢ؞ؖ ꉺლ, the Wingdings alias of Kieran Hebden/Four Tet. Unpronounceable in a way Prince could only dream of, the names of the songs are spelt out using Wingdings too. The new release has two songs, both featuring the familiar skippy drums, lighter-than- air production, sunlit melodies and fragments of vocals. Of the pair I think the first one,  ʅ͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡(ƟӨ)ʃ͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡͡ ꐑ(ཀ ඊູ ఠీੂ೧ູ࿃ूੂ✧✧✧✧✧✧ළඕั࿃ूੂ࿃ूੂ,  shades it for me but both are pretty wonderful, capable of lifting the spirits and taking you somewhere else for a few minutes and, lets be honest, sometimes that's all we need our music to do.