Rounds

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (323 ratings)
Rounds album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 45:22

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Chaos theory to practice

Seikilos

The artist that turned me on to Electronic music. This is my favorite of the Four Tet albums and best enjoyed through a fine set of headphones. Take this for a listen and explore the possibilities of melody and music.

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If only there were more...

Yadadadabingbang

This is an amazing album, and I love it dearly. On this album, I am able, without stressful levels of concentration, to reduce Four Tet's abstractions into palpable melodies and music with a complex emotional substance to it... That is to say, this album is immensely rewarding listening - if I listen closely. Watch it though, Spirit Fingers might cause you to blow a fuse. Other Four Tet albums are either simply too frenetic or cerebral (I don't know which, but feel certain it can only be one or the other) for me to enjoy.

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Incomparable

djcureyes

His blend of the ambient and the driving has yet to be matched.

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Very nice

Schemer

Very nice outside jazz with electronic and pop elements. Not sure where the folk thing in the emusic description comes from, but this is very nice stuff if you like your music a bit experimental and outside.

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HOTT!

elbuort

If you have not listened to FourTet yet, this is your starting point. Unique sounds combine to form melodic melodies. What could be better?!

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For his solo projects, Fridge’s Kieran Hebden is a lo-fi experimentalist who, had he been recording 15 years ago, would’ve been cranking out songs on a four-track recorder instead of a laptop. As demonstrated on his third record, Rounds, he’s one of the few musicians capturing all the promise inherent in computer science — being able to summon, manipulate, and mix any sound imaginable. The record offers something to nearly every audience that could approach it, with a bit of a groove for electronic fans, an obtuse sense of music-making for experimentalists, and a dreamy melodicism sure to endear it to indie-pop fans. The opener, “Hands,” is especially breathtaking; it begins with a few seconds of drum samples, surgically inserted and ill-timed, but opens into a warm, melodic production with a simple frame-kit beat outlining Hebden’s guitar-and-keyboard atmospherics. “My Angel Rocks Back and Forth” features a music-box melody playing against softly shaded backmasked guitar and a subdued, grating percussion line reminiscent of an iron lung. The nine-minute “Unspoken” alternates guitar and piano playing the same beatific melody, over another simple beat and tambourine claps. Though Rounds is experimental by nature, Kieran Hebden’s gift for melody and emotional shading allows his records to be enjoyed by an audience wider than merely experimental listeners. – John Bush

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