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Four Tet: Ringer

Music Reviews Music
Four Tet: Ringer

Since being coined in the early '90s, the term
"Intelligent Dance Music" has been eschewed by most of the artists whose music
it was meant to describe. Four Tet (a.k.a. Kieran Hebden) is to be praised,
then, for not just grousing about his beats being called intelligent, but for
resolving to bite down and make some that are good and stupid. On Ringer, a generously portioned
EP, Hebden dials back his frenetic eclecticism, instead turning out ambitious
yet danceable techno. All four of Ringer's bright, bracing beats have heart-beating
kickdrums at their foundations, on which Hebden builds walls of Europhilic
synthesizer. Fans of earlier albums such as Rounds and Everything
Ecstatic

will be caught off-guard by a track like "Ribbons," which for its first half is
so austere, all the instruments can be counted on one hand. Meanwhile, on "Wing
Body Wing," Hebden brings in a stuttering drum roll and crackling polyrhythmic
percussion, a hint of the "more is more" approach he's built a fan base on. Ringer proves
that an egghead can be a man of the people. Good news for Barack Obama.

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