Some people might think it's easy to explain Fourtet: "It's electronica." It might be easiest to wince at these people and concede, "Yes, well sort of." Fourtet, the one-man DJ project of Fridge's Kieran Hebden, doesn't fit so easily into any one category.
True, there are beats, samples, and other aspects of turntablism to his music, but there are also live instruments and very real sounding drum tracks -- "organic electronic" might be one way to describe it.
Dialogue is Fourtet's first proper album (a slew of remixes and 12-inches have come before and after).
Sometimes the record is jazzy: Heavy acoustic bass and scattered drums, but alternately, tabla and sitar, are the key focus of the final track.
It seems that Hebden is quite happy in any musical setting he creates.
None of the album sounds contrived, and there's an underlying earnestness that provides real credibility.
Some of the record sounds, at times, like the more sampled passages of Fridge, but not as austere.
If you're feeling fed up with stale, predictable electronica, or feeling ready to brave the shores of the electro-isle, this is an excellent album.