I seem to remember commenting at the end of a review of Kieran Hebden’s last release, the Tongues album with drummer Steve Reid, that I had no idea where he was going to go next. If I had really put my mind to it (or, erm, done some cursory internet research) I should have worked out it would be a new Fridge album. With the live, loud, jazzy bent of his recent work, and the considerable benfit of hindsight, the reformation of the decade-asleep Putney three-piece seems pretty logical.


The reunion with Adem (lovely man, nice glasses, sturdy acoustic fare on Domino) and Sam Jeffers seems to have been a fruitful one. The band slip effortlessly back into their post-rock gear, and I slip comfortably back into my post-rock listening costume, and much happiness ensues. “Clocks” ticks along in Tortoise fashion, “Eyelids” is crunchy, riffy, like “Chroma” from Semaphore, in “Oram” crystal forms from sonic tumble a la “Sun Drums and Soil”, while “Insects” curves off improvisationally from from the orbit of Rounds. It isn’t entirely a retrospective affair; the title track melts tambura over an electric hip-hop fire and blazing drums, sounding totally fresh and exciting. (An entirely personal and probably regrettable observation to close: the pleasant twang of “Comets” would have sounded brilliant accompanying the run-through of the leaderboard at the US Masters. Make of that what you will).
The extra decade of experience of the protagonists has resulted in a confident, well-produced and most grin-inducing album, making previous Fridge releases sound disturbingly raw and naïve in comparison. I can’t remember the last time an album made me feel ten years younger. They should sell this stuff in Boots (they do sell this stuff at Temporary Residence).


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June 15, 2007 at 6:47 pm
Brad
I saw Fridge play recently alongside Tarentel at a Temporary Residence birthday party here in New York. I was pretty underwhelmed — Hebden seemed to be handling his guitar as if he hadn’t picked it up for a few months, which is to say very tentatively, and the music was an aged mix of Brit-poppy guitar melodies extended into post-rock indulgences, but without the sort of textured walls of sound that make post-rock so enjoyable in the first place. I’ve never heard Fridge on record though, and I was extremely disappointed with Mice Parade recently too. Maybe I’ve been spoiled by my headphones.