
Colchester, Essex, England, United Kingdom producer & DJ Felix Weatherall a.k.a. Ross from Friends back for his sophomore effort. Someone who started off in 2013 with his debut extended play David Crane’s Amazing Tennis followed by Alex Brown, You’ll Understand, Don’t Sleep, There Are Snakes, The Outsiders & Aphelion prior to Flying Lotus signing him to Brainfeeder Records distributed by Ninja Tune. His full-length debut Family Portrait made some big improvements over his earlier material & it seems like he’s outdone himself again with Tread.
“The Daisy” begins with a future garage lead single containing additional elements of IDM as well as 2-step & ambient house whereas “Love Divide” blends UK garage, outsider house, ambient trance, Euro house & UK funky for a mellower & more atmospheric single. “Revellers” spends the next 7 minutes showing an Aphex Twin influence although he interestingly puts his own spin on it leading into “A Brand New Start” feeling like a cross between Burial & one of my top 10 producers of all-time Madlib.
We have Felix taking inspiration from Boards of Canada on “XXX Olympaid” & it makes me feel a bit nostalgic considering that they haven’t done anything in almost a decade at this point just before “Grub” takes it back to the future garage sound, further carrying Burial’s torch. “Splatter/Splatter” comes across as a fusion between Aphex Twin & someone you’d hear off of Burial’s eponymous debut while “Morning Sun in a Dusty Room” takes a more ambient approach instrumentally.
“Run” gets the last leg of Tread going taking some characteristics out of the early 2000s trance playbook & hints of deadmau5 with the 2nd half of it hitting harder than the 1st while “Life in a Mind” fuses future garage & UK garage for a composition that starts energizing & ends bittersweetly. The 33 second outro “Thresho_1.1” however should’ve been merged with the final song “Thresho_1.1”, which is a 4 minute IDM closer with an Aphex Twin & Boards of Canada twist to it.
Dialing up the intricate & emotive qualities of his production style, Ross from Friends pushes himself further by composing an LP that I can say is the riskiest yet most adventurous thing he’s ever made almost a decade since his career began. His production’s more future garage flavored than outsider house although Tread carries that sound over to a lesser extent along with ambient, downtempo, IDM, 2-step, ambient house, UK garage, ambient trance, Euro house & UK funky.
Score: 4/5