Showing posts with label Mark Stewart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Stewart. Show all posts

Down : Sampled


Mark Stewart - As The Veneer Of Democracy Starts To Fade
Originally ripped and posted here from a vinyl album released on Mute Records (STUMM 24) in 1985 to high resolution 24-bit FLAC audio. Down-sampled to 16-bit flac audio quality for the mass audience.
A1. Passcivecation Program
A2. Bastards
A3. The Resistance Of The Cell
A4. Untitled
B1. As The Veneer Of Democracy Starts To Fade
B2. Pay It All Back
B3. Hypnotized
B4. Slave Of Love
B5. The Waiting Room

Re:upped To A Lower Resolution


Mark Stewart And The Maffia - Learning To Cope With Cowardice
Originally ripped from a vinyl album released on On-U Sound Records (ON-U LP 24) in 1983 to high resolution 24-bit FLAC audio. Downsampled here to 16-bit 44.1Khz quality audio.
A1. Learning To Cope With Cowardice
A2. Liberty City
A3. Blessed Are Those Who Struggle
A4. None Dare Call It Conspiracy
B1. Don't You Ever Lay Down Your Arms
B2. The Paranoia Of Power
B3. To Have A Vision
B4. Jerusalem

Mafiosi


Mark Stewart- Mark Stewart
It was quite some time ago when I upped high resolution 24 bit rips of the first two Mark Stewart albums from vinyl. I overlooked this at the time as I only had a copy on CD, Licensed from On-U Sound to Mute Records, the former (and now reformed) Pop Group front man unleashes another huge slab of dubby electronic noise created with the aide of numerous Tackhead'ers and Adrian Sherwood behind the desk. Rather than plundering the classics as with the first two records, Stewart now turns his sights on rap, disco and soul - his rework of a Donna Summer and Giorgio Moroder disco floor filler on the nine minute Fatal Attraction is a joy to behold! I may get around to downsampling the first two albums to 16/44.1 if there is demand.

Ripped from a compact disc album released on Mute Records (CD STUMM 43) in 1987 to high quality lossless flac audio.

1 Survival
2 Survivalist
3 Anger Is Holy
4 Hell Is Empty
5 Stranger
6 Forbidden Colour
7 Forbidden Dub
8 Fatal Attraction
9 Stranger Than Love
10 Stranger Than Love (Dub)
11 Survival

As The Veneer Of Democracy Starts To Fade...


Mark Stewart - As The Veneer Of Democracy Starts To Fade


Lovingly reworked from an original vinyl album in 24 bits.

By the time 1985's second LP "As The Veneer Of Democracy Starts To Fade" was released, Mark Stewart's Maffia had mutated. Though Stewart had been aware of Doug Wimbish, Keith LeBlanc and Skip McDonald and their seminal work as the Sugarhill Gang, it was Adrian Sherwood who had recently brought them to the UK and started working with them on a largely experimental but ground-breaking project called Fats Comet. Stewart heard them play at the Language Lab in the mid-80s:

It was this tape they'd done with like rockets going off and drums that sounded like steamhammers. I was going mental playing it to everyone.

Sherwood soon introduced the trio to Stewart, and so the new Maffia were formed. Parallel to recording as the Maffia for Stewart, without him and sometimes replaced by Gary Clail or Peech-Boy Bernard Fowler, Keith, Doug, Skip and Sherwood continued to record as Fats Comet and later Tackhead with their own, equally influential brand of funk-soul-sonic mayhem.
Meanwhile, Mark Stewart & The Maffia's "Veneer..." LP was without doubt one the heaviest albums he ever made. "Passivecation Program" sets the agenda for the rest of the LP by being wickedly harsh, dubby and funky. The track was a highlight of the Maffia's live set at the time, and Paul Meme recalls their early live shows:

Basically the live Maffia experience was just like seeing Tackhead - i.e. a brain-pulverisingly intense experience, the closest music could get to all-out apocalypse and still be endurable - but with the addition of a front man who projected this incredible political / social paranoia vision which twisted the energy up yet another notch. He was actually a very focussed performer, he wasn't obviously in need of help to function, but he wasn't 'controlled' in the sense of being a cynical fake. Watching him bouncing up and down and calling out 'Operation Passivecation' had this amazing propulsive energy. There's no way the On-U story would have happened without him.

The track "Bastards" is like finding yourself in the middle of a military installation without security clearance. Klaxons, layer upon layer of distortion and Stewart shouting "This is a restricted area!" through a megaphone might not be everyone's idea of a good listen, but hearing Stewart's voice switching between oppressor and oppressed characters was pretty compelling - particularly when coupled with some of William Burroughs' words of advice.

Ripped from a vinyl album released on Mute Records (STUMM 24) in 1985 to high resolution 24-bit FLAC audio.
A1. Passcivecation Program
A2. Bastards
A3. The Resistance Of The Cell
A4. Untitled
B1. As The Veneer Of Democracy Starts To Fade
B2. Pay It All Back
B3. Hypnotized
B4. Slave Of Love
B5. The Waiting Room

Learning To Cope With Cowardice


Mark Stewart And Maffia - Learning To Cope With Cowardice

Seemingly a topical post, and a very worthy 24-bit rip of classic On-U-Sound. Mark still records today, but his first two albums are works of sublime genius in dub.


From the highly informative On-U-Sound In The Area :

Mark Stewart remains one On-U Sound's most influential acts, having made peerless, arresting and skull splintering music for almost as long as anyone can remember. Here then is his story: Mark Stewart started out in Bristol in 1978 with the Pop Group - an out-there, genre-busting band whose titles, political conviction, disrespect for copyright and willingness to collaborate laid the foundations for his later work. This militant gang of leftist radical politicos specialised in a funk-driven cacophony of sound that was abrasive, strident, and ultimately very exciting.

Railing against Margaret Thatcher's Tory UK government, the state of pop music, racism and sexism, the Pop Group were not the easiest band of the early post-punk era to listen to, but those who made the effort were in for an interesting melange of primitive rhythms and avant-garde guitar racket. Led by Stewart's squalling vocals, they were unabashedly and stridently radical to the point of being hectoring. But, unlike others of their ilk, the music was so challenging, joyfully noisy, and downright weird that it was easy to cut them a little slack, even when their finger-pointing and ranting became a bit much. Said Stewart once of the group's output, after its decline:

"It was not punk. Punk had already happened. We were a year or two younger than the punk bands. 
And I'd always loved black music. I'd always gone to funk clubs so I wanted to play funk. We 
really thought we were funky, but we couldn't play very well and we played out of time, so 
people thought we were avant-garde. All these old journalists would come up to you and start 
talking about Captain Beefheart. I couldn't stand Captain Beefheart. We thought we were like 
Bootsy Collins or something."

Never intending to make a serious run at the pop charts, the Pop Group imploded in 1981 after three albums. They did, however, contribute some talented people to other bands: most notably Gareth Sanger, who formed Rip Rig & Panic, which also featured the lead vocals of a then-teenage Neneh Cherry. Stewart of course went on to flourish in Adrian Sherwood's On-U Sound stable of artists.
The highlight of this first LP Learning To Cope With Cowardice is almost certainly the last track of its vinyl editions, Jerusalem. British politicians of various persuasions have laid claim to William Blake's anthem in the process of attempting to create a definition of "England" as a nation. Stewart however has perhaps more claim to Blake's legacy as it is clear from Blake's texts that his visions of "England" were both beautiful and horrific. The track itself continues the theme of a disregard for copyright kicked off by the Pop Group, phasing an un-credited choral version of the song in and out of the mix.

On paper it didn't sound like it would work. Urban paranoia and a techno sensibility; the positivity of dub reggae gone horribly wrong; dystopian visions mixed with those of William Blake, Donna Summer and William Burroughs; voodoo and ultra-left texts. But it worked, and when it didn't, the fractures could be far more rewarding than the gleaming monolith of any corporate uber-production it could never have been.

Ripped from a vinyl album released on On-U Sound Records (ON-U LP 24) in 1983 to high resolution 24-bit FLAC audio for your aural pleasure.
A1. Learning To Cope With Cowardice
A2. Liberty City
A3. Blessed Are Those Who Struggle
A4. None Dare Call It Conspiracy
B1. Don't You Ever Lay Down Your Arms
B2. The Paranoia Of Power
B3. To Have A Vision
B4. Jerusalem