Mark Stewart

Rate this:

Home > Music > Mark Stewart > Discography

Mark Stewart
Metatron
Release Date: 1990
Label: Mute Records

Following his eponymous 1987 album, Mark Stewart continued his collaboration with producer Adrian Sherwood and the Maffia (Sugar Hill's Keith LeBlanc, Doug Wimbish, and Skip McDonald); in 1990, he released Metatron, his most accessible record to date. On his first three albums, Stewart had juxtaposed expansive dub-oriented numbers with more experimental tracks that made for decidedly uneasy listening. That harsher, more difficult dimension of Stewart's sound is absent from Metatron, which trades experimental cut-ups and electronic noise for relatively seamless, tight techno funk workouts. Indeed, the emphasis here falls on the stellar rhythm section of LeBlanc and Wimbish, who provide a solid foundation for this material. At times on "Mammon" and "Faith Healer," Stewart's fraught, distorted voice is almost buried under that heavy groundwork, while on numbers like "Hysteria" his vocals occasionally pierce through the weighty arrangements. On Metatron's slightly uneven predecessor, Stewart had shown a more introspective side, something that several critics took as a blunting of his political edge. Here, Stewart achieves a more fully realized blending of the personal and the political; his characteristically nihilistic pronouncements concerning the sinister effects of authority and technocracy on everyday life sit well alongside explorations of individual psychology and dysfunction on tracks like "Shame" and "These Things Happen." All the components of Stewart's sound converge to maximum effect on "Collision," as the heavyweight beats and distorted vocals are topped off with something bordering on heavy metal guitar -- there's even a brief solo. But Stewart can get away with such excesses; on the previous album, he'd already done the unthinkable, sampling the guitar from Billy Idol's "Flesh for Fantasy." Although Metatron is a homogeneous record, "My Possession" changes the equation somewhat with its house groove and minimal keyboards. Stewart would pursue that sonic diversity six years later on his follow-up album, Control Data. Wilson Neate, All Music Guide

Tracks:
TitleComposerTime
1HysteriaWimbish, McDonald, Stewart, Leblanc
2ShameLeblanc, Stewart, Wimbish, McDonald
3CollisionLeblanc, Stewart, Wimbish, McDonald
4Faith HealerLeblanc, Wimbish, Stewart, McDonald
5These Things HappenMaxwell, Stewart, Harrow
6My PossessionHarrow, Stewart
7Possession DubHarrow, Stewart
8MammonMcDonald, Wimbish, Stewart, Leblanc
9Hysteria [*][Instrumental]Leblanc, McDonald, Stewart, Wimbish

Releases:
YearTypeLabel
CDMute Records
1993CDMute Records



Member Of:
The Pop Group
New Age Steppers
Fred Frith Guitar Quartet
Mark Stewart and the Maffia
Bang on a Can All-Stars
More >>

Similar Artists:
James Woodrow
Dub Syndicate
Basement 5
African Head Charge
Mantronix
More >>

Followers:
Meat Beat Manifesto
Tricky
Nick Cave
More >>







Browse More Music:
# A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Follow Starpulse