Mark Stewart And The Maffia
50 top tracks
Mark Stewart And The Maffia
50 top tracks
Albums

As the Veneer of Democracy Starts to Fade
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

Learning to Cope With Cowardice
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

Edit
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

Mark Stewart
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

Metatron
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

Control Data
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

The Politics of Envy
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

Kiss the Future
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

The Fateful Symmetry
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

On-U Sound Crash: Slash & Mix - Adrian Sherwood
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

Alpha (Adrian Sherwood and Peter Harris Mix)
Mark Stewart And The Maffia

VS
Mark Stewart And The Maffia
Biography
Mark Stewart started out in Bristol in 1978 with The Pop Group - an out-there, genre-busting band whose titles (such as "For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?"), political conviction1, disrespect for copyright2 and willingness to collaborate3 laid the foundations for his later work....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Mark Stewart started out in Bristol in 1978 with The Pop Group - an out-there, genre-busting band whose titles (such as "For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?"), political conviction1, disrespect for copyright2 and willingness to collaborate3 laid the foundations for his later work.
"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…"
The Pop Group split in 1981, with Stewart and two other members heading off to London to hook up with the emerging On-U Sound "conspiracy of outsiders" as part of the New Age Steppers4.
On-U became a focal point an absurdly diverse set of networks - punks, reggae players from both the UK and JA, free-jazzers, blaggers, nutters... you name it.
Mark eventually hooked up with a line up of:
Charles "Eskimo / Mus'come" Fox on drums (an original member of Creation Rebel, as well as Freedom Fighters back in the 70's),
Evar (sometimes Ever) Wellington on bass (Noah House Of Dread/Playgroup/Singers And Players/Dub Syndicate),
Desmond "Fatfingers" Coke on keyboards,
Bonjo Iyabinghi Noah (Noah House Of Dread/African Head Charge) on percussion.
Adrian Sherwood (production and so much more...)
The original Maffia - where the Mark's Pop Group-era experiments with Dennis Bovell leapt up to another level. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/+noredirect/Mark+Stewart+and+the+Maffia">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
