Machinedrum is easily the most well-known alias attributed to American electronic musician
Travis Stewart, who has also released material as
Syndrone,
tstewart, Neon Black, and
Aden. Initially credited as
Machine Drum (two words), he was one of the primary exponents of glitch-hop during the early 2000s, with acclaimed albums such as 2001's
Now You Know and 2004's
Bidnezz finding common ground between hip-hop rhythms and the tightly programmed experimental electronic sounds of IDM labels such as
Skam, Warp, and Rephlex. His sound mutated as the decades progressed, with releases such as 2009's Want to 1 2? incorporating more club-friendly styles such as house, boogie, and dubstep. 2011's Room(s) marked a shift toward a vibrant hybrid of juke and U.K. bass styles, and 2013's
Vapor City fused footwork and jungle.
Stewart kept busy with collaborative projects such as
Sepalcure (with
Praveen Sharma) and JETS (with
Jimmy Edgar), in addition to production work for the likes of
Dawn Richard,
Azealia Banks, and
Jesse Boykins III, while his own albums, including 2020's
A View of U, featured guests including
Freddie Gibbs and
Tigran Hamasyan.
Although
Stewart's first album, a set of drill'n'bass meanderings titled Triskaideka, was released under the name
Syndrone in early 2000, the first track he released as
Machine Drum was a hazy, skittering melange that owed more to hip-hop and ambient than to early
Squarepusher. Indeed, the bursting "Izey Rael" proved to be the template for
Machine Drum's early output. In 2001, the brilliant
Now You Know was released to underground acclaim and firmly established the 19-year-old producer as one of IDM and left-field hip-hop's brightest hopes. The album was released by Merck, a Miami-based glitch-hop label that was highly prolific during the first half of the 2000s. It was followed by
Urban Biology and remix album Half the Battle (both 2002),
Bidnezz (2004), and another remix collection, double-CD Mergerz & Acquisitionz (2006). Also in 2006,
Machine Drum shared a split-EP with
Drop the Lime, released by Tigerbeat6's dancehall/jungle imprint Shockout, and he released an LP of DJ battle tools titled Cached on the Inside.
Stewart took a break for a few years while he finished up his college studies, after which he moved to New York City. With Merck defunct, having ceased operation in 2007,
Stewart (who had shortened his moniker to
Machinedrum) started up a label and production company called Normrex, which released his full-length Want to 1 2? before falling apart. Following this album,
Stewart's sound became more frenetic and incorporated a number of styles, particularly Chicago's emerging juke/footwork scene and various permutations of the U.K. bass music continuum. He hit another creative stride during the 2010s, signing with
Planet Mu for Room(s), and Hotflush for the self-titled debut by
Sepalcure. Both were among the most acclaimed dance albums of 2011.
In 2012,
Stewart formed a duo with
Jimmy Edgar called JETS. He also collaborated with
Om Unit on a side project called
Dream Continuum which explored the sweet spot between jungle and juke.
Planet Mu released their
Reworkz EP in 2012.
Machinedrum continued this hybrid with the conceptual full-length
Vapor City, his first release for Ninja Tune, in 2013. He produced material for rapper
Azealia Banks and R&B singer
Jesse Boykins III, and began splitting time between New York and Berlin. In 2014, after he produced the majority of
Boykins'
Love Apparatus, he released
Vapor City Archives. Two years later, Hotflush released
Sepalcure's second album
Folding Time, and Ninja Tune released
Machinedrum's most pop-leaning effort up to the point,
Human Energy. Additional singles followed, including 2017's "1 2 B Needed" (with
Roses Gabor) and 2018's "Hype Up," and JETS released their debut album, Zoospa, in 2019, with guests including
Dawn Richard,
Mykki Blanco, and
Tkay Maidza. Berry Patch, a collaboration with producer Holly (Miguel Oliveira), appeared on
Noisia's Vision Recordings in 2020, accompanied by remix EP Berry Patch: Blended.
Machinedrum returned to Ninja Tune with the full-length
A View of U, a mixture of hip-hop and drum'n'bass with guests including
Freddie Gibbs,
Father,
Sub Focus, and
Chrome Sparks. ~ Mark Pytlik & Paul Simpson