* En anglais uniquement
Post-punk renegade
Mark Stewart's early,
Adrian Sherwood-produced solo efforts were credited to
Mark Stewart and the Maffia (or similar variations, such as
Mark Stewart + Maffia). Releases such as the groundbreaking 1983 full-length Learning to Cope with Cowardice were volatile, confrontational bursts of distorted dub rhythms and radical politics. Over the coming decades, these recordings heavily influenced industrial, trip-hop, illbient, digital hardcore, and other forms of subversive, counter-cultural music.
Bristol native
Stewart first became known as the leader of post-punk cult favorites
the Pop Group. While short-lived in their initial run during the late '70s and early '80s,
Stewart's paranoid vocals and the band's fearless sense of experimentation made a major impact on the underground music scene.
The Pop Group broke up in 1980, and
Stewart (along with drummer Bruce Smith and guitarist
John Waddington) appeared on the 1981 eponymous debut by
New Age Steppers, a collective assembled by producer
Adrian Sherwood which incorporated musicians from Jamaica as well as the United Kingdom. In 1982,
Sherwood's On-U Sound released
Jerusalem, the first
Mark Stewart and the Maffia EP, which featured Jamaican musicians
Bonjo Iyabinghi Noah, Eskimo Fox, and Evar Wellington, all of whom played on several other On-U projects. Full-length Learning to Cope with Cowardice, additionally featuring keyboard player Desmond "Fat Fingers" Coke, appeared in 1983.
Stewart's next album,
As the Veneer of Democracy Starts to Fade, appeared in 1985 and featured the powerhouse line-up of
Doug Wimbish,
Keith LeBlanc, and
Skip McDonald, all alumni of
the Sugarhill Gang's band. While
Veneer wasn't credited as a
Maffia release, tracks from both Learning and
Veneer were compiled on the American-issued compilation LP Mark Stewart + Maffia in 1985.
Stewart's subsequent releases were largely credited as solo releases, although 1987 single "This Is Stranger Than Love" bore the
Maffia name. In 2019, Mute reissued Learning with an additional disc of previously unreleased material from the same sessions as Learning to Cope with Cowardice/The Lost Tapes. ~ Paul Simpson