Mark Stewart

Musician — Bristol

01Profile

A Mark Stewart Photo

03Interview

Photograph by Michel Fenderwoods

Name, where are you from?
Mark Stewart. As someone who’s always been on another planet and, as my Rasta mates say, we’re outernational by way of Bristol.

Describe your style in three words?
Lounge lout-couture.

What’s the best gig you’ve ever been to?
The Clash at the ICA, 1976. (See picture in the gallery below) It was pure renegade energy.

If you could be on the line up with any two bands in history?
The Revolutionaries who I saw at the legendary Bamboo club in Bristol as a kid. Their drummer Style Scott for me is the beat mechanic, one of the two best drummers in the world.

As you know this next choice is not officially a band but…Malcolm X. As he relates to the other best drummer in the world Keith LeBlanc who made tracks with samples of Malcolm X’s voice with his widow's blessing.

Which subcultures have influenced you?
Raggamuffin. As a junior smoothie what stopped me from becoming a terrace legend was in those dread times the spiritual influence and sufferation songs of amazing Jamaican deejays of the 70s such as Jah Stitch, Jah Woosh, Prince Hammer and Prince Far-I. I had the pleasure of running with the last two! (See picture in the gallery below).

If you could spend an hour with anyone from history?
The Count of St Germain who seems to be a time travelling illuminoid who turns up at crucial moments in revolutionary history. We could desperately do with an hour of his time now.

Of all the venues you’ve played, which is your favourite?
The Marquee in London. I’ve got amazing memories of playing there with The Pop Group on the day that Elvis died. We were a mere support band to our Bristolian punk legend mates The Cortinas but after the gig we were put on the front cover of Bristol fanzine Loaded (wow!) (See picture in the gallery below) I met Keith Levene from Public Image Ltd that night for the first time and had a lovely conversation with him about portals in the street outside.

Your greatest unsung hero or heroine in music?
The Cockerel Chorus for making ‘Nice One Cyril’. Basically, when this song came out it became a real rallying call for nutters far and wide.


'Learning To Cope With Cowardice', the groundbreaking debut solo album by visionary post-punk iconoclast Mark Stewart (of The Pop Group), is to be given a definitive reissue alongside 'The Lost Tapes', a newly discovered cache of unreleased material.

The release is set for 25th January 2019 and can be pre-ordered at smarturl.it/mark-stewart.

04Playlist Notes

The first track you played on repeat?
It was a small Action Man record and on one track it kept going "Combat Commander to base" with crazy helicopter sounds. I wish I hadn’t heard it at the age of four as, for so many years, it fucked up my chances of ever being like John Miles.

A song that defines the teenage you?
‘Take Me I’m Yours’ by Jobriath.

One record you would keep forever?
‘Learning To Cope With Cowardice’ by myself & The Maffia.

A song lyric that has inspired you?
‘No Sell Out’ by Keith LeBlanc / Malcolm X.

A song you wished you had written?
‘Jerusalem’ by William Blake.

Best song to turn up loud?
‘Yabby You Sound’ by Yabby You.

A song people wouldn’t expect you to like?
'Driftwood' By Travis.

Best song to end an all-nighter on?
'Aftermath' by Tricky (which I happened to help the young fella with).

Any new bands you are listening to right now?
Textbeak, Algiers & Puce Mary.

03Interview

Photograph by Michel Fenderwoods

Name, where are you from?
Mark Stewart. As someone who’s always been on another planet and, as my Rasta mates say, we’re outernational by way of Bristol.

Describe your style in three words?
Lounge lout-couture.

What’s the best gig you’ve ever been to?
The Clash at the ICA, 1976. (See picture in the gallery below) It was pure renegade energy.

If you could be on the line up with any two bands in history?
The Revolutionaries who I saw at the legendary Bamboo club in Bristol as a kid. Their drummer Style Scott for me is the beat mechanic, one of the two best drummers in the world.

As you know this next choice is not officially a band but…Malcolm X. As he relates to the other best drummer in the world Keith LeBlanc who made tracks with samples of Malcolm X’s voice with his widow's blessing.

Which subcultures have influenced you?
Raggamuffin. As a junior smoothie what stopped me from becoming a terrace legend was in those dread times the spiritual influence and sufferation songs of amazing Jamaican deejays of the 70s such as Jah Stitch, Jah Woosh, Prince Hammer and Prince Far-I. I had the pleasure of running with the last two! (See picture in the gallery below).

If you could spend an hour with anyone from history?
The Count of St Germain who seems to be a time travelling illuminoid who turns up at crucial moments in revolutionary history. We could desperately do with an hour of his time now.

Of all the venues you’ve played, which is your favourite?
The Marquee in London. I’ve got amazing memories of playing there with The Pop Group on the day that Elvis died. We were a mere support band to our Bristolian punk legend mates The Cortinas but after the gig we were put on the front cover of Bristol fanzine Loaded (wow!) (See picture in the gallery below) I met Keith Levene from Public Image Ltd that night for the first time and had a lovely conversation with him about portals in the street outside.

Your greatest unsung hero or heroine in music?
The Cockerel Chorus for making ‘Nice One Cyril’. Basically, when this song came out it became a real rallying call for nutters far and wide.


'Learning To Cope With Cowardice', the groundbreaking debut solo album by visionary post-punk iconoclast Mark Stewart (of The Pop Group), is to be given a definitive reissue alongside 'The Lost Tapes', a newly discovered cache of unreleased material.

The release is set for 25th January 2019 and can be pre-ordered at smarturl.it/mark-stewart.

04Playlist Notes

The first track you played on repeat?
It was a small Action Man record and on one track it kept going "Combat Commander to base" with crazy helicopter sounds. I wish I hadn’t heard it at the age of four as, for so many years, it fucked up my chances of ever being like John Miles.

A song that defines the teenage you?
‘Take Me I’m Yours’ by Jobriath.

One record you would keep forever?
‘Learning To Cope With Cowardice’ by myself & The Maffia.

A song lyric that has inspired you?
‘No Sell Out’ by Keith LeBlanc / Malcolm X.

A song you wished you had written?
‘Jerusalem’ by William Blake.

Best song to turn up loud?
‘Yabby You Sound’ by Yabby You.

A song people wouldn’t expect you to like?
'Driftwood' By Travis.

Best song to end an all-nighter on?
'Aftermath' by Tricky (which I happened to help the young fella with).

Any new bands you are listening to right now?
Textbeak, Algiers & Puce Mary.

 

05Videos

Mark Stewart Archive Gallery

Mark Stewart & The Maffia | Liberty City

Mark Stewart | Paranoia

The Pop Group | She Is Beyond Good & Evil

The Pop Group | Where There's A Will