
Bastard (2024 Reissue)
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It was four years into the swim ~ labelâs history before Bastard arrived. Like my previous albums, it was another collaboration â although this time only with my partner in life and crime, Malka Spigel.
There was a point in the â90s when British music journalists basically didnât get dance music and would refer to it as âfacelesstechno bollocksâ. It was that very attribute that Malka and I felt most attracted to. In instrumental music, you could be anyone fromanywhere. The only thing that mattered was how good your tunes were. In fact, for the first Immersion album, we pretended to befrom Germany and were photographed in wigs and masks. This had the unexpected result of the album selling more copies in Germany than anywhere else!
With Bastard, it took a while to get to the concept, which was essentially this: What if we subverted the whole âbloke from Wireâthing and had a Colin Newman album without any actual songs on it? These days, this is not such a big thing, but it was hugelytransgressive at the time. The language of Bastard is house, techno, breakbeat, drum and bass, and doubtless post-rock. The onlysinging is a one-line Malka sample on âTurnâ. Not only did the album not play by the rules of what would these days be called musicby a âheritageâ artist, but it didnât play by the rules of dance music either. Back then, dance music artists didnât mix up styles as theydo today. This is one of the reasons the albumâs called Bastard.
Upon release, Bastard was modestly successful in comparison to the labelâs other releases, although widely misunderstood. Thetitle is intentionally multifaceted, referring to several ways in which the album is a misfit â a cuckoo in the nest. But it never meantâColin Newman is a bastardâ â even if Malkaâs toy finger gesture on the cover tempted fate on that!
Malka and I have done more work together on swim ~ â and, of course, there has been plenty of Wire activity after its second hiatus during the 1990s â but I never felt the need to do another solo album. I donât crave attention and certainly donât feel I lackways to express myself. In many ways, itâs more creative to collaborate with others.
There is joy and beauty in collaboration. And collaborating with Malka has become so effortless that we almost donât know whodoes what in the work we create. This has led us to throwing open our partnership via Nanocluster events and albums where webuild musical bridges and make partnerships that transcend the art. Maybe thatâs the point? Surely, art should be about human connection and diversity of expression?
Tracklist
LP & CD1
Sticky
May
Slowfast (falling down the stairs with a drumkit)
Without
g-deep
Spaced In
Spiked
The Orange House & the Blue House
Turn
CD2
Automation
Faq
Voice
Output
The Narrativ (with Corrado Izzo)
Blank Canvas
Time Will Allow
Tsunami
Cut The Slack (2001)
Found & Bound (2001)
Unbroken (2001)
Flight Mode (2008)
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Description
More Info
It was four years into the swim ~ labelâs history before Bastard arrived. Like my previous albums, it was another collaboration â although this time only with my partner in life and crime, Malka Spigel.
There was a point in the â90s when British music journalists basically didnât get dance music and would refer to it as âfacelesstechno bollocksâ. It was that very attribute that Malka and I felt most attracted to. In instrumental music, you could be anyone fromanywhere. The only thing that mattered was how good your tunes were. In fact, for the first Immersion album, we pretended to befrom Germany and were photographed in wigs and masks. This had the unexpected result of the album selling more copies in Germany than anywhere else!
With Bastard, it took a while to get to the concept, which was essentially this: What if we subverted the whole âbloke from Wireâthing and had a Colin Newman album without any actual songs on it? These days, this is not such a big thing, but it was hugelytransgressive at the time. The language of Bastard is house, techno, breakbeat, drum and bass, and doubtless post-rock. The onlysinging is a one-line Malka sample on âTurnâ. Not only did the album not play by the rules of what would these days be called musicby a âheritageâ artist, but it didnât play by the rules of dance music either. Back then, dance music artists didnât mix up styles as theydo today. This is one of the reasons the albumâs called Bastard.
Upon release, Bastard was modestly successful in comparison to the labelâs other releases, although widely misunderstood. Thetitle is intentionally multifaceted, referring to several ways in which the album is a misfit â a cuckoo in the nest. But it never meantâColin Newman is a bastardâ â even if Malkaâs toy finger gesture on the cover tempted fate on that!
Malka and I have done more work together on swim ~ â and, of course, there has been plenty of Wire activity after its second hiatus during the 1990s â but I never felt the need to do another solo album. I donât crave attention and certainly donât feel I lackways to express myself. In many ways, itâs more creative to collaborate with others.
There is joy and beauty in collaboration. And collaborating with Malka has become so effortless that we almost donât know whodoes what in the work we create. This has led us to throwing open our partnership via Nanocluster events and albums where webuild musical bridges and make partnerships that transcend the art. Maybe thatâs the point? Surely, art should be about human connection and diversity of expression?
Tracklist
LP & CD1
Sticky
May
Slowfast (falling down the stairs with a drumkit)
Without
g-deep
Spaced In
Spiked
The Orange House & the Blue House
Turn
CD2
Automation
Faq
Voice
Output
The Narrativ (with Corrado Izzo)
Blank Canvas
Time Will Allow
Tsunami
Cut The Slack (2001)
Found & Bound (2001)
Unbroken (2001)
Flight Mode (2008)











