The Beta Band and King Biscuit Time (1996–2004) Mason started his music career as the lead singer and one of the founding members of
The Beta Band, formed in 1996. The band released four albums, and gained international notoriety when they were referenced in the film of Nick Hornby’s
High Fidelity when John Cusack’s character states he can sell five copies of "The Three EP's" by The Beta Band. The track he selects to achieve this is "Dry the Rain". Astralwerks, the band’s US label stated sales quadrupled after the release of the film. During the group’s time together, Mason was one of the first artists to speak of his depression openly. In late 2004, after a short farewell tour, they split. During the Beta Band era, Steve appeared on TV shows, including
The Adam & Joe Show (2001) and
Never Mind the Buzzcocks (2005). Mason released solo material as King Biscuit Time, including two
EPs on
Regal Records during The Beta Band's existence. 2000’s
No Style EP was described by
NME as
“wonderfully erratic ambles into crisp electronica, soft strumming, sleepy beats and his doleful singing about love, virtue, surviving and being comfortably glum". After The Beta Band split in 2004, Mason released one album as King Biscuit Time,
Black Gold, on No Style Records, an
imprint of
Alan McGee's
Poptones record label. Mason announced the end of King Biscuit Time before the album's release, and cancelled a subsequent tour, posting on his website “Peace to you all, I’m out of here. It’s been amazing but I’ve had enough. Over and out. Steve xxx.”
The Guardian called Black Gold a “vital, dolorous treasure” and that Mason’s “creative well seems bottomless.”
Pitchfork said although it was
“a melancholy record”, it could listen to
“Mason's creaky, lonely voice all day.”
Black Gold was one of the first CDs to be released in bio-degradable packaging and Mason self-released the 2-LP version of the album, in a limited edition of 150.
Black Affair (2008) Mason has also worked under the name Black Affair, and has released one album under this pseudonym on
V2 Records. Paul Lester wrote in
The Guardian that Black Affair “reek of: old school R&B, electro, early hip-hop, Chicago house, Detroit techno, even the pristine white synth-pop that influenced all of the previous black artists in the first place – poptronic forgemasters such as
Kraftwerk,
Yazoo,
the Human League,
Depeche Mode,
Soft Cell and
New Order". Their sole album,
Pleasure Pressure Point, was released in 2008 to positive reviews.
The Boston Phoenix stated “sensitive indie man boy breaks up cult band, goes clubbing, is sexed up by shady ladies, feels somewhere between good-bad and bad-bad, tells the world about it, repeat".
Solo career (2009–present) On 19 April 2009,
The Sunday Times reported that Mason was working on a new album with the record producer
Richard X. This album,
Boys Outside, was released in March 2010 and is the first album under Mason's own name. The first single, "All Come Down", was released as a
download at the end of November 2009.
Q gave the album a 4/5 rating. According to Rob Fearn, the album "relocates Mason in a grand tradition of indie boys doing idiosyncratic electronic pop, a line stretching back through
Hot Chip,
New Order,
Talk Talk and
Brian Eno". Fearn argued that the album, "totally different from what he did in King Biscuit Time and Black Affair", might be seen as a "welcome return to a stripped-down songcraft". It is "...not just a work that can finally measure up to [Beta Band's]
The Three EPs, but is a sign of a "bold new start", according to the critic. Record Collector added retrospectively that “Boys Outside was one of 2010’s very best albums. Steve Mason had finally faced his personal demons and was able, after years of hiding behind pseudonyms, to . . . deliver a solo album of touching sincerity, equal to any high-period Beta Band". In 2011, Mason issued a dub version of the album,
Ghosts Outside, in collaboration with Dennis Bovell.
Record Collector said that by “adding his reverb-laden studio trickery, it’s as if Bovell has delved deeper into Mason’s soul and created a perfect standalone piece".
The Independent called it "his most rewarding release since the Beta Band";
Record Collector stated it was “An attack on the lack of dissenting voices in popular culture, if this isn’t Mason’s bona fide masterpiece, it’s certainly approaching it”. To support the album, Mason played several UK dates as well as selected UK, Europe and Canadian festivals. Remixes of album tracks “Seen It All Before” and “Come To Me” by
Greg Wilson and Derek Kaye were issued on 12” for
Record Store Day 2014. In 2023, Mason released
Brothers & Sisters. The album was recorded during
lockdown, in 2020. It steps away from his "radio-friendly" style of 2019’s
About The Light, marrying electronic elements with
world music. Tom Doyle at
Mojo singled out the title track as “a rallying cry to dormant
ravers,” and concluded that the album was “a winning beats-driven combination of the personal and the universal.” Daryl Easlea at
Record Collector noted that this may well be Mason’s friend and collaborator
Martin Duffy’s final appearance on record (after his passing in December 2022) – “a fine way for him to finish, on an album full of intelligence and love.” Nick Roseblade said in
Clash Magazine that
Brothers & Sisters was “one of his best albums to date." A ten-date UK tour to support the album runs April/May 2023. == Discography ==