Emerging from Sheffield, England, David J. Boswell, also known as Bozzwell, has never followed a predictable path. Once part of the late-’90s collective All Seeing I, Boswell stepped away from the mainstream spotlight to focus inward, shaping a deeply personal electronic sound from his Stag Works studio. His new single, “I KNOW WHAT I SAW,” reflects that long, deliberate journey.
“I KNOW WHAT I SAW” feels like the work of an artist who no longer needs external validation. Instead, it leans into conviction, into trusting one’s own perception, memory, and truth. There’s a sense of reflection embedded in the title itself, suggesting clarity earned through distance and time rather than immediacy.
Boswell’s strength has always been his refusal to rush. Here, the years spent honing his craft away from public pressure manifest not as nostalgia but as control. "I KNOW WHAT I SAW" invites the listener to engage with the music instead of merely skimming it. What makes this release compelling is its quiet confidence. It doesn’t announce itself with excess; it unfolds with purpose. The result is electronic music shaped by lived experience, not algorithmic expectation. Every decision feels intentional, as if the track exists because it had to, nothing more, nothing less.