In the early 2000s, ex-graffiti artist and indie label owner Austin Wilde ran a label that released cult classic compilation albums, including a hip-hop-inspired series called BADMEANiNGOOD, for which he commissioned a then-little-known graffiti artist named Banksy to produce four album covers and posters, and an additional 12โณ sleeve for the 2002โ2003 releases. Back then, Wilde shared an office with Bankyโs first manager.
The concept for the albums was to shine a light on the compilerโs musical influences. The tracks chosen by each compiler were the soundtrack to their experience, a Venn diagram of hip-hop, turntablism, and sample culture. The strapline for the series was โPersonal. Musical. A Hip-Hop Chronicle,โ and this remains as true today as it was then.
Working with Stephen Earl (Banksyโs then manager), Banksy assigned Wilde the copyright for the designs. This in itself is a rarity, as Banksy only did this twice as far as we know:, the other being for Blurโs โThink Tankโ album, released in May 2003, which features a couple wearing aqualungs and kissing.
For the first release by Skitz, Banksy produced an original image of heavy artillery wearing a pair of Adidas. A canvas of this image was sold with Pest Control authentication via Sothebyโs in 2008. For the remaining album covers, Banksy repurposed existing images from his catalog that would work within the subversion of the bad/good thematic principle.
โAinโt Half Bad: The History of BADMEANiNGOODโ by Austin Wilde
Since the launch of the BADMEANiNGOOD mixtape series in 2001, twenty-something years have passed โ and they have now become cult collectorsโ items around the world. And in the world of music and rare records, โcult collectorโs itemsโ is very much a synonym for โlost a shitload of money when it was first released,โ and that, fly girls and homeboys, is very much the case with BADMEANiNGOOD.
The four BADMEANiNGOOD mixtapes shone a strobe light on the selectorโs musical inspirations and featured seismic songs that paved the way for jungle, dubstep, and grime. These musical game-changers went head-to-head with stone-cold classics: unrivaled samples, and super-rare esoteric breaks, all culled from the golden songbook of black musicโs past.
โRight place, right timeโ is not a synonym but a well-trodden truth. And the reason these mixtapes are so celebrated is not solely musical but more akin to the fourth element of Hip-Hop: Graffiti. Namely, the artist who compiled the artwork for the series, Banksy (more on him shortly).

Right place, right time was very much the case for BADMEANiNGOOD creator Austin Wilde. Iโm the person writing this marketing asset. Hello. Iโm fully grown now but, way back then; a pre-pubescent kid from the โburbs, out to the East of London; a place of car factories, concrete dull greyness, a Tory heartland that swam in the flatlands of mono-culture, a place football vetoed music six days out of seven.
Something irrevocably changed when, aged 11 in 1985, I watched Grandmaster Melle Mel & The Furious Five perform โStep Offโ on Top of the Pops. In grey โ the single color that had soundtracked my life until that point โ school trousers with grass stains ingrained at the knees, I sat cross-legged and transfixed at Melle Mel and Keef Cowboy, acutely aware that Iโd get a kick-in if I wore their outfits to youth club.

The performance was full of everything Iโd never heard or seen at that point. It had surely been recorded in deep space. It was music from another planet, a planet I wanted to inhabit. Behind me, on a floral sofa with matching floral cushions, my mum and dad feigned indifference. Whilst for me, the song felt like the only progressive thing ever to have happened anywhere, ever.
Mum and dad made it clear they didnโt think it was music.
This made me like it more.
But in one way, they were right: it wasnโt just music. It was the Manhattan Project bomb โ re-engineered in the Bronx Projects โ going off on the other side of the Atlantic: a nuclear happening that made things better by getting rid of Duran Duran. I canโt say it for certain, but this moment started something that the release of Yo! Bum Rush the Show galvanized two years later: the need to escape the grey.

Pretty soon after, I started writing graffiti myself.
Pretty soon after that, I found the planet I wanted to inhabit. It was called Ladbroke Grove, home to the Notting Hill Carnival, officially the un-greyest place Iโd ever been, which is strange considering we spent most of our first visits underneath a section of elevated motorway, the Westway, taking photos of wildstyle graffiti in the belly of a pour grey concrete beast.
As things turned out, I ended up moving to Ladbroke Grove, starting a record label in 2000 and sharing an office, beneath the Westway, with Banksyโs first manager Stephen Earl. Right place, right time.
This is where I first met Banksy, who had recently relocated from Bristol to make his mark. Already a seasoned contrarian with considerable and admirable swagger, he was presumably attracted to the same glorious multicultural, expressive explosions that happened on the daily in this part of town. Or, perhaps, because heโd run out of walls to paint in Bristol; who knows? Much mystery whenever heโs involved. But one thingโs for sure, he lived around the corner from me with a lad from Virgin Records. And was a regular at the watering holes frequented almost exclusively by creative types, of which there was plenty, all relocated to (what was) the epicenter of the music industry: everyone on the hustle in the heyday of their twenties.
Rent in West London was, even then, fucking exorbitant, and writing on walls wasnโt (yet) the best way to make an easy living. Like Warhol before him, Banksy took on a few commercial music jobs from which he could continue to fund his other project: poking a stick in the eye of a whole city. Given what I wanted BADMEANiNGOOD to be, a celebration of Hip-Hop and its influences, and my โone desk awayโ proximity to his manager, it felt like the right thing to ask Banksy to be a part of the project.
At the time, having him turn up at the office for a meeting never felt like the arrival of street artโs caped crusader anti-hero, but somehow thatโs what it feels like in retrospect to others. Part of this has to do with timing, the Banksy of 2000 was not the Banksy of today; if you were into music in that part of West London at that time, he was known.

But the seeds of a covert identity were already being sown, an aloofness was perpetuated by him and his manager. Looking back, Iโm unsure if this was by design or requirement: producing provocative illegal work attracted unwanted attention from the same police force who have subsequently protected his public works. I only ever knew him by his first name, and our conversations never involved a past outside of the cultural interests we shared.
At our first planning meeting, he very nearly walked out because someone he didnโt know was in attendance. For Banksy then, staying out of jail was good for business.
In keeping with the BADMEANiNGOOD name, Banksyโs idea for the series illustration was based upon subversion: an anti-aircraft gun in trainers, a police car on bricks, crows detaching the wiring to CCTV cameras, and a tank with bunny ears in place of the weaponry.

The typographical elements and the large cross upon which the illustrations sat were all based upon hazardous chemical labels, the type you find on radioactive waste. All the album covers are what the major art auction houses refer to as โsignature Banksyโ โ and the first release, by Skitz, was produced exclusively for the series.
The vinyl and CD formats all featured his logo โ and we produced stickers, posters, and beer coasters distributed to record stores, club venues, and the above-mentioned watering holes for creatives. Another graffiti writer and friend of Banksyโs, Solo One, plastered the stickers across London, and the posters got pasted to walls at busy intersections or outside of nightclubs.

The press adored the albums, but they sold poorly, and the well of marketing money soon dried up. The 2x World DMC Champions, the Scratch Perverts, closed the series in July 2003 โ ironically, the only album to turn a profit.
A couple of years later, our distributor went bust, meaning a lot of people lost a lot of money โ and, sadly, I had to close the label.
I never saw Banksy much after that, I believe he moved to East London, and I stayed West. In 2009, we bumped into each other backstage at the Hyde Park Blur gig, who were now a part of my A&R roster at my new gig, Creative Director of EMI Music Publishing. I have a vague memory of seeing him leave the afterparty, but I could be wrong.
I now work as a muralist. Itโs funny how things turn out.
Austin Wilde @nofrescoyo
The Drop
Both Austin Wilde and MakersPlace will donate 10% of their sales proceeds to MOAS Ukraine, a charitable organization that brings medical aid and assistance to the conflict-affected civilians of Ukraine.
Record Shop Posters
These smaller posters were produced for record shops purely for promotional purposes โ unsurprisingly, many of them quietly ended up in the hands of record shop employees and not on the shop walls. These posters have become collectorsโ items in their own right.
Redeemable: Owners of this NFT will receive one of the only official second-edition prints of the promotional posters via fully insured and tracked international shipping. These posters are stamped and signed by series creator and copyright owner Austin Wilde and come with a certificate of authenticity.
*The winning buyer is required to contact Austin Wilde <bmgaustin2022@gmail.com> within 7 days of purchasing to coordinate shipping of the physical merchandise. The buyer is responsible for postage costs. Please note that items ship from the UK and are subject to import duty. UK Postage will be capped at UK Royal Mail insured prices.
Peanut Butter Wolf โ Record Shop Poster
The third in the BADMEANiNGOOD series saw its first trip across the pond to the Bay Area and was impeccably compiled by Stones Throw Recordsโ head honcho, Peanut Butter Wolf. The tracklist and mix had breakdancing and the dancefloor at its beating heart. Post-Kraftwerk early electro from NYC, soul gemstones from Roy Ayers, and reggae from Prince Far I โ the mix was nothing short of an eclectic masterpiece.
Banksy again produced a signature masterpiece for the album: an LAPD car, its wheels replaced by bricks โ its mobility nullified by the artist.
- Editions: 3/3
- Pricing: Fixed price of $300 for editions 1 & 2; Edition 3 will be auctioned with a $300 reserve
Skitz โ Record Shop Poster
The first release from the BADMEANINGOOD series was compiled and mixed by Skitz, a key player in the UK hip-hop and turntablist movement in the early noughties. The mixtapes tracklist was eclectic and featured musical game-changers that drew from the past and paved the way for Grime, Dubstep, and Jungle. Skitzโs diverse selection includes records such as Roots Manuvaโs synth-bass-laden โWitness (1 Hope)โ and Slick Rickโs top-down smash hit โMona Lisa.โ
Banksy produced the albumโs original artwork, and this image has only ever appeared in the BADMEANINGOOD series. As with all BADMEANiNGOOD albums, the artwork is what major auction houses term โsignature Banksy.โ In addition, Banksy produced four canvases of this image, one of which sold at Sothebyโs for $332,000 in March 2021.
- Editions: 3/3
- Pricing: Fixed price of $300 for editions 1 & 2; Edition 3 will be auctioned with a $300 reserve
Scratch Perverts โ Record Shop Poster
With two Technics/DMC team World Champion titles โ and two ITF individual titles for member Prime Cuts โ the Scratch Perverts crew need little introduction. Their BADMEANiNGOOD mix, paired with original Banksy artwork, was termed a hip-hop headโs wet dream by the UK music press. With an all-killer, no-filler eclectic tracklist that spanned Lalo Schifrin, Gang Starr, Squarepusher, and Minnie Ripperton, itโs fair to say that this was the seriesโ stand-out mixtape.
For the artwork, Banksy again produced a signature masterpiece itself based upon a piece of his street sculpture most regularly referred to as the CCTV Crows โ in which the birds disconnect the cameraโs wires, a way of debilitating mass state surveillance to let the artist work in anonymity.
- Editions: 3/3
- Pricing: Fixed price of $300 for editions 1 & 2; Edition 3 will be auctioned with a $300 reserve
Roots Manuva โ Record Shop Poster
The second in the BADMEANINGOOD series came from the one and only Roots Manuva: unarguably one of the most influential figures in UK Hip-Hop.
Raised in Stockwell by Jamaican parents, his father was a preacher and a tailor โ and Roots Manuvaโs music, undoubtedly a precursor to Grime, still fits the music it inspired like a bespoke suit. โBrand New, Second Handโ (his debut for Njina Tuneโs Big Dada label) signaled the arrival of an influential voice โ and his breakout single โWitness the Fitnessโ is a stone-cold classic and very probably the best UK rap record ever made.
For the rear of the album artwork, Banksy produced a portrait of Roots Manuva featuring a radio aerial sprouting from his left ear. For the cover, Banksyโs theme of subversion continues by removing a tankโs weaponry and replacing it with a natty bow tie. As with all BADMEANiNGOOD albums, the artwork is what major auction houses term โsignature Banksyโ โ nuff said, buff ting!
- Editions: 3/3
- Pricing: Fixed price of $300 for editions 1 & 2; Edition 3 will be auctioned with a $300 reserve
BADMEANiNGOOD Crew 2 โ The Completist Edition
This โcompletist editionโ is a 1/1 item. The auction winner will receive a full set of limited edition physical prints, all of which are signed by series creator Austin Wilde. These prints come with a certificate of authenticity and are sent via fully insured and tracked international shipping.
- Editions: 1/1
- Pricing: $500 reserve, followed by a 24-hour auction
Both Austin Wilde and MakersPlace will donate 10% of their sales proceeds to MOAS Ukraine, a charitable organization that brings medical aid and assistance to the conflict-affected civilians of Ukraine.
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