David J Boswell Explores Unseen Truths and Human Curiosity on “I KNOW WHAT I SAW”
David J Boswell’s “I KNOW WHAT I SAW” marks a striking and deliberate departure from the disco-inflected sound that long defined much of his career. Best known for his work with The All Seeing I and the electronic duo Hiem, Boswell now steps forward under his full name with a song that feels raw, unsettled, and deeply human. Rather than chasing rhythm or release, “I KNOW WHAT I SAW” leans into atmosphere, storytelling, and the uneasy space between belief and doubt.
The track unfolds like a nocturnal confession. Built around restrained electronics, shadowy textures, and a subtle folk-blues undercurrent, the production feels intentionally sparse. This minimalism allows the narrative to take center stage. The song draws inspiration from tales of skywatching and alleged UFO abductions in Sheffield, but its emotional weight extends far beyond the subject matter. “I KNOW WHAT I SAW” is less about proving the existence of unexplained phenomena and more about the psychological impact of encountering something that disrupts one’s sense of reality.
Boswell’s vocal delivery is calm yet charged, carrying the quiet conviction of someone recounting an experience they know will be questioned. There is no melodrama here, only steady resolve. That restraint gives the song credibility and depth, allowing listeners to sit with the discomfort of uncertainty rather than rushing toward conclusions. In doing so, the track becomes a meditation on human perception, memory, and the need to be believed.
What makes “I KNOW WHAT I SAW” particularly compelling is how it reflects Boswell’s broader artistic evolution. Years spent working behind the scenes at his Stag Works studio have clearly sharpened his sense of detail and emotional pacing. The influence of folk and blues elements grounds the song in something ancient and familiar, while the electronic layers suggest the modern anxiety of living in a world saturated with information yet starved of clarity.
As a preview of the forthcoming album Going Down Slow, the song signals an artist fully committed to following his instincts, regardless of expectations. It is strange without being alienating, thoughtful without being self-indulgent. In an era of instant reactions and surface-level listening, “I KNOW WHAT I SAW” invites patience, empathy, and inner awareness. David J Boswell does not ask listeners to agree with him, only to listen. In that quiet request lies the song’s greatest strength.
