Sidestepper

For the enemy in the Mario Bros game, see Recurring enemies in the Mario series#Sidestepper.
Sidestepper
Origin Bogotá, Colombia
Genres World music
Drum and bass
Tropical
Worldbeat
Years active 1996 (1996)–present
Labels Deep South, Palm Pictures
Associated acts Aterciopelados
Carlos Vives
Bloque de Busqueda
ChocQuibTown
Pernett
Website www.sidestepper.net
Members Richard Blair
Edgardo Garcés
Érika Muñoz
Ernesto "Teto" Ocampo
"El Chongo" (aka Juan Carlos Puello)
Past members Janio Coronado
Pedro Ojeda

Sidestepper is a Colombian band formed in 1996 by English DJ/producer Richard Blair (born 17 June 1965, London). Colombian singer-songwriter and producer Iván Benavides later wrote and co-produced several albums with Blair including their influential 2003 album 3AM. The group is one of the originators of the Colombian "electro cumbia" sound, influenced both by Afro-Colombian popular music styles like salsa and cumbia as well as electronic dance music such as drum and bass. Their sound has a strong dub element. Sidestepper has featured a number of guest vocalists and musicians over the years who have since become well-known artists in their own right in Colombia, such as Gloria "Goyo" Martínez of ChocQuibTown. Since 200 they have played all over the world, including festivals such as Glastonbury, Coachella, Roskilde and Womad. They are releasing a new album with RWR jan 2016.

History

The origins of the band can be traced back to 1992 when Richard Blair, then a studio engineer for Peter Gabriel's Real World Records label, found himself working on the album La Candela Viva by Totó la Momposina. Captivated by the mix of Latin and Afro-Caribbean sounds made by Totó and her band, he made the journey to Colombia to visit her and find out more about her music. Originally intending to stay for just a few weeks holiday, Blair ended up staying in Colombia for three years, as he immersed himself in the culture and the music of the country, funding his stay by producing and engineering the early albums by artists who would later go on to be some of Colombia's best known musicians, including Con el Corazon en la Mano by Aterciopelados and La Tierra del Olvido by Carlos Vives.[1][2]

While working on La Tierra del Olvido Blair had met the album's co-producer Iván Benavides, a singer-songwriter who had previously been part of the duo Iván y Lucía, and the two men began writing songs together. Returning to the UK in 1996, Blair began DJing under the name Sidestepper, and set about putting together a band of the same name, with the intention of playing live versions of his new songs mixing salsa, Afro-Colombian coastal music such as cumbia, and British dance music such as drum and bass and dub.[2] Blair told the Colombian newspaper El Tiempo in 1998 that during his Colombian musical education he had found that the salsa music produced at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s had a "heavy feeling" to it, which he felt was equivalent to rock bands of the time such as Led Zeppelin and the current drum'n'bass scene, and which in his opinion was lacking in the modern commercial salsa productions.[3] Sidestepper's first album, Southern Star, was released on the small UK label Deep South in 1997, before signing to MTM in Colombia and Chris Blackwell's US-based label Palm Pictures worldwide to produce three more albums, More Grip (2000), 3AM (In Beats We Trust) (2003) and Continental (2006).

Benavides stopped writing for the group in 2007 when he moved back to Colombia from New York in order to concentrate on setting up his new project "Toda Via" to promote independent Colombian musicians.[4] In an interview with El Tiempo Blair dismissed the notion that Benavides had "left" the band, saying that he had never "joined" the group or been part of the live act, and that the likes of Benavides, Pernett and Martínez were simply part of a fluid collective that changed over time.[5] Sidestepper released a mix album, The Buena Vibra Sound System in 2008, consisting of previously unreleased tracks and remixes of old songs. A compilation album titled 15: The Best of 1996–2011 was released in Colombia in 2011, preceded by a new single, "Justicia".

Having been without a record contract since 2008, the band recorded their most recent album in between the individual members working on other musical projects, and raised money for the album's recording through the Pledge Music website.[6] The album, Supernatural Love, was released to Pledge Music subscribers in March 2015 and will have a full release via Real World Records [7] in January 2016.

Discography

Albums

Singles

Compilations

References

  1. Brown Gamboa, Miguel (June 8, 2006). "Sidestepper, más colombiano". El Tiempo (in Spanish) (Bogotá, Colombia). Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  2. 1 2 "Afro-Colombian Beats Forged in Steel: Sidestepper Releases 'The Buena Vibra Sound System'". Sounds and Colours. April 19, 2010. Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  3. Arias, Eduardo (April 3, 1998). "Salsa con estilo inglés". El Tiempo (in Spanish) (Bogotá, Colombia). Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  4. (Spanish) Biography of Iván Benavides as artistic producer of the 2010 "Gran Concierto Nacional", Colombian Ministry of Culture website
  5. "Vuelva la buena vibra de Sidestepper". El Tiempo (in Spanish) (Bogotá, Colombia). March 28, 2008. Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  6. Sidestepper album page on Pledge Music

External links

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