Salmonella Dub
Salmonella Dub is a Dub/Drum n Bass/Reggae/Roots band from Kaikoura, New Zealand. The band was formed in 1992 by Andrew Penman, David Deakins and Mark Tyler. The band has toured extensively throughout New Zealand, Australia, and Europe, including the UK and Ireland.
The original Salmonella Dub line-up formed in 1992, in Ōtautahi/Christchurch, Aotearoa/NZ. The 'Dubbies' have rightfully been called the pioneers and originators of a unique Pacific style of dub/drum ‘n’ bass/reggae/hip hop and groove-based rock, along with other influential 90s bands like Hallelujah Picassos, Nemesis Dub Systems, Unitone HiFi, and to some degree, Supergroove. Acts such as Fat Freddy’s Drop, Shapeshifter, Cornerstone Roots, Kora, and Trinity Roots as well as the new wave of Australian acts like Budspells, Rastawookie, King Tide, Red Eyes, and the likes, can all thank Salmonella Dub for breaking new ground, in an Australasian alternative music scene which was dominated through most of the 1990s by straight guitar rock, and electronic dance music.
The group worked for some time with MC Tiki Taane, who began mixing their live sets in 1996, and later joined the band onstage to rap, sing, and play guitar. After developing a profile with the band, Taane embarked on a solo career in 2007. Other guest or collaborative artists have included Paddy Free (of Pitch Black) who produced the most recent album release Freak Controller and performed with the band; and guests Whirimako Black, Hirini Melbourne, Richard Nunns and MC Mana. The band has also collaborated with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and Hamish McKietch.
Recent touring entourage includes: Peter Wood, Antsmif, Jason Young (audio), Steve Jarden (lighting); guest performers Paul Buchanan (the Mighty Asterix).
In February 2008, Salmonella Dub and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra collaborated for the Feel The Seasons Change tour of New Zealand with shows performed in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and Nelson. The Feel The Seasons Change project combined Salmonella Dub’s contemporary music and production values with elements of te reo Maori, the ancient arts of taonga puoro (traditional Maori instruments) and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra's classical music tradition.
&United by background images of our geography and history, the omnipresent birdsong of Richard Nunns on traditional Maori instruments, and the outstanding vocals of jazz-blues singer Whirimako Black, the collaboration was certainly intriguing if for its sheer scale. Between songs, conductor Hamish McKeich was careful not to trip over his players, squeezed on to two-thirds of the stage; Salmonella Dub looked oddly well-behaved and vulnerable standing next to them.&
At the New Zealand Radio Awards in 2009 Radio New Zealand became the first non commercial radio to win the Supreme Award including Best Technical Production, Studio or Outside Broadcast Recording with Feel the Seasons Change – Live with the NZSO.
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by Jody Macgregor
Salmonella Dub got their name from the &bad-taste& dub versions of popular songs they used to break the ice in their early sets. In '90s New Zealand, dub/roots/reggae freak-outs weren't entirely in vogue -- grunge and dance music held sway -- so Salmonella Dub would use lighthearted covers of Nancy Sinatra and Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show tunes or Fred Dagg's novelty song &Larry Loves Barry& to win over skeptical audiences.
In the early '90s, New Zealand's liquor licensing laws changed, allowing pubs and clubs to stay open late and revitalizing the country's live music scene. The members of the band then called Golf Course Alligators seized this opportunity and, in late 1992, Andrew Penman (guitar), Mark Tyler (bass), and Dave Deakin (drums) became Salmonella Dub. In the early days they lacked money for proper equipment and used inventive solutions such as creating a sampler by hooking up a cassette player to a switch pedal from Penman's guitar so they could create live samples. Usually these samples would come from whatever was on the TV at the time, whether it was the news or a Cheech & Chong movie. Lacking the funds for cassettes, they raided the bins of a record store and found discarded copies of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles albums that served as their early tape stock.
To prepare for their first, self-titled album in 1994, Peter Woods (trumpet, keyboard) and Conan Wilcox (saxophone, percussion) were invited to join the band. Salmonella Dub was released through the independent label Curious Records.
Soon afterwards, Woods left the band, moving to Auckland and getting a job to pay his student overdraft. Tiki Taane (acoustic guitar, percussion) joined in his stead and in 1997 they released Calming the Drunken Monkey, signing with Virgin for distribution and beginning overseas tours.
In 1998 they released &For the Love of It,& a single that found a surprising degree of mainstream success and won them their first place in the Top Ten of the local charts. The album Killer Vision followed it and was also popular, achieving double platinum sales and being released in five countries. Suddenly they were local heroes, but based on an album with which they were personally unhappy and which they disliked having to play on the intensive touring that followed it.
For their 2001 album Inside the Dub Plates, they brought back David Wernham, who had been engineer on their initial releases before leaving to work with rock band Shihad, hoping to re-create their earlier sound. The album also went double platinum in sales. A remix album called Outside the Dubplates followed, including a remix by one of their heroes, Mad Professor, who had also done a mix of &For the Love of It.&
Facing an unexpectedly hefty tax bill in 2003, the band returned to the studio to quickly record their fifth album, One Drop East, to pay it off. Woods was brought back as a session musician and another Mad Professor remix was planned, but in the rush to release, it had to be left off and used instead on their next release, 2004's Mercy. Mercy consisted of songs from the One Drop East recording sessions, mixed at a more leisurely pace.
Taane left to record a solo album and Woods was brought back as a full-time bandmember for recording sessions at a studio on Penman's isolated rural property. The result was their seventh album, 2007's Heal Me.
The original Salmonella Dub line-up formed in 1992, in Ōtautahi/Christchurch, Aotearoa/NZ. The 'Dubbies' have rightfully been called the pioneers and originators of a unique Pacific style of dub/drum ‘n’ bass/reggae/hip hop and groove-based rock, along with other influential 90s bands like Hallelujah Picassos, Nemesis Dub Systems, Unitone HiFi, and to some degree, Supergroove. Acts such as Fat Freddy’s Drop, Shapeshifter, Cornerstone Roots, Kora, and Trinity Roots as well as the new wave of Australian acts like Budspells, Rastawookie, King Tide, Red Eyes, and the likes, can all thank Salmonella Dub for breaking new ground, in an Australasian alternative music scene which was dominated through most of the 1990s by straight guitar rock, and electronic dance music.
The group worked for some time with MC Tiki Taane, who began mixing their live sets in 1996, and later joined the band onstage to rap, sing, and play guitar. After developing a profile with the band, Taane embarked on a solo career in 2007. Other guest or collaborative artists have included Paddy Free (of Pitch Black) who produced the most recent album release Freak Controller and performed with the band; and guests Whirimako Black, Hirini Melbourne, Richard Nunns and MC Mana. The band has also collaborated with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and Hamish McKietch.
Recent touring entourage includes: Peter Wood, Antsmif, Jason Young (audio), Steve Jarden (lighting); guest performers Paul Buchanan (the Mighty Asterix).
In February 2008, Salmonella Dub and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra collaborated for the Feel The Seasons Change tour of New Zealand with shows performed in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and Nelson. The Feel The Seasons Change project combined Salmonella Dub’s contemporary music and production values with elements of te reo Maori, the ancient arts of taonga puoro (traditional Maori instruments) and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra's classical music tradition.
&United by background images of our geography and history, the omnipresent birdsong of Richard Nunns on traditional Maori instruments, and the outstanding vocals of jazz-blues singer Whirimako Black, the collaboration was certainly intriguing if for its sheer scale. Between songs, conductor Hamish McKeich was careful not to trip over his players, squeezed on to two-thirds of the stage; Salmonella Dub looked oddly well-behaved and vulnerable standing next to them.&
At the New Zealand Radio Awards in 2009 Radio New Zealand became the first non commercial radio to win the Supreme Award including Best Technical Production, Studio or Outside Broadcast Recording with Feel the Seasons Change – Live with the NZSO.
(wiki)
------------------------------------------------------------------
by Jody Macgregor
Salmonella Dub got their name from the &bad-taste& dub versions of popular songs they used to break the ice in their early sets. In '90s New Zealand, dub/roots/reggae freak-outs weren't entirely in vogue -- grunge and dance music held sway -- so Salmonella Dub would use lighthearted covers of Nancy Sinatra and Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show tunes or Fred Dagg's novelty song &Larry Loves Barry& to win over skeptical audiences.
In the early '90s, New Zealand's liquor licensing laws changed, allowing pubs and clubs to stay open late and revitalizing the country's live music scene. The members of the band then called Golf Course Alligators seized this opportunity and, in late 1992, Andrew Penman (guitar), Mark Tyler (bass), and Dave Deakin (drums) became Salmonella Dub. In the early days they lacked money for proper equipment and used inventive solutions such as creating a sampler by hooking up a cassette player to a switch pedal from Penman's guitar so they could create live samples. Usually these samples would come from whatever was on the TV at the time, whether it was the news or a Cheech & Chong movie. Lacking the funds for cassettes, they raided the bins of a record store and found discarded copies of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles albums that served as their early tape stock.
To prepare for their first, self-titled album in 1994, Peter Woods (trumpet, keyboard) and Conan Wilcox (saxophone, percussion) were invited to join the band. Salmonella Dub was released through the independent label Curious Records.
Soon afterwards, Woods left the band, moving to Auckland and getting a job to pay his student overdraft. Tiki Taane (acoustic guitar, percussion) joined in his stead and in 1997 they released Calming the Drunken Monkey, signing with Virgin for distribution and beginning overseas tours.
In 1998 they released &For the Love of It,& a single that found a surprising degree of mainstream success and won them their first place in the Top Ten of the local charts. The album Killer Vision followed it and was also popular, achieving double platinum sales and being released in five countries. Suddenly they were local heroes, but based on an album with which they were personally unhappy and which they disliked having to play on the intensive touring that followed it.
For their 2001 album Inside the Dub Plates, they brought back David Wernham, who had been engineer on their initial releases before leaving to work with rock band Shihad, hoping to re-create their earlier sound. The album also went double platinum in sales. A remix album called Outside the Dubplates followed, including a remix by one of their heroes, Mad Professor, who had also done a mix of &For the Love of It.&
Facing an unexpectedly hefty tax bill in 2003, the band returned to the studio to quickly record their fifth album, One Drop East, to pay it off. Woods was brought back as a session musician and another Mad Professor remix was planned, but in the rush to release, it had to be left off and used instead on their next release, 2004's Mercy. Mercy consisted of songs from the One Drop East recording sessions, mixed at a more leisurely pace.
Taane left to record a solo album and Woods was brought back as a full-time bandmember for recording sessions at a studio on Penman's isolated rural property. The result was their seventh album, 2007's Heal Me.
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