B-Side Players founder Karlos Paez makes it clear that he’s a benevolent bandleader. He’s still friends with his former B-Side bandmates. All 52 of them.
“We just had our 20th reunion at the Belly Up,” says Paez of his eight-piece Latin-flavored band that has released ten albums of funk, Afro-Cuban, soul, and reggae material. “We had, like, 25 ex-players get up and play with us.”
Paez says a handful left the band for common causes: partying or marriage. But most left, he tells the Reader, because they couldn’t deal with B-Side’s touring regimen. “For the past 15 years we’ve played, like, 150 shows a year throughout the U.S. and Mexico. Some guys can’t commit to that.”
Paez flipped the script for his side project, Sonida de la Frontera. Instead of seven B-Side bandmates who use real instruments, he’s pared it down to just two. Turntablist DJ Unite, who is also part of the local reggae soundsystem Tribe of Kings, and hip-hop producer Mr. Henshaw from the First Power Crew. Onstage, Henshaw uses an MPC-2000 sampler that triggers pre-recorded loops and melodies. Traditional cumbia textures of accordion and güiro are still there, but they are synth-borne and drenched in bottom-heavy dance beats.
“We started as a recording project,” says singer/trumpet player Paez. “Now we’re performing.”
Paez admits many B-Side fans don’t share his taste for technology. “Some people look down on it, like it’s taking over. But I grew up with hip-hop and dub music. I have respect for people who use turntables and samples. To me they are just different types of instruments. The future will be a lot more of that type of music.”
Paez, who is known for his dreads and aviator glasses onstage, says the thriving cumbia club scene in San Diego and Tijuana has been key to marketing their first vinyl release, Cumbia Mundial.
“There are regular cumbia nights at Live Wire, El Camino [Little Italy], Ken Club, and Casbah. There is a huge cumbia scene in TJ right now. There are a bunch of clubs at Revolución and La Sexta [Sixth Street] that have cumbia four nights a week. There is a huge underground cumbia scene in Chicago, and clubs are popping up in New York and L.A. We send our vinyl to the DJs. They don’t want MP3s.
He says that DJ club exposure has increased album sales. “That’s how reggae music got started, by the DJs in the clubs in Jamaica.”
Sonida de la Frontera appears with Agua Dulce, Cumbia Machin, and La Taibla on December 6 at Bread and Salt in Barrio Logan. The event is a launch party for a new internet radio station, Radio Pulso del Barrio. Admission is free.
B-Side Players founder Karlos Paez makes it clear that he’s a benevolent bandleader. He’s still friends with his former B-Side bandmates. All 52 of them.
“We just had our 20th reunion at the Belly Up,” says Paez of his eight-piece Latin-flavored band that has released ten albums of funk, Afro-Cuban, soul, and reggae material. “We had, like, 25 ex-players get up and play with us.”
Paez says a handful left the band for common causes: partying or marriage. But most left, he tells the Reader, because they couldn’t deal with B-Side’s touring regimen. “For the past 15 years we’ve played, like, 150 shows a year throughout the U.S. and Mexico. Some guys can’t commit to that.”
Paez flipped the script for his side project, Sonida de la Frontera. Instead of seven B-Side bandmates who use real instruments, he’s pared it down to just two. Turntablist DJ Unite, who is also part of the local reggae soundsystem Tribe of Kings, and hip-hop producer Mr. Henshaw from the First Power Crew. Onstage, Henshaw uses an MPC-2000 sampler that triggers pre-recorded loops and melodies. Traditional cumbia textures of accordion and güiro are still there, but they are synth-borne and drenched in bottom-heavy dance beats.
“We started as a recording project,” says singer/trumpet player Paez. “Now we’re performing.”
Paez admits many B-Side fans don’t share his taste for technology. “Some people look down on it, like it’s taking over. But I grew up with hip-hop and dub music. I have respect for people who use turntables and samples. To me they are just different types of instruments. The future will be a lot more of that type of music.”
Paez, who is known for his dreads and aviator glasses onstage, says the thriving cumbia club scene in San Diego and Tijuana has been key to marketing their first vinyl release, Cumbia Mundial.
“There are regular cumbia nights at Live Wire, El Camino [Little Italy], Ken Club, and Casbah. There is a huge cumbia scene in TJ right now. There are a bunch of clubs at Revolución and La Sexta [Sixth Street] that have cumbia four nights a week. There is a huge underground cumbia scene in Chicago, and clubs are popping up in New York and L.A. We send our vinyl to the DJs. They don’t want MP3s.
He says that DJ club exposure has increased album sales. “That’s how reggae music got started, by the DJs in the clubs in Jamaica.”
Sonida de la Frontera appears with Agua Dulce, Cumbia Machin, and La Taibla on December 6 at Bread and Salt in Barrio Logan. The event is a launch party for a new internet radio station, Radio Pulso del Barrio. Admission is free.
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