TAG: Bomba Estereo

Aug28

BOMBA ESTEREO: Mythmaking with Colombian Electro-Cumbia Act

Spotlight on Latin's New "It" Band 

Liliana Saumet stalks the stage like a panther and the crowd at Central Park’s SummerStage chants “Fuego” with the huntress during the Latin Alternative Music Conference (LAMC) in July. For the thousands of onlookers, most were hearing Bomba Estereo for the first time. A look, a laugh or the purring cadence of her voice is all it takes to feel the band’s allure.

However, it’s Simón Mejía who is responsible for unleashing Bomba Estereo and their album Blow Up to audiences the world over—from the band’s hometown, Bogota, to London and Denmark. Mejía is the storyteller, weaving together guitar, synthesizers, and a drum machine with more traditional Colombian instruments like the flauta de mill, alegre, maracas, guache, and llamado to make the sonic landscape Saumet inhabits. Recording mostly instrumental work on his own, when the two came together, Mejía found the …

Share/Bookmark
Aug28

New Bomba Estereo Feature

Ever wonder what growing up along Colombia’s seaside would sound like when set to electronica? Look no further than our new feature on Bomba Estereo, an act that is sharing their unique blend of electro-cumbia, dancehall and Afro-beats with the world to support their summer release Blow Up. Check it out.

Share/Bookmark
Aug14

Bomba Estereo Fuego (Pacha Massive Fiyah Remix) Exclusive (MP3)

“Fiyah” is really quite the understatement when two of my favorite Latin bands get together on one track. Nova from Pacha Massive remixes Bomba Estereo’s huge summer hit “Fuego” into an intricately layered yet still blithe track.The original song’s integrity isn’t lost on Nova, who amps the bass up, but, even so, Li’s vocals don’t get overpowered. The walls are sweating.

Share/Bookmark
Jul14

Bomba Estereo – Blow Up (Review)

Bomba Estereo

Blow Up



Bomba Est'reo is a funky underground talent revealing a genre-busting, linguistics-defying release with Blow Up. The Colombian group rolls out an original mix of electronica, dub, hip-hop, champeta and cumbia for the Nacional label, which has been recently garnering extra attention for their pan-Latino sound.

Lead vocalist Liliana Saumet's wildly playful lyrics explode when in contact with Simon Mejia's guitar and synths. Saumet's sultry style is a hybridization of Nelly Furtado with the precision and attitude of M.I.A. Fuego introduced the world to Bomba's Technicolor world. La Nina ...

Share/Bookmark