five south american musicians you need to know

The diversity of South America - from rainforests to grasslands, Brazil to Bolivia - is mirrored in the musicians that hail from there (and no, we’re not talking Shakira). Here are five boundary-pushing South American acts, doing everything from silky electronica to society-skewering rap, all on their own terms.

1

Tei Shi 

Tei Shi (AKA Valerie Teicher) grew up in Argentina and Colombia before moving to Canada, although she is also of part Polish-Jewish descent. Her global perspective shines through in her brand of clean, super-stylish electronica that you can imagine hearing on dancefloors from New York to New Delhi. Her upcoming debut record, Crawl Space, is released on 31 March, exploring her childhood insomnia and how her creativity flourished. It also features a Spanish-language track, Como Si. In an accompanying press release, she stated: "I really wanted to do something in Spanish because it's such a big part of my identity. I love the language and it's a way of preserving this part of myself”.

tei-shi.com

2

Diamond

The Rio-based trio of Alice Coelho, Jeni Loyola and Mariana Alves - formerly known as Pearls Negras - make hyperactive, energetic dance-rap infused with bass and baille funk, on the realities of tough favela living. After a short hiatus from the spotlight following the release of two mixtapes in 2014, the crew - all in their late teens - made a triumphant return to the scene last year with Bad Girls, which basically sounds like an EDM, Portuguese language cover of Missy Elliott (sample lyric: “"if you f**k up you better get out because we are in charge now”). In short: fantastic.

3

Julieta Rada

The Uruguayan singer - daughter of feted percussionist and singer Ruben Rada - makes music that’s somewhere between a Spanish-speaking Rhythm Nation-era Janet Jackson and 80s funk-rock, with candombe (Afro-Uruguyan) touches and the odd Stevie Wonder cover. Her rich pop sound has made her one of Uruguay’s biggest young talents, and she was nominated for a Latin Grammy in 2015 for best new artist.

4

Zuzuka Poderosa

Half-Indonesian Brasilena Poderosa makes tunes that fuse a hip-hop sound with baile funk and dance hooks. Her nonchalant energy is reminiscent of fellow Brazilians CSS and Bonde Do Role as well as M.I.A, and although she hasn’t dropped an official release since 2013’s Carioca Funk she did release a single, Pussy Control, following the women’s marches back in January. An English and Portuguese-language slice of female empowerment with a tongue-in-cheek feel, it shows the Brooklyn-based artist at her political-yet-irreverent best.

5

Kali Uchis

Colombian-born, US-raised popster Uchis makes skillful, soul and R&B-tinged tinged ballads influenced by everyone from Brazilian bossa nova singer Astrud Gillberto to Lily Allen. She’s also worked with some of the coolest names in music; her debut Ep, Por Vida (For Life), featured tracks produced by the likes of Diplo, Tyler The Creator and Kaytranada, she collaborated with Snoop Dogg on 2014’s On Edge and 2016 single Only Girl featured Vince Staples and Steve Lacy of The Internet. As well as a retro-inspired sound, Uchis also has amazing Instagram game, sharing swag-heavy looks and pics interspersed with snaps from trips back to her homeland.

This Week

making images: behind the scenes

Take another look behind the scenes at photographer Harley Weir’s journey in capturing five women from around the world as well at a number of other creators defining the image of today in documentary filmmaker Chelsea McMullan’s Making Images video. 

Read More

making films: behind the scenes

Take another look behind the scenes in director Eva Michon's Making Films with Alma Har'el video: a look at the making of JellyWolf and the current state of play within the film industry through the eyes of female filmmakers championing diversity, and Alma Har'els Free The Bid initiative. 

Read More

making movement: behind the scenes

Take a look behind the scenes in filmmaker Agostina Galvez’s Making Movements: a look at the making of The Pike and the Shield: Five Paradoxes with ballerina Nozomi Iijima and other leading movers and shakers from the world of dance including choreographers and dancers Holly Blakey, Aya Sato and the duo Project O. 

Read More

making codes: behind the scenes

Take another at director Liza Mandelup's Making Codes video, a look behind the scenes at digital artist and creative director Lucy Hardcastle's piece 'Intangible Matter' that features producer Fatima Al Qadiri, artist Chris Lee and a host of more leading digital artists.

Read More

seeing sound: in conversation charlotte hatherley & carly paradis

Two of London’s most sought after figures in visually-shaped music meet.

Read More

making exhibitions: behind the scenes

Take a look behind the scenes in director Christine Yuan’s Making Exhibitions with Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel: a look at the making of Just A Second: A Digital Exhibition Curated by Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel, inspired by CHANEL Nº5 L'EAU, and a look at other leading curators and collectives from the art world including BUFU, Rozsa Farkas, Fatos Ustek, Angelina Dreem and Yana Peel.

Read More

lizzie borden: feminist trailblazer

As her magnum opus returns to UK shores, Lizzie Borden – the visionary artist behind Born in Flames – talks rebellion, feminist artistry, and her nostalgia for 70s NYC.

Read More

rebecca lamarche-vadel's
just a second

Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel is the Paris based curator for the Palais De Tokyo. Dedicated to modern and contemporary art she puts on large scale exhibitions that span installation, dance, sculpture, photography and spoken word. For The Fifth Sense she created a digital exhibition based on the transformative power of CHANEL’s Nº5 L’EAU.

Read More

reba maybury: she’s got the power

We sat down with the editor, writer and dominatrix Reba Maybury to discuss her taboo-breaking publishing house Wet Satin Press, her latest novel Dining With Humpty Dumpty and what it means to be a woman in control.

Read More
loading...