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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Punjabi Disco: How a Family's Kitchen Birthed a Groundbreaking Dance Music Record

Punjabi Disco: How a Family's Kitchen Birthed a Groundbreaking Dance Music Record

Summary

  • First-ever British Asian electronic dance album released in 1982
  • Mohinder Kaur Bhamra and her sons Kuljit and Ambi created the pioneering sound
  • Blended Punjabi folk, disco, funk, and proto-acid house
Punjabi Disco: How a Family's Kitchen Birthed a Groundbreaking Dance Music Record

Over 40 years ago, in 1982, a family in Southall, UK was quietly making history. In the kitchen of the Bhamra household, Mohinder Kaur Bhamra and her sons Kuljit and Ambi were crafting the first-ever British Asian electronic dance album, "Punjabi Disco."

Armed with a Roland SH-1000 synthesizer and a Compurhythm CR-8000 drum machine, 22-year-old Kuljit spent his days creating siren-horn loops and bubbling basslines, blending disco and funk experiments with the rhythms and melodies of Punjabi folk. His 11-year-old brother Ambi would often join in on the drum machine, while Mohinder, a trained Sikh devotional singer, penned Punjabi lyrics to sing over the tracks, delivering songs of love and yearning in her melismatic, full-throated voice.

The resulting album, "Punjabi Disco," is a joyous, loose-limbed romp through Punjabi-tinged disco, funk, psychedelia, and proto-acid house. This pioneering record, now being reissued, reflects the hybridity of the Bhamra family's émigré experience, offering a unique sonic fusion that was born out of the kitchen, rather than the dancefloors that had yet to materialize for young South Asians in 1980s Britain.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.

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The "Punjabi Disco" album was the first-ever British Asian electronic dance album, created by the Bhamra family in their Southall kitchen in 1982.
Mohinder Kaur Bhamra and her sons Kuljit and Ambi Bhamra were the key figures behind the creation of the pioneering "Punjabi Disco" album.
The album blended Punjabi folk, disco, funk, psychedelia, and proto-acid house, reflecting the family's émigré experience in 1980s Britain.

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