Zun Zun Egui conjure up bona fide rebel music  that is full of body, raw in spirit and totally free of precedent. A  heavy, heavy dance band, they fire up mighty, eternal grooves worthy of  some dust-caked Lagos street jam, but don’t just settle for that:  tropical melodies, thrilling stop-start time switches, scorching  psychedelics and robust underground rock flourishes are gathered up as  the momentum swells towards frenzied, ecstatic finales. East African  guitar practice is inflamed by multi-lingual incantations (in French,  English, Creole, Japanese…), sinuous prog gets a big bass undertow. It’s  roll and roll, a rainbow blaze of rhythm and sound that pulls both the  rockers and the writhers into its heart.
Zun Zun release their first EP ‘Bal La Poussiere’ on Blank Tapes  (home of Bass Clef, Scatter, Thee Stranded Horse) as a limited edition  12″. The title is a Mauritian saying loosely translated as ‘the best  dancer raises more dust from the floor…’
Borne of Bristol, England (where Zun Zun Egui met and unhatched),  this is music that has seen rare corners and a genuinely unique  cross-range of cultures. Frontman and guitarist Kushal Gaya grew up off  the coast of Madagascar, one foot in Reunion Island, the other on the  adjacent isle of Mauritius. Life on Reunion made a particularly telling  mark, as the teenage Kushal was awakened to the music of traditional  ceremonies performing in honour of local ancestry – proud Creole customs  that had been demonised by French colonial influence in the sixties. It  took small and enterprising groups of Kushal’s young adult peers to  find the courage to reclaim these folk traditions for what they were: in  a weird parallel with the “rebellious” subcultures of western youth,  Kushal would have to sneak off to such gatherings without his mother and  father’s blessing. “The colonialists had fed my parents’ generation the  idea that these services were devil-worshipping rituals”, he explains,  “when in fact they were a really important part of Creole culture and  identity – and the music you’d hear at them reflected the social mix on  the island, this unique form of blues played with African rhythms and  Indian melodies.”
Migrating to Nottingham in 2000 to live the English student life,  Kush found himself reveling in a very different kind of subcullture:  devouring a reputed 50 albums a month, he majored on the keystones of  leftfield American rock such as Touch & Go Records and The Jesus  Lizard, and wound up fronting a chaotic psycho-punk-blues group known  for unhinged, exhibitionist live performance inspired by rock/art freaks  like GG Allen and Delta blues legend Son House.
It was upon relocating to Bristol in 2005 that Kush started to crave a  music which, whilst retaining the loose ‘n’ wild streak of his recent  musical history, played down the wilful provocation in favour of a  different intensity – something more joyful, groove-led, and in tune  with the tropical blues scales and skipping, reverential rhythms Reunion  and Mauritius had ingrained within him. He found a perfect foil in  Yoshino Shigara, a Japanese animator, visual artist, and inventive  keyboardist he met through a local jam band, whose soulful, explosively  technicolour art seemed to paint the music of Zun Zun Egui before the  band had even come to be (Yoshino is now responsible for all the band’s  visual elements). After some early tinkerings, a permanent, all-English  rhythm section was found in bassist Luke Mosse and drummer Matt Jones –  suitable wide-minded students of beat and metre both, who swiftly became  compositional partners in the Zun Zun democracy. It’s then the alchemy  really started fizzing…
So far the band have been busy playing with all sorts of acts at all  kinds of shows, from underground bunker busters with Whitehouse,  Flower-Corsano Duo, and Peeesseye to larger gigs with the likes of David  Byrne (at The Royal Festival Hall), Antibalas (at The Barbican),  Hypnotic Ensemble and A Hawk and A Hacksaw, as well as ecstatically  received appearances at Green Man and End of The Road festivals. They  recently toured the UK with Fuck Buttons and were hand-picked by  Portishead’s Geoff Barrow to play Invada Invasion at Bristol’s Colston  Hall. Meanwhile the band hone their room-wrecking jamboree sound on home  turf, as resident band at the club night they run in Bristol called  ‘How Come…’