Salmonella Dub was formed in 1992 in
Christchurch by Andrew Penman (guitar), David Deakins (drums), and Mark Tyler (bass). They played their first gig in January 1993 at the
Westport racecourse tearooms, to an audience of 64 people. The band's name was a reference to the 'bad-taste' covers they performed in a dub-reggae style. Conan Wilcox (saxophone/percussion) and Peter Wood (trumpet/keyboard) joined the band in 1994, Wood left the band in mid-1996. MC
Tiki Taane had begun mixing the group's live sets in 1996, and later joined the band onstage to rap, sing, and play guitar. After developing a profile with the band, Taane embarked on a solo career in 2007. Other guest or collaborative artists have included Paddy Free (of
Pitch Black) who produced the album
Freak Controller and performed with the band, and guests
Whirimako Black, Hirini Melbourne, Richard Nunns and MC Mana. In 1999, the band's album
Killervision won eight
bNet awards. It went platinum (15,000 copies sold) in May 2000, and later went double platinum. It was released in five countries. Their album
Inside the Dub Plates won three awards, including 'Top Group', at the
New Zealand Music Awards. and best downbeat release at the
2003 bNet Awards, where winners are chosen by public voting. In February 2008, Salmonella Dub and the
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra collaborated for the
Feel The Seasons Change tour of New Zealand with shows performed in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, and Nelson. The
Feel The Seasons Change project combined Salmonella Dub’s contemporary music and production values with elements of
Te Reo Māori,
taonga pūoro (traditional Maori instruments) and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra's classical music tradition. A
New Zealand Herald reviewer stated "United by background images of our geography and history, the omnipresent birdsong of
Richard Nunns on traditional Maori instruments, and the outstanding vocals of jazz-blues singer
Whirimako Black, the collaboration was certainly intriguing if [only] for its sheer scale. Between songs, conductor
Hamish McKeich was careful not to trip over his players, squeezed onto two-thirds of the stage; Salmonella Dub looked oddly well-behaved and vulnerable standing next to them." At the New Zealand Radio Awards in 2009, Radio New Zealand became the first non-commercial radio station to win the Supreme Award including Best Technical Production, Studio, or Outside Broadcast Recording with
Feel the Seasons Change – Live with the NZSO. The band released the single
Same Home Town in 2013 in honour of their 20th birthday. The single is dedicated to the
Dux de Lux, the early Christchurch venue for the band. In 2017 the
Sunday Star Times reported that the band was to be given a Legacy Award at the
New Zealand Music Awards. They were invited to choose a band or performer who had influenced them who would perform at the awards ceremony. Salmonella Dub named Wellington band Beat Rhythm Fashion but the organisers rejected their choice, saying that it was too obscure for television. In response, Salmonella Dub declined the offer of entry to the
New Zealand Music Hall of Fame. Nino Birch, frontman of Beat Rhythm Fashion, said that he was honoured to have been cited by Salmonella Dub. Penman stated: "The producer thought that Beat Rhythm Fashion was too obscure and would confuse the audience and take too much work to explain to them. I said 'if that's the case I don't want to be there', then I didn't hear anything back." He went on: "After it all went to custard I had a look at the NZ Hall of Fame and I went 'hang on, there's no
Split Enz, no Skeptics either. Why haven't
Upper Hutt Posse been acknowledged?'" He said "I'd feel wrong accepting it with that not being acknowledged, it doesn't work for me." For many years, the band has been connected to the small north
Canterbury town of Kaikōura, where they have their studio, and where they helped found the Kaikoura Roots festival. The band formed a company, Dub Conspiracy, which Penman sees as a production house. It releases records by other people, helps to organise tours and the Kaikoura Roots Festival and functions as a support for other roots bands. ==Discography==