Changemakers: Con influencia de la Nueva Canción, el álbum Entremundos
by Leslie Layton | Posted August 21, 2025
El conjunto Debajito de Chico tocando en una presentación reciente. Foto cortesía de Ken Pordes.
Read this story in English here.Changemaker es una serie ocasional de ChicoSol que presenta perfiles de personas que contribuyen a la comunidad.
En la segunda estrofa de “Frontera”, el primer sencillo del álbum recién lanzado “Entremundos”, un pescador emprende el angustioso viaje desde su pueblo en Sonora, México, hasta los Estados Unidos, en busca de trabajo.
El cuento del pescador es típico de las historias que los compositores, miembros del conjunto Debajito de Chico, conocen bien. Como parte del tema “Frontera”, esperan que esta rompa con el alboroto y la represión antiinmigrante que ha seguido ensombreciendo la vida en este país.
“Tenemos una relación con este territorio”, explicó Dani Cornejo, vocalista de Debajito cuya familia materna había emigrado del estado mexicano de Sonora. “De niños, íbamos allí todos los años. Acampábamos junto a un pueblo pesquero. Esa historia está arraigada en nuestra relación con la gente del pueblo pesquero de La Manga”.read more
Changemaker: Chico band was influenced by New Song Movement
by Leslie Layton | Posted August 19, 2025
The Chico band Debajito playing at a recent Chico show. Photo courtesy of Ken Pordes.
Changemaker is an occasional ChicoSol series that profiles local people or groups contributing diversity or humanitarian work to the community.
In the second verse of “Frontera,” the lead single on the newly-released album “Entremundos,” a fisherman makes the harrowing journey from his village in Sonora, Mexico, to the United States seeking work.
The fisherman’s story is the kind of story that the composers – members of the Chico band Debajito – know well. As part of the track “Frontera,” they hope it will break through the anti-immigrant ruckus and repression that has continued to darken life in this country.
“We have a relationship with that territory,” explained Debajito vocalist Dani Cornejo, whose mother’s family had emigrated from the Mexican state of Sonora. “Growing up, we went down there on a yearly basis. We would camp next to a fishermen’s village. That story is rooted in our relationship to the people of the La Manga fishing village.read more
“De La Patagonia hasta el Rio Grande/El amor de la vida es lo que siempre sobresale“
(“From Patagonia to the Rio Grande/The love for life is what always prevails”)
The Chico-based band Debajito that has fused rhythms from across the Americas and kept local dance floors crowded will release its debut album, “Entremundos” (“Between Worlds”) within weeks.
Entremundos, to be released on streaming services Aug 5, celebrates the message that “another world is possible,” according to a Debajto press release. The album’s songs will be publicly unveiled July 25 at the Sierra Nevada Big Room, when the local band opens for Ozomatli, the well-known Grammy award-winning rock group from Los Angeles. (The show is sold out.)read more
Popular band mixes Latin American musical styles with hip hop and more
by Ken Smith | Posted February 29, 2024
photo by Ken Smith
The five-member band Debajito adds diversity to the Chico music scene.
If not for some creative thinking on the part of its members, Chico’s Debajito could have been just another creative casualty of the COVID-19 crisis. An early incarnation of the group played just one show at Tender Loving Coffee before the virus – and accompanying shutdowns – struck our area. With the standard venues shuttered and indoor gatherings prohibited, the members of Debajito started their own pandemic-era scene.
“As soon as you could have gatherings outdoors, around the spring of 2021, we started having these ‘Backyard Boogies,’ which were outdoor, family-friendly parties with friends in backyards,” said front-man Pablo “Kee” Cornejo, who describes the band’s hard-to-pin-down sound as “multicultural, multi-instrumental music without borders.”
Post-pandemic, Debajito has been fueling increasingly crowded dance floors across Chico with energetic live shows. The band members’ diverse backgrounds and mosaic of musical influences are reflected in its fervent — and growing — cross-cultural fan base.
“The shows are really fun and lively, and the crowd gets pretty amped up,” bassist Austin Petersen said. Band members laughed as he recalled an ugly Christmas sweater party at Argus Bar + Patio they played last December: “By the end of the night people had been drinking quite a lot and it got wild. Someone fell on Pablo …”
“They chipped my tooth!” Kee interjected to more laughter before Petersen continued. “Some guy was riding around on someone’s shoulders with his shirt off, people were dancing and spinning their partners all over the place. I never expected anything like it before I started playing with these guys … this music really gets people going.”
Rising from Debajo del Agua
Kee explained Debajito’s name comes from his earlier band, Denver, Colorado-based Debajo Del Agua (“We called it Debajito because it’s a smaller version of Debajo del Agua,” he said.) Formed in 2007, that collective of musicians was a long-time staple of that city’s “artivist” scene and known equally for their live performances as their positive political messaging; in 2009, they were awarded a Global Justice & Peace Award from the Denver Justice & Peace Committee.
video por Ken Smith
Debajo del Agua was a family band in the truest sense, fronted by Kee and his two brothers, Dani and Elias, who traded vocals and rhymes in Spanish, English, Spanglish, Nahuatl and Portuguese. Their father, Pepe Cornejo, was also a founding member.
“My dad came to the States as an exile from Chile during the military dictatorship [of Augusto Pinochet] there,” Kee said. “He showed up with a bag of books and a bag of instruments. There were drums, pan pipes, and flutes all over the house and he taught me to play guitar and charango [a 10-stringed Andean cousin of the ukulele]. He was part of a musical movement of his generation, La Nueva Canción Latinoamericana.”
Nueva Canción was a political as well as musical movement that combined pro-democracy, leftist politics with folk-based music and socially-conscious lyrics, and provided a soundtrack for freedom fighters and activists in the Iberian Peninsula and Latin America from the mid-1960s through the ’80s. The elder Cornejo played in a band called Amincha in his native country, and Kee mentioned Quilapayún, Illapu, and Inti-Illimani as influential Chilean bands from the genre.
“So we grew up with all of that, but in the States, so I also loved hip hop and punk rock,” he continued. “We aren’t a punk rock band but you can feel some of that energy when we play live, and hip hop is part of our musical backbone.” Further describing Debajito’s influences, he mentioned Afro-indigenous influences from Columbia, various Caribbean styles, and cumbia, the latter of which he described as “the soundtrack of the Americas.”
Kee said Debajito’s current repertoire consists largely of Debajo del Agua songs, as well as some originals written together with Debajito’s current lineup and a handful of covers, including a few songs by Argentine ska legends Los Fabulosos Cadillacs.
Debajo del Agua’s socio-poitical values, Latin American pride, and positive vibes are also woven into the newer band’s DNA. Kee offered lyrics to the song Origen — a Debajo del Agua holdover regularly included in Debajo set lists — as an example of this ethos: “It’s an eternal search for peace in this mosaic on the pavement/So many shades of gray that I’ve strayed away from my station/In this constant transformation, desperately seeking salvation/Things are bound to change holding on tight to my foundation/Origen, holding on tight to my foundation.”
California cumbia, dirty Detroit snare, and violin from nowhere
In addition to Kee, Debajito’s line-up includes the aforementioned bassist Petersen and violin/mandolin player Peter Washington, both long-time Chicoans; Detroit transplant Wayne Moore (drum kit); and percussionist Luis Castillo (congas, bongos, cajon and more). Castillo said he lived all over South America before moving to the United States from Peru in 2014. Petersen and Moore played in rock and punk bands previously and Washington grew up playing classical music, and all three admit they had limited exposure to and experience playing Latin music before joining Debajito. Rather than being a detriment, the members agree this previous unfamiliarity is part of the key to the band’s uniqueness.
“California is a place where everybody from everywhere comes to mix, and you hear that when we play” — Luis Castillo
“We all have very different backgrounds, and what we each bring to the table makes our sound different from anything else,” Moore said.
“When we play cumbia, it’s like this one-of-a-kind, Debajito-style, California cumbia,” Kee said. “Like, Wayne brings in that Detroit, nasty, kicking snare, and it makes it a different flavor, then the violin brings in these melodic elements from out of nowhere. It’s taking all these things that don’t seem to go together and mashing them up to make something beautiful.”
“I’ve listened to cumbia my whole life, but what Wayne brings … it gives it this power I’ve never heard before,” Castillo added. “The combination of us playing together mixes everything up. California is a place where everybody from everywhere comes to mix, and you hear that when we play.”
Debajito has several live performances on its Facebook page. They’ve yet to record, but say they have at least an entire album’s worth of original material they’ve created together and plan to go into the studio soon. In the meantime, they have several live shows coming up, including with Valley Wolf (cumbia from Modesto) on March 2 at Duffy’s Tavern; Suika T and La Rüa (Mexico City) at Unwined Kitchen & Bar on March 29; and Duniya (Afro/world music from Nevada City featuring members from Mali and Trinidad) at Chico Women’s Club on Apil 13.
Ken Smith is a freelance writer and editor based in Chico.
(This story was produced with support from EMS’ Stop The Hate initiative, made possible with funding from the California State Library in partnership with the California Commission on Asian and Pacific Islander American Affairs.)