Like many great genres, cumbia rebajada was born from the collision of accident and destiny. Its origin story has been told so often that it has taken on the quality of myth. At some point in the early 1990s, in Monterrey, Mexico, a DJ named Gabriel DueƱez was playing a wedding party when his turntables began to malfunction. Heād been spinning for hours, and beneath the heat of the record playersā overworked motors, and the heat from all those dancing bodies, a crucial piece of machinery began to melt, causing the platters to rotate at half speed. The result was a kind of psychedelic sludge, narcotic in its languor: voices slurred, brass turned liquid, accordions rendered spongy and bog-like.
DueƱezā music of choice, cumbia, was already pregnant with meaning: Born in Colombia, it had been adopted by generations of Mexican migrants to the northern industrial city, who identified with cumbiaās rural imagery and inherent longing. Cumbia was the communityās musical lingua francaāa source, for these marginalized working poor, of both nostalgia and a sense of belonging. (So fierce was the local fandom that the neighborhood of La Independencia became known as āLittle Colombia.ā) Slowing down the music supercharged it, made it transcendent and otherworldly. It wasnāt just the sonic effect, although fans of similarly altered stylesāHouston screw, Belgian popcorn, etc.āhave long been aware of the mind-bending wooziness of mechanically pitched-down recordings. In the case of cumbia, stepping on the brakes opened up space for reflection, played tricks with time, maybe even jammed a wrench in the gears of history.
What happens when you slow down music thatās already been slowed down? Thatās the question Mexican American experimental musician Delia Beatriz, aka Debit, asks on her recent album Deceleradas, an homage toāand reinterpretation ofāthe subgenre that came to be known as cumbia rebajada. Her source material is a pair of cassette tapes recorded by DueƱez in the ā90s, two of a series of bootlegs that the sonidero and his wife sold at the flea market along the Puente del Papa, a bridge connecting Monterreyās prosperous city center with its mountainside slums. (Working with Monterreyās Sabotaje Media, Beatriz recently assisted in reissuing both tapes for Boomkat.) Her tool of choice is granular synthesis, which, as its name suggests, allows for the manipulation of sound at the quasi-atomic level. Running DueƱezās recordings through granular processing, and fleshing them out with her own accordion playing, she has made an already phantasmagoric music exponentially more hallucinatory.
Rather than simply stretching out DueƱezās pitched-down reworks, she explodes them from inside. āDesplazosā opens the album with what might be trembling guitars and a swirl of feedbackāa desolate sound, formless and unsettled, reminiscent of Flying Saucer Attack at his most haunted. āvinilos trasnacionalesā smears wheezing accordion into a forlorn, Philip Jeck-like dirge; āLa Ronda y el sonideroā is an inchoate spray of dissonant tones and chopped-up cries, as disorienting as a Nurse With Wound record. Encountering Desaceleradas without context, you might never guess at its provenance; whether by intention or as a byproduct of its analogically stressed and digitally mangled origins, its reference points are more in keeping with dark ambient and industrial music.

