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Cornershop
Biography
It may have taken Cornershop a few years to perfect its innovative hybrid of Indian music, British indie rock, and contemporary dance, but with the release of a third full-length album, When I Was Born for the 7th Time, the racially integrated group's multi-cultural fusions made band instant critics' darlings. Taking their name from a common stereotype of Indians in England -- that they all own small, corner grocery shops -- Cornershop was formed by singer/songwriter, guitarist, and dholki player Tjinder Singh and guitarist, keyboardist, and tamboura player Ben Ayres after the 1991 breakup of a previous group, General Havoc. The remainder of their initial lineup featured Singh's brother Avtar on guitar and former Dandelion Adventure drummer David Chambers. Following the group's first gig in Harlow, they signed with the small indie label WIIIJA.

Cornershop issued two EPs over the course of 1993 (In the Days of Ford Cortina and Lock Stock and Double Barrel, later collected as Elvis Sex-Change), but attracted more attention for their strong anti-racist politics -- specifically, their public denunciation of indie icon Morrissey. In response to Morrissey's flirtation with skinhead imagery, the group blasted him in the press and took to burning pictures of him in concerts, at press conferences, and even outside the offices of his record label.
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