Ozomatli
Street Signs

Concord Records    CCD 2200-2  (2004)

Rock/Pop
CD, 13   Tracks, 51:40  Length
01 Believe Andy Mendoza; Ozomatli; J. Smith-Freeman 05:02
02 Love and Hope J. B. Eckl; Ozomatli; K. C. Porter 04:24
03 Street Signs Ozomatli; J. Smith-Freeman 03:46
04 (Who Discovered) America? J. B. Eckl; K. C. Porter; Jason Roberts; Asdru Sierra 04:35
05 Who's to Blame Don Corleon; Daniel Lewis 03:13
06 Te Estoy Buscando Ozomatli 03:50
07 Saturday Night Ozomatli; J. Smith-Freeman 03:59
08 Dejame En Paz Ozomatli 03:29
09 Santiago Ozomatli 05:10
10 Ya Viene El Sol (The Beatle Bob remix) Ozomatli 03:39
11 Doña Isabelle Ozomatli; Eddie Palmieri 01:05
12 Nadie te Tira Ozomatli 04:48
13 Cuando Canto Ozomatli 04:40
Music Details
Product Details
UPC (Barcode) 0013431220022
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Bass Wil-Dog Albers
Guitar Raúl Pacheco
Percussion Justin Porée
Trumpet Asdru Sierra
Saxophone Ulises Bella
Tablas Jiro Yamaguchi
Drums Mario Calire
Trombone Sheffer Bruton
Turntable DJ Spinobi
Rap vocals Jabu
Musician Ozomatli
Producer Ozomatli; Richard "T-Ray" Todd Ray
Personal Details
Index # 2394
Owner Dave
Tags Latin, Hip Hop
Links Amazon US
User Defined
Purchased Used
Notes
Los Angeles-based Ozomatli are a new kind of American band, a band reflecting the multiracial and multicultural One World demographics of the 21st century. Drawing on musical sources as diverse as salsa, hip-hop, rock, jazz, funk, Tejano, and reggae, Ozomatli appear to be trying to be all things to all people, but amazingly, they pull it off more times than they don't, and even when their increasingly inclusive experiments fall short, they still manage to offer up new creative possibilities. With the release of Street Signs you can add Middle Eastern music to the mix, and once again, the sheer number of ingredients they manage to pack into their sound is impressive, beginning with "Believe," the album opener, which should be all over pop radio with its full, deep, and anthemic sound (that it isn't all over the radio says a lot more about the current state of radio than it does Ozomatli). "Te Estou Buscando" and "Saturday Night" are also impressive, but the real highlight here is the appearance of legendary jazz and salsa pianist Eddie Palmieri on two tracks, the brief and lovely "Dona Isabelle" and "Nadie Te Tira," a blast of horn-drenched salsa that underscores an obvious point about Ozomatli: aside from their considerable cultural, political, and musical import, this is one hell of a dance band.