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Street Signs

Ozomatli

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Ozomatli

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Believe Ozomatli 5:02 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Love and Hope Ozomatli 4:24 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Street Signs Ozomatli 3:44 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 (Who Discovered) America? Ozomatli 4:35 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Who's to Blame Ozomatli & Chali 2na 3:13 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Te Estoy Buscando Ozomatli 3:50 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Saturday Night Ozomatli 3:59 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Dejame en Paz Ozomatli 3:28 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Santiago Ozomatli & David Hidalgo 5:10 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Ya Viene el Sol (The Beatle Bob Remix) Ozomatli 3:38 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Dona Isabelle Ozomatli & Eddie Palmieri 1:05 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Nadie Te Tira Ozomatli & Eddie Palmieri 4:47 $0.99 View In iTunes
13 Cuando Canto Ozomatli 4:40 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

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.

Recent Customer Reviews

Banda Excelente.
     
by quisten

That Eddie Palmieri and David Hidalgo sat in on a few tunes should tell you something. Throughout this release are inventive, layered grooves that can give you something new on each listen and, like nothing else, make you wanna get up and dance on every listen. Every track is good and very unique. The messages in the lyrics are positive and smart without being overbearing; the vocals and all musicians are top notch. Among the best Latin alternative rock you'll find, this is at once melodically pleasing, rhythmically complex, and very current music from one of today's tightest bands. No wonder the album won a Grammy; I can't believe more folks don't know about Ozo.

Kool Beans
     
by acura813

This group is the bomb I seen them live on t.v. what a show they put on I would love to see them in concert

INSANLY FABULOUS
     
by FORDTRUCKS

WONDERFULY GOOD I LOVE OZO

Biography

Genre: Latino

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Brewing a vital concoction of Latin salsa, urban hip-hop, and jazz-funk, Ozomatli formed in Los Angeles in the mid-'90s, eventually settling on a lineup that included Raúl "El Bully" Pacheco, Ulises Bella, Jiro Yamaguchi, Cut Chemist, Chali 2na, Wil-Dog Abers, Mairo Calire, Rene "Spinobi" Dominguez,...
Full Bio
Street Signs, Ozomatli
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Customer Ratings

     
9 Ratings

Contemporaries