| OZOMATLI
"DON’T MESS WITH THE DRAGON"
Welcome
to Ozomatli. Version 12.0.
Rested, revived, and ready for the next level.
On the
surface, nothing’s changed. There’s the
same core line-up, the same oppositional politics,
the same live shows that erupt into drum-line blessed
community parties, and the same devotion to polyglot
urban sound clashing. But here’s what’s
new: after 12 years of collaborative song-writing,
12 years of constant touring everywhere from Denver
to Tokyo to Sydney, 12 years of supporting anti-war
mobilizations and global human rights movements, 12
years of pioneering Spanish-English mash-ups of hip
hop, salsa, cumbia, dub, and Middle Eastern funk,
and most importantly, 12 years of facing up to internal
battles and personal struggles, they’ve emerged
anew with their fourth full-length studio album, Don’t
Mess With The Dragon, the band’s most cohesive,
polished, and joyous record to date.
“There is more of a sense of personal responsibility
on this one,” says bassist Wil-Dog Abers. “All
of us are on this road of being more responsible in
our own lives, becoming happier human beings, healthier
in our lives outside of the band. In the process of
making the record, people were really deep in the
process of getting their lives together. It made a
big difference. People growing up, people taking care
of their own lives. The healthier people get, the
better the music gets.”
Don’t Mess With The Dragon was written and recorded
with a firm commitment to collective creation. They
began writing and experimenting with songs in informal
sessions in the fall of 2005 at a local Los Angeles
Latino art gallery, Tropico de Nopal. Then came recording
sessions in the legendary Fantasy studios in Northern
California, followed by sessions at a slew of prime
LA recording houses.
“It’s
always a struggle to be creative together, as a unit,
but this was by far our best time in the studio together,”
says percussionist Jiro Yamaguchi. “It takes
maturity to work together and we are all getting better
at communicating. “In the past, we would be
like, this song is a Raul song, this song is an Asdru
song, this song is a Justin song. There wasn’t
much room for interplay. On this record, we have more
interplay, all the characters work together into a
whole book instead of just being in a bunch of short
stories says Wil Dog.”
Much of the band’s renewed sense of musical
collaboration comes from their relationship with their
label, venerable jazz and Latin stalwarts Concord
Records. Don’t Mess With The Dragon is Ozo’s
second full length, studio offering for Concord —
their longest stay with a single label.
“We’ve
usually been a one record one label band,” says
Yamaguchi. “Being on Concord for a second record
has given us a sense of stability we’ve never
had. They show us a lot of love and don’t breathe
over our shoulders in the creative process.”
Yet the biggest change of all on Don’t Mess
With The Dragon is that Ozo are not going it alone.
They enlisted the guidance of super-producer and Latin
music veteran KC Porter, best known for ushering Ricky
Martin and Carlos Santana to the top of the charts.
Porter has the golden touch when it comes to converting
traditional Latin American sounds and styles into
infectious songs ripe for commercial success. Porter
didn’t just produce Don’t Mess With The
Dragon, but helped the band shape their songwriting
and arrangements.
As
a result, the band sees Don’t Mess With The
Dragon as their first true collection of songs, where
the emphasis is on melody, structure, and feeling
as much as on the genre-crossing stylistic experiments
that fans have come to expect. Which isn’t to
say that their flair for the unexpected has been lost.
“After Party” pays homage to old-school
Chicano R&B (with help from keyboard whiz Money
Mark), “Don’t Mess With The Dragon”
throws Lin Cheng’s erhu playing into a Dirty
South merengue chant, “When I Close My Eyes”
nods back to Fishbone and Oingo Boingo, and “La
Segunda Mano,” which features the vocals of
Quetzal’s Martha Gonzales, blends son jarocho
with hip hop to create what Bella calls “the
sound of Afrika Bambattaa at a fandango.”
There’s also “City of Angels,” the
ultimate Los Angeles valentine from the city’s
most beloved musical sons. “We wanted to celebrate
Los Angeles but on the street level,” says Wil-Dog.
“You always hear Randy Newman’s song,
which is cool, but we thought it was time for a new
one. Ours mentions Figueroa and South L.A.”
The band’s
dedication to addressing social justice issues—a
hallmark of Ozomatli’s work ever since the band
formed in 1995 as part of a local labor protest—continues
on Don’t Mess With The Dragon. The blazing “Temperatura”
was inspired by the May 2006 pro-immigration marches
(“We wanted people to take it to the streets
and turn up the heat,” says Wil-Dog) and “Magnolia
Soul” rebukes the Bush administration for their
lack of Katrina relief.
“The whole album is really a statement of just
how much we want to take Ozo to the next level in
terms of music and artistry,” says Bella. “We
paid our dues. We toured our asses off. After twelve
years, we’re really ready to present the world
with what we believe in.”
* * * * * * *
Ozomatli are:
Ulises Bella, Tenor Sax, Clarinet, Vocals
Wil-Dog Abers, Bass, Vocals
Raul Pacheco, Guitar, Lead Vocals
Justin Porée, Percussion, MC, vocals
Asdru Sierra, Trumpet, Lead Vocals
Jiro Yamaguchi, Percussion
Jabu Smith-Freeman, MC
Mario Calire, Drums
Shef Bruton, Trombone
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