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Condom Black

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Download links and information about Condom Black by Otto. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Electronica, Dancefloor, World Music, Latin, Dance Pop genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 01:01:09 minutes.

Artist: Otto
Release date: 2001
Genre: Electronica, Dancefloor, World Music, Latin, Dance Pop
Tracks: 14
Duration: 01:01:09
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dilata 4:29
2. Anjos do Asfalto 2:19
3. Armadura 3:54
4. Cuba 5:47
5. Dias de Janeiro 5:42
6. Pelo Engarrafamento 3:08
7. Londres 3:36
8. Por Que 4:51
9. Street Cannabis Street 3:46
10. Condom Black 3:02
11. Retratista 5:14
12. Único Sino 3:14
13. Hemodialisis 7:47
14. Basquiat 4:20

Details

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On first listen, Condom Black sounds like electronica closer to the acid jazz/chill-out tip than the harder, more techno-driven Samba Pra Burro. That's not to say it lacks energy or rhythm force since Otto and company are Brazilian. But a closer listen shows the second disc from the ex-percussionist for Chico Science doesn't fit the usual electronica mold of dance-floor groove mongers and/or DJ mixes: it's modern Brazilian music that draws on a lot of dance world sources.

There may be tons of credits for tapes, but these are well-constructed songs with a definite band feel, not just a bunch of random sounds slapped together over a groove. It's nicely varied — "Anjos de Asfalto" is heavier on the drums and percussion, but "Armadura" counters that with a much lighter, loping feel and the shimmering Fender Rhodes sound that dominates "Londres" and "Basquiat." "Cuba" brings a touch of rap flavor in Otto's singing and the first of several appearances by trumpeter Valmir Gil, while "Por Que" is more of a ballad with groove and "Dias de Janeiro" brings a pretty classic MPB vocal feel, but with a far harder, bigger beat behind it.

"Pelo Engarrafamento" goes for a more straight-up hard rock feel and "Street Cannabis Street" does its rocking accompanied by serious blasts of keyboard noise. That's another key — apart from the Rhodes, the keyboards on Condom Black are used for sound textures more than playing melody lines, per se, another savvy adaptation from the dance music world. "Retratista" continues in that vein — Otto sings understated in that breathy Brazilian way and lets the sound textures and groove carry things. And

"Hemodialisis" brings aboard Nacao Zumbi and its original guitarist, the brilliant Lúcio Maia, for a stretched-out, less effective rock jam.

The overall sound is spare and the players display a keen awareness of staying out of each other's way. So Condom Black is an impressive feat, a song-oriented disc with a strong band feel, yet plenty of links to the dance world through propulsive percussion grooves and attention to sonic texture. It's light and spacy on top, edgy and punchy on the bottom — it'd be nice if the U.S. picked up on the combination because it's a good one.