A1 | Oríza | 4:52 |
A2 | Flautira | 5:00 |
A3 | Suena Tu Bongó | 4:05 |
A4 | Se Me Fue La Montuna | 3:30 |
B1 | Undress My Mind | 3:29 |
B2 | Ay Que Frio | 3:59 |
B3 | Que Pelota! | 2:20 |
B4 | Coco May May | 6:19 |
Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
L-31119 | Ocho | Ocho (LP, Album) | UA Latino | L-31119 | US | 1972 |
L-31119 | Ocho | Ocho (LP, Album) | UA Latino | L-31119 | Panama | 1972 |
463 950 6027-2 | Ocho | Ocho (CD, Album, RE, RM) | Fania Records | 463 950 6027-2 | US | 2010 |
L-31119 | Ocho | Ocho (LP, Album) | UA Latino | L-31119 | Venezuela | 1972 |
BOM24076 | Ocho | Ocho (CD, Album, RE, RM, Pap) | Bomba Records | BOM24076 | Japan | 2006 |
Ocho Cinco or OchoCinco is "eight five" in Spanish. It may refer to: Chad Johnson, (born 1978), American football player in college and NFL known as Chad Ochocinco (also Ocho Cinco) during the period 2009 season to the 2011 for wearing the jersey 85 (ocho cinco in Spanish). Ochocinco: The Ultimate Catch, American reality television series airing on VH1 starring wide receiver Chad Ochocinco (Chad Johnson).
Ocho is a English album released on Nov 2013. Ocho Album has 8 songs sung by Marco Sanguinetti. Listen to all songs in high quality & download Ocho songs on Gaana. attr("src", $('. de tp. d t img img').
Ocho may refer to: Ōchō, a Japanese era name. Ocho, the Spanish word for eight. Ocho, a figure "eight" in Argentine tango dance. Mount Ōchō, a peak in Okuetsu Kōgen Prefectural Natural Park in Japan. Ocho", a song by 2Face Idibia from the album Grass 2 Grace. Ocho", a song by Omar Rodríguez-López from the album "Un Corazón de Nadie. Ocho, a character in the television cartoon The Amazing World of Gumball.
Album ∙ 2015 ∙ 12 Songs. NA. {"url":null,"pid":"-GzdeLRD","length":"329"}.
Ocho Cinco: The Mixtape. Released December 4, 2018. Ocho Cinco: The Mixtape Tracklist. Ocho Cinco: The Mixtape, is Ocho Cinco’s first mixtape as a group. It is a compilation of all their most recent singles. Ocho Cinco: The Mixtape Q&A.
Their first album illustrated Mendoza's arranging talents and the group's loose-limbed jamming skills, which made them sound like a skilled electric jazz group jamming around boogaloo figures (closest to Santana or Willie Bobo's late-'60s sound). Their originals weren't spectacular, and attempts to "get with the times" fall flat (as on "Undress My Mind"), but the band played well together and hired-gun vocalists Willie Torres and Jimmy Sabater helped focus the album.