Resuming a free life in 1997, Ramos by chance tattooed Dope House rapper Low G, who invited him out to a South Park Mexican concert. South Park Mexican turned out to be old schoolmate Carlos Coy reinvented as a Latino rap sensation. That began Ramos’ unofficial rap-game apprenticeship as “Juan Gotti” with SPM and Dope House Records, filling in for Low G at low rider and rap shows around Houston from 1998. Citing DJ Screw, Street Military, Ramón Ayala and Control Machete as influences, Gotti’s first single “Mira Lo Que Pasa” a year later “blew up,” as he puts it. The full album, No Set Trippin’, dropped in 2002, quickly snapped up a Latin Grammy® nomination and sold enough units to go “ghetto gold” (more than 50,000 by street standards). “I thank Jesus. Glory to God,” Gotti praises of his successes, “Faith has kept me focused and Dope House has done wonders. Everyone was freaked out about how fast I moved up. Things happen for a reason because of God.” Gotti collaborated with Kings One, El Tri, La Traición and La Mafia, laying down vocals for their recent album, Para El Pueblo, and also featured Tejano-norteño band Los Palominos on Gotti’s next album. So, fans don’t have to wait to hear Gotti-they can get a sampler of what’s to come off any of these other projects. He also has a series of underground mixtapes, El Más Locote, Vol. 1 & 2. Meanwhile, Gotti kicks things off with simultaneous releases for distinct markets-the first single “Incondicional” with La Traición for the regional Mexican market off upcoming album Juan Gotti aka John Ghetto drops in early 2005; alongside hip-hop track “You Don’t Wanna”; and cumbia offering “Para El Pueblo” with La Mafia. The rush is followed up by a solid tour kicking off in Monterrey, Mexico in March 2005 then touring throughout Mexico, Texas, Cali, the Midwest, Miami, Colombia, and Argentina. |
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