Omarion All Songs

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Brook Mithani

unread,
Aug 3, 2024, 1:06:16 PM8/3/24
to isethuzed

You can download songs of Omarion from Boomplay App for free.
Firstly, install Boomplay app on your mobile phone.
Secondly, navigate to the song you would like to download.
Thirdly, Tap on More > Download.

List of Omarion songs, ranked from best to worst by the Ranker community. All of Omarion's singles are included here, but real fans know there are other awesome songs to vote on other than the radio hits. Music videos and audio videos are included next to each track name, so if you haven't heard a song you can listen to it right here on this list. Is one of your favorite Omarion songs missing from this poll? Add it to the list so it has a chance to rise to the top.

Omarion is a well-known R&B and Contemporary R&B musician from Los Angeles, California, who has had a big impact on the music business. He has a devoted following all around the world because to his silky vocals and appealing tunes.

Omarion has developed a distinctive sound over the course of a career spanning more than two decades that combines classic R&B components with cutting-edge production methods. He has continually produced hits after hits, demonstrating his artistic diversity. His songs are distinguished by heartfelt lyrics, moving melodies, and catchy hooks that stay in the listeners' minds for a very long time.

There is no denying Omarion's impact to the R&B genre. His music has had a profound impact on the business and served as an inspiration to other musicians. He keeps challenging the limits of modern R&B and is still a major player in the music industry. Omarion is certain to keep making music that touches the hearts of many people thanks to his talent and commitment.

The American artist from Los Angeles who plays R&B and modern R&B, Omarion, has released a number of well-known songs throughout the course of his career. The songs "Post to Be" with Chris Brown and Jhene Aiko, "Ice Box," "Distance," and "Let Me Hold You" with Omarion on the radio version are some of his best.

His most well-known songs include "I'm Up" with Kid Ink and French Montana, "O," "Girlfriend," "Summer in the Winter" with Omarion, and "I'm Sayin'" with Rich Homie Quan.

Smooth vocals and appealing beats are hallmarks of Omarion's contemporary R&B-influenced music style. The timeless Omarion song "Ice Box" has his mellow falsetto and poignant lyrics. The more current song "Distance," on the other hand, has a rhythm that is more energetic and danceable.

Overall, lovers of R&B and modern R&B music have embraced Omarion's music, and his well-known songs have found their way onto many playlists.

The Los Angeles-born R&B and Contemporary R&B performer Omarion has been making waves in the music business with his most recent albums. The publication of his most recent record, "Full Circle: Sonic Book 1," is scheduled for 2023, and fans can't wait.

Omarion's most recent hits have been satisfying his admirers in the interim. Both "Serious" and "Big Vibez," slated for release in 2023, look to be smash songs that will have listeners bobbing their heads to their catchy beats. The fan response to earlier albums like "With A Little Help From My Friends" and "EX" has also been positive.

Omarion's music combines R&B, hip-hop, and pop elements to create a distinctive sound that is all his own. Fans of modern R&B music love him for his mellow vocals and memorable tunes. Omarion keeps demonstrating with his most recent releases why he is a major force in the music business.

Overall, Omarion's most recent musical output demonstrates that he is not someone who takes it easy. Fans can anticipate even more captivating music from this amazing musician in the future as he continues to experiment and develop his sound.

The Los Angeles-based R&B and Contemporary R&B performer Omarion has performed on numerous venues throughout the years, but his Lovers and Friends Festival and Smokin Grooves Fest engagements stand out as some of his most significant ones.

Omarion appeared at the Lovers and Friends Festival with a roster that included Usher, Ludacris, and Lil Jon, among others. Omarion's performance at the Las Vegas festival, which honored traditional R&B and hip-hop music, was among its high points.

In Long Beach, California, at the Smokin Grooves Fest, Omarion also made an appearance. Omarion's performance at this festival, which honored modern R&B and hip-hop, was evidence of his skill as a singer and performer.

Omarion has performed at some of the best American venues in addition to these events, including the Kia Forum in Atlanta, the Oakland Arena in California, the FTX Arena in Miami, and the Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. Omarion's performances in these locations have cemented his status as one of the greatest R&B musicians of his time. Each of these venues has played host to some of the biggest names in music.

American R&B and current R&B musician Omarion has worked with a number of other musicians during the course of his career. The most renowned musical pairings include "Post to Be" with Jhene Aiko and Chris Brown, "Let Me Hold You" with Bow Wow, and "I'm Up" with Kid Ink and French Montana.

"Post to Be" was a major hit, appearing on several charts across the world and reaching its highest position of number 13 on the US Billboard Hot 100. The soothing vocals of Omarion, Jhene Aiko, and Chris Brown enhanced the song's captivating lyrics and energetic melody. The flawless blending of the trio's voices made this one of Omarion's most memorable collaborations.

The duet "Let Me Hold You" with Bow Wow is another memorable one. One of Omarion's earliest collaborations, it helped establish him as an R&B performer. On the US Billboard Hot 100, the song peaked at number four, indicating its commercial success. Omarion's soothing vocals and Bow Wow's rap rhymes came together to create a powerful and enduring duet.

Omarion has collaborated with many other musicians over the course of his career, but these projects stand out as some of the most significant. Every partnership contributed something distinctive, displaying Omarion's creativity and artistry.

The former B2K member said that in the wake of the Lifetime docu-series, it's time to stop dismissing the type of behavior that R. Kelly is accused of by the women and those like him must be held accountable for heir actions. Omarion then vowed to retire all the songs that R. Kelly wrote from his set list ... after the Millennium Tour.

R. Kelly wrote and produced the hit song "Bump Bump Bump" for B2K which peaked at number one on the Billboard charts for a week straight. Kelly also wrote and produced two more songs off the group's Pandemonium! album, "What a Girl Wants," and "Girlfriend."

Popular celebrity gossip news site, The Shade Room, reposted Omarion's tweets to their Instagram page where angry users flooded the comment section also insinuating that the "Girlfriend" artist wants to earn money off the tour before taking a stance on R. Kelly.

"This is a (expletive) joke! Make money off the songs R Kelly wrote, first, then join the movement?!?! So you sir are also part of the problem. Pick a stance and be courageous enough to stick to it," one person wrote on Instagram.

Pete Macia e-mailed a couple of days ago and asked me to write this column about "the two police tasing incidents this week-- Two Gallants and Ali from St. Lunatics-- and the difference in reaction" between them, but he was too late, so I thought I'd let him speak for him. Besides, there's a new Omarion single out.

However, because of Omarion's past as the alpha male in cherry-picked boy band B2K-- and after his star-turn in You Got Served wherein it was discovered he smooches tongue out, eyes open-- he hasn't been as on-our-tongues Ne-Yo, nor is he quite as visible as Chris Brown. His break-out time as Hot Newcomer came in 1999. Do you even remember anything that happened before 9/11? We're used to Omarion's trusty grin, his easy fluidity, leaving him to release scorching-hot single after scorching-hot single without, and videos in which he is entirely naked from the waist up, delivering lines like, "Think I wanna bite you," without too much brouhaha.

"Ice Box" is Omarion's new ballad! IT IS R&B FOR EMO LOVERS. And it is an important song in his career, because it's the first that invests him with a time and place: In California, in 2006, and one of the first r&b singers to have come of age during third-wave emo and apply that influence to his own music. A native of Los Angeles, the O's voice has acquired a tinge of West Coast punky nasal, which serves him well on the dramatic chorus, which is straight out of New Found Glory's diary: "I GOT THIS ICE BOX WHERE MY HEART USED TO BE." A little goth, too, non? Timbaland, producer of the song's dramatic synths and the cavernous effects, helps O's cause immensely by adding a wrought back-up vocal: "I'm so cold, I'm so cold, I'm so cold, I'm so cold," he sings, and does, in fact, sound as if he were afflicted with hypothermia. The song is, of course, about a failing relationship, and features the melodrama and style of contemporary emo. But here's where the "r&b" of this R&Bemo trailblazer comes in: Instead of scapegoating or vilifying the ex-girlfriend, Omarion "really wanna work this out, damn girl, I'm trying," and lists all of her positive qualities. Pure 100% Omarion: he doesn't mean no disrespect. He even said as much in a song.

Of course, nobody pays attention to genre anymore. But the only recent high-viz attempts at this type of crossover have resulted in disastrous collabos (Mary J Blige & Bono dueting "One") or baby-stepping mash-up acts (Jay-Z and Linkin Park, which is better than reactionary LP haters give it credit for). Omarion's "Ice Box" is the first subtly R&Bemo song of its kind.

One of the benefits of living in New York, I mean besides gastronomical delights and astronomical rents, is the annual New Yorker festival, which positions global ingnues in potentially amazing conversations with New Yorker writers. This year, I attended two music-related interview/performances: Polly Jean Harvey in conversation with Hilton Als, and Gustavo Santaolalla (essentially the Phil Spector of Latin America) in conversation with Jon Lee Anderson. The quality of these conversations seriously depend on the dynamic between the interviewer and subject; the PJ Harvey/Als convo would have benefited if Als had inquired more about Harvey, and expounded less about himself. On the other hand, Jon Lee Anderson, one of the New Yorker's best writers (GOOGLE HIS ARCHIVE ON LATIN AMERICA), asked carefully phrased questions so Santaolalla could speak on his storied, fascinating life: as a political prisoner in Argentina in the 1970s, as the ostensible inventor of rock en espanol, as a producer for musicians like Juanes, Caf Tecuba, Julieta Venegas and Molotov, as the man who scored films such as Motorcycle Diaries, Amoros Perros, and Brokeback Mountain. That interview was an example of the New Yorker at its best: dialogue between two masters of their form, each with a genuine interest in ideas, and countless stories of their own.

c80f0f1006
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages