Besides 'Havana Moon' and 'Blues For Salvador' he made 3 other interesting solo records when he was calling himself Devadip Carlos Santana (ala Mahavishnu John McLaughlin). The best IMO was 'The Swing Of Delight'. Although he used various other musicians on the double album, the highlight was that he primarily used the members of Miles Davis's 2nd great quintet; Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Tony Williams, and Wayne Shorter! Of course, while 'Caravanserai' can be considered the only Fusion recording by the Santana band, his hardest hitting Fusion record was his collaboration with Mahavishnu John McLaughlin; 'Love, Devotion, & Surrender'. The Santana band record that rarely gets any love is Santana III. To me it's as good as Abraxas, the only time the band had TWO lead guitarists, a very young, but extremely smokin' Neal Schon, who went on to make it big in Journey. Being an aging latino hippy;), I always loved Santana as it was the perfect mix of Rock, Latin, with some Jazz overtones. I really can't listen to his music anymore. His 'formula' since 'Supernatural' has been the same and it bores me to tears. He's making more money than ever so I'm happy for him, but his music has stopped evolving and the worst aspect is that so has his guitar playing.
In Santana we trust
I just finished listening to my (lp) copy of "Havana Moon".
Wow! I was kind of blown away. I haven't listened to this lp for over a decade. ( My copy happens to be a promotional copy). This was released in 1983. Having said this, it really sounds gooood! Very analog! Side one is really blues based.
All in all, this one was really worth mentioning IMO. Enjoy!
Wow! I was kind of blown away. I haven't listened to this lp for over a decade. ( My copy happens to be a promotional copy). This was released in 1983. Having said this, it really sounds gooood! Very analog! Side one is really blues based.
All in all, this one was really worth mentioning IMO. Enjoy!
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- 17 posts total
- 17 posts total