“If people take the time to look from the beginning, what I listened to was John Lee Hooker, Jimmy Reed and Lightnin’ Hopkins. Then, later on, Peter Green\ and Michael Bloomfield. They were disciples of B.B. King, and me too, except that I got away from B.B King when I discovered Gábor Szabó A lot of people came from B.B King. They also listened to Freddie King and to Albert King, but for some reason B.B. King was the centerpiece for a lot of musicians that wanted to play the blues. I think it was due to his honesty, the rawness of his playing, and his heart.“To me, Gábor was a very, very elegant gypsy guitarist. He was Hungarian, from Budapest. I learned a lot from him, especially because of the way he played with Willie Bobo, Victor Pantoja and Chico Hamilton. His playing was very, very different. In San Francisco at that time, everybody was listening to the Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Janis Joplin. But I was listening to Gábor Szabó a lot, and Wes Montgomery.“Peter Green was a very good friend. I miss him terribly. I’m grateful that we toured together a lot of times. You know, he would catch a plane and he would just appear and play with Santana. He would leave Fleetwood, Mac for a little bit, and then he will come sit in with us. I identify with the way he played the guitar because he was very lyrical. The only other person that is like that was Gary Moore. A lot of musicians play guitar, but very few people get deep, deep, deep, into the guitar, like Gary Moore, Peter Green, and myself. But again, we all came from B.B. King. BB King is the guy.”
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Mo’ Birthdays - Happy 78th birthday to Carlos Santana!
Saturday, December 21, 2024
The Wagon excels John Lee’s 72nd Birthday Party! . . . . .
John Lee Hooker's Birthday Celebration Party 1989
Thursday, December 05, 2024
Carlos Santana - Love Theme from ‘Spartacus’ film | jt1674
Devadip Carlos Santana Love Theme from ‘Spartacus’
- now I had a theory that once Carlos converted to guru Sri Chinmoy his musicality suffered but this is lovely and well worth a listen in my opinion! Very meditative . . . . . so I will bid you all an end to he day with this
Thursday, November 28, 2024
The Perennial Question | Steve Winwood and Carlos Santana ‘Why Can’t We Live Together'
Steve Winwood & Carlos Santana “Why Can’t We Live Together” Live @ Montreux 2004
Sunday, May 12, 2024
Carlos Santana ' Samba Pa Ti ‘ Live at The House of Blues in Las Vegas 2016
more Sunday mewsics . . . now I worried about Carlos post something like his conversion to following Sri Chinmoy (coincidence ?) where he seemed to loose his timing and became a self parody almost . . . but occasionally could still pull it out of the bag . . . . . .this is one such time
Friday, May 05, 2023
From around the Internet :: John Lee and Carlos Santana
“John Lee Hooker was hilariously funny to be around,” recalls Carlos Santana. “He always had two gorgeous ladies to the left, two gorgeous ladies to the right. On one side, they’re feeding him Junior Mints, and the other side, they’re feeding him fish and chips. So he’s eating fish and chips and mints, man, with these four gorgeous women just massaging his hot soft hands. I never knew anybody like that guy.”
Everybody respected John,” recalls Charlie Musselwhite,
“His style, especially the solo style, was so unlike anybody else. Nobody had that sound on guitar, or played that particular way. And man, when I would listen to the radio late at night, John Lee coming across the radio waves playing Hobo Blues, it just sounded so cool – even sinister. Just a man by himself, playing guitar. And, you know, he was serious.”
“One story I could tell, I don’t know if I should or not, but it’s a good one,”“Madonna wanted him to be in a video with her. And John’s manager put him on the phone with Madonna, and he talked to her, and he’s giving her the old, ‘I just love all your music,’ and ‘Oh yeah, I’d love to be in the video with you.’ And when he got off the phone, he told his manager, ‘I ain’t doing it.’ Not only was he not doing it, but he didn’t know who Madonna was, and didn’t care.”
- MOJO Magazine
Photo by Jay Blakesberg
Thursday, January 05, 2023
Jeff Beck & Carlos Santana - Karuizawa, Japan 1986 (UPDATED!) - FLOPPY BOOT STOMP
The Boss over at HQ (FLOPPY BOOT STOMP) has posted an update for the Santana Jeff Beck set we looked at the other day with a FLAC version and the quality cranked up a notch of course . . . . . .
Jeff Beck Carlos Santana Steve Lukather - Live Japan 1986 - Floppy Boot Stomp
Reunion - Prince Hotel
Karuizawa, Japan
June 1, 1986
Soundboard @flac
SBD feed > TV Broadcast > ProDVD > unknown lossless audio transfer to CD > EAC > FLAC Level 8 > you
Steve Lukather - Guitars
Carlos Santana - Guitars
Jeff Beck - Guitars
Beck's band:
Jan Hammer - Keyboards
Simon Phillips - Drums
Jimmy Hall Vocals & Sax
Doug Wimbish - Bass
Santana's band:
George Miles - Vocals
Chester Thompson - Keyboards
Armando Peraza - Congas
Orestes Vilato - Timbales
Tom Coster - Keyboards
Graham Lear - Drums
Paul Rekow - Percussion
Track Listing
Disc 1
01 Primera Invasion
02 Black Magic Woman
03 Open Invitation
04 Starcycle
05 Cause We’ve Ended As Lovers
06 Wild Thing
07 Freeway Jam
08 Going Down
09 Escape
Disc 2
01 Superboogie
02 Lotus Blues
03 People Get Ready
04 Johnny B. Goode
05 Love Will
06 Ambitious
07 Goodbye Pork-Pie-Hat
08 Stop, Look And Listen
09 Blue Wind
Thursday, December 22, 2022
Jeff Beck & Carlos Santana Re-Union (with Steve Lukather) - Karuizawa, Japan 1986 - FLOPPY BOOT STOMP
Silent Way over at Floppy Boot has posted a goody this morning and it features this . . . . .
. . . .Reunion - Prince Hotel
Karuizawa, Japan
June 1, 1986
Soundboard @flac
Playing Time: 63:38
Track Listing:
Primera Invasion
BMW
Open Invitation
Star Cycle
Cause we’ve Ended as Lovers
Wild Thing
Freeway Jam
Going Down
Super Boogie/Lotus Blues
People Get Ready
Johnny B. Good
Line Up:
Carlos Santana - Guitars
Jeff Beck - Guitars
Steve Lukather - guitar
Beck's band:
Jan Hammer - Keyboards
Simon Phillips - Drums
Jimmy Hall Vocals & Sax
Doug Wimbish - Bass
Santana's band:
George Miles - Vocals
Chester Thompson - Keyboards
Armando Peraza - Congas
Orestes Vilato - Timbales
Tom Coster - Keyboards
Graham Lear - Drums
Paul Rekow - Percussion
Friday, July 15, 2022
JOHN LEE HOOKER and CARLOS SANTANA - THE HEALER
`Me and Carlos Santana got together,' remembers John Lee Hooker. 'He's a man who say, "You heal a lot of people."
I say, "What d'you mean?"
He say, "Yeah man, you heal 'em with your voice, and your music, man, is so deep. Well, I got a bunch of music, and it's got no fancy chords, but it's so beautiful."
I say, "Yeah?"
He say, "We gonna do this thing. What do you think about we name this 'The Healer'?
" I say, "What?"
He say, "We name this thing 'The Healer'."
"That sound good," I said, "but why?"
He say, "Because you do heal a lot of people, all over the world. People sit there, they listen to you, you soothe they mind, you takes they trouble away from 'em. You says things in your lyrics that really heal they problems. We'll name this `The Healer'. The blues have healed you, it'll heal me."
I say, "Yeah, that's a good idea."
We worked on it, me and him and Roy Rogers, my producer . . . I said, "Carlos?" He said, "What?"
I said, "Man, I feel a groove. Let's do this." 'And the first take it was it. '
| Photo by Paul Natkin
John Lee Hooker and Carlos Santana - Chill Out
Wednesday, October 06, 2021
Santana III - 1971, Deluxe Edition 2006 & 2016 (Out of Print) - Plain & Fancy
SANTANA III
Deluxe 3 disc edition [1971, 2006, 2016]
I saw them live at festivals here and woke up to what seemed like a new musics and no mistake, then we all witnessed Woodstock and thought 'Hello!' despite the later faltering and dare I say descent into easy listening, the first three album are central to anyone's record collection and despite the single album of this still being available the three discs available here included the re-issue and digital two disc set all of which versions here are long out of print if the running current price of over £80 is to go by and therefore I post the links here (I do not post links to officially released and still available commercial items)
FLAC format throughout.
The text as per usual at Plain & Fancy is really interesting and well written on two fronts, the story of the band in this formation and the classic line up and the story behind the double album itself.
Well worth a read
Santana III - 1971/2006/2016 - The Rockasteria
Thursday, October 08, 2020
If you missed it first time around on the original Floppy Boot Stomp SilentWay has posted a revisited Bob Dylan (+ the British Band!) with Mick Taylor, Ian MacLagan et al, guesting spots and video featuring Carlos Santana and Eric Clapton! Extraorindary document of extraordinary times, with a pickup band of superstars!
If you missed it I really don't know where you've been but this is a most welcome revisit and reminder of the above events . . . . . . . superb quality and so much better than Real Live versions of certain songs as the notes underline
BOB DYLAN - LIVE IN ROME! 1984
Bob Dylan - Live Palaeur Rome Italy 1984 - Floppy Boot Stomp
Disc 1:
01 - Disc one
02 - Highway 61 Revisited
03 - Jokerman
04 - All Along The Watchtower
05 - Just Like A Woman
06 - Maggie's Farm
07 - I And I
08 - License To Kill
09 - Hard Rain (acoustic)
10 - Tangled Up In Blue (acoustic)
11 - It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding) (acoustic)
12 - Simple Twist Of Fate
Disc 2:
01 - Masters Of War
02 - Ballad Of A Thin Man
03 - When You Gonna Wake Up
04 - Every Grain Of Sand
05 - Like A Rolling Stone (band introduction)
Encore:
06 - Mr Tambourine Man (acoustic)
07 - It Ain't Me Babe (acoustic)
08 - The Times
09 - I Shall Be Released
10 - Tombstone Blues
11 - Blowin' In The Wind
Band:
Mick Taylor - guitar
Ian MacLagan - keyboards
Greg Sutton - bass
Colin Allen - drums
Guest: Carlos Santana - guitar, last 4 tracks
" There's too many guitar players up here! Think I'll take the first verse and then leave!" Bob