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Santana

The Essential Santana

The Essential Santana Tracks
1. Jingo
2. Evil Ways
3. Soul Sacrifice
4. Medley: Black Magic Woman/Gypsy Queen
5. Oye Como Va
6. Samba Pa Ti
7. Everybody's Everything
8. No One To Depend On
9. Toussaint L'Overture
10. Guajira
11. La Fuente Del Ritmo
12. In A Silent Way (Live)
13. Love, Devotion and Surrender
14. Mirage
15. Carnaval
16. Let The Children Play
17. Jugando
18. She's Not There
19. Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana) (Live)
20. Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)
21. Stormy
22. Well All Right
23. Open Invitation
24. Aquamarine
25. You Know That I Love You
26. All I Ever Wanted
27. Winning
28. Hold On
29. Nowhere To Run
30. Say It Again
31. Veracruz
32. Blues For Salvador
33. The Healer (Featuring John Lee Hooker)
Santana - The Essential Santana
The Essential Santana Review
Guitar hero, world-music pioneer, and Latin-rock superstar--Carlos Santana embodies them all on this 33-track double-disc anthology of the legend's first 20 years in music. Yet none of those labels seem to capture the true musical essence of the mercurial, Mexican-born icon. Literally from the very beginning here (the furiously rhythmic 1969 reworking of Nigerian star Babatunde's Olatunji's "Jingo"), Santana cuts his own rewarding and peculiar swath across rock history, whether giving similar "Jingo" treatment to Tito Puente's "Oye Como Va" or infusing the meat-and-potatoes R&B of "Everybody's Everything" with his emotional soloing. While that familiar, warm guitar tone adds compelling new dimensions to covers of staples like the Zombies' "She's Not There" and the Classics IV's "Stormy," as well as to the string of '80s hits also included here, it's the sense of spiritual freedom he gives tracks like Joe Zawinul's "In a Silent Way" and the gorgeous, understated "Europa" that seem his greatest legacy. And lest anyone thought the pop affectations of the Grammy-winning Supernatural a fluke, there are plenty of reminders in the set's second half (the joyous funk of "Vera Cruz," his bluesy duet with John Lee Hooker, "The Healer") to remind us that Santana's commercial timing has oft been as masterful as his fleet-fingered soloing. --Jerry McCulley


Users's Reviews
Feel free to add your comments about The Essential Santana
HE IS THE BEST
4
I LOVE THIS COLLECTION I THINK SANTANA IS THE BEST GUITAREST MY FAVORITE SONGS ARE "SOUL SACRIFICE" "BLACK MAGIC WOMAN" OYE COMO VA" EVIL WAYS" AND "GUAJIRA" IF YOU LIKE SANTANA YOU SHOULD HAVE THIS CD
Posted by Anonymous, on 2003-04-18
All Of Santana's Important Songs In One Place
5
THE ESSENTIAL SANTANA is along with the first three studio albums, the two BEST OFs, and GREATEST HITS, one of the first Santana albums you should get, preferably all at once. This collection traces his music from its beginnings as a hard rock/Latin/blues hybrid, through his jazzier 1972-era phase, through his R&B-based work from the mid-70s on. This collection is a limited edition, so get it while you can.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2003-09-07
An Embarassing Look in the Mirror
3
The value of this set is that it shows what was so incredibly brilliant about Santana, and how it all went terribly wrong. The first CD presents the ctaegorical argument that Santana was ( and really still is) the greatest Latin guitarist, possibly the greatest Latin jazz guitarist, and definitively the best blues guitarist to have emerged from the sixties. His music is as fresh today as it was upon arrival.
The second CD evdiences how the thread was lost. Second rate collaborators with no feel for his inspiration conspired to produce some of the most horrible sounding pop/disco/dance music ever made that has only become worse over time. The production values that once added so much depth and soul to his music have become thin and superficial. It would not be until he realigned himself with John Lee Hooker that Carlos would shake himself out of the bad dream in which his music had gotten lost. The music from 1978 through 1989 is so bad, he actually makes Neil Young's contemporaneous slide in taste look like a work of well considered genius.
Thankfully for all of us, Santana recovered his vision and mission. I admire his bravery in releasing this set. It shows his integrity. Let's hope it never happens again, for his sake, most of all.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2004-02-13