Santana – Santana
Label: |
Columbia – KC 30595 |
---|---|
Format: |
|
Country: |
US |
Released: |
|
Genre: |
Latin |
Style: |
Psychedelic Rock |
Tracklist
A1 | Batuka | 3:35 | |
A2 | No One To Depend On | 5:25 | |
A3 | Taboo | 5:40 | |
A4 | Toussaint L'Overture | 5:54 | |
B1 | Everybody's Everything | 3:30 | |
B2 | Guajira | 5:50 | |
B3 | Jungle Strut | 5:19 | |
B4 | Everything's Coming Our Way | 3:19 | |
B5 | Para Los Rumberos | 2:44 |
Companies, etc.
- Manufactured By – Columbia Records
- Manufactured By – CBS Inc.
- Recorded At – Columbia Studios
- Mastered At – Customatrix
- Pressed By – Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Pitman
- Published By – Petra Music
- Published By – Dandelion Music Co.
- Published By – Prestige Music Co., Inc.
- Published By – Patricia Music Pub. Corp.
Credits
- Backing Vocals, Percussion – Coke Escovedo
- Bass – David Brown (5)
- Congas, Vocals, Percussion, Tambourine – Michael P. R. Carabello*
- Design [Album] – Mary Ann Mayer
- Drums, Percussion, Vibraphone – Michael Shrieve
- Engineer – Glen Kolotkin
- Guitar – Neal Schon
- Guitar, Vocals – Carlos Santana
- Photography By [Inside] – Joan Chase
- Piano, Organ, Vocals – Gregg Rolie
- Producer – Santana Musicians*
- Recorded By – Mike Larner
- Timbales, Congas, Percussion, Vocals, Drums, Flugelhorn – Jose Chepito Areas*
Notes
The Pitman "P" in the matrices may be very faint, reduced in most cases to merely a line.
Runouts are etched, except for the "P" which is stamped.
Recorded at Columbia Studios, San Francisco.
Runouts are etched, except for the "P" which is stamped.
Recorded at Columbia Studios, San Francisco.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Rights Society: BMI
- Pressing Plant ID: P
- Matrix / Runout (Label side A): AL 30595
- Matrix / Runout (Label side B): BL 30595
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 1): AL30595-2・F
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 1): BL30595-2・F
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 2): AL30595-2・A
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 2): BL30595-2・A
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 4): AL30595-2E
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 4): BL30595-2・F.
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 5): AL30595-2E
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 5): BL30595-2B 2
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 6): AL30595-2・O
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 6): BL30595 - 2N
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 7): AL30595-2.F・O
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 7): BL30595-2.F・O
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 8): o AL30595 - 2A 35
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 8): o BL30595 - 2B 29
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 9): o AL 30595-2.F. p C 3
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 9): o BL 30595-2.F. p C 3
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 10): AL30595-2N
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 10): BL30595-2・O
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 11): AL30595-2E P 2 o
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 11): BL30595-2.F. P 2 o
Other Versions (5 of 249)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
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Recently Edited
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3 (LP, Album, Stereo, Gatefold Sleeve) | Columbia | S 69015, KC 30595 | Netherlands | 1971 | ||
Recently Edited
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Santana (LP, Album, Stereo, Gatefold) | CBS | S 69015, 69015 | UK | 1971 | ||
Recently Edited
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Santana (LP, Album, Stereo) | CBS | SBP 234036 | Australia | 1971 | ||
Recently Edited
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Santana (LP, Album) | CBS | KC 30595 | India | 1971 | ||
Santana (LP, Album, Stereo, Gatefold) | Columbia | KC 30595 | Canada | 1971 |
Recommendations
Reviews
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I have never been a big rock fan. There are a few songs from the 60s, 70s, and 80s that I like. However, Latin Rock is something I would listen to whenever I come across it. I have not found many, but I would say that my favorite latin rock album is called Cristo Paz Y Amor by Mana Peniel...and yes...this is christian rock by this group from Puerto Rico released in 1972. The next latin rock album I love is this particular by Santana. It is the best secular latin rock album I own.
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Top contender for best Santana release? Just Wow! Picked this up at a classic vinyl shop at the coastal town of Morro Bay. What a great day. I have the CD but Holy Molly it sounds incredible for being original edition vinyl 😍
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Last album of the band’s first incarnation, it’s a soaring and vibrant, mostly instrumental, selection from a group of musicians trying to look tight as ever but, underneath the surface, torn apart by a life of excesses. The opening jam immediately exploits a fierce guitar shredding duel between Carlos and the new addition, twin-lead guitarist kid Neal Schon, which continues in the subsequent track “No one to depend on”, that really is in some sort the heaviest track up to that time by Santana, resulting in a ballsy thick hard rocking pounder acting as a forerunner to the wilder Journey’s ‘mark 1’ tracks to come. “Taboo” is a soulful episode characterized by a liquid atmosphere above a bluesy structure that just can have inspired the similar B.B. King’s “Ghetto woman” released a few months later that same year. Carlos’ mastery and gusto enlight the trademark number “Toussaint l’Overture”, where the guitar runs sumptuously on an infectious latin groove, probably one of the most heartfelt lead interventations ever operated on record by the band leader. Side 2 opens up with the fast soul of “Everybody’s everything” with a blasting prominent horn section and a ferocious solo by the new kid Neal acting like a beast looking for its tamer. The album es to more latin territories from the salsa exercise of “Guajira” to the south american tinged tribal extravaganza of “Jungle strut”, pausing on the brazilian ballad “Everybody’s coming my way” (constructed on the same melody line of “Samba pa ti”) and concluding on a high with the incessant rumba of “Para los rumberos”. I think this is the less succeeded lp from the Santana’s first line-up, lacking both the genuine excitement of the first release and the imaginative songwriting of “Abraxas”, but it’s still a top notch statement from a terrific jaw-dropping bunch of guys that had built one of the best musical machines of all time. 4 stars out of 5.
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I bought mine from Better Records so you know this is a good (great) pressing. 10/10 - esp when cranked up a bit on my system.
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Edited 4 years agoThe cover lives up to the content, this album was a great find. If you like technical guitar with grooves that will make you move then you will like this.
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By far one of the best albums Carlos has done, the intro with Batuka just sets the pace for this magnificent example of Latin Rock.
The stand out track for me Guajira, it's a must have for any collector of good music.
Release
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Recently Edited
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