Look we can argue till kingdom come.now when the start a custodian of records.that states who the musicians where.and their age Over 21 or over 18 and had representation.espically if under age.oh but they the recorded corps would not do that.of course they would .because their are no laws or morale and ethics when they can hide .and the public is keeped out of site.hey hear is the real shit .the music industry exists to sell alcohol and tobacco to under age teens.their is no ART .IF THEIR WERE THEY WOULD NOT NEED TO SELL THEIR SHIT.BUT IT IS ALL ROLLED INTO ONE.YOU DO NOT GET A CHOICE OF OPT OUT.THATS WHAT HIP HOP IS ABOUT.SELLING ALCOHOL
Santana is sublime. Greg Rollie on organ and vocals, is the co-founder of Journey. Michael Shrieve is a mega-talented drummer - I think he’s about 19 or 20 here - watch his drum solo from their performance at Woodstock - epic.
Damn we had the best music back then! That’s Greg Rollie on keyboard and vocals- he later co- founded Journey with Neil Schon- who played second guitar for Santana as a 17 year old.
as a 74 year old guy who thrived on Carlos Santana in the 70's I'm really glad you like this timeless music, just goes to prove,.. rock and roll will never die :)
My hubby and I grew up in the fifties and sixties on the southside of Chicago. We were sweetheartsin the late sixties and after he graduated from high school in 1969 he immediately went into the military and everyone can guess where he ended up at. We lost touch but in 2010 with the advent of Facebook I tracked him down! LOL! We soon married and of course we talked about everything we had both done and gone through. When he started telling me how many concerts he'd seen I was just blown away! I mean it was phenomenal! So I asked him which artist or band did you see the most without any hesitation he said, "Santana first and Queen second!" Jokingly he said , "honey I've seen Carlos so many times, I thought I was in the band!" It helped that a co-worker of his had an older brother who was Jam Productions, a ticket venue in Chicago at the time. He said I always paid very little and always had seats between the sixth and tenth row, middle!! I was just blown away by that! What a lucky guy and what a great time he had! He said that being that close just intensified the whole experience! All I could say was, "I wish I had been there!"
Fleetwood Mac released this as a non-album single in March of '68. Santana covered it on their second studio album Abraxas (Sept.,1970). This may have led to the decades of confusion regarding authorship.
Greg Rollie plays the classic Hammond B3 thru a Leslie cabinet [fan] speaker as well as a Fender Rhodes, his standard set-up during his time with Santana and then with Journey and throughout his career.
A good cover of the original version written by Peter Green and was an early Fleetwood Mac song. Amazing how many people don't realize this is a cover version and really isn't that different to the original.
Love this performance; well chosen sir. Saw Santana as a school boy:1975 UK tour, with Earth Wind and Fire as support act! What a show, especially as EWF not yet established in UK. You may like their 1977 cover of The Zombies' 1964 hit ' She's not there' written by Rod Argent. Keep up this good work, thanks.
Santana is one group I heard a lot growing up. Along with Malo's song "Suavecito" a band started by Carlos brother. And of course War's" Lowrider" and Tierra's "Together".
One of the most successful cover versions ever! That's right, this is not the original. The original is from Fleetwood Mac... Yep, from a time when Peter Green was the frontman, and the style was closer to Blues. There is an excellent Live performance on TH-cam, I think it was YT... Well worth the time. Very different from The Fleetwood Mac of the mid 70's that we all know and love.
on the original album (33 was of course) this song is followed by O Ye Como Va. The fast transition between the 2 songs is stunning especially when you've had a little green bud. Glad you loved the tune. at 74 years old, I grew up with 'em :)
Just for historical sake, you should check out the original cut of this song by Fleetwood Mac (when they were a blues band). Fleetwood Mac's founder guitar wizard Peter Green wrote it. Green was Carlos Santana's guitar hero and was a big influence on Santana's style. Santana often acknowledged Green and did several tributes to him through the years. Also check out the Green composed blues instrumental The Supernatural by the John Mayall Blues Breakers and you will immediately recognize how Santana was inspired by Green's sound.
Santana is definitely big on percussion . Hes got that solid rhythmic Latin sound. Here he had 3 percussionists : On the extreme left was the TIMBALES, then the DRUMS and then the CONGAS. The bass, on his Fender, just hitting a steady hypnotic riff. Santana, like you say, is , well . . .Santana ! Watch the Woodstock performance of SOUL SACRIFICE, but try to find the full version, not the short one, where they cut the performance of that same drummer, who was., at the time 15 or 16 years old ! Also from Woodstock, you'll love JIMI HENDRIX playing the NATIONAL ANTHEM. That'll blow your socks off !
First three albums by Santana are peerless. He got aimless and non-commercial after those three, and lost a lot of his audience. But in the beginning, an amazing mixture of styles and new rhythms, coupled with great, melodic, memorable songs.
Since you like organ music so much you should know that's Greg Rolle on keyboards and vocals, who went on to form Journey with Neal Schon. On many of Journey's earliest, (and best) hits, he shares vocals with Steve Perry. Edit: Ok, I see this was mentioned in the comments already. But he does deserve to mentioned many times, as an outstanding musician of this era. Here's Journey's most underrated, (in TH-cam's reaction world) song. "Feeling That Way/Anytime". (One song transitions into the next). th-cam.com/video/NPF1PjkqHQc/w-d-xo.html (live version) For anybody that thinks Journey is "Steve Perry Inc.", check out my favorite Journey song, "Just the Same Way". th-cam.com/video/twC6FvDubLk/w-d-xo.html These and several others are why I consider them a great "Rock" band instead of the later Steve Perry only, ballad era Journey, where they got kinda syrupy. "
Man, my wife and her band (70s, 80s) STILL play this today! ALWAYS a big hit no matter the party. LOL! A lot of baby boomers would groove to this today!
Soul Sacrifice at Woodstock. And definitely check out Michael Shrieve on the the drums. He went on to be a major percussionist and composer , he was the second youngest performer at Woodstock. One of his works was the music to Apollo 13. Actually Micheal is the drummer in this video.
That's bill shot.why do think Peter green went into hiding? They did not have permission from the lyricist to use his work.he is a u .s citizen.who the fuck is green a brit.trying to rip off a u.s. kid.they did say it was a co written as a compilation of their work.this has the sound with get this Lucy's Husband on
I think the keyboards your talking about is called the Fender Rhodes, beautiful instrument, it's like a creamy piano tone, very popular in the 60's and 70's and amongst jazz musicians, I miss that tone in music nowadays. I also miss instruments in modern music
One of the best things about classic rock bands doing it live is the lack of a stage "show." Talented musicians with their energy and live crowds with their energy interacting. And people living in the moment. No one holding up damn smartphones.
This was, in my opinion, the best line up Santana ever had. Carlos Santana, guitar, vocals; Gregg Rolie, vocals, keyboards; Jose "Chepito" Areas, timbales, congas; Mike Carabello, timbales, congas; Michael Shrieve, drums; David Brown, bass (RIP David Brown). Every member of the band was a star in his own right. You need to listen to Soul Sacrifice also from Tanglewood. Then listen to Song of the Wind.
I was at the Fillmore East when they premiered this song on the east coast. I saw them twice again at the Fillmore, the last time when Neal Schon joined the band. The day man.
Probably my favourite although Soul Sacrifice is another !! I love the instrumentals especially & when the vocals come it it out of this world! This is the music I listened to back in the late 60’s & early 70’s, and I’m a huge Motown groupie so we were so fortunate to have all kinds of music to choose from & now the newer generations are discovering the magic we older folks played everyday 😁💥💜☮️🎸🎸🥁🎹❤️🔥
You don’t know how lucky are. If I had wanted to listen to a 50-year old song in the year Black Magic Woman was released, I would have had to listen to Al Jolson singing Swanee. Believe me, Al Jolson didn’t resonate in 1970 the way that Santana does in 2020.
Wilburn...you're beautiful people baby. Power to you for being you. Dont smoke weed, smoke a bowl of music instead. Somebody needs to build an music amuesment park like Disney World but Music World. Coasters, hollographic concerts Beethoven, Elvis, etc. Concerts, theme song rides, shows. sheeeeit. Somebody builds that...they will come.
Bull shit.he stole it .from a kid in the u.s. I swear under the penalty of perjury that is the truth so help me god.march 17th 2021 Hayward ca.county of Alameda. If he disagrees with my statement of fact he can claim so under oath and sue me if he believes I have damaged him .his reputation or that of the band.if he does not the Queen would like to know why? Is she responsible for their crimes and torts.mick Fleetwood you owe it to the public to address this or lose the public trust.that is the crime .violating the public trust.but I guess Seagram rules .the truth
@@josephsheridan7885 "Mick Fleetwood" didn't write it, or *claim* to write it. He did not give the band their name. Peter Green died 9 months before your comment, so good luck!
@@josephsheridan7885 Peter Green died in July 2020. After taking LSD in 1970 his mental health seriously declined. Music was everything to him, and I doubt the money meant much to him, there is a famous story of Green threatening his accountant with a gun to stop him sending him money. The 1960's line-up of Fleetwood Mac was very rooted in the blues revival in the UK, it was British acts discovering many almost forgotten Blues artists who were responsible for boosting the careers of many US acts who had struggled in the US to get any wide recognition outside the black community. Peter Green often acknowledged in interviews the influence of Otis Rush's song 'All your love (I miss loving)' . The Blues has a very long aural history of lifting from previous generations and the adapting of past songs. This is a standard minor key 12 bar blues, and it would be difficult to attribute total original authorship. What makes this a variation on the standard 12 bar Blues is the introduction of an Afro-Cuban beat. If you feel that Otis Rush should take all credit for his 1959 take on it, th-cam.com/video/KGt3JAHxzJ0/w-d-xo.html then listen to Jody Williams track 'Lucky Lou', released 2 years before Otis' version. th-cam.com/video/R4AzsKdmFeI/w-d-xo.html I'm sure music historians and experts on The Blues could trace elements of it back and back further in time. (BTW You seem to have some very weird archaic ideas about the UK, the Queen is just a figurehead, a quaint cultural relic, she doesn't hold any judicial powers. LOL)
Yes because he knew he not the author.the one who originally created the work.it so easy to steal from a kid especially if parents don' t give a shit or are an the take.sell pimp their kid.it is called genocide.family stealing from their own.stealing their intelligence.by violance.why didn't he give it the author.the honor system.it is not a option
If you ever have an opportunity to see Carlos Santana live don't pass it up. His guitar skills haven't diminished any he is truly on of Gods special creations .The only thing that surpasses his music is his generosity as a humanitarian. James Keeney
Carlos Santana is arguably one of the top 3 or top 5 guitarist of all time!!! There are some people who even think he's the absolute best of all time...just food for thought!!! He's that good & he's still going strong!!!
I love Santana, but you need to react to the original by Peter Green when he was with the original version of Fleetwood Mac. Totally different, but totally amazing.
The sources for this Santana medley: Fleetwood Mac - Black Magic Woman (1968) th-cam.com/video/6AlPXaklOz4/w-d-xo.html Gábor Szabó - Gypsy Queen (1966) th-cam.com/video/A3--HVjDk7s/w-d-xo.html
@09:00 _have some respect for the percussionist. They have a hard job up there, They accent everything._ Yes I agree. Music is communication, not only between the band & the audience, but a language between the band members so they compliment & accent each other. I like modern music & it's complicity but I find it appaling that the complicity drives towards individual performance, Take the drumset for instance. It is complex even to play it solo, but I am afraid this can distract from the communication (this didn't happen with Santana). I remember my childhood in Basrah/Iraq in poor quarters neighboring the slums of the big African (black) community there. The Africans of Basrah (about 50 000 in the 70s) dominated the folk music scene for the simple reason that music is communication more than performance to them. I went to their "kaif" (means recreation) each thursday night (weekend) where they washed away the accumulated filth of their hard life (they were slaves until mid 19th century) with the sweat of their "primitive" music & dance. Did I say "primitive"? Yes but that's a badge of pride for it is pure communication. every baby, child, teen woman & man took part. A small part , like clapping or simply hitting a bottle with a spoon, but they listened to each other to accent & compliment. You can't believe the degree of complexity none of them could achieve alone but together everyone including the dancers & the audience got goosebumps beside the ecstasy-like state enjoying the songs.
Carlos is a Guitar God! Listen to his “Europa/Samba Pa Ti” Live from Mexico City Video. His “Song of the Wind”, off the Caravanserai album is my all time favorite…SanJoséBob
I challenge everybody that listens to you to name even one bad Santana song! I have never heard one and he plays in a lot of different bands as a guest guitarist!
That drummer is Michael Shrieve, who is well known for his stellar drum solo at Woodstock playing "Soul Sacrifice" with Santana.
He absolutely nails these tunes.. amazing drummer
And was only in his teens! Incredible talent!
Also on percussion was" LUCY I"m Home.Desi Arnaz. congas bongos.played with his hands.as a drummer uses sticks. brushes and kicks.
Absolutely!
Look we can argue till kingdom come.now when the start a custodian of records.that states who the musicians where.and their age Over 21 or over 18 and had representation.espically if under age.oh but they the recorded corps would not do that.of course they would .because their are no laws or morale and ethics when they can hide .and the public is keeped out of site.hey hear is the real shit .the music industry exists to sell alcohol and tobacco to under age teens.their is no ART .IF THEIR WERE THEY WOULD NOT NEED TO SELL THEIR SHIT.BUT IT IS ALL ROLLED INTO ONE.YOU DO NOT GET A CHOICE OF OPT OUT.THATS WHAT HIP HOP IS ABOUT.SELLING ALCOHOL
Santana is sublime. Greg Rollie on organ and vocals, is the co-founder of Journey. Michael Shrieve is a mega-talented drummer - I think he’s about 19 or 20 here - watch his drum solo from their performance at Woodstock - epic.
He HAS...
Damn we had the best music back then!
That’s Greg Rollie on keyboard and vocals- he later co- founded Journey with Neil Schon- who played second guitar for Santana as a 17 year old.
as a 74 year old guy who thrived on Carlos Santana in the 70's I'm really glad you like this timeless music, just goes to prove,.. rock and roll will never die :)
The 70's talent pool was beyond anything we will ever see again. Santana was up there with the best. The ultimate time for rock!
My hubby and I grew up in the fifties and sixties on the southside of Chicago. We were sweetheartsin the late sixties and after he graduated from high school in 1969 he immediately went into the military and everyone can guess where he ended up at. We lost touch but in 2010 with the advent of Facebook I tracked him down! LOL! We soon married and of course we talked about everything we had both done and gone through. When he started telling me how many concerts he'd seen I was just blown away! I mean it was phenomenal! So I asked him which artist or band did you see the most without any hesitation he said, "Santana first and Queen second!" Jokingly he said , "honey I've seen Carlos so many times, I thought I was in the band!" It helped that a co-worker of his had an older brother who was Jam Productions, a ticket venue in Chicago at the time. He said I always paid very little and always had seats between the sixth and tenth row, middle!! I was just blown away by that! What a lucky guy and what a great time he had! He said that being that close just intensified the whole experience! All I could say was, "I wish I had been there!"
Check out their song Soul sacrifice live at Woodstock.....probably the most amazing live performance I’ve ever seen.
Fleetwood Mac released this as a non-album single in March of '68. Santana covered it on their second studio album Abraxas (Sept.,1970). This may have led to the decades of confusion regarding authorship.
well over 50 years in the music business, play anything by Santana
Greg Rollie plays the classic Hammond B3 thru a Leslie cabinet [fan] speaker as well as a Fender Rhodes, his standard set-up during his time with Santana and then with Journey and throughout his career.
Legendary band and song originally done by Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac!
Listen to Santana's Smooth...great singer Rob Thomas
I saw Santana in 82 and they played for 3 hours. It was awesome! Great reaction!
A good cover of the original version written by Peter Green and was an early Fleetwood Mac song. Amazing how many people don't realize this is a cover version and really isn't that different to the original.
Love this performance; well chosen sir. Saw Santana as a school boy:1975 UK tour, with Earth Wind and Fire as support act! What a show, especially as EWF not yet established in UK. You may like their 1977 cover of The Zombies' 1964 hit ' She's not there' written by Rod Argent. Keep up this good work, thanks.
I appreciate that you play the video larger instead of having yourself over the video and that you don’t pause it.
Hadn't heard that jam before. That was sweet. I don't care who sings this song, it's a great classic.... beautiful no matter. Thanks.
Santana is one group I heard a lot growing up. Along with Malo's song "Suavecito" a band started by Carlos brother. And of course War's" Lowrider" and Tierra's "Together".
One of the most successful cover versions ever! That's right, this is not the original. The original is from Fleetwood Mac... Yep, from a time when Peter Green was the frontman, and the style was closer to Blues. There is an excellent Live performance on TH-cam, I think it was YT... Well worth the time. Very different from The Fleetwood Mac of the mid 70's that we all know and love.
on the original album (33 was of course) this song is followed by O Ye Como Va. The fast transition between the 2 songs is stunning especially when you've had a little green bud. Glad you loved the tune. at 74 years old, I grew up with 'em :)
RIP Peter Green
I always thought this was their best performance. Thanks for the memories!
Some of the backup band became Journey, where the singer lost his job to Steve Perry.
Just for historical sake, you should check out the original cut of this song by Fleetwood Mac (when they were a blues band). Fleetwood Mac's founder guitar wizard Peter Green wrote it. Green was Carlos Santana's guitar hero and was a big influence on Santana's style. Santana often acknowledged Green and did several tributes to him through the years. Also check out the Green composed blues instrumental The Supernatural by the John Mayall Blues Breakers and you will immediately recognize how Santana was inspired by Green's sound.
This song was originally done by early Fleetwood Mac around 1967. Great song pick for Santana.
Absolutely, positively and certainly. It is a masterpiece.
Santana is definitely big on percussion . Hes got that solid rhythmic Latin sound. Here he had 3 percussionists : On the extreme left was the TIMBALES, then the DRUMS and then the CONGAS. The bass, on his Fender, just hitting a steady hypnotic riff. Santana, like you say, is , well . . .Santana ! Watch the Woodstock performance of SOUL SACRIFICE, but try to find the full version, not the short one, where they cut the performance of that same drummer, who was., at the time 15 or 16 years old ! Also from Woodstock, you'll love JIMI HENDRIX playing the NATIONAL ANTHEM. That'll blow your socks off !
Oye Como Va by Santana.
First three albums by Santana are peerless. He got aimless and non-commercial after those three, and lost a lot of his audience. But in the beginning, an amazing mixture of styles and new rhythms, coupled with great, melodic, memorable songs.
Since you like organ music so much you should know that's Greg Rolle on keyboards and vocals, who went on to form Journey with Neal Schon. On many of Journey's earliest, (and best) hits, he shares vocals with Steve Perry.
Edit: Ok, I see this was mentioned in the comments already. But he does deserve to mentioned many times, as an outstanding musician of this era.
Here's Journey's most underrated, (in TH-cam's reaction world) song. "Feeling That Way/Anytime". (One song transitions into the next).
th-cam.com/video/NPF1PjkqHQc/w-d-xo.html (live version)
For anybody that thinks Journey is "Steve Perry Inc.", check out my favorite Journey song, "Just the Same Way".
th-cam.com/video/twC6FvDubLk/w-d-xo.html These and several others are why I consider them a great "Rock" band instead of the later Steve Perry only, ballad era Journey, where they got kinda syrupy. "
Here's another solid 10 (w/ lots of percussion!) Santana ft Rob Thomas Smoothe (Best choice is the Official video version) Enjoyed reaction! Thx!
They have multiple legendary percussionists
Notably Jose Chepito Aroyas
Man, my wife and her band (70s, 80s) STILL play this today! ALWAYS a big hit no matter the party. LOL! A lot of baby boomers would groove to this today!
Soul Sacrifice at Woodstock. And definitely check out Michael Shrieve on the the drums. He went on to be a major percussionist and composer , he was the second youngest performer at Woodstock. One of his works was the music to Apollo 13. Actually Micheal is the drummer in this video.
This is actually a Cover of a Fleetwood Mac song.
... yes, but quite a good cover! ;-)
peter green
That's bill shot.why do think Peter green went into hiding? They did not have permission from the lyricist to use his work.he is a u .s citizen.who the fuck is green a brit.trying to rip off a u.s. kid.they did say it was a co written as a compilation of their work.this has the sound with get this Lucy's Husband on
I think the keyboards your talking about is called the Fender Rhodes, beautiful instrument, it's like a creamy piano tone, very popular in the 60's and 70's and amongst jazz musicians, I miss that tone in music nowadays. I also miss instruments in modern music
This is so awesome!!! We use to play this song all time....I still have his vinyl record!!!!
Tanglewood- July, 1970- some of the greatest concerts in the greatest era of rock.
One of the best things about classic rock bands doing it live is the lack of a stage "show." Talented musicians with their energy and live crowds with their energy interacting. And people living in the moment. No one holding up damn smartphones.
Not only is this guy a good listener but he is a top notch critic and conveys subject matter very well and has sharp insights.
As much as I love Carlos' version, and I do, you have to check out the originals, Fleetwood Mac's "Black Magic Woman" and Gabor Szabo's "Gypsy Queen".
And they were all in the early-20's. Incredible. They invented their own genre of music......Latin Rock!!
One of the world's best guitar player hands down
Carlos could get that tone out of a cigar box guitar
I was 16 years old the first time I heard this song. I thought I'd found a new religion!
Santana is a solid gold legend.
Check out "Song of the Wind" from the brilliant Caravanserai album ('73)
Its pure heaven.
If you want to see what that drummer could really do you need to watch their performance at Woodstock..👍🏻
The original by Fleetwood Mac is always worthy of listening to as well. It's a blues tune
Pure magic. Thanks for the react.
Was waiting for you to mention that bass! This is a great performance and thanks for putting up this reaction!
Written by: Peter Green. Founder and original guitarist of: Fleetwood Mac.
No joke,
Santana covered Fleetwood Mac. 😜🤘🤘⚡🔥
T
True
Make sure that you check out the Peter Green's original.
This is a chill on a hot summer day kinda song.
This was, in my opinion, the best line up Santana ever had. Carlos Santana, guitar, vocals; Gregg Rolie, vocals, keyboards; Jose "Chepito" Areas, timbales, congas; Mike Carabello, timbales, congas; Michael Shrieve, drums; David Brown, bass (RIP David Brown). Every member of the band was a star in his own right. You need to listen to Soul Sacrifice also from Tanglewood. Then listen to Song of the Wind.
Albums. I miss album covers. Santana is a master. Plain and simple.
I was at the Fillmore East when they premiered this song on the east coast. I saw them twice again at the Fillmore, the last time when Neal Schon joined the band. The day man.
Probably my favourite although Soul Sacrifice is another !! I love the instrumentals especially & when the vocals come it it out of this world! This is the music I listened to back in the late 60’s & early 70’s, and I’m a huge Motown groupie so we were so fortunate to have all kinds of music to choose from & now the newer generations are discovering the magic we older folks played everyday 😁💥💜☮️🎸🎸🥁🎹❤️🔥
I’ve never seen a live performance of this song. Fantastic, still my favorite Santana song.
You don’t know how lucky are. If I had wanted to listen to a 50-year old song in the year Black Magic Woman was released, I would have had to listen to Al Jolson singing Swanee. Believe me, Al Jolson didn’t resonate in 1970 the way that Santana does in 2020.
Mind you, Jolson's Stairway to Heaven with "jazz hand" solo was a thing of beauty.
Wilburn...you're beautiful people baby. Power to you for being you. Dont smoke weed, smoke a bowl of music instead. Somebody needs to build an music amuesment park like Disney World but Music World. Coasters, hollographic concerts Beethoven, Elvis, etc. Concerts, theme song rides, shows. sheeeeit. Somebody builds that...they will come.
That was a JAM. Love Santana.
Do samba pa ti next please!
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE!!!
Santana's version is great but I still love the original Fleetwood Mac version with the great Peter Green on guitar.
Band: Little Feat. Song: Spanish Moon.
MUST be live. The best version has Tower of Power with the band on Waiting for Columbus.
Going to mention you should do Beth Hart and Joe Bonamassa "I'd Rather Be Blind" live at Amsterdam again.. You won't be disappointed!
Trust Juliana on this one. You'll be on the floor brother!
always thoughtful, well informed reviews. It makes a difference to hear a musician's reaction to real music!!
Had a strong feeling you might vibe to this...
Santana have the sweatiest rhythm section in history.
Saw Santana in Boston in 1979. Eddie Money opened. It was a great show!✌❤
Peter Green wrote it
RIP🕊
Bull shit.he stole it .from a kid in the u.s. I swear under the penalty of perjury that is the truth so help me god.march 17th 2021 Hayward ca.county of Alameda. If he disagrees with my statement of fact he can claim so under oath and sue me if he believes I have damaged him .his reputation or that of the band.if he does not the Queen would like to know why? Is she responsible for their crimes and torts.mick Fleetwood you owe it to the public to address this or lose the public trust.that is the crime .violating the public trust.but I guess Seagram rules .the truth
@@josephsheridan7885
"Mick Fleetwood" didn't write it, or *claim* to write it.
He did not give the band their name.
Peter Green died 9 months before your comment, so good luck!
@@josephsheridan7885 Peter Green died in July 2020. After taking LSD in 1970 his mental health seriously declined. Music was everything to him, and I doubt the money meant much to him, there is a famous story of Green threatening his accountant with a gun to stop him sending him money.
The 1960's line-up of Fleetwood Mac was very rooted in the blues revival in the UK, it was British acts discovering many almost forgotten Blues artists who were responsible for boosting the careers of many US acts who had struggled in the US to get any wide recognition outside the black community. Peter Green often acknowledged in interviews the influence of Otis Rush's song 'All your love (I miss loving)' . The Blues has a very long aural history of lifting from previous generations and the adapting of past songs. This is a standard minor key 12 bar blues, and it would be difficult to attribute total original authorship. What makes this a variation on the standard 12 bar Blues is the introduction of an Afro-Cuban beat. If you feel that Otis Rush should take all credit for his 1959 take on it, th-cam.com/video/KGt3JAHxzJ0/w-d-xo.html then listen to Jody Williams track 'Lucky Lou', released 2 years before Otis' version. th-cam.com/video/R4AzsKdmFeI/w-d-xo.html I'm sure music historians and experts on The Blues could trace elements of it back and back further in time. (BTW You seem to have some very weird archaic ideas about the UK, the Queen is just a figurehead, a quaint cultural relic, she doesn't hold any judicial powers. LOL)
Yes because he knew he not the author.the one who originally created the work.it so easy to steal from a kid especially if parents don' t give a shit or are an the take.sell pimp their kid.it is called genocide.family stealing from their own.stealing their intelligence.by violance.why didn't he give it the author.the honor system.it is not a option
And this is a live performance. Groups today can't do it at this standard.
Carlos santana most under rated guitarist. Great!
Could iyou please react to Peter Geen's/Fleetwood Mac's Black Magic Woman, he's the originator of the song
PURE MUSICAL MAGIC!!!!!!!!!
Evil Ways from woodstock
This song came out 51 years ago today. 8-18-2021
No it didn't, the song came out in march 1968 (Fleetwood Mac), two and a half years before this cover version, and is 100 times better.
Listen to the entire album.. it's all one thing (almost). and it's a Hammond B3 organ :)
I swear Carlos Santana is a freaking magician with a guitar.
Santana, what else to say.
GREAT album is "Moonflower".
If you ever have an opportunity to see Carlos Santana live don't pass it up. His guitar skills haven't diminished any he is truly on of Gods special creations .The only thing that surpasses his music is his generosity as a humanitarian. James Keeney
Carlos Santana always highlights the percussion group by allowing them 15-20 minutes to 'work out' during the second set.
Carlos Santana is arguably one of the top 3 or top 5 guitarist of all time!!! There are some people who even think he's the absolute best of all time...just food for thought!!! He's that good & he's still going strong!!!
You should check out early Mahavishnu Orchestra! Birds of Prey Album! Very different but unbelievable musicians!
Santana; three drummers. Wow!
Wow he's so young in this video
Have you heard music by EWF yet when you do,then you will be complete that's the end all, so nice to know you love Jazz music.
A classic love santanna
'O ye Como Va" you will like.
I love Santana, but you need to react to the original by Peter Green when he was with the original version of Fleetwood Mac. Totally different, but totally amazing.
The sources for this Santana medley:
Fleetwood Mac - Black Magic Woman (1968)
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Gábor Szabó - Gypsy Queen (1966)
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An ultimate jam!
That keyboard is a Fender Roads electric piano! Stevie Wonder use to play one too!!!
Carlos Santana was born in Mexico but his musical influences are from Puerto Rico and Cuba.
It was originally written by Fleetwood Mac. I highly recommend you react to the original version!
For a big surprise check out Santana's "Mother's Daughter." You won't be sorry.
@09:00 _have some respect for the percussionist. They have a hard job up there, They accent everything._
Yes I agree. Music is communication, not only between the band & the audience, but a language between the band members so they compliment & accent each other. I like modern music & it's complicity but I find it appaling that the complicity drives towards individual performance, Take the drumset for instance. It is complex even to play it solo, but I am afraid this can distract from the communication (this didn't happen with Santana). I remember my childhood in Basrah/Iraq in poor quarters neighboring the slums of the big African (black) community there. The Africans of Basrah (about 50 000 in the 70s) dominated the folk music scene for the simple reason that music is communication more than performance to them. I went to their "kaif" (means recreation) each thursday night (weekend) where they washed away the accumulated filth of their hard life (they were slaves until mid 19th century) with the sweat of their "primitive" music & dance. Did I say "primitive"? Yes but that's a badge of pride for it is pure communication. every baby, child, teen woman & man took part. A small part , like clapping or simply hitting a bottle with a spoon, but they listened to each other to accent & compliment. You can't believe the degree of complexity none of them could achieve alone but together everyone including the dancers & the audience got goosebumps beside the ecstasy-like state enjoying the songs.
Carlos is a Guitar God! Listen to his “Europa/Samba Pa Ti” Live from Mexico City Video. His “Song of the Wind”, off the Caravanserai album is my all time favorite…SanJoséBob
The keyboard player, Greg Rollie, would later go on to form Journey - another great band you should check out.
Carlos!
Listen to the original - early Fleetwood Mac with Peter Green.
I challenge everybody that listens to you to name even one bad Santana song! I have never heard one and he plays in a lot of different bands as a guest guitarist!