@@L33Reacts cool story to add, I bought drumsticks and practice pad for my best friend last month, she wants to learn drums. Today at a thrift store I found a drum set that was 75% off. Got it all for $50. She’s over the moon but we haven’t told her old man yet.😂😂😂😂
I love that Carlos is not out in front of the band. He stays close to the amp in the back That one dude must have won the' play maracas with Santana " contest. He is so enjoying his moment HAHA They are ALL just having fun.
Not trying to knock today's artists because there are some very talented people out there; but... watching this explains why we aren't generally raving over rap, hiphop, and all of the new, digitally-enhanced music coming out today. None of that stuff even comes CLOSE to the artists of the 60's & 70's. Yes, we were spoiled!! But as you young people experience these gems as "new" for the first time, you get to feel exactly the way we did when they were new to all of us. The best part, is that 50 or 60 ywars later, we still get hyped up on this music; its that good! We feel you, Lee!
I saw them in '72 I think, The Charlotte Coliseum They came out, said hello for a minute or so, had a minute of silent prayer and never spoke during the concert! The music said it all.
My daughter saw Santana last week near Chicago and he is still going strong. They were all young there. It’s been over 50 years ago!! South American jazz and rock combined to make Santana a treasure in this whole world 🎶🎶 🌍💕🎸🎶🎶
Great selection! I was there--Miles Davis opened. Chicago did play there in 1970. They become the defacto headliner when Hendrix cancelled due to illness
Never forget, Gregg Rollie, and Neil Schon, left Satanna, later in decade, to form their own band. That band was a little, tiny band , called Journey. Hope they did well. 😂 The Family Tree of music, is amazing.
@@lawrencesmith6536 ✌️..." Feeling that Way/Anytime , played together, as it should be., an absolutely great rock n roll , composition..and yes, we know the other Journey hits. Thanks for the comment... reply . 🙏✌️
Gregg left Santana over differences in where the band was going and didn't co-found Journey for about a year or two. Neal Schon left and joined Azteka. It was a great band with lots of members but too many couldn't leave their day jobs. He got with Gregg after Azteka to form Journey. He was only 19 when Journey started.
Damn, I'm glad to come across this after always treasuring the Woodstock version. Several of' em were on acid there and it's to their credit that they held it together, met the occasion as they did. Michael made a huge impact then, just another percussion icon to file. Saw Carlos just once, touring the album he did with Mahavishnu John McLaughlin. Godlike performance by McLaughlin, drummer Billy Cobham, everyone. Great show. 😊🤙🏼🎶🍁❤️✨️🕊
Tanglewood is so beautiful. A great place to see a concert under the stars. Also SPAC (Saratoga Performing Arts Center) where we saw a lot of acts back in the ‘70’s.
I’m amazed that Tanglewood is an open air venue !! I have watched both the Santana and Chicago performances on TH-cam, but I never realized I was watching outdoor concerts. Thanks for the info !
Happy Birthday to Michael Shrieve. Never has so much been achieved with so little kit. The bass lays such a steady Grove. The whole Tanglewood concert was epic, but I love this one for its percussion to match Soul Sacrifice, "Savor/Jingo" th-cam.com/video/sTcXtvKgvE0/w-d-xo.htmlsi=lN6KP7rO5pep93Ef
Bill Graham was a German impresario and legendary rock concert promoter, who in the mid '60s to early '70s owned both The Fillmore and Winterland Arena in San Francisco. These venues became proving grounds for San Francisco Bay area rock bands and acts such as the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, and Big Brother and the Holding Company with Janis Joplin. Graham also opened The Fillmore East, a companion to the Fillmore Auditorium and its successor, the Fillmore West, in the Lower East Side section of Manhattan, New York. During the summer of 1970, Bill Graham presented an extraordinary series of concerts at Tanglewood, the renowned classical music venue located in the scenic Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts. At the time, presenting rock music in a classical venue was a surprising and precarious step to take. To many, hearing "The Fillmore" and "Tanglewood" in the same sentence equated to "when worlds collide." Much like his approach at the Fillmores, Graham's "Fillmore at Tanglewood" series presented diverse handpicked triple bills, but with the added advantage of a beautiful open-air venue, plenty of informal lawn seating, and the Fillmore East crew providing technical support. The 1970 Tanglewood concert series delivered outstanding rock performances, beginning with Jethro Tull and The Who (July 7, 1970), and closing with Miles Davis and Santana (August 18, 1970). Bill Graham presented another equally memorable night at Tanglewood right between those two concerts. On the evening of July 21, 1970, Chicago would become the last minute headliner on an impressive triple bill that, in typically diverse Graham style, featured openers, the New Orleans-based Preservation Hall Jazz Band and former Lovin' Spoonful leader, John Sebastian. Joe Cocker and his extravagant Mad Dogs And Englishman revue, literally the biggest rock act touring in 1970, were originally going to be the headline act on July 21, but Cocker was forced to back out just weeks before the gig due to the demanding logistics of his tour and his deteriorating health. In addition, despite Bill Graham's best negotiating efforts, Jimi Hendrix, then in the midst of studio sessions (sadly, his last ever) and immersed in managerial problems, was also unable to work the performance into his schedule. Some claim Hendrix may have suggested Graham contact the band Chicago, who were also living in New York City at the time, recording their third album.
I'm 76 years old miss those days so much, concerts were just plain pure music fun! Saw him 3 times, always an excellent show. Miss concerts like this and SRV, Airplane, Zeppelin, all the greats, things were so beautiful. Good job drummer from a faithful follower.
👏🙌👌💯I was so loving your loving Michael's drum solo! Even the band thought this was the better performance over Woodstock‼️. I saw Santana a few months after their Woodstock coming out party. It was in San Francisco at the Avalon Ballroom which was a popular if small venue. No seating, everyone standing and dancing. I could Santana himself but the drummer was hidden from my view. Besides being blown away by Carlos, the percussion section, the drummer was so much more incredible than I had ever experienced and I never knew who he was until TH-cam and walking back down the great music highway of my youth. Happy Birthday today to Michael, one of the world's greatest drummers🥁‼️
It must be humbling for a young musician just getting started in the business to watch this video and realize how high the standard is if you want to be the best.
Side note from a Carlos fan since we grew up in SF: his finest works are the instrumentals he created after his spiritual awakening. First 3 albums were the hard Latin rock ish stuff which were great. However please check out Caravanseri; Barboletta, Welcome, Moonflower, Blues for Salvador and others. They are intricate, transcendental, mystical and yet rhythmic and still latin-ish in influence. That whole period was his best in my opinion. Bass here: David Brown -went to my high school!
Growing up in the Bay Area in 60-70s was so cool cuz we grew up with many rock legends. Mine was Ross Valory, bass player of Journey. We went to same HS, he graduated years before me but his younger brother and I were buds.
Dan Rather interviewed Carlos, and went throughout the career, Woodstock, weed, etc ..at the very end Dan asked Carlos..." How would you describe your Music? ..Carlos leaned back and didn't answer quickly, then leaned forward, with a smile, answered...." My music is Delicious! " 😂😂😂😂
Something about the Hammond Organ with spinning Leslie horns sitting on top and the wild pulsating sound it makes is amazing. It's an organ sound like no other that you can hear in so many of these great late 60's, 70's rock songs. Lee Michaels, Leon Russell, Cactus, Vanilla Fudge, Deep Purple to name a few.
I need more Santana in my life. So many songs to like. I remember "Mother's Daughter" is really good and "Samba Pa Ti". I need to dig through my boxes of albums or better yet just look at Spotify 😂 and find some more recommendations for you. They're so good that it's hard to go wrong!👍
Amazing! This concert was played in 1970, that is 54 years ago next month. These young artists are now 'old' dudes. I can identify, I turned 25 in '70, and will be 79 in September of this year. Time is the great 'leveler' and 'equalizer' - everyone gets a turn at being 'old', the only requirement necessary is to live long enough. We can be grateful that these awesome musical events were taped or filmed, and that we can access them on TH-cam anytime. There was no internet back then, or cell phones with cams; the only way to experience a concert like this was to attend in person or see it in a movie (quite rare). I watched a video about Michael Shreve on TH-cam, the drumming prodigy who performed at both Woodstock (69) and Tanglewood (70). He turned 75 a few days ago, and you would not recognize him as he appears today.
He actually turned 75 the day I posted this video! I had no idea either. Just cosmic coincidence. :) thank you for watching! I wish I could have lived in that time. Truly.
been listening to Santana since early 70s ! the album i had was the best ! can t remember all the songs titles but there was Oye como va and Samba pati on it ! the whole album was dope ! lol ! 😎
Just remembered Santana 3 and some favorites from that album like "Jungle Strut" and "Everybody's Everything", Everything is Coming Our Way" and "No One To Depend On". Damn, so many great albums and sooo many awesome songs.That's just one album that I haven't thought of in years! Lee, you won't run out of great music to react to in this lifetime! 🎉
Santana played the very first concert I ever attended in the 60's! Great motivation for me to continue going to as many concerts as I possibly could all of my life until around 6 years ago. I loved revisiting this performance, TYSM!! Great reaction and yes, no doubt, we were spoiled! 😂
Ive said this on several of these older videos. There was something about the band all standing together in the center of the stage. It totally focused the energy out to the crowd. For some reason modern bands stand 50ft from each other on a huge stage. Totally kills the energy.
This was fire!! Amazing musicians! The Woodstock version is also great, when they were all high on acid. Definitely watch the long version for Michael's entire solo.
Mike was a legit super drummer but he didn't have a 'rock star" persona. He later said this was one of their best and his favorite gig. Chepito was a world-class timbalero. You should do Savor/Jingo from this concert. He owns it. Tanglewood is in Lenox MA. The Berkshires. A drop-dead beautiful spot. I live nearby. The Boston Symphony Orchestra played outdoor concerts there in the 1930's under a tent. One time there was a terrific storm and the tent collapsed and everybody got soaked. The patrons resolved to build an enclosure, took up a collection, and raised 100K which they offered to a famous architect. He was insulted by the low ball figure and said "For 100K you'll get a shed". It stands today, a roof on support beams and no sides. Open air. If you go there the air is permeated with the scent of citronella candles to keep the skeeters at bay. It was named after the famous BSO conductor Serge Kousssevitski but now shortened to The Shed. The name Tanglewood was taken from Nathaniel Hawthornes "Tanglewood Tales". He lived there in a small red cottage, also still there. At some point it was decided that so fine a venue should not be wasted on classical music and post-Woodstock Jefferson Airplane, the Who, Chicago, iron Butterfly and others did concerts there. I imagine that at this gig everybody within a ten mile radius experienced a contact high
Saw Santana in Nov 72 (just looked it up!) in Berlin. Was one of the best gigs I ever saw. Really turned me on to latino music, if I can put it that way.
Woodstock was their very first performance. This concert in Tanglewood was the second time playing live if I am correct in that assumption. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong. People were just getting to know Santana and as you can tell from the crowd they loved them
godd*mn. Michael Shrieve said that he thought he played the solo better at Tanglewood compared to the Woodstock clip that we usually see but I had never seen it before. Thanks for this.
Santana ALWAYS delivers, I am lucky enough (& old enough) to have seen them Live many times. Carlos always great on guitar & the amazing Michael Shrieve on drums.
FYI the longer Woodstock video (9:56) does not include the complete drum solo - the album version from Woodstock [Soul Sacrifice (Live at The Woodstock Music & Art Fair, August 16, 1969)] is complete at 11:49
Santana at Tanglewood....just about one year after their career making performance at Woodstock. They were enjoying the success of their debut album with three hit songs, had a new Top 10 hit with a cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Black Magic Woman” and were about to release their second album, the amazing "Abraxas." This is the classic lineup of Santana, before a young Neal Joseph Schon joined the band. 🤓
@@janetcarlson9960 Absolutely. By any objective musical performance measure, this was better. That takes absolutely nothing away from Woodstock which will always be seared in everyone’s memory as an iconic and emotional masterpiece. But the band was unquestionably tighter and more professional at Tanglewood. To state that the only one worth seeing is Woodstock is to limit the band’s greatness, and one’s own exposure.
Great to see this one! Woodstock is Woodstock though. Find that full version with drum solo and you be the judge. Only one had Carlos tripping balls and still delivering amazing guitar.
Another similar band that emerged around the same time as Santana 1970 but with African roots was Osibisa. Check out their first album simple title the name of the band 1970. Heaps of wild drumming and evil bass. Music for Gong Gong is a good lead in.
Today is Michael Shrieve’s 75th birthday. Perfect timing. ✌️♥️🎶
No shit? That is wild. It must have been meant to be! Happy birthday Michael!
@@L33Reacts yeah, I run a fb music page so I saw that you posted that right after I had posted about his bd…serendipity.
Happy Birthday Michael!!! ❤️🎂🎈
@@dianedavies8291 glad it worked out that way. This was like a birthday party! 🥳
@@L33Reacts cool story to add, I bought drumsticks and practice pad for my best friend last month, she wants to learn drums. Today at a thrift store I found a drum set that was 75% off. Got it all for $50. She’s over the moon but we haven’t told her old man yet.😂😂😂😂
There is no music today that can come within 100,000 miles of this.
I love that Carlos is not out in front of the band. He stays close to the amp in the back That one dude must have won the' play maracas with Santana " contest. He is so enjoying his moment HAHA They are ALL just having fun.
Not trying to knock today's artists because there are some very talented people out there; but... watching this explains why we aren't generally raving over rap, hiphop, and all of the new, digitally-enhanced music coming out today. None of that stuff even comes CLOSE to the artists of the 60's & 70's. Yes, we were spoiled!! But as you young people experience these gems as "new" for the first time, you get to feel exactly the way we did when they were new to all of us. The best part, is that 50 or 60 ywars later, we still get hyped up on this music; its that good! We feel you, Lee!
Spoiled *rotten!* 😅
This was so good that I really have no words to describe it. Woodstock was iconic, this was otherworldly. 🔥
Totally agree! I love when young people discovering the great music from the past are not only blown away but jealous! Good reason for that🎶
I would go back to the seventies for sure........
Incredible performance. Pure essential visceral music.
I saw them in '72 I think,
The Charlotte Coliseum
They came out, said hello for a minute or so, had a minute of silent prayer and never spoke during the concert!
The music said it all.
My daughter saw Santana last week near Chicago and he is still going strong. They were all young there. It’s been over 50 years ago!! South American jazz and rock combined to make Santana a treasure in this whole world 🎶🎶 🌍💕🎸🎶🎶
Great selection! I was there--Miles Davis opened. Chicago did play there in 1970. They become the defacto headliner when Hendrix cancelled due to illness
I love your passion & appreciation for this amazing version
It’s so good! I had to appreciate it! There is no other way! 🫡👍👍
Never forget, Gregg Rollie, and Neil Schon, left Satanna, later in decade, to form their own band. That band was a little, tiny band , called Journey.
Hope they did well. 😂
The Family Tree of music, is amazing.
Love the first Journey albums
@@lawrencesmith6536 ✌️..." Feeling that Way/Anytime , played together, as it should be., an absolutely great rock n roll , composition..and yes, we know the other Journey hits.
Thanks for the comment... reply . 🙏✌️
Gregg left Santana over differences in where the band was going and didn't co-found Journey for about a year or two. Neal Schon left and joined Azteka. It was a great band with lots of members but too many couldn't leave their day jobs. He got with Gregg after Azteka to form Journey. He was only 19 when Journey started.
The guy in the blue shirt and white pants with the maracas is worth the price of admission himself.
Freaking outstanding pick Lee!
Santana at Tanglewood is one of the best concerts to watch on TH-cam.
Absolutely not
@@DENVEROUTDOORMAN what?
Damn, I'm glad to come across this after always treasuring the Woodstock version. Several of' em were on acid there and it's to their credit that they held it together, met the occasion as they did.
Michael made a huge impact then, just another percussion icon to file.
Saw Carlos just once, touring the album he did with Mahavishnu John McLaughlin. Godlike performance by McLaughlin, drummer Billy Cobham, everyone. Great show.
😊🤙🏼🎶🍁❤️✨️🕊
Tanglewood is so beautiful. A great place to see a concert under the stars. Also SPAC (Saratoga Performing Arts Center) where we saw a lot of acts back in the ‘70’s.
Just saw James Taylor two nights ago, there. Beautiful grounds and vibe is peaceful.
but no more
I’m amazed that Tanglewood is an open air venue !! I have watched both the Santana and Chicago performances on TH-cam, but I never realized I was watching outdoor concerts. Thanks for the info !
I have saw one time live on stage the Santana.Great performance
Happy Birthday to Michael Shrieve. Never has so much been achieved with so little kit. The bass lays such a steady Grove. The whole Tanglewood concert was epic, but I love this one for its percussion to match Soul Sacrifice, "Savor/Jingo" th-cam.com/video/sTcXtvKgvE0/w-d-xo.htmlsi=lN6KP7rO5pep93Ef
That little kit is DANGEROUS. He was on fire!
Gotta love Rico Reyes having the time of his life with the maracas!
Great! Fun to see that version - first time for me.
Glad you enjoyed it too my friend!
Bill Graham was a German impresario and legendary rock concert promoter, who in the mid '60s to early '70s owned both The Fillmore and Winterland Arena in San Francisco. These venues became proving grounds for San Francisco Bay area rock bands and acts such as the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, and Big Brother and the Holding Company with Janis Joplin. Graham also opened The Fillmore East, a companion to the Fillmore Auditorium and its successor, the Fillmore West, in the Lower East Side section of Manhattan, New York.
During the summer of 1970, Bill Graham presented an extraordinary series of concerts at Tanglewood, the renowned classical music venue located in the scenic Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts. At the time, presenting rock music in a classical venue was a surprising and precarious step to take. To many, hearing "The Fillmore" and "Tanglewood" in the same sentence equated to "when worlds collide." Much like his approach at the Fillmores, Graham's "Fillmore at Tanglewood" series presented diverse handpicked triple bills, but with the added advantage of a beautiful open-air venue, plenty of informal lawn seating, and the Fillmore East crew providing technical support.
The 1970 Tanglewood concert series delivered outstanding rock performances, beginning with Jethro Tull and The Who (July 7, 1970), and closing with Miles Davis and Santana (August 18, 1970). Bill Graham presented another equally memorable night at Tanglewood right between those two concerts. On the evening of July 21, 1970, Chicago would become the last minute headliner on an impressive triple bill that, in typically diverse Graham style, featured openers, the New Orleans-based Preservation Hall Jazz Band and former Lovin' Spoonful leader, John Sebastian.
Joe Cocker and his extravagant Mad Dogs And Englishman revue, literally the biggest rock act touring in 1970, were originally going to be the headline act on July 21, but Cocker was forced to back out just weeks before the gig due to the demanding logistics of his tour and his deteriorating health. In addition, despite Bill Graham's best negotiating efforts, Jimi Hendrix, then in the midst of studio sessions (sadly, his last ever) and immersed in managerial problems, was also unable to work the performance into his schedule. Some claim Hendrix may have suggested Graham contact the band Chicago, who were also living in New York City at the time, recording their third album.
It's great to see your enthusiasm friend, Santana is a great show
Spectacular!! I love this channel!
I’m glad to hear it my friend… thank you for being here!
I'm 76 years old miss those days so much, concerts were just plain pure music fun! Saw him 3 times, always an excellent show. Miss concerts like this and SRV, Airplane, Zeppelin, all the greats,
things were so beautiful. Good job drummer from a faithful follower.
Carlos Santana. Living legend still performing! Always surrounded by great musicians and always puts on a great show.
It doesn't get much better than these guys, and this song!
I love watching them , they always look like they’re having so much fun . This is a toe tapper for sure ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
👏🙌👌💯I was so loving your loving Michael's drum solo! Even the band thought this was the better performance over Woodstock‼️. I saw Santana a few months after their Woodstock coming out party. It was in San Francisco at the Avalon Ballroom which was a popular if small venue. No seating, everyone standing and dancing. I could Santana himself but the drummer was hidden from my view. Besides being blown away by Carlos, the percussion section, the drummer was so much more incredible than I had ever experienced and I never knew who he was until TH-cam and walking back down the great music highway of my youth. Happy Birthday today to Michael, one of the world's greatest drummers🥁‼️
Michael fucking rocks! Watch the Woodstock video with the full drum solo, it's out there. Digging them since then MICHAEL!! ***
It must be humbling for a young musician just getting started in the business to watch this video and realize how high the standard is if you want to be the best.
Masterpiece ❤🎉
Side note from a Carlos fan since we grew up in SF: his finest works are the instrumentals he created after his spiritual awakening. First 3 albums were the hard Latin rock ish stuff which were great. However please check out Caravanseri; Barboletta, Welcome, Moonflower, Blues for Salvador and others. They are intricate, transcendental, mystical and yet rhythmic and still latin-ish in influence. That whole period was his best in my opinion. Bass here: David Brown -went to my high school!
Growing up in the Bay Area in 60-70s was so cool cuz we grew up with many rock legends. Mine was Ross Valory, bass player of Journey. We went to same HS, he graduated years before me but his younger brother and I were buds.
first 3 albums were the best
Dan Rather interviewed Carlos, and went throughout the career, Woodstock, weed, etc ..at the very end Dan asked Carlos..." How would you describe your Music? ..Carlos leaned back and didn't answer quickly, then leaned forward, with a smile, answered...." My music is Delicious! " 😂😂😂😂
Something about the Hammond Organ with spinning Leslie horns sitting on top and the wild pulsating sound it makes is amazing. It's an organ sound like no other that you can hear in so many of these great late 60's, 70's rock songs. Lee Michaels, Leon Russell, Cactus, Vanilla Fudge, Deep Purple to name a few.
And the dude dancing around with the maracas is Carlo's brother.
Michael was only 19/20 at this concert. Amazing talented kid.
The Woodstock performance of this is great too.
I need more Santana in my life. So many songs to like. I remember "Mother's Daughter" is really good and "Samba Pa Ti". I need to dig through my boxes of albums or better yet just look at Spotify 😂 and find some more recommendations for you. They're so good that it's hard to go wrong!👍
So good, thank you.
Amazing! This concert was played in 1970, that is 54 years ago next month. These young artists are now 'old' dudes. I can identify, I turned 25 in '70, and will be 79 in September of this year. Time is the great 'leveler' and 'equalizer' - everyone gets a turn at being 'old', the only requirement necessary is to live long enough. We can be grateful that these awesome musical events were taped or filmed, and that we can access them on TH-cam anytime. There was no internet back then, or cell phones with cams; the only way to experience a concert like this was to attend in person or see it in a movie (quite rare). I watched a video about Michael Shreve on TH-cam, the drumming prodigy who performed at both Woodstock (69) and Tanglewood (70). He turned 75 a few days ago, and you would not recognize him as he appears today.
He actually turned 75 the day I posted this video! I had no idea either. Just cosmic coincidence. :) thank you for watching! I wish I could have lived in that time. Truly.
@@L33Reacts
i recommend +🔥from the same performance
★ *Santana - Evil Ways - 8/18/1970 - Tanglewood (Official)*
★ *SANTANA - Black Magic Woman / Oye Como Va*
(10min 06sec)(Channel : *therockandrolltv* )
(its a two continue songs)
Had to watch this again!
been listening to Santana since early 70s ! the album i had was the best ! can t remember all the songs titles but there was Oye como va and Samba pati on it ! the whole album was dope ! lol ! 😎
Great version!
Just remembered Santana 3 and some favorites from that album like "Jungle Strut" and "Everybody's Everything", Everything is Coming Our Way" and "No One To Depend On". Damn, so many great albums and sooo many awesome songs.That's just one album that I haven't thought of in years! Lee, you won't run out of great music to react to in this lifetime! 🎉
Great sound!
Santana played the very first concert I ever attended in the 60's! Great motivation for me to continue going to as many concerts as I possibly could all of my life until around 6 years ago. I loved revisiting this performance, TYSM!! Great reaction and yes, no doubt, we were spoiled! 😂
with so MUCH goin on , and for so long, bass man never missed a beat...and looked like he was jus chillin and havin fun! Hard to get better than that
Wish I could go back in time and be there because I would have been grooving hard, hard, hard to this!!!!!
Ive said this on several of these older videos. There was something about the band all standing together in the center of the stage. It totally focused the energy out to the crowd. For some reason modern bands stand 50ft from each other on a huge stage. Totally kills the energy.
This was fire!! Amazing musicians! The Woodstock version is also great, when they were all high on acid. Definitely watch the long version for Michael's entire solo.
Mike was a legit super drummer but he didn't have a 'rock star" persona. He later said this was one of their best and his favorite gig. Chepito was a world-class timbalero. You should do Savor/Jingo from this concert. He owns it. Tanglewood is in Lenox MA. The Berkshires. A drop-dead beautiful spot. I live nearby. The Boston Symphony Orchestra played outdoor concerts there in the 1930's under a tent. One time there was a terrific storm and the tent collapsed and everybody got soaked. The patrons resolved to build an enclosure, took up a collection, and raised 100K which they offered to a famous architect. He was insulted by the low ball figure and said "For 100K you'll get a shed". It stands today, a roof on support beams and no sides. Open air. If you go there the air is permeated with the scent of citronella candles to keep the skeeters at bay. It was named after the famous BSO conductor Serge Kousssevitski but now shortened to The Shed. The name Tanglewood was taken from Nathaniel Hawthornes "Tanglewood Tales". He lived there in a small red cottage, also still there. At some point it was decided that so fine a venue should not be wasted on classical music and post-Woodstock Jefferson Airplane, the Who, Chicago, iron Butterfly and others did concerts there. I imagine that at this gig everybody within a ten mile radius experienced a contact high
Saw Santana in Nov 72 (just looked it up!) in Berlin. Was one of the best gigs I ever saw. Really turned me on to latino music, if I can put it that way.
Unfu$$ing believable!!!! This was beyond words!!!!🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
DAYUM!
Was at Tanglewood two nights ago to see James Taylor. Nowhere near this energy, but, Tanglewood has a vibe of its own that feels like magic.
Woodstock was their very first performance. This concert in Tanglewood was the second time playing live if I am correct in that assumption. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong. People were just getting to know Santana and as you can tell from the crowd they loved them
Yes, Same year Chicago played there. The conga player at the beginning is Sheila E's Father.
Haven’t seen this one! Thanks for this. Soooo Magnificent !!!!!
That Hammond organ is amazing!
godd*mn. Michael Shrieve said that he thought he played the solo better at Tanglewood compared to the Woodstock clip that we usually see but I had never seen it before. Thanks for this.
What a great performance ,Santana has always been good,
Santana ALWAYS delivers, I am lucky enough (& old enough) to have seen them Live many times. Carlos always great on guitar & the amazing Michael Shrieve on drums.
Cheers , to Bill! , tink!
there is an interview on youtube with this drummer "Carlos Santana drummer, Michael Shrieve" recorded fairly recently. You might be interested.
Shrieve was a beast.... I loved Santana with Greg Rolie on keys.
I saw Santana somewhere in Oklahoma around this time period. I can't remember the specifics too well; must have been some good weed.
Was on a music teacher's outing...
Many bands played there....
Especially the multi member bands
How any of the audience could stay seated through that I do not understand
FYI the longer Woodstock video (9:56) does not include the complete drum solo - the album version from Woodstock [Soul Sacrifice (Live at The Woodstock Music & Art Fair, August 16, 1969)] is complete at 11:49
The perfect jam session with legends on stage.
Santana at Tanglewood....just about one year after their career making performance at Woodstock. They were enjoying the success of their debut album with three hit songs, had a new Top 10 hit with a cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Black Magic Woman” and were about to release their second album, the amazing "Abraxas." This is the classic lineup of Santana, before a young Neal Joseph Schon joined the band. 🤓
“What a time to be alive” wish I could go back all over again ❤ Greg Rollie left Santana and formed this little group called “Journey”
Days of happiness ❤️
Never get tired of Santana everlasting music
Iconic for the ages!!
Talk about a groove,lol.
Tanglewood is a great place to see music performed there.
Lee read about Michael at the Fillmore. He sat in and was discovered by Santana.
Just pure JOY!
Saw them in 73 and 74.
You’re a lucky man !
The Woodstock "Soul Sacrifice" is the one and only to watch. That's the classic.
Woodstock is the iconic masterpiece. Tanglewood is the performance masterpiece.
Mike liked this performance better
@@janetcarlson9960 Absolutely. By any objective musical performance measure, this was better. That takes absolutely nothing away from Woodstock which will always be seared in everyone’s memory as an iconic and emotional masterpiece. But the band was unquestionably tighter and more professional at Tanglewood. To state that the only one worth seeing is Woodstock is to limit the band’s greatness, and one’s own exposure.
Great to see this one! Woodstock is Woodstock though. Find that full version with drum solo and you be the judge. Only one had Carlos tripping balls and still delivering amazing guitar.
LOVE IT.......
Mercy!
Imagine having to live up to the standard of the iconic Woodstock performance but Santana certainly did at Tanglewood...
Oh my did they…. What a show. They one upped the Woodstock one!
Michael is one of the most underrated drummers.
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BTW Mike liked this performance better than Woodstock, but of course he was ripped on acid at Woodstock.
Michael Shrieve later went on to play with Steve Winwood in Stomu Yamashta's "Go". Some good stuff there, and also a live album.
Michael's drum solo here ranks right up there with Iron Butterfly's Ron Bushy on In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida. Both iconic!!!
If that doesn’t make you move nothing will !!!!
I'm sorry you missed the 60s and 70s❤
Please react to this Woodstock.. Live.. First time everyone got to experience Santana and this song..please..
Drummer reacts to "Soul Sacrifice" (Live at Woodstock) by Santana
th-cam.com/video/TdKtg7qfiEA/w-d-xo.html
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Another similar band that emerged around the same time as Santana 1970 but with African roots was Osibisa. Check out their first album simple title the name of the band 1970. Heaps of wild drumming and evil bass. Music for Gong Gong is a good lead in.
Gregg Rolie on the hammond b3 left Santana in 1973 to form Journey.
Why does it seem like the best live performances happened at Tanglewood? This and Chicago for example.
Carlos with MORE COWBELL! ✌🏻💀
Side note: "Jose" went by Chepito. He is Nicaraguan-American. Mike Carabello is Puerto Rican. Quite the eclectic mix.