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Thread started 11/20/13 6:01pm

SoulAlive

Carlos Santana releases new single "La Flaca" from his upcoming album 'Corazon'

The song features Juanes on lead vocals

Santana’s ‘La Flaca’ featuring Juanes from upcoming album ‘Corazon

Santana’s first single release was unveiled Wednesday at the Latin Grammy Awards press conference. The event was held in Las Vegas at the House of Blues -- Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino. “La Flaca,” featuring Latin superstarJuanes, is the debut single from Santana’s forthcoming album “Corazon.” The single is available for download on November 25th at all digital providers.

This studio album differs from Santana’s previous works. He's collaborating with some of the biggest names in Latin music. These artists include Chocquibtown (Colombia), Lila Downs (Mexico), Gloria Estefan (Cuba), Los Fabulosos Cadillacs (Argentina), Juanes (Colombia), Miguel (USA), Niña Pastori (Spain), Samuel Rosa of Skank (Brazil), Soledad (Argentina), Diego Torres (Argentina), Ziggy Marley (Jamaica) and Romeo Santos (Dominican Republic). “Corazon” is set to be released in early 2014 on the RCA/Sony Latin Iberia label.

In addition to the “La Flaca” and “Corazon” news, it was also announced an upcoming HBO concertevent, in conjunction with HBO Latino and HBO Latin America, will broadcast Santana’s historic concert in Mexico. The special will feature all guest artists on his upcoming album. “Corazon, Live From Mexico: Live It To Believe It” will be filmed from his concert slated for December 14th in Guadalajara, Santana’s home state of Jalisco. Its premiere on HBO is set for Spring 2014.

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Reply #1 posted 11/20/13 7:36pm

V10LETBLUES

Looking forward to this. A friend recenltly hooked me up on Rock en Espanol and I'm hooked. In many ways better than today's American pop.

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Reply #2 posted 11/20/13 11:04pm

SoulAlive

(New York – November 20, 2013) The first single from Santana’s forthcoming superstar-packed album CORAZÓN entitled “La Flaca” featuring multi-platinum recording artist Juanes, was unveiled today at a Latin GRAMMY Awards ® press conference in Las Vegas at the House of Blues at the Mandalay Bay Hotel & Casino. Click here to listen to the track now! “La Flaca” featuring Juanes will be available for sale at all digital providers on November 25th. It was also announced at the press conference that HBO Latino and HBO Latin America have signed on to broadcast ten-time GRAMMY ® Award-winning, three-time Latin GRAMMY ® Award-winning, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Santana’s once-in-a-lifetime“CORAZÓN, LIVE FROM MEXICO: LIVE IT TO BELIEVE IT” concert event in Guadalajara, Mexico (in Santana’s native state of Jalisco).This is the first time ever that HBO Latino and HBO Latin America have joined forces to premiere a concert event in the US and Latin American regions. The concert will debut on the HBO networks in spring 2014.

“CORAZÓN, LIVE FROM MEXICO: LIVE IT TO BELIEVE IT,”is scheduled for December 14 at the Arena VFG in conjunction with the Mexico Tourism Board. Guadalajara, Mexico was selected by Carlos Santana and Sony Music as the location for the concert and DVD to celebrate Santana’s Mexican roots and for Carlos to honor Mexico's people, its culture and its history.

Famed director Nick Wickham will be at the helm shooting the concert film, scheduled to air in spring 2014 on both HBO Latino and HBO Latin America, and later will be released on DVD via RCA/Sony Latin Iberia. Also, there will also be a documentary film shot in Puerto Vallarta, Riviera Nayarit, and Guadalajara, entitled “Live It To Believe It,” documenting “the making of” this soon-to-be historic concert event.

“We are incredibly excited to team up with Sony Music to bring the legendary, signature sound of Carlos Santana to our audiences in the U.S. and Latin America,” said Lucinda Martinez, Senior Vice President, Multicultural Marketing, HBO. “The music of this global superstar deserves a global audience, which we are proud to deliver with our first-ever simultaneous concert event on HBO Latino in the U.S. and HBO Latin America in South America, Central America, Mexico and the Caribbean Basin.”

Comments Rodolfo López Negrete, CEO of the Mexico Tourism Board:”We are extremely proud of being associated with one of the world's music icons and his connection to Mexico. Carlos believes in the wide array of attractions that Mexico possesses, a Mexico so rich and diverse that you have to live it to believe it.”

“CORAZÓN, LIVE FROM MEXICO: LIVE IT TO BELIEVE IT,” the concert event features a star-studded cast of musicians, all celebrating their Latin music heritage, joining Santana performing his massive hits from the last five decades. Confirmed celebrity performances at the concert include Chocquibtown, Lila Downs, Gloria Estefan, Los Fabulosos Cadillacs, Juanes, Miguel, Fher Olvera of Maná, Niña Pastori, Samuel Rosa of Skank, Salvador Santana, Soledad, Diego Torres, among others. More celebrity performances will be announced soon. For tickets and more information regarding the concert, visitwww.ticketmaster.com.mx.

“CORAZÓN, LIVE FROM MEXICO: LIVE IT TO BELIEVE IT,” the concert is a homecoming for Carlos and a festive kickoff event to mark his forthcoming album project close to his heart entitled CORAZÓN. In addition to most of the superstars performing at the December 14th show, Ziggy Marley and Romeo Santos will also be joining Santana on this star-studded album project CORAZÓN -- release date and more to be announced soon.

CORAZÓN, the concert and album project brings Carlos back to his birthplace, in the city of Autlan, just south of Guadalajara and celebrates Carlos’ love of his musical heritage, as well as showcasing Carlos’ own personal influence on Latin music and on today’s generation of Latin superstars. Many genres of Latin music are represented in these collaborations including pop, rock, salsa, hip-hop, folk, reggae, traditional and bachata. More album details to be announced soon.

SANTANA is currently in the studio in Las Vegas recording many of these superstar collaborations for CORAZÓN with producer Lester Mendez at the helm. CORAZÓN is a joint album release between Sony Latin Iberia and RCA Records. The album is executive-produced by Carlos Santana, Clive Davis, Santana’s longtime collaborator and Chief Creative Officer, Sony Music Entertainment, and Afo Verde, Chairman and CEO for Sony's Latin Region, Spain and Portugal.

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Reply #3 posted 11/21/13 5:33am

Empress

Sounds great! I'm always ready for some new Santana. Too bad the album wasn't being released before Christmas.

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Reply #4 posted 11/23/13 4:58am

SoulAlive

New single,new album,and an HBO concert that will later be available on DVD.2014 will be a great year for Santana fans thumbs up!

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Reply #5 posted 11/23/13 6:48am

Identity

Can you tell us when the DVD might be released? I'm so estactic about this, man.

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Reply #6 posted 11/23/13 6:58am

JoeTyler

V10LETBLUES said:

Looking forward to this. A friend recenltly hooked me up on Rock en Espanol and I'm hooked. In many ways better than today's American pop.

true, Spain and UK aren't as obsessed about synths & rhymes as 21st Century USA...

tinkerbell
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Reply #7 posted 11/23/13 7:52am

2020

avatar

Corazon as in Te Amo wink
The greatest live performer of our times was is and always will be Prince.

Remember there is only one destination and that place is U
All of it. Everything. Is U.
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Reply #8 posted 11/23/13 2:12pm

babynoz

It starts out sounding a lot like Smooth but the riffs are better. His last cd was kinda blah so I am looking forward to this one.

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #9 posted 11/24/13 9:24pm

funkyrake

avatar

Identity said:

Can you tell us when the DVD might be released? I'm so estactic about this, man.

I am too. He is the best!

The Leaf Shall Inherit The Earth.
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Reply #10 posted 11/24/13 11:14pm

Javi

There's great music being made in Spain at the moment, but Juanes certainly isn't among them. I'm sad to see Santana with him.

[Edited 11/24/13 23:15pm]

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Reply #11 posted 11/25/13 12:19am

SoulAlive

Identity said:

Can you tell us when the DVD might be released? I'm so estactic about this, man.

I'll keep you posted wink

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Reply #12 posted 12/07/13 12:52am

SoulAlive

Carlos Santana finds Kennedy Center Honors after a lifelong search for the ‘universal tone’

By David Montgomery, Published: December 6 (The Washington Post)

LAS VEGAS — Carlos Santana frowns. The look is so uncharacteristic, because this whole afternoon his expression runs consistently from beatific to boyish and back. He riffs amiably about receiving inspiration from angels and discloses secrets about his quest for the “universal tone,” about how he learned to distill longing and joy in a single note — that pristine, piercing Santana sound that’s instantly recognizable from San Francisco to Singapore.

But now he’s standing on a hotel balcony 43 stories up, where a photographer has just asked him to climb onto a table, the better to pose against the neon skyline.

The guitar player balks: “Why do I have to be put on a pedestal?”

Awkward pause.

Santana winks. He’ll do it, on the promise that the effect will not be pedestal-like.

At 66, he has an uneasy relationship with the pedestal — the one that he at once covets, disdains and sometimes doubts he deserves. The one that people want to place him upon — except when they don’t, during those dispiriting droughts when the music-buying public all but forgets him.

He certified himself a contender for the guitar-hero crown almost from the start, in a band that took his last name, at Woodstock in 1969. His frenzied solo on “Soul Sacrifice” went old-school viral, thanks to the film of the hippie music festival.

There followed a series of pioneering albums that almost single-handedly invented pop world-beat music. The congas, timbales and Afro-Latin guitar and organ rhythms on smash covers such as “Black Magic Woman/Gypsy Queen” and “Oye Como Va” redefined the parameters of rock-and-roll. The guitar player knew what notes not to play, savoring the magic of a simple melodic line. But he grew restless, and he embarked on a decades-long quixotic musical and spiritual journey. He explored jazz and new-age horizons and, for several years, followed the guru Sri Chinmoy. Santana commanded the admiration of elite musicians but not radio programmers.

“I don’t consider myself a guitar player as much as I am a seeker who wants to manifest his vision through that particular instrument,” he said in 1978.

Then, seemingly out of nowhere, his 1999 album, “Supernatural,” won nine Grammys, posted astronomical sales and lodged Santana in the download queue of a new generation. On nearly every track, his guitar accompanied — shared the pedestal with — a trendier singer, such as Dave Matthews, Rob Thomas of Matchbox Twenty, Everlast and Lauryn Hill. He has used that formula on several more albums and has alighted on a concert residency at the House of Blues in the Mandalay Bay casino resort.

“I’m not a seeker anymore,” he says. “I’m a finder now. It’s more fun to just will it to happen, than to hope for somebody to sort of come, part the ocean or the sky, and give it to you.”

He steps down from the makeshift pedestal. Curly black locks billow beneath a black fedora, which covers a balding pate. He’s wearing a purple shirt printed with a picture of John Coltrane. Carrying his purple guitar, he enters a private room that the House of Blues has trimmed in purple. Which puts him in the mood to play “Purple Haze.”

He jams meditatively, loses the Jimi Hendrix lick for a second — “Where is that thing?” — finds it.

All the while, he’s working out how he feels about this latest pedestal, the one they’re erecting in Washington.

“I don’t mind committing career suicide once in awhile and playing music that only musicians maybe understand,” he says. “I’m not a poodle who you just throw a little bone or a biscuit to, and I dance for you, man. That’s why, perhaps, when they’re celebrating this Mexican, Carlos Santana, in the Kennedy Center, it’s a big canasta [that is being honored]. Canasta is like a basket, with not just a guitar [inside], but a person who loves uplifting consciousness.”

He deems the Kennedy Center’s history of having rarely honored Latinos to be typical of so many American institutions trapped in an Anglo-European thrall. Yet he considers it no favor to be cast in the self-limiting role of one of the two Latinos (along with opera singer Martina Arroyo) being honored this year, to help correct that record. True, he was born in Autlan de Navarro, Mexico, and honed his guitar chops in the streets and dives of Tijuana. But the identity that matters most to Santana — his artistic and spiritual self — is bigger, embracing roots from Mali to Haiti to Cuba to the Mississippi Delta.

“I’m more than just a Mexican with a blower on the presidential lawn at the White House,” he says. “I represent a whole bunch of other people.”

The aspect of this accolade that really awes him? It’s the promise of being ushered onto the same platform as jazz keyboardist Herbie Hancock, who is also being honored.

Hancock is among a select list of artists, living and dead, whom Santana reveres. Hendrix, Coltrane, Miles Davis, Wayne Shorter, Bob Marley, Babatunde Olatunji, Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Harry Belafonte, John Lee Hooker, B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Gabor Szabo. He jammed with as many as he could and tried to learn from the rest.

Even though he has recorded and toured with Hancock and Shorter, a little, insecure part of Santana has always worried that he couldn’t keep up with such aces.

“I’m still learning the difference between respect and fear,” he says. “They all say the same thing to me: You’re one of us. But as soon as I’m in the room, and they start playing, I’m like, oh, damn. Because they’re so — I’ll say it like this: They are an ocean. I’m a big lake. Someone else is a swimming pool. I’m somewhere in the middle.”

A seminal moment

José Santana was a professional violin player who taught his son Carlos the instrument. The boy learned the emotional power of even a simple melody in classical pieces, Mexican folk tunes and pop standards such as “Fascination.” But when he heard American rhythm-and-blues, he set aside the violin and picked up a guitar. Barely a teenager, he supported himself with a gig accompanying dancers in a strip club.

“You learn how to strip women,” he recalls. “Yet at the same time, exalt, like ‘Ave Maria.’ It’s the same energy.”

The family immigrated to San Francisco, and by the late 1960s, Carlos Santana had co-founded a band with a rare integrated lineup of Latinos, whites and an African American. They earned coveted invitations to play at the Fillmore and then Woodstock.

“This was no peace, love, hippie thing. The band was like a street gang, and its weapon was music,” drummer Michael Shrieve recalled when the original Santana band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998. In a recent interview with The Washington Post, he elaborated: “This band was very serious and rehearsed every single day. . . . If you messed up, you’d be called on it in no uncertain terms. It was like there was a mission behind the whole endeavor.”

One day after rehearsal, Shrieve asked Santana if he wanted to see a movie. Recalls Shrieve: “He stops in his tracks, and he looks at me and he says, ‘Man, what would I want to go see a movie for? I want to be the movie.’ ”

A seminal moment for Santana came when he first saw B.B. King play guitar, in 1967, when Santana was about 20, two years before Woodstock. The bluesman knew how to coax maximum ecstasy out of a single note. What caught Santana’s attention was not King’s fretwork but his transfigured expression.

“I needed to see B.B. King because once I saw his face, I said, ‘Oh, it’s not the amplifier, it’s not the guitar,’ ” Santana recalls. “It’s where he went. He metaphysically went into a place in his head beyond his mind to get that tone and that note.

“After that, my mom would always ask me, ‘Mi hijo, [my son], where do you go when you look up at the ceiling and you play differently?’ I told her it’s a place where everything’s memorable, there’s no more time, there’s no more distance, there’s no more fear. It’s called a state of grace.”

From that foundation, his music took flight.

“He loves Africa and African music, so he’s always bringing those fundamental colors, flavors and rhythms to mainstream pop culture,” says drummer and producer Narada Michael Walden, who has produced Whitney Houston, Aretha Franklin, Barbra Steisand and Elton John. “You can revolutionize music by doing that over and over again, and that’s what he’s done — be it through pushing on the jazz side, the rock side, the blues side, the Spanish-Mexican side, even pushing into the top 10.”

The top 10 had become elusive after the early hits, until an angel and a record company executive intervened, according to Santana. The result was “Supernatural.”

“I’m not afraid to say it was an angel called Metatron that came around,” he says.

Metatron is a figure in medieval mystical writings. Santana attended seances and learned from Metatron: “You will be placed on the radio like you’ve never been before,” he recalls. “And I’m like, I haven’t been on the radio since ’72.”

In return, Santana would be expected to use that platform “to invite people to create their own masterpieces of joy.” And he would have to disclose for the first time publicly that he had been sexually molested as a child, by a man outside his family, in order to help other victims heal. Santana kept his side of the bargain in interviews after “Supernatural” was released.

His intention, he says now, was to “invite other people who have been molested sexually when they were children to look at themselves in the mirror and say, ‘I am not what happened to me. I am still with purity and innocence.’ ” By discussing it, he says, “I became totally free from it. I was released.”

At least as important as Metatron was Clive Davis, the veteran pop taste­maker and power broker. Davis drove the concept of pairing Santana with vocalists who had more contemporary appeal. After years of instrumental jamming, Santana found the commercially viable discipline invigorating.

“When I play [instrumental] melodies, I feed myself with a shovel; I don’t need to care how long — 15 bars, 16 bars, just go,” he says. “On the radio, you have to be only 4:15 or 3:30 or whatever, and you only have so much space between you and the singer. You complement all the time — not compare or compete — and when it comes to doing your solo, do it in such a way that if Jimi Hendrix was alive, he would go, ‘Hey man, that was a nice solo.’ ”

The melody for the song with Matthews, “Love of My Life,” is appropriated from a passage by Brahms, which was the first music a grieving Santana heard when he turned on the car radio, tuned to a classical station, shortly after his father died in 1997.

In 2007, Santana and his wife of more than 30 years, Deborah, divorced. They have three adult children. In 2010, Santana married esteemed jazz drummer Cindy Blackman, who played briefly in his band. He proposed to her on stage that year, after her drum solo on “Corazón Espinado” — which means “pierced heart” and is one of the hits from “Supernatural.” In Las Vegas, he is active in local charities, not just writing checks, but also visiting the city Rescue Mission to meet residents. His Milagro Foundation reports having given $5.6 million in the United States and abroad, mainly to help vulnerable children.

Since “Supernatural,” the collaborative approach has yielded three more top 10 albums, pairing the guitarist with singers as diverse as Steven Tyler and Plácido Domingo. Now he is at work on a project with a Latino accent, partnering with Juanes, Lila Downs, Gloria Estefan, Romeo Santos and others.

Yet he’s still the sonic voyager, releasing instrumental music on the side, notably the “Shape Shifter” disc last year. Say what you will about angels, the track “Metatron” is sublime, or, as Rolling Stone said in the album review: “This largely instrumental debut release on his own label has moments of s----hot playing (see the smeared runs on ‘Metatron’).”

‘Songs that touch your soul’

Santana saunters onstage in a long black leather coat with his purple guitar, and the 1,300 fans packing the intimate House of Blues start to scream.

“I have been listening to Santana since I was 11,” says Angelina Gallegos, 45, from the Seattle area. Now she and her daughter listen. “He’s got some songs that touch your soul.”

John Senger, 70, of Kelowna, British Columbia, says that he has cancer and that when he and his wife of nearly 50 years, Claudette, got to Vegas and realized they could see Santana, he added the show to his bucket list. After a few songs, his eyes are brimming with tears.

The band has 10 players, including two vocalists, two horn players and three percussionists. Periodically, Santana moves to the side or the back of the stage, sharing the pedestal.

“Most artists who have reached this level of success in the music industry, when they perform, it’s generally all about them,” trumpet player Bill Ortiz said earlier. “One of the great things about him as a band­leader is he really values the input of his side people.”

Santana sheds the coat to reveal a black T-shirt. He has put on a few pounds since Woodstock, but his fingers seem as nimble.

Each song is a mini-drama. Even the radio-ready hits are expanded for a live workout. The sound builds, subsides, resolves in catharsis. At the emotional center of a tune — “Europa,” “Incident at Neshabur,” “Corazón Espinado” — Santana plants himself at the front of the stage, wringing his guitar. He looks up, sees something through the ceiling, closes his eyes, like a man who appears to have found it, a state of grace.

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Reply #13 posted 12/10/13 3:52am

SoulAlive

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Reply #14 posted 12/10/13 3:57am

SoulAlive

Obama riffs on Santana tripping at Woodstock

|

President Obama knocked down TWO presidential firsts Sunday at the 2013 Kennedy Center Honors reception at the White House — and one included the Bay Area’s own cultural treasure and Kennedy Center honoree, Carlos Santana.

In his opening remarks about one of rock’s seminal guitarists, Obama became the first president to make an LSD joke in the White House — in talking about Santana’s ground-breaking performance at Woodstock. Here’s what Obama — a Choom Gangveteran who was no stranger to mind-altering drugs in his youth — had to say about Santana, according to the official White House transcript:

“When a 22-year-old Carlos Santana took the stage at Woodstock, few people outside his hometown of San Francisco knew who he was. And the feeling was mutual. Carlos was in such a — shall we say — altered state of mind that he remembers almost nothing about the other performers. (Laughter and applause.) He thought the neck of his guitar was an electric snake. (Laughter.)”

“He thought the neck of his guitar was an electric snake.” True that. Carlos did.

Here’s the rest of Obama’s remarks about Santana:

But that did not stop Carlos and his band from whipping the crowd into a such frenzy with a mind-blowing mix of blues, and jazz, and R&B, and Latin music. They’d never heard anything like it. And almost overnight, Carlos Santana became a star.

It was a pretty steep climb for a young man who grew up in Mexico, playing the violin for tourists, charging fifty cents a song. But as a teenager, Carlos fell in love with the guitar. He developed a distinctive sound that has drawn admirers from Bob Dylan to Herbie Hancock. And he gave voice to a Latino community that had too often been invisible to too many Americans. “You can cuss or you can pray with the guitar,” Carlos says. He found a way to do both. (Laughter.)

And today, with 10 Grammys under his belt, Carlos is considered one of the greatest guitarists of all time. And he’s still attracting new fans. Back in 2000, his album “Supernatural” beat out Britney Spears and the Backstreet Boys to get to the No. 1 on the charts. Kids were listening to Carlos who hadn’t even heard of Woodstock.

But despite all his success, Carlos says he still feels blessed to “be able to play a piece of wood with strings and touch people’s hearts.” So for blessing all of us with his music, we honor Carlos Santana. (Applause.)

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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Carlos Santana releases new single "La Flaca" from his upcoming album 'Corazon'