Number 781 - Santana


Number 781

Santana

“Smooth”

(1999)
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Genre:Latin Rock

Santana is the primary exponent of Latin-tinged rock, particularly due to its combination of Latin percussion (congas, timbales, etc.) with bandleader Carlos Santana’s distinctive, high-pitched lead guitar playing. The group was the last major act to emerge from the psychedelic San Francisco music scene of the 1960s and it enjoyed massive success at the end of the decade and into the early ’70s. The musical direction then changed to a more contemplative and jazzy style as the band’s early personnel gradually departed, leaving the name in the hands of Carlos Santana, who guided the group to consistent commercial success over the next quarter-century. By the mid-’90s, Santana seemed spent as a commercial force on records, though the group continued to attract audiences for its concerts worldwide. But the band made a surprising and monumental comeback in 1999 with Supernatural, an album featuring many guest stars that became Santana’s best-selling release and won a raft of Grammy Awards.

Carlos and Davis put together Supernatural, which was stuffed with appearances by high-profile guest stars including Eagle-Eye Cherry, Wyclef Jean, Eric Clapton, Lauryn Hill, Rob Thomas of matchbox 20, Everlast, and Dave Matthews. Arista released the album in June 1999, followed by the single “Smooth” featuring Rob Thomas. Album and single hit number one and in 2000, a second single, “Maria Maria,” also topped the charts. Supernatural’s sales exploded, taking it past ten million copies and the album garnered 11 Grammy nominations. Santana won eight Grammys, for Record of the Year (”Smooth”), Album of the Year, Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal (”Maria Maria”), Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals (”Smooth”), Best Pop Instrumental Performance (”El Farol”), Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal (”Put Your Lights On”), Best Rock Instrumental Performance (”The Calling”), and Best Rock Album, and “Smooth” won the Grammy for Song of the Year for authors Rob Thomas and Itaal Shur. The follow-up, Shaman, appeared in 2002. Three years later All That I Am arrived with Steven Tyler, Michelle Branch, Big Boi, Joss Stone, Bo Bice, and many more making guest appearances. ~ William Ruhlmann

For Eric Clapton see Number 537

For Eagle Eye Cherry see Number 787

For Dave Matthews visit Mellow Mix Volume 1 #066

Rolling Stone Top 500 Songs ranked this song at Number (Would you believe no Santana songs at all?) and the Album ranked at Number (Tough Biccies)
This song has a total rating of 64.9 out of 108
Hakatere

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