Performer:
Santana
Title:
Santana III
Country:
US
Genre:
Jazz / Rock Music / Funk & Rythm
Style:Jazz-Rock
Released: May 1972
Catalog number: CQ 30595
Label: Columbia
MP3 album szie: 1875 mb
FLAC album size: 2567 mb
Tracklist
| 1 | Everybody's Everything | 3:31 |
| 2 | Guajira | 5:44 |
| 3 | Taboo | 5:38 |
| 4 | Batuka | 3:37 |
| 5 | No One To Depend Upon | 5:25 |
| 6 | Toussaint L'Overture | 5:54 |
| 7 | Jungle Strut | 5:20 |
| 8 | Everything's Coming Our Way | 2:18 |
| 9 | Para Los Rumberos | 2:46 |
Versions
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KC 30595 | Santana | Santana (LP, Album, Gat) | Columbia | KC 30595 | US | 1971 |
| DAS 2114, AL. 30595 | Santana | Santana (LP, Album, Gat) | Date, CBS | DAS 2114, AL. 30595 | South Africa | 1971 |
| PRC-5202 | Santana | Everybody's Everything - The New Album (LP, Album, Unofficial) | 先鋒 | PRC-5202 | Taiwan | Unknown |
| PC 30595 | Santana | Santana (LP, Album, RE, Gat) | Columbia | PC 30595 | US | Unknown |
| S 69015 | Santana | Santana (LP, Album, RE, Gat) | CBS | S 69015 | Spain | 1978 |
Credits
- Backing Vocals – Linda Tillery (tracks: B1, B4), Rico Reyes (tracks: A2, A4, B5)
- Backing Vocals, Percussion – Coke Escovedo
- Bass – David Brown
- Congas, Vocals, Percussion, Tambourine – Michael P. R. Carabello
- Design [Album] – Heavy Water Light Show, Joan Chase, Mary Ann Mayer
- Drums, Percussion, Vibraphone – Michael Shrieve
- Engineer – D. Brown, Glen Kolotkin
- Engineer [Quadraphonic Remix Engineer] – Larry Keyes
- Guitar – Neal Schon
- Guitar, Vocals – Carlos Santana
- Horns – Tower Of Power Horn Section (tracks: B1)
- Photography By [Back Cover] – Joan Chase
- Piano [Solo] – Mario Ochoa (tracks: B2)
- Piano, Organ, Vocals – Gregg Rolie
- Producer – Santana Musicians
- Recorded By – Mike Larner
- Supervised By [Quadraphonic Sound Supervision] – Al Lawrence
- Tambourine – Greg Errico (tracks: A2)
- Timbales, Congas, Percussion, Vocals, Drums, Flugelhorn – José "Chepito" Areas
- Trumpet – Luis Gasca (tracks: B5)
- Vocals – Rico Reyes (tracks: B2)
Notes
SQ Quadraphonic Release(P) 1972 CBS, Inc.
Barcodes
- Matrix / Runout (Side 1 Label): QAL 30595
- Matrix / Runout (Side 2 Label): QBL 30595
Companies
- Phonographic Copyright (p) – CBS Inc.
- Manufactured By – Columbia Records
- Manufactured By – CBS Inc.
- Recorded At – CBS Studios, San Francisco
Short intro
Santana is the third studio album by the American rock band Santana. The band's second self-titled album, it is often referred to as III or Santana III to distinguish it from the band's 1969 debut album. The album was also known as Man with an Outstretched Hand, after its album cover image. It was the third and until the group's 2016 reunion, the last album by the Woodstock-era lineup, and it was also considered by many to be the band's peak commercially and musically, as subsequent releases aimed. Santana III is an album that undeservingly stands in the shadows behind the towering legend that is the band's second album, Abraxas. This was also the album that brought guitarist Neal Schon - who was 17 years old - into the original core lineup of Santana. Percussionist Thomas Coke Escovedo was brought in to replace temporarily José Chepitó Areas, who had suffered a brain aneurysm, yet who recovered quickly and rejoined the band. The 2014 FIFA World Cup Official Album: One Love, One Rhythm. The Greatest 60's Music Album. Songs in album Santana - Santana III 1971. Santana - Batuka. Santana - No One To Depend On. Santana - Taboo. Santana - Toussaint L'Overture. Santana - Everybody's Everything. Santana - Guajira. Santana - Jungle Strut. Santana - Everything's Coming Our Way. Santana - Para Los Rumberos. Santana goes back deep into the roots of todays music, not only just to the time when the Family Dog was at the Avalon, but back further into the heavy dosages of Latin and African rhythms that have been part of American music for a long time. Thats a hallmark of Santana, its continual high level of excitement. When the band drops down from that high tension wire for a number or for a movement, it usually enters into one of those romantic lyric passages that Anglos have come to associate with syrupy sentimentality. But one mans sentimentality is anothers pure emotion and Santana really is an emotional band. Santana is the third studio album by Santana. The band's second self-titled album, it is often referred to as III to distinguish it from the band's 1969 debut album. The album was also known as Man with an Outstretched Hand. It was the third and last album by the Woodstock-era lineup, and it was also considered by many to be the band's peak commercially and musically, as subsequent releases aimed towards more experimental jazz and Latin music. Santana III, 1971. Batuka, 03:34. No One to Depend On, 05:32. Taboo, 05:35. Toussaint l'overture, 05:55. Everybody's Everything, 03:30. Guajira, 05:42. Album 1971 9 Songs. The move made for an album that's all about instrumental firepower: It's telling that the single No One to Depend On had exactly one line of lyric. There's a pure Latin groove on Guajira and a rare Carlos vocal on the uplifting rocker Everything's Coming Our Way. A loose translation of the closing number, Tito Puente's Para Los Rumberos, gets it right: This one is for the swingers. Discover all of this album's music connections, watch videos, listen to music, discuss and download. Santana III 1971. Album by Santana. No One to Depend On. Spanish Grease by Willie Bobo 1965. was sampled in. Mentirosa by Mellow Man Ace 1989. was covered in. Santana III is ranked 2,246th in the overall chart, 435th in the 1970s, and 51st in the year 1971. This album is rated in the top 3 of all albums onRelated to Santana - Santana III