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Santana Concert Tickets

Santana is a rock band based around talented guitarist Carlos Santana and founded in the late 1960s. The band first came to public attention after their performing the song "Soul Sacrifice" at the Woodstock Festival in 1969, when their Latin rock provided a contrast to other acts on the bill. This initial exposure made their first, eponymous album a hit at the time, followed in the next two years by successful follow-ups Abraxas and Santana III. Check our available Santana concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Guitar legend Carlos Santana and his band are back at it again as they pack their worldly music into their new album, Corazon, his first Latin music album in a career that began in the '60s. Santana brings his same iconic, beautiful guitar but mixes it with a plethora of big-name collaborations on his new album...
- www.beat.com.au
Every few decades Carlos Santana manages to filter through from the pages of the guitar magazines and into the consciousness of the music buying public. First it was his 1970 album Abraxas and the instantly recognisable 'Black Magic Woman'. 30 years later he hit big with his mega US hit 'Smooth' which also got big radio play in the UK. Now comes the Mexican guitar maestro's first proper Latin album, Corazon, and another chance to hit the big time.Or maybe not...
- music.thedigitalfix.com
A Latin-pop version of Santana's all-star 1999 supersession, Supernatural? A great idea that's fairly well-executed here. "Oye 2014" updates Santana's 1970 cover of Tito Puente's "Oye Como Va" for yet another generation, with bass drops and an overzealous Pitbull rap ("We making history, baby, like Nelson Mandela did!"); "Mal Bicho," with Argentine vets Los Fabulosos Cadillacs, is seamless cumbia-psych-skapunk swarming with bee-sting riffs...
- www.rollingstone.com
It goes without saying that no matter how far afield into jazz, funk, fusion, rock or pop he chases his muse, Carlos Santana always hews close to his Latin roots. (For starters, just give the classic Abraxas or 1992's Milagro a spin.) In that sense then, Corazón ("Heart") is a logical step in the continuum, even if it does stand out for featuring some of the heavyweights of Latin pop--an all-star assembly that's in the mold, or perhaps more in the shadow, of his monster-selling Supernatural ...
- www.relix.com
The veteran guitarist's 36th album is a predominantly instrumental set that tries too hard to do too much over its hour long length. It includes everything from "Europa" styled pieces ("In the Light of a New Day"), the American Indian influenced title track and by-the-numbers hard rocking in "Nomad," but is most successful when the congas finally appear on the acoustic "Mr. Szabo." The disc is as slick and polished as his upcoming two year Vegas residency implies...
- www.americansongwriter.com
Take it from us: including a "collectable wall hanger" is no substitute for a proper set of sleevenotes outlining the provenance of these early Santana recordings. We know that the material on these three discs (helpfully if not-strictly- factually demarcated into Latin Grooves, Santana Blues and Improvisational Jams) is split between live tracks claimed to be from the Fillmore in 1968 and Pacific Recording Studios sessions in 1969 - but a bit of background might have helped...
- recordcollectormag.com
As you read this, Carlos Santana is a few weeks into a two-year residency at the House Of Blues in Las Vegas: a comfy corporate gig in keeping with the multiple Grammy-winning accessibility of his latter-day recordings. However, many of us painfully miss the scalding passion of the early Santana: a band capable of taking Woodstock apart even while tripping their collective tits off...
- recordcollectormag.com
This first release on Santana's own Starfaith Records contains many fine moments but some fans may find the mostly instrumental set a bit too introspective for their tastes. Fans of the guitarist's early prog rock sound will dig the Native American-flavored title cut and "Nomad," another First Peoples-influenced song that carries a dynamic that makes it sound like a musical war cry or perhaps something equally urgent like music to hunt buffalo by...
- www.antimusic.com
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