Throughout his storied career, music legend
Carlos Santana has amassed an iconic body of work by pioneering a unique fusion
of rock, Latin and jazz. On his upcoming album, Africa Speaks, to be released
June 7, 2019 on Concord Records, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame guitarist goes
deeper and further than ever before. Inspired by the sounds and rhythms of
Africa, the virtuoso musician has created a truly memorable and powerful
experience that also promises to be one of his most groundbreaking albums yet.
For Santana,
the inspiration for Africa Speaks holds a special significance. “This is music
that I hold so dearly, and it’s not a stranger to me,” he says. “The rhythms,
grooves and melodies from Africa have always inspired me. It’s in my DNA. If
you take your inspiration from many, it’s called research. I researched this
beautiful music from the African continent. They have a frequency that’s all
their own. It’s funny, because when I play in Africa, people say, ‘How do you
know our music?’ And I say, ‘How can I not know what I love?’”
To fully
realize the breadth of the music on Africa Speaks, Santana knew that he needed
to work with another outside-the-box thinker, and he enlisted iconoclastic
producer Rick Rubin. “Before I even shook hands with Rick, I said, ‘This is going
to blow his mind,’” Santana recalls. “I knew he’d never done anything like
this.” When Rubin listened to the demos, his reaction was immediate and
effusive: “He called me and said, ‘These songs are like gateways to people’s
consciousness,’” Santana says.
The master
guitarist and his eight-piece band (which also includes Santana’s wife, Cindy
Blackman Santana, on drums), convened at Rubin’s Shangri La Studios in Malibu,
and in a joyous and stimulating 10-day period they recorded an astonishing
number of tracks, many of them in one take. “I’m not bragging or boasting,”
Santana says, “but we recorded 49 songs in 10 days – killer, vibrant, dynamic,
exuberant African songs that moved and inspired me. If Miles Davis or John
Coltrane were in the room and they watched this music go down, they would be
like, ‘Damn! How did you do that?’”
On working
with Rubin, Santana raves, “He was very gentle and unobtrusive. His spirit was
never an imposition. He trusted the process and how I wanted people to dance
and feel in a way that’s totally different.”
Another
dramatic element in the creation of Africa Speaks came in the form of Spanish
singer Buika, whose heavenly lead vocals cast a magical spell throughout the
album. “People are going to be blown away when they hear her,” says Santana.
“She’s got Nina Simone, Etta James, Tina Turner, Aretha and more rolled into
one.” The guitarist was so taken with the Latin Grammy Award winner that he
asked her to write lyrics to his new compositions. Santana recalls, “Buika told
me, ‘I wrote lyrics and melodies I’ve never done before. I was crying and
laughing. The music possessed me to create something outside of the realm that
I know.’ I said, ‘Yeah! If that’s what it does to you, imagine what it’ll do to
the listener.’”
Africa
Speaks is a beautifully sustained, blissful experience that opens with the
fully immersive title cut, a righteous celebration that features Santana’s
savage, yet shimmering guitar lines engaged in a joyful dance with congas,
piano and a rousing choir of vocals.
On the fast-paced “Batonga,” Santana locks
into a wicked free-form jam with David K. Mathews’ Hammond B3 that recalls the
band’s early days. “This song means business – it’s got war paint,” says
Santana. “It heals laziness, complacency, the doldrums that people feel. It
revs up your enthusiasm to make you roll up your sleeves and invite other
people to create heaven on earth together.”
“Oye Este Mi
Canto” starts out seductive and sinuous, with Buika’s magical vocals playing
off Benny Rietveld’s playful bass lines. As its deep funk groove deepens,
Santana ignites a veritable bonfire of guitar voodoo. “This isn’t Hollywood or
Palo Alto,” Santana notes. “This is African music. This is what Jerry Garcia or
Michael Bloomfield would have heard and said, ‘I want some of that in my
music!’ Well, you have it in you.”
All of the
songs have a coliseum essence to them,” Santana observes. “Whether it’s ‘We
Will Rock You’ or Start Me Up,’ there’s certain songs that do that.” Which is a
perfect way of describing “Yo Me Lo Merezco,” a crushing tour de force that
sees Buika in sensational stadium-quaking form. Matching the singer’s fervor is
Santana himself, dispatching three spine-tingling minutes of six-string
splendor. The guitarist could also be talking about “Breaking Down the Door,” a
sexy and frisky musical carnival that is bound to be a concert staple for years
to come. With Santana’s slinky soloing doing pirouettes to Mathews’
transporting accordion textures, stirring horns converge with rhapsodic percussion
and vocals to produce the ultimate feel-good sensation. The track also features
Carlos’ son and Grammy Award-winning composer Salvador Santana on keyboards.
As the album
unfolds, more treasures are revealed: “Blue Skies,” which features the sumptuous
background vocals of UK singer Laura Mvula, is an all-hands-on-deck jazz-rock
masterwork that segues majestically into the super-funky “Paraisos Quemados” –
highlighting the impeccable band interplay are Rietveld’s lively bass and
Santana’s velvety guitar lines.
The
guitarist’s otherworldly, wah-driven solos take flight on the stomping groove
of “Los Invisibles” and the breezy, highly danceable “Luna Hechicera,” the
latter of which features spitfire drumming by Cindy Blackman Santana along with
the crisp percussion work of Karl Perazzo.This mesmerizing rhythmic excellence
is on full display on the high-energy “Bembele.”
Africa
Speaks culminates with the cowbell-driven, epic marvel called “Candombe
Cumbele.” As Cindy Blackman Santana works wonders around her drum kit and Buika
leads an exultant vocal chorus, the man on guitar plays with time and space,
exploring every inch of his instrument’s sonic spectrum. It’s a thrilling
finale to a one-of-a-kind journey.
“This song
captivates and freezes the moment of being in a total spell,” Santana says.
“Certain artists like Jimi Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughan become a force of
nature when they play. It’s like witnessing a tornado that’s coming at you.
That’s what this music is about, capturing the metaphysical with the physical,
and to do that you have to not be afraid to cast a spell.”
Distilling
the 49 dazzling tracks that the band recorded in an unbroken, breathless 10-day
period into an 11-cut album was no mean feat, but Santana, now 50 years into
his remarkable career, succeeded in creating Africa Speaks as a compelling and
uplifting vision that will rank as one of his most important and memorable
works.
“This record
was meant to be,” he says. “It was like a gift that came from heaven that we
received and were meant to give to the masses. We validate people’s existence
and touch on so many emotions – there’s humor, beauty, grace and the human
existence. We look forward to touring this album over the next year.”
Africa
Speaks track listing:
1.Africa Speaks
(4:47)
2.Batonga
(5:43)
3.Oye Este
Mi Canto (5:58)
4.Yo Me Lo
Merezco (6:12)
5.Blue Skies
(9:08)
6.Paraísos
Quemados (5:59)
7.Breaking
Down The Door (4:30)
8.Los
Invisibles (5:54)
9.Luna
Hechicera (4:47)
10.Bembele
(5:51)
11.Candombe
Cumbele (5:36)
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