Guitarist. Born July 20, 1947, in  Autlán de Navarro, Mexico. His father,  Jose, was an accomplished  professional violinist, and Carlos learned to  play the guitar at age 8.  In 1955, the family moved from Autlán de  Navarro to Tijuana, the  border city between Mexico and California. As a  teenager, Santana began  performing in Tijuana strip clubs, inspired by  the American rock &  roll and blues music of artists like B. B. King,  Ray Charles, and  Little Richard. In the early 1960s, Santana moved  again with his  family, this time to San Francisco, where his father  hoped to find  work.
Guitarist. Born July 20, 1947, in Autlán de Navarro, Mexico. His father, Jose, was an accomplished professional violinist, and Carlos learned to play the guitar at age 8. In 1955, the family moved from Autlán de Navarro to Tijuana, the border city between Mexico and California. As a teenager, Santana began performing in Tijuana strip clubs, inspired by the American rock & roll and blues music of artists like B. B. King, Ray Charles, and Little Richard. In the early 1960s, Santana moved again with his family, this time to San Francisco, where his father hoped to find work.
In San Francisco, the young  guitarist  got the chance to see his idols, most notably King, perform  live. He  was also introduced to a variety of new musical influences,  including  jazz and international folk music, and witnessed the growing  hippie  movement centered in San Francisco in the 1960s. After several  years  spent working as a dishwasher in a diner and playing for spare  change  on the streets, Santana decided to become a full-time musician;  in  1966, he formed the Santana Blues Band, with fellow street musicians   David Brown and Gregg Rolie (bassist and keyboard player, respectively).
 With their highly  original blend of Latin-infused rock, jazz, blues,  salsa, and African  rhythms, the band (which quickly became known simply  as Santana) gained  an immediate following on the San Francisco club  scene. The band's  early success, capped off by a memorable performance  at Woodstock in  1969, led to a recording contract with Columbia Records,  then run by  Clive Davis. Their first album, Santana (1969),  spurred by a  Top 10 single, "Evil Ways," went triple platinum, selling  over four  million copies and remaining on the Billboard chart for over  two years.  Abraxas, released in 1970, went platinum, scoring  two more  hit singles, "Oye Como Va" and "Black Magic Woman." The band's  next two  albums, Santana III (1971) and Caravanserai  (1972), were also critical and popular successes.
As the band's personnel changed  frequently, Santana (the band) came  to be associated almost exclusively  with Santana himself who soon became  the only remaining member of the  original trio and his psychedelic  guitar riffs. In addition to his work  with his band, Santana recorded  and performed with a number of other  musicians, notably drummer Buddy  Miles, pianist Herbie Hancock, and  guitarist John McLaughlin. Along with  McLaughlin, Santana became a  devoted follower of the spiritual guru Sri  Chimnoy during the early  1970s. Disillusioned with the heady,  drug-addled world of 1970s rock  music, Santana turned to Chimnoy's  teachings of meditation and to a new  kind of spiritually-oriented music,  marked by a popular jazz album he  recorded with McLaughlin, Love,  Devotion, Surrender, in 1973.
Throughout the 1970s and early  1980s,  Santana and his band released a string of successful albums in  their  unique style. Notable albums of this time period included Amigos  (1976) and Zebop  (1981). During the 1980s, he continued to  tour and record both solo  and with the band, but his popularity began to  decrease with the  commercial audience's dwindling interest in the  jazz/rock blend.  Nevertheless, Santana earned critical acclaim  throughout the decade,  winning his first Grammy Award, for Best  Instrumental Performance, for  the 1987 solo album Blues for Salvador.  He toured extensively, playing in sold-out auditoriums and on tours  like LiveAid (1985) and Amnesty International (1986).
2:06 PM
Ilham

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