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Length: 2:47
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Se a cabo
Se a cabo
Se a cabo
...spent a lot of time looking at that album cover while listening.
Yeah, I was 18 & a freshman at Long Beach State when this came out. Bought it and nearly wore it out; listening and looking.
The story of the Abraxas cover art
https://groovyhistory.com/santana-abraxas-cover
Thanks good people its taken over fifty years to finally find an explanation
I LOVE CRAB!
The story of the Abraxas cover art
https://groovyhistory.com/santana-abraxas-cover
Definitely a 9 :-)
Is this an attempt at humor, or are you just obsessed with hating Arcade Fire and love to see your witty put downs on each comment?
Can you just let it go? Santana is great. Let's talk about him and his music.
idiot_wind wrote:
His handle refers to his value being equal to the wind from the bottom of an idiot.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraxas_(album)
Amazon.com lists the name of the track as "Se A Cabo", which—of course—would be a misspelling
of "Se acabó" (which translates to "it's over") as you correctly point out. Why did they misspell it? I have no idea, only some predictable hypotheses. (I'm not Mexican, but fluent in Spanish )
Salud!
I'm definitely not fluent in Spanish, but couldn't it be translated something like, "to be in Cabo" or "He is in Cabo" .... as in Cabo San Lucas? That's kind of what we thought — and dreamed about — in 1974.
BTW, jag - I finished the book a couple of weeks ago. Good read, thanks for mentioning it.
Is this an attempt at humor, or are you just obsessed with hating Arcade Fire and love to see your witty put downs on each comment?
Can you just let it go? Santana is great. Let's talk about him and his music.
idiot_wind wrote:
A very interesting read.
If it shows up at my local library, I'll pick it up.
I've read Keef's & Mick's, Gregg Allman's, Tony Iommi's, Dave Grohl's, Phil Lesh's, Jimmy Page's, Neil Young's, several others in rock. Carlos has always been one of my faves.
A very interesting read.
A great book a great man and a great musician. And best Santana album for sure....
A very interesting read.
Very true, but don't write off his "transition period", starting after "Caravansari". That's when he met John McLaughlin, started following Sri Chinmoy, and changed his name to Devadip. Two overlooked albums from that time are "Welcome" and "Barborletta", which are filled with songs that praise Chinmoy and reflect Carlos's religious changes. T
"Borborletta" is one of my favorite fusion albums. It's not for everyone, indeed, but with the return of fusion I've turned on two younger friends to that album and a few other gems from that mid-70s period when guitar-based rock headed off to a galaxy far, far away.
Found this review:
Ah, not just any set of changes here, but the Carlos Santana secret chord progression. The small-minded people will point out that it is just a two-chord vamp on G minor and C7. But didn't Santana hit the top of the charts with two lousy chords on "Evil Ways" and "Oye Como Va"? Well, the secret's out, Carlos. Every guitarist at West L.A. Music and Sam Ash now knows the score. To reinforce the point, Zappa enlists seven people for his rhythm section -- if you can believe the personnel credits, which seem a wee bit padded to these ears -- and they pound away at G minor and C7 like it's the second coming of F major soon to arrive on a cloud in the sky. But forget about the harmonies here. The magic is concentrated in Zappa's lead guitar, which sizzles like a downed power line on wet pavement. Very edgy work with no comic relief, just straight playin'.
Reviewer: Ted Gioia
Very true, but don't write off his "transition period", starting after "Caravansari". That's when he met John McLaughlin, started following Sri Chinmoy, and changed his name to Devadip. Two overlooked albums from that time are "Welcome" and "Barborletta", which are filled with songs that praise Chinmoy and reflect Carlos's religious changes. They lyrics aren't for everyone, though most of the songs and arrangements are pretty good. What was spectacular was the playing. Carlos learned a lot from recording "Love, Devotion, Surrender" with McLaughlin, and you can hear it in his playing. Unfortunately, the smell of money became too much for Carlos, and he went back to full pop mode. He's never gotten back to the incredible playing of his early days and his "Chinmoy years", and has become a caricature of what he used to be. A shame, but at least we still have this material to enjoy.
You are quite capable of going away, yourself. Even that one sentence indicates something - you're like the telemarketer's dream; you hate being called, but you answer the phone and then won't hang up on them.
hear hear
I kinda lost touch after Welcome. There always seemed to be something of interest in those subsequent offerings, just not solid, until Supernatural. That's me for that...
No. Not. At. All.
In fact, this song came from their stellar second album in 1970. Abraxis. Hardly generic. It was considered a bold departure from their debut. Likely older than you are. Not your fault. But, when you say "Great", I agree, particularly re: the timbale work on this song!
When telemarketers called, I used to tell them, "Wait just a second, OK? I gotta get the baby out of the bathtub." Then I'd put the phone down and ignore it for five minutes. Maybe that's why they don't call me these days.
ASK your boss for holidays, you sure need a loooong couple of weeks ! (but I keep the trick anyway)
EXACTLY!
When telemarketers called, I used to tell them, "Wait just a second, OK? I gotta get the baby out of the bathtub." Then I'd put the phone down and ignore it for five minutes. Maybe that's why they don't call me these days.
You are quite capable of going away, yourself. Even that one sentence indicates something - you're like the telemarketer's dream; you hate being called, but you answer the phone and then won't hang up on them.
It's only boring if you're not stoned, too. THAT'S the real problem ...
I wonder why EssexTex even bothers to listen to RP.
Physics Genius or Excelsior reborn?
I wonder why EssexTex even bothers to listen to RP.
I took a brief look at his comments page, and noted that his ratings form a bell curve, with mostly 7s, pretty much like anybody else's. His comments, though, are mostly snarky. So my theory is that Mr. Tex had his lunch money stolen by Carlos Santana in grade school, thus explaining his hatred for all things Santana. Also, I believe Mr. Tex thinks he's really clever, explaining the snarky comments. Just a theory.
(I'm Mexican)
I have both the vynil edition and the CD edition of this album, but not with me right now.
Amazon.com lists the name of the track as "Se A Cabo", which—of course—would be a misspelling
of "Se acabó" (which translates to "it's over") as you correctly point out. Why did they misspell it? I have no idea, only some predictable hypotheses. (I'm not Mexican, but fluent in Spanish )
Salud!
I wonder why EssexTex even bothers to listen to RP.
Probably because he/she can expose us to his/her misery and negativity.
I wonder why EssexTex even bothers to listen to RP.
(I'm Mexican)
Good luck with that.
Agreed.
"Crab"...yeah that too
Can you please rate this one an 11??
Santana's my cue to click over to radioio acoustic.
Sorry.
Absolutely! It just sounds like a very bad jamming session by people who are too stoned to realise they are boring the crap out of everyone.
Simply wonderful (Caravanserai, that is...). This track is OK, but not enough to want to DL it to my player.
Michael Shrieve
From AMG:
Shrieve has had a long and interesting career as a rock drummer, percussionist, and progressive electronic composer. Gaining early recognition as the powerhouse drummer for Santana, the teenage Shrieve was launched into the popular culture maelstrom when he performed an extended drum solo during Santana's appearance at the legendary Woodstock festival. Over the years, Shrieve has continued to strive for innovative approaches to percussion-based music. His numerous collaborations include work with Stomu Yamash'ta, Klaus Schulze, Steve Roach, David Beal, David Torn, and Andy Summers, to name a few.
I saw a YouTube video of him awhile back playing at an outdoor music festival in the northwest. As Wonderlizard mentioned, he played with Stomu Yamash'ta and Steve Winwood on an LP in a band they called "Go." I've got it on vinyl. Good music to listen to when in an altered state. Especially the cut "Crossing the line."
Another Stone Roses Segue.
Mute Button Time for me- you kids play nice- see you when I get back.
Santana in this era was terrifyingly good.
ain't no "era" about it.