Jump to content

List of Santana live performances (1980s)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Blues for Salvador Tour)

Santana is an American rock band, formed in 1966 by the Mexican American guitarist Carlos Santana, which has performed for five decades.

The group's first concert tours were North America, with performances in Europe, where they performed at small and medium-size venues and rock festivals. Following a lineup change in early 1972, they toured the world from 1972 to 1973. During this tour, the band performed at arenas and theaters, while doing several concerts in South America, one of the first tours of the continent by a major American rock act. After a North American tour in 1974, the last remaining members of the group from their famous lineup, Michael Shrieve and José Areas, quit the group, and the band underwent multiple lineup changes during the following years. In the 1970s to the 1980s, the band played at arenas, but mostly theaters and seldom music festivals.

In the 1990s, the group lost their recording contract, but they continued to tour extensively throughout the decade, mostly playing at theaters and amphitheaters. However, the band ended the decade with the Supernatural Tour, a vehicle for their popular 1999 album Supernatural. The 177–date tour was a success with audiences and critics, and the group continued to perform within the 2000s. In the third quarter of 2010, Carlos Santana proposed to drummer Cindy Blackman after her solo on the song "Corazón Espinado", and she became an official member of the band in 2016. The group continues to tour the world to this day.

Europe Tour '80 (1980)

[edit]
Santana Europe Tour '80
Tour by Santana
Associated albumMarathon
Start dateMay 23, 1980 (1980-05-23)
End dateJuly 14, 1980 (1980-07-14)
Legs2
No. of shows32
Santana concert chronology

Santana Europe Tour '80 was a concert tour of Europe by American band Santana in 1980.

Tour band

[edit]

The tour band consisted of:[1]

Set list

[edit]

This set list is representative of the show on July 1.[2] It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.

  1. "Hannibal" (Alex Ligertwood, Alan Pasqua, Raul Rekow, Carlos Santana)
  2. "All I Ever Wanted" (Ligertwood, Santana, Chris Solberg)
  3. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Pasqua, Armando Peraza, Rekow, Santana)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  7. "Just in Time to See the Sun" (Gregg Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  8. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  9. "Lightning in the Sky" (Santana, Solberg)
  10. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  11. "Savor" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  12. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  13. "You Just Don't Care" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  14. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  15. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  16. "Runnin" (David Margen)
  17. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  18. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, Margen)
  19. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  20. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  21. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  22. "Shake Your Moneymaker" (Elmore James)
  23. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)

Tour dates

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[3]
Date
(1980)
City Country Venue
June 2 London England Wembley Arena
June 3
June 4
June 6 Leiden Netherlands Groenoordhallen
June 7
(2 shows)
Cologne West Germany Sporthalle
June 9 Barcelona Spain Plaza de toros Monumental de Barcelona
June 11 Mannheim West Germany Eisstadion am Friedrichspark
June 12 Dortmund Westfalenhallen
June 13 Kassel Eissporthalle Kassel
June 14 Hanover Eisstadion am Pferdeturm
June 21[a] Knebworth England Knebworth House
June 22[b] Paris France Paris–Le Bourget Airport
June 23 Brussels Belgium Forest National
June 24 Bremen West Germany Stadthalle Bremen
June 26 Stockholm Sweden Gröna Lund
June 27 Kiel West Germany Ostseehalle
June 28[c] Roskilde Denmark Darupvej
June 29[d] Oslo Norway Kalvøya
July 1 Frankfurt West Germany Festhalle Messe Frankfurt
July 2 Zwolle Netherlands IJsselhallen
July 4[e] Montreux Switzerland Casino Barrière de Montreux
July 5 Zürich Hallenstadion
July 6 Munich West Germany Olympiahalle München
July 7
July 8 Vienna Austria Praterstadion
July 10 Avignon France Parc des Expositions de Chateaublanc
July 11 Fréjus Arènes de Fréjus
July 12
July 13 Agde Arènes du Cap d'Agde
July 14 Dax Arènes de Dax

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on June 21 was a part of the Knebworth Festival.
  2. ^ The concert on June 22 was a part of the Fête de la Liberté.
  3. ^ The concert on June 28 was a part of the Roskilde Festival.
  4. ^ The concert on June 29 was a part of the Kalvøyafestivalen.
  5. ^ The concert on July 4 was a part of the Montreux Jazz Festival.

US Tour 1980 (1980)

[edit]
Santana US Tour 1980
Tour by Santana
Associated albumMarathon
Start dateJuly 30, 1980 (1980-07-30)
End dateSeptember 13, 1980 (1980-09-13)
Legs1
No. of shows25
Santana concert chronology

Santana US Tour 1980 was a short concert tour of the United States by American rock band Santana.

Tour band

[edit]

The tour band consisted of:[1]

Set list

[edit]

The tour lasted from July 30, 1980, at the Blossom Music Center in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, to September 13, 1980, at the Hearst Greek Theatre in Berkeley, California. Taken from September 5, a common set list was as follows:[4]

  1. "All I Ever Wanted" (Alex Ligertwood, Carlos Santana, Chris Solberg)
  2. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  3. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Alan Pasqua, Armando Peraza, Raul Rekow, Santana)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  6. "Lightning in the Sky" (Santana, Solberg)
  7. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  8. "Savor" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  9. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  10. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  11. "Runnin" (Margen)
  12. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  13. "Concierto de Aranjuez" (Joaquín Rodrigo)
  14. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, David Margen)
  15. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  16. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  17. "Whole Lotta Love" (John Bonham, Willie Dixon, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant)
  18. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)

Tour dates

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[5][6]
Date
(1980)
City Country Venue
July 30 Cuyahoga Falls United States Blossom Music Center
July 31 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
August 2 South Yarmouth Cape Cod Coliseum
August 3 Shelton Pinecrest Country Club
August 5 Albany Palace Theatre
August 7 Tarrytown Westchester Premiere Theater
August 8 Philadelphia Mann Music Center
August 9 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
August 10 Asbury Park Asbury Park Convention Hall
August 12 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theatre
August 13 Kansas City Memorial Hall
August 15 St. Louis Kiel Opera House
August 16
August 17 Oklahoma City Zoo Amphitheatre
August 30 Denver Denver Coliseum
August 31[a] Albuquerque Albuquerque Sports Stadium
September 1 El Paso Civic Center Theater
September 3 Tucson Tucson Community Center
September 5 San Diego Open Air Theatre
September 6 Phoenix Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
September 8 Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre
September 9
September 10
September 12 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
September 13 Berkeley William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1980)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
August 7 Tarrytown, United States Westchester Premiere Theater 3,574 / 3,574 $42,713 [7]
August 8 Philadelphia, United States Mann Music Center 9,934 $79,459 [7]
August 10 Asbury Park, United States Asbury Park Convention Hall 3,927 / 3,927 $39,417 [7]
August 13 Kansas City, United States Memorial Hall 2,715 $25,792 [8]
August 15 St. Louis, United States Kiel Opera House 7,114 / 7,114 $65,875 [8]
August 16 [8]
August 17 Oklahoma City, United States Zoo Amphitheatre 4,276 $35,640 [8]
August 30 Denver, United States Denver Coliseum 9,514 / 9,514 $99,300 [9]
September 5 San Diego, United States Open Air Theatre 4,100 / 4,100 $43,801 [10]
September 12 Santa Barbara, United States Santa Barbara Bowl 4,646 / 4,646 $42,901 [11]
TOTAL 49,800 $474,988

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on August 31 was a part of the Stadium Jam.

Zebop! Tour (1981)

[edit]
Zebop! Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumZebop!
Start dateFebruary 1, 1981 (1981-02-01)
End dateDecember 1, 1981 (1981-12-01)
Legs5
No. of shows83 in North America
33 in Europe
5 in Asia
121 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Zebop! Tour (also known as The Zebop Concert '81)[12] was the sixteenth concert tour by Santana supporting the Zebop! album.

History

[edit]

Santana spent 1981 promoting Zebop! by touring in North America, Europe, and Asia. As well as playing at sporting venues and theaters, the group performed at nightclubs. The group started the year off with a huge 76-show tour of North America, followed by a brief tour of Japan with Masayoshi Takanaka. The band then flew to the United States to do seven concerts in California, and a tour of Europe soon followed. After the European tour concluded, the group opened for the Rolling Stones at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan, in December.

During the Japanese tour, after visiting the Zōjō-ji temple in Tokyo, Carlos Santana's wife Deborah confessed to him that in early 1976, their guru Sri Chinmoy asked her to get an abortion.[13] Carlos was saddened by this news, and they both parted ways with Chinmoy.[14][15] Deborah's sister Kitsaun King also left the guru's path, and Dipti Nivas, a restaurant in San Francisco the Santanas helped create in September 1973, was sold.[16]

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from 1981 has appeared on the following:

  • The band's concert on July 4 at the Cape Cod Coliseum in South Yarmouth, Massachusetts, was broadcast nationwide on radio[17] and subsequently became a popular bootleg recording.
  • "I Love You Much Too Much" from the show of August 12 at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles was featured on the 1988 video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana.

Tour band

[edit]

Reception

[edit]

The concert on July 1 at Kleinhans Music Hall in Buffalo was given a positive review by Billboard.[18]

Set list

[edit]

An average set list of this tour is as follows:[19]

  1. "All I Ever Wanted" (Alex Ligertwood, Carlos Santana, Chris Solberg)
  2. "Primera Invasion" (Graham Lear, David Margen, Alan Pasqua, Santana)
  3. "Searchin'" (Ligertwood, Santana, Solberg)
  4. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Pasqua, Armando Peraza, Raul Rekow, Santana)
  5. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  6. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  7. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  8. "E Papa Ré" (Santana, Richard Baker, Margen, Orestes Vilató, Ligertwood)
  9. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  10. "Savor" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  11. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  12. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  13. "Body Surfing" (Santana, Ligertwood)
  14. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  15. "Runnin" (Margen)
  16. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, Margen)
  17. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  18. "The Sensitive Kind" (J.J. Cale)
  19. "American Gypsy" (Russ Ballard, Lear, Ligertwood)
  20. "Shake Your Moneymaker" (Elmore James)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American leg (January 12 – July 11)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1981)
City Country Venue
February 1 San Francisco United States Old Waldorf
February 2
February 3
February 4
February 5
February 8 Davis Freeborn Hall
February 12
(2 shows)
Denver Rainbow Music Hall
February 13 Boulder Balch Fieldhouse
February 14 Pueblo Massari Arena
February 16 Colorado Springs Clune Arena
February 18 Salt Lake City Symphony Hall
February 21
(2 shows)
Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium
February 22 San Luis Obispo Mustang Stadium
February 23 Salinas Sherwood Hall
February 25 San Jose San Jose Civic Auditorium
February 27 Petaluma Petaluma Veterans Memorial Hall
March 13 Anaheim Anaheim Convention Center
March 14
March 16 Los Angeles Reseda Country Club
March 17 Las Vegas Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts
March 18 Reno Reno Centennial Coliseum
March 24 Odessa Ector County Coliseum
March 25 Austin Frank C. Erwin Jr. Special Events Center
March 27 Dallas Dallas Convention Center
March 28 Houston Sam Houston Coliseum
March 29 Mobile Mobile Municipal Auditorium
March 31 New Orleans Saenger Theatre
April 2 Coral Gables Norman A. Whitten University Center
April 3 Sunrise Sunrise Musical Theater
April 4 Tampa Curtis Hixon Hall
April 18 San Juan Puerto Rico Roberto Clemente Coliseum
April 19
April 21 Washington, D.C. United States DAR Constitution Hall
April 22 Richmond The Mosque
April 24[a] Pittsburgh Carnegie-Mellon University Gym
April 25 Syracuse Carrier Dome
April 26 Albany Palace Theatre
April 28 Plattsburgh SUNY Plattsburgh Field House
April 29 Potsdam Walker Arena
May 1 Burlington Roy L. Patrick Gymnasium
May 2
(2 shows)
Tarrytown Westchester Premiere Theater
May 3 Stony Brook Stony Brook Gymnasium
May 5 New York City The Savoy
May 6 Buffalo Kleinhans Music Hall
May 8 Boston Orpheum Theatre
May 9 Amherst Curry Hicks Physical Education Building
May 10 State College Recreation Building
May 28 Columbus Veterans Memorial Coliseum
May 29 Indianapolis Market Square Arena
May 30 St. Louis Checkerdome
June 1 Atlanta Fox Theatre
June 3 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
June 4
June 5
June 6
June 7 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theater
June 9 New Haven New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum
June 10 Boston Orpheum Theatre
June 12 Philadelphia Mann Music Center
June 13 Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center
June 26 Pittsburgh Civic Arena
June 27 Stanley Theatre
June 29 Montreal Canada Montreal Forum
June 30 Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens
July 1 Buffalo United States Kleinhans Music Hall
July 3 Portland Cumberland County Civic Center
July 4 South Yarmouth Cape Cod Coliseum
July 6 Virginia Beach Virginia Beach Pavilion
July 7 West Orange South Mountain Music Fair
July 8[b] New York City Pier 84
July 10 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
July 11 Uniondale Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Japanese leg (August 2–7)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1981)
City Country Venue
August 2[c] Yokohama Japan Yokohama Stadium
August 3 Kyoto Kyoto Kaikan
August 4 Nagoya Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall
August 6 Osaka Festival Hall
August 7 Fukuoka Fukuoka Sports Center

U.S. leg (August 11 – September 2)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1981)
City Country Venue
August 11 Los Angeles United States Greek Theatre
August 12
August 13
August 14
August 15 Berkeley William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre
August 16 Sacramento Charles C. Hughes Stadium
September 2 California Exposition

European leg (September 11 – November 15)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1981)
City Country Venue
September 11 Fréjus France Arènes de Fréjus
September 12 Agde Arènes du Cap d'Agde
September 13 San Sebastián Spain Velódromo de Anoeta
September 15 Madrid Estadio Román Valero
September 16 Valencia Plaza de Toros de Valencia
September 18 Annecy France Parc des Sports
September 19 Munich West Germany Olympiahalle München
September 20 Cologne Sporthalle
September 21 Essen Grugahalle
September 23 Saint-Ouen France Grande Nef de l'Île-des-Vannes
September 24
September 26 West Berlin West Germany Waldbühne
September 28 Hanover Eilenriedehalle
September 29 Copenhagen Denmark Forum Copenhagen
October 1 Drammen Norway Drammenshallen
October 2 Stockholm Sweden Johanneshovs Isstadion
October 3 Gothenburg Scandinavium
October 24
(2 shows)
Birmingham England Birmingham Odeon
October 26 London Royal Albert Hall
October 27
October 28
October 31 Brussels Belgium Forest National
November 1 Strasbourg France Rhénus Sport
November 2 Frankfurt West Germany Alte Oper
November 4 Eppelheim Rhein-Neckar-Halle
November 6 Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
November 7 Passau West Germany Nibelungenhalle
November 8 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
November 10 Lyon France Palais des Sports de Gerland
November 12 Böblingen West Germany Sporthalle
November 13 Bremen Stadthalle Bremen
November 15 Rotterdam Netherlands Sportpaleis

U.S. show (December 1)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1981)
City Country Venue
December 1 Pontiac United States Pontiac Silverdome

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1981)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
February 12
(2 shows)
Denver, United States Rainbow Music Hall 2,900 / 2,900 $29,072 [20]
February 13 Boulder, United States Balch Fieldhouse 4,369 $42,289 [20]
February 14 Pueblo, United States Massari Arena 3,388 $31,752 [20]
February 18 Salt Lake City, United States Symphony Hall 2,742 / 2,742 $25,508 [21]
February 21
(2 shows)
Santa Cruz, United States Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium 3,928 / 3,928 $39,349 [21]
February 23 Salinas, United States Sherwood Hall 1,600 / 1,600 $16,000 [22]
February 25 San Jose, United States San Jose Civic Auditorium 3,200 / 3,200 $30,400 [22]
March 13 Anaheim, United States Anaheim Convention Center 14,226 / 14,226 $129,848 [23]
March 14 [23]
March 17 Las Vegas, United States Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts 4,074 $44,074 [24]
April 4 Tampa, United States Curtis Hixon Hall 7,535 / 7,535 $67,815 [25]
April 25 Syracuse, United States Carrier Dome 15,213 / 15,213 $113,700 [26]
May 2
(2 shows)
Tarrytown, United States Westchester Premiere Theater 6,774 $79,500 [27]
May 30 St. Louis, United States Checkerdome 10,412 / 10,412 $97,060 [28]
June 9 New Haven, United States New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum 7,800 $70,316 [29]
June 10 Boston, United States Orpheum Theatre 2,800 $28,760 [29]
June 12 Philadelphia, United States Mann Music Center 8,117 $72,765 [29]
July 1 Buffalo, United States Kleinhans Music Hall 2,994 / 2,994 $29,020 [30]
July 4 South Yarmouth, United States Cape Cod Coliseum 7,200 / 7,200 $68,588 [30]
August 15 Berkeley, United States William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre 8,500 / 8,500 $89,250 [31]
August 16 Sacramento, United States Charles C. Hughes Stadium 21,041 $331,577 [31]
December 1 Pontiac, United States Pontiac Silverdome 76,348 / 76,348 $1,145,000 [32]
TOTAL 215,161 $2,581,643

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on April 24 was a part of the Spring Carnival Concert.
  2. ^ The concert on July 8 was a part of the Dr. Pepper Central Park Music Festival.
  3. ^ The concert on August 2 was a part of the Pioneer Live Special.

Shangó Tour (1982–1983)

[edit]
Shangó Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumShangó
Start dateMay 30, 1982 (1982-05-30)
End dateMay 13, 1983 (1983-05-13)
Legs2
No. of shows65 in North America
33 in Europe
98 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Shangó Tour was the seventeenth concert tour by Santana supporting their album Shangó.

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from this tour has appeared on the following releases:

  • "All I Ever Wanted", "Black Magic Woman" and "Gypsy Queen" from August 20, 1982, at the Altos de Chavón Amphitheater in La Romana, Dominican Republic were featured on the 1988 video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana.
  • The band's entire concert on September 4, 1982, as a part of the US Festival was released in 2019 as Santana: Live at US Festival.
  • "Black Magic Woman", "Gypsy Queen" and "Oye Como Va" on the 1988 compilation album Viva Santana! are from September 22, 1982, at the Montreal Forum in Montreal, Canada.
  • "Abi Cama", "Vilató" and "Paris Finale" from April 18, 19 or 20, 1983, at Grande Nef de l'Île-des-Vannes in Saint-Ouen, France, also appear on Viva Santana!.

Tour band

[edit]

1982 tour band

[edit]

1983 tour band

[edit]
  • Greg Walker – lead vocals, percussion
  • Carlos Santana – lead guitar, percussion, vocals
  • Tom Coster – keyboards
  • Chester D. Thompson – keyboards
  • Keith Jones – bass guitar
  • Graham Lear – drums
  • Armando Peraza – congas, percussion, vocals
  • Raul Rekow – congas, bongos, percussion, vocals
  • Orestes Vilató – timbales, percussion

Typical set lists

[edit]

May 1982—March 1983: North American tour

[edit]

Santana embarked on a 65-date North American tour through all of 1982 and a small part of 1983, beginning on May 29, 1982, at the Kabuki Night Club in San Francisco and ending on March 3, 1983, at the same venue. During this tour, the band headlined large music festivals such as the two-day Texxas Jam '82 (to a crowd of 64,945 and 65,000 fans each), Day on the Green (before a crowd of exactly 57,500 people), and Summerfest, appeared at the Concert for the Americas at the Altos de Chavón Amphitheater in La Romana, Dominican Republic, where their set was cut short due to rain,[33] and opened for British rock band The Who on September 25, 1982, during their farewell tour, as documented by Billboard.[34] An average set list for this outing is as follows:[35]

  1. "Primera Invasion" (Graham Lear, David Margen, Alan Pasqua, Carlos Santana)
  2. "Searchin'" (Alex Ligertwood, Santana, Chris Solberg)
  3. "The Nile" (Santana, Ligertwood, Gregg Rolie)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  7. "Oxun (Oshūn)" (Santana, Ligertwood, Rolie, Lear, Armando Peraza, Raul Rekow, Orestes Vilató)
  8. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  9. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  10. "Nowhere to Run" (Russ Ballard)
  11. "Savor" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  12. "Body Surfing" (Santana, Ligertwood)
  13. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  14. "Hold On" (Ian Thomas)
  15. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, Margen)
  16. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  17. "American Gypsy" (Ballard, Lear, Ligertwood)
  18. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  19. "Shangó" (Rekow, Vilató, Peraza)

March—May 1983: European tour

[edit]

The European tour lasted from March 11, 1983, at the Carl-Diem-Halle in Würzburg, West Germany to May 13, 1983, at Budapest Sportcsarnok in Budapest, Hungary. This set list is representative of the show on April 26.[36] It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.

  1. "Nowhere to Run" (Ballard)
  2. "Hold On" (Thomas)
  3. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Pasqua, Peraza, Rekow, Santana)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  7. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  8. "Watch Your Step" (Ricky Lee Phelps, Doug Phelps)
  9. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  10. "Brotherhood" (David Sancious, Santana, Chester D. Thompson)
  11. "That's the Way God Planned It" (Billy Preston)
  12. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  13. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Olatunji)
  14. "Havana Moon" (Chuck Berry)
  15. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  16. "Concierto de Aranjuez" (Joaquín Rodrigo)
  17. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Walker, Margen)
  18. "She's Not There" (Argent)
  19. "Marbles" (John McLaughlin)
  20. "American Gypsy" (Ballard, Lear, Ligertwood)
  21. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  22. "Shangó" (Rekow, Vilató, Peraza)
  23. "Super Boogie"
  24. "Shake Your Moneymaker" (Elmore James)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American leg (May 29, 1982 – March 3, 1983)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[37][38]
Date City Country Venue
May 29, 1982 San Francisco United States Kabuki Night Club
June 2, 1982 Los Angeles Greek Theatre
June 3, 1982
June 4, 1982
June 5, 1982
June 6, 1982
June 12, 1982[a] Dallas Cotton Bowl
June 13, 1982[a] Houston Houston Astrodome
June 16, 1982 Stateline Sahara Tahoe
June 17, 1982
June 18, 1982
June 19, 1982
June 26, 1982[b] Oakland Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
June 29, 1982 San Francisco Warfield Theatre
June 30, 1982[c] Milwaukee Henry Maier Festival Park
July 2, 1982 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
July 3, 1982
July 4, 1982
July 5, 1982
July 9, 1982 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theatre
July 10, 1982 Bloomington Met Center
July 12, 1982 Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center
July 20, 1982 San Francisco Old Waldorf
July 30, 1982 New Haven New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum
July 31, 1982 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
August 1, 1982 South Yarmouth Cape Cod Coliseum
August 2, 1982 Boston Boston Common
August 4, 1982 Philadelphia Mann Music Center
August 6, 1982 Hempstead Calderone Concert Hall
August 7, 1982 Woodridge Music Mountain
August 9, 1982 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
August 10, 1982 Darien Center Lakeside Amphitheater
August 11, 1982 Pittsburgh Civic Arena
August 13, 1982 Atlanta Fox Theatre
August 14, 1982 Tampa USF Sun Dome
August 15, 1982 Sunrise Sunrise Musical Theater
August 20, 1982[d] La Romana Dominican Republic Altos de Chavón Amphitheater
August 28, 1982 Sacramento United States Cal Expo Amphitheatre
September 3, 1982 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
September 4, 1982[e] San Bernardino Glen Helen Pavilion
September 5, 1982 Berkeley William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre
September 8, 1982 Morrison Red Rocks Amphitheatre
September 17, 1982 Amherst Curry Hicks Physical Education Building
September 18, 1982 New York City Madison Square Garden
September 20, 1982 Ottawa Canada Ottawa Civic Centre
September 22, 1982 Montreal Montreal Forum
September 24, 1982 Albany United States Palace Theatre
September 25, 1982 Philadelphia John F. Kennedy Stadium
September 26, 1982 State College Recreation Building
September 29, 1982 Merrillville Holiday Star Theatre
October 1, 1982 Kansas City Municipal Auditorium
October 2, 1982 St. Louis Checkerdome
October 3, 1982
October 28, 1982 San Antonio Convention Center Arena
October 29, 1982 Dallas Reunion Arena
October 30, 1982 Austin Frank C. Erwin Jr. Special Events Center
October 31, 1982 Houston The Summit
November 2, 1982 Corpus Christi Memorial Coliseum
November 5, 1982 Albuquerque Tingley Coliseum
November 6, 1982 El Paso El Paso County Coliseum
November 7, 1982 Tempe Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium
November 12, 1982 Portland Paramount Theatre
November 13, 1982 Seattle Seattle Center Coliseum
November 27, 1982 San Juan Puerto Rico Roberto Clemente Coliseum
March 3, 1983 San Francisco United States Kabuki Night Club

European leg (March 11, 1983 – May 13, 1983)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[38]
Date City Country Venue
March 11, 1983 Würzburg West Germany Carl-Diem-Halle
March 12, 1983 Frankfurt Festhalle Messe Frankfurt
March 13, 1983 Hanover Eilenriedehalle
March 14, 1983 West Berlin Deutschlandhalle
March 16, 1983 Lille France Hall des Expositions Foire de Lille
March 18, 1983 Nantes Parc des Expositions de la Beaujoire
March 19, 1983 Orléans Parc des Expositions et des Congrès d'Orléans
March 20, 1983 Strasbourg Rhénus Sport
March 22, 1983 Copenhagen Denmark Brøndbyhallen
March 24, 1983 Drammen Norway Drammenshallen
March 25, 1983 Gothenburg Sweden Scandinavium
March 26, 1983 Stockholm Johanneshovs Isstadion
March 28, 1983 Helsinki Finland Helsinki Ice Hall
March 29, 1983 Cologne West Germany Sporthalle
March 31, 1983 Lyon France Palais des Sports de Gerland
April 1, 1983 Toulouse Palais des Sports
April 2, 1983 Avignon Parc des Expositions de Chateaublanc
April 18, 1983 Saint-Ouen Grande Nef de l'Île-des-Vannes
April 19, 1983
April 20, 1983
April 21, 1983 Brussels Belgium Forest National
April 22, 1983 Rotterdam Netherlands Sportpaleis
April 23, 1983 Bremen West Germany Stadthalle Bremen
April 26, 1983 Rome Italy Palazzo dello Sport
April 27, 1983
April 28, 1983 Genoa Palasport di Genova
April 30, 1983 Dortmund West Germany Westfalenhallen
May 2, 1983 London England Royal Albert Hall
May 3, 1983
May 4, 1983
May 6, 1983 Ludwigshafen West Germany Friedrich-Ebert-Halle
May 7, 1983 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
May 8, 1983
May 11, 1983 Munich West Germany Olympiahalle München
May 12, 1983 Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
May 13, 1983 Budapest Hungary Budapest Sportcsarnok

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
June 12, 1982[a] Dallas, United States Cotton Bowl 64,945 / 70,000 $1,199,310 [34]
June 13, 1982[a] Houston, United States Houston Astrodome 65,000 / 65,000 $1,160,504 [34]
June 26, 1982[b] Oakland, United States Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 57,500 / 57,500 $957,851 [34]
July 10, 1982 Bloomington, United States Met Center 4,443 / 5,000 $46,074 [39]
July 30, 1982 New Haven, United States New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum 7,186 / 10,000 $73,382 [40]
August 28, 1982 Sacramento, United States Cal Expo Amphitheatre 24,583 / 25,000 $372,144 [41]
September 5, 1982 Berkeley, United States William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre 8,500 / 8,500 $99,056 [42]
September 25, 1982 Philadelphia, United States John F. Kennedy Stadium 91,451 / 91,451 $1,440,353 [34]
October 28, 1982 San Antonio, United States Convention Center Arena 5,949 / 8,300 $52,448 [43]
October 29, 1982 Dallas, United States Reunion Arena 5,925 / 9,300 $49,066 [43]
October 30, 1982 Austin, United States Frank C. Erwin Jr. Special Events Center 4,500 / 7,252 $44,018 [43]
November 5, 1982 Albuquerque, United States Tingley Coliseum 7,468 / 10,500 $73,180 [44]
TOTAL 347,450 / 367,803 (94%) $5,567,386

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d The concerts on June 12–13, 1982 were a part of the Texxas World Music Festival '82.
  2. ^ a b The concert on June 26, 1982, was a part of Day on the Green.
  3. ^ The concert on June 30, 1982, was a part of Summerfest.
  4. ^ The concert on August 20, 1982, was a part of Concert for the Americas.
  5. ^ The concert on September 4, 1982, was a part of the US Festival.

Havana Moon Tour (1983)

[edit]
Havana Moon Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumHavana Moon
Start dateJuly 3, 1983 (1983-07-03)
End dateOctober 21, 1983 (1983-10-21)
Legs3
No. of shows26 in North America
12 in Asia
2 in Oceania
40 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Havana Moon Tour was the eighteenth concert tour by Santana in 1983, supporting leader Carlos Santana's solo album Havana Moon.

Tour band

[edit]
  • Greg Walker – lead vocals, percussion
  • Carlos Santana – guitar, percussion, vocals
  • Tom Coster – keyboards
  • Chester D. Thompson – keyboards
  • Keith Jones – bass guitar
  • Graham Lear – drums
  • Armando Peraza – congas, percussion
  • Raul Rekow – congas, bongos, percussion, backing vocals
  • Orestes Vilató – timbales, percussion

Typical set lists

[edit]

Japan and Hong Kong

[edit]

Santana did an Asian tour from July 3 at the Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium in Yokohama, Japan to July 19 at Queen Elizabeth Stadium in Wan Chai, Hong Kong. A typical set list is from July 19:[45]

  1. "Batuka" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Michael Shrieve)
  2. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Coke Escovedo, Rolie, Willie Bobo, Melvin Lastie)
  3. "Taboo" (Areas, Rolie)
  4. "Hold On" (Ian Thomas)
  5. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Alan Pasqua, Armando Peraza, Raul Rekow, Carlos Santana)
  6. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  7. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  8. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  9. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  10. "Waited All My Life"
  11. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  12. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  13. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)

Australia

[edit]

The band did two shows in Australia on July 23 at Sydney Entertainment Centre in Sydney and July 24 at Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre in Melbourne. Sourced from a bootleg recording, the most complete set list is from Melbourne:[46]

  1. "Concierto de Aranjuez" (Joaquín Rodrigo)
  2. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  3. "Batuka" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve)
  4. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Escovedo, Rolie, Bobo, Lastie)
  5. "Taboo" (Areas, Rolie)
  6. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  7. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  8. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Olatunji)
  9. "Havana Moon" (Chuck Berry)
  10. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  11. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  12. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Greg Walker, David Margen)
  13. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  14. "Right Now" (Alex Ligertwood, Santana)
  15. "Shangó" (Rekow, Orestes Vilató, Peraza)
  16. "Super Boogie"
  17. "Hong Kong Blues"
  18. "John Henry" (traditional)
  19. "Shake Your Moneymaker" (Elmore James)
  20. "Hold On" (Thomas)
  21. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)

US and Canada

[edit]

A North American tour lasted from July 29 at Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii to October 21 at the Caesars Tahoe casino in Stateline, Nevada. A typical set list is from October 6 at the Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles, California:[47]

  1. "Batuka" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve)
  2. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Escovedo, Rolie, Bobo, Lastie)
  3. "Taboo" (Areas, Rolie)
  4. "Hold On" (Thomas)
  5. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Pasqua, Peraza, Rekow, Santana)
  6. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  7. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  8. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  9. "Waited All My Life"
  10. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  11. "Brotherhood" (David Sancious, Santana, Chester D. Thompson)
  12. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  13. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Olatunji)
  14. "Havana Moon" (Berry)
  15. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  16. "Concierto de Aranjuez" (Rodrigo)
  17. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Walker, Margen)
  18. "She's Not There" (Argent)
  19. "Right Now" (Ligertwood, Santana)
  20. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  21. "Shangó" (Rekow, Vilató, Peraza)
  22. "In a Silent Way" (Joe Zawinul, Miles Davis)
  23. "Dealer" (Jim Capaldi)
  24. "Super Boogie"
  25. "Hong Kong Blues"
  26. "Shake Your Moneymaker" (James)

Tour dates

[edit]

The tour itinerary consisted of:[48]

Asian leg (July 3–19)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1983)
City Country Venue
July 3 Yokohama Japan Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium
July 4 Hamamatsu Hamamatsu Shimin Kaikan
July 6 Osaka Festival Hall
July 7
July 9 Nagoya Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall
July 10 Tokyo NHK Hall
July 11 Utsunomiya Utsunomiya Bunka Kaikan
July 13 Takasaki Gunma Music Center
July 14 Chiba Chiba Bunka Kaikan
July 15 Tokyo Nakano Sun Plaza Hall
July 16 Nippon Budokan
July 19 Wan Chai Hong Kong Queen Elizabeth Stadium

Australian leg (July 23–24)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1983)
City Country Venue
July 23 Sydney Australia Sydney Entertainment Centre
July 24 Melbourne Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre

North American leg (July 29 – October 21)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1983)
City Country Venue
July 29 Honolulu United States Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena
July 30 Lahaina Royal Lahaina Tennis Stadium
August 26 Philadelphia Spectrum
August 27 Wantagh Jones Beach Marine Theater
August 29 New York City Pier 84
August 30
August 31 Syracuse New York State Fair Grandstand
September 1 Vaughan Canada Kingswood Music Theatre
September 3 Holmdel Township United States Garden State Arts Center
September 4 South Yarmouth Cape Cod Coliseum
September 5 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
September 7 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
September 9 Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center
September 10 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theatre
September 11 Mecosta Northern Star Live Stage
September 15 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
September 16
September 17
September 30 Fresno Fresno State Amphitheatre
October 2 Stanford Laurence Frost Amphitheater
October 5 Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre
October 6
October 7 San Diego SDSU Open Air Theatre
October 8 Costa Mesa Pacific Amphitheatre
October 9 Sacramento Cal Expo Amphitheatre
October 10 Los Angeles Greek Theatre
October 21 Stateline Caesars Tahoe

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1983)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
October 2 Stanford, United States Laurence Frost Amphitheater 7,968 / 10,000 $100,524 [49]
October 7 San Diego, United States SDSU Open Air Theatre 4,343 / 4,343 $62,800 [50]
TOTAL 12,311 / 14,343 (86%) $163,324

Bob Dylan/Santana European Tour 1984 (1984)

[edit]

From May 28 to July 8, 1984, Bob Dylan and Santana set out on a twenty-seven date European tour.

Beyond Appearances Tour (1984–1986)

[edit]
Beyond Appearances Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumBeyond Appearances
Start dateOctober 6, 1984 (1984-10-06)
End dateNovember 1, 1986 (1986-11-01)
Legs4
No. of shows107 in North America
3 in Oceania
1 in Asia
111 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Beyond Appearances Tour was the twentieth concert tour by American rock band Santana from 1984 to 1986.

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from this tour has appeared on the following releases:

  • "Super Boogie" and "Hong Kong Blues" on the 1988 compilation album Viva Santana! are from July 14, 1985, at the Agora Ballroom in West Hartford, Connecticut.
  • "Open Invitation" and "She's Not There" from the second show on August 9, 1985, at the Warfield Theatre in San Francisco were also featured on Viva Santana!.
  • "She's Not There" and "Savor" from the same show at the Warfield were released on the 1988 video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana.

Tour band

[edit]

Reception

[edit]

The concerts on October 31, 1984, at The Ritz in New York City were given a positive review by Billboard.[53] The band's set at the Crack Down! concert in Madison Square Garden on October 31, 1986, was given a mostly positive review. In a review for The New York Times, Jon Pareles said that the band's new vocalist, Buddy Miles, "did not do much with the songs, but he delivered an impassioned version of his own 'Them Changes'." He also added that the band "worked up a percussive momentum during instrumental sections, particularly the climactic 'Black Magic Woman'".[54]

Set list

[edit]
1984[55]
  1. "Brotherhood" (David Sancious, Carlos Santana, Chester D. Thompson)
  2. "Spirit" (Alphonso Johnson, Alex Ligertwood, Raul Rekow)
  3. "Primera Invasion" (Graham Lear, David Margen, Alan Pasqua, Santana)
  4. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, Margen)
  5. "Body Surfing" (Santana, Ligertwood)
  6. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  7. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  8. "Waited All My Life"
  9. "Breaking Out" (Johnson, Ligertwood)
  10. "Super Boogie"
  11. "Hong Kong Blues" (Hoagy Carmichael)
  12. "Savor" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  13. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  14. "Batuka" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve)
  15. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Coke Escovedo, Rolie, Willie Bobo, Melvin Lastie)
  16. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  17. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  18. "Right Now" (Ligertwood, Santana)
1985[56]
  1. "Brotherhood" (Sancious, Santana, Thompson)
  2. "Primera Invasion" (Lear, Margen, Pasqua, Santana)
  3. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Walker, Margen)
  4. "She's Not There" (Argent)
  5. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  6. "Waited All My Life"
  7. "Body Surfing" (Santana, Ligertwood)
  8. "Breaking Out" (Johnson, Ligertwood)
  9. "Super Boogie"
  10. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  11. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  12. "Hong Kong Blues" (Carmichael)
  13. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  14. "Say It Again" (Val Garay, Steve Goldstein, Anthony La Peau)
  15. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  16. "Two Points of View" (Ligertwood, Santana)
  17. "Batuka" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve)
  18. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Escovedo, Rolie, Bobo, Lastie)
  19. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  20. "Right Now" (Ligertwood, Santana)
1986[57]
  1. "Brotherhood" (Sancious, Santana, Thompson)
  2. "Primera Invasion" (Lear, Margen, Pasqua, Santana)
  3. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Walker, Margen)
  4. "She's Not There" (Argent)
  5. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  6. "Super Boogie"
  7. "Songs of Freedom" (Coster, Buddy Miles, Santana)
  8. "Hong Kong Blues" (Carmichael)
  9. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  10. "Them Changes" (Miles)
  11. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  12. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  13. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  14. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  15. "By the Pool"
  16. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  17. "Once It's Gotcha" (Jeffrey Cohen, Coster, Johnson)
  18. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  19. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  20. "Right Now" (Ligertwood, Santana)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American leg (October 6, 1984 – May 24, 1986)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[58][59][60]
Date City Country Venue
October 6, 1984 San Diego United States SDSU Open Air Theatre
October 7, 1984 Ventura Seaside Park
October 26, 1984 Rockford Rockford MetroCentre
October 27, 1984 Ann Arbor Crisler Arena
October 28, 1984 Evanston Welsh–Ryan Arena
October 29, 1984 New York City The Ritz
October 31, 1984
(2 shows)
November 2, 1984 Burlington Roy L. Patrick Gymnasium
November 3, 1984 Durham Lundholm Gym
November 4, 1984 Stony Brook Stony Brook Gymnasium
November 5, 1984 Albany Palace Theatre
November 7, 1984 Washington, D.C. DAR Constitution Hall
November 9, 1984 Sunrise Sunrise Musical Theater
November 10, 1984 Tampa USF Sun Dome
November 11, 1984 Atlanta Fox Theatre
November 24, 1984 Los Angeles Hollywood Palladium
November 25, 1984 Berkeley Berkeley Community Theatre
November 28, 1984 San Jose San Jose Civic Auditorium
November 29, 1984 Stateline Caesars Tahoe
November 30, 1984
December 1, 1984
April 27, 1985 Buffalo Shea's Performing Arts Center
April 28, 1985 Ithaca Barton Hall
April 30, 1985 Amherst Fine Arts Center
May 1, 1985 Troy Houston Field House
May 2, 1985 New Brunswick College Avenue Gymnasium
May 3, 1985 Binghamton Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena
May 4, 1985 Grand Rapids Welsh Auditorium
May 5, 1985 Newark Delaware Field House
May 8, 1985 Poughkeepsie Mid-Hudson Civic Center
May 9, 1985 Providence Providence Civic Center
May 10, 1985 New Haven New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum
May 30, 1985 Grand Rapids Welsh Auditorium
May 31, 1985 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theatre
June 1, 1985 Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center
June 2, 1985 Hampton Hampton Coliseum
June 4, 1985 Atlanta Fox Theatre
June 6, 1985 Kansas City Starlight Theatre
June 7, 1985 St. Louis St. Louis Municipal Opera Theatre
June 8, 1985 Indianapolis Indianapolis Tennis Center
June 9, 1985 Pittsburgh Civic Arena
June 11, 1985 Davenport Palmer Auditorium
June 12, 1985 Chicago Bismarck Theatre
June 14, 1985 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
June 15, 1985
June 16, 1985 Cincinnati J. Ralph Corbett Pavilion
June 27, 1985 Middletown Orange County Fair Speedway
June 28, 1985 Boston Boston Common
June 29, 1985 Weedsport Cayuga County Fair Speedway
July 2, 1985 Philadelphia Mann Music Center
July 3, 1985 Holmdel Township Garden State Arts Center
July 5, 1985 Wantagh Jones Beach Marine Theater
July 6, 1985 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
July 8, 1985[a] New York City Pier 84
July 9, 1985[a]
July 10, 1985 Canandaigua Finger Lakes Performing Arts Center
July 12, 1985 Vaughan Canada Kingswood Music Theatre
July 13, 1985[b] Philadelphia United States John F. Kennedy Stadium
July 14, 1985 West Hartford Agora Ballroom
July 26, 1985 San Jose Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
July 27, 1985
(2 shows)
Los Angeles Wiltern Theatre
July 28, 1985 San Diego SDSU Open Air Theatre
July 30, 1985 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara County Fairgrounds
August 2, 1985 Los Angeles Greek Theatre
August 3, 1985 Costa Mesa Pacific Amphitheatre
August 4, 1985 Mesa Mesa Amphitheatre
August 6, 1985 Park City Park West
August 7, 1985 Morrison Red Rocks Amphitheatre
August 9, 1985 San Francisco Warfield Theatre
August 10, 1985 Concord Concord Pavilion
August 17, 1985 Fresno Fresno State Amphitheatre
August 22, 1985 Cincinnati J. Ralph Corbett Pavilion
November 15, 1985 Albany Palace Theatre
January 18, 1986[c] Oakland Kaiser Convention Center
March 15, 1986[d] San Francisco San Francisco Civic Auditorium
May 24, 1986[e] Concord Concord Pavilion

Japanese show (June 1, 1986)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[60]
Date City Country Venue
June 1, 1986[f] Karuizawa Japan Karuizawa Prince Hotel

Australian leg (June 5–9, 1986)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[60]
Date City Country Venue
June 5, 1986 Perth Australia Perth Entertainment Centre
June 7, 1986
June 9, 1986 Melbourne Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre

North American leg (June 12 – November 1, 1986)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[60]
Date City Country Venue
June 12, 1986 Honolulu United States Waikiki Shell
July 17, 1986 Oklahoma City Zoo Amphitheatre
July 18, 1986 Dallas Park Central Amphitheater
July 19, 1986 Houston Southern Star Amphitheatre
July 20, 1986 San Antonio San Antonio Municipal Auditorium
July 22, 1986 St. Louis Kiel Opera House
July 24, 1986 Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center
July 25, 1986 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theatre
July 26, 1986 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
July 28, 1986 Poughkeepsie Mid-Hudson Civic Center
July 30, 1986 New York City Pier 84
August 1, 1986 Wantagh Jones Beach Marine Theater
August 2, 1986 Philadelphia Mann Music Center
August 3, 1986 Holmdel Township Garden State Arts Center
August 5, 1986 Darien Center Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
August 6, 1986 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
August 8, 1986 Tampa Tampa Jai-Alai Fronton
August 9, 1986 Sunrise Sunrise Musical Theater
August 11, 1986 Mansfield Great Woods Center for the Performing Arts
August 17, 1986[g] Mountain View Shoreline Amphitheatre
September 19, 1986
(2 shows)
Stateline Caesers Tahoe
September 20, 1986
(2 shows)
September 25, 1986 Miami Beach Doral Beach Hotel
September 26, 1986 Sunrise Sunrise Musical Theater
September 27, 1986 Miami Bayfront Park Amphitheater
October 1, 1986 Mesa Mesa Amphitheatre
October 2, 1986 Los Angeles Wiltern Theatre
October 3, 1986
October 4, 1986 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
October 31, 1986[h] New York City Madison Square Garden
November 1, 1986[h] Felt Forum

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
May 8, 1985 Poughkeepsie, United States Mid-Hudson Civic Center 3,037 / 3,037 $40,100 [62]
May 9, 1985 Providence, United States Providence Civic Center 3,864 / 7,117 $44,182 [63]
June 4, 1985 Atlanta, United States Fox Theatre 2,635 / 3,985 $36,231 [64]
June 6, 1985
(2 shows)
Kansas City, United States Starlight Theatre 3,963 / 7,800 $48,505 [65]
June 7, 1985 St. Louis, United States St. Louis Municipal Opera Theatre 8,812 / 10,235 $131,880 [65]
June 27, 1985 Middletown, United States Orange County Fair Speedway 5,576 / 6,000 $60,830 [66]
June 29, 1985 Weedsport, United States Cayuga County Fair Speedway 4,684 / 6,000 $48,946 [66]
July 13, 1985[b] Philadelphia, United States John F. Kennedy Stadium 89,484 / 89,484 $3,552,800 [67]
August 10, 1985 Concord, United States Concord Pavilion 8,372 / 8,372 $123,129 [68]
August 17, 1986[g] Mountain View, United States Shoreline Amphitheatre 10,088 / 15,000 $159,836 [69]
October 2, 1986 Los Angeles, United States Wiltern Theatre 6,900 / 6,900 $120,750 [70]
October 3, 1986 [70]
TOTAL 147,415 / 163,930 (90%) $4,367,189

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b The concerts on July 8–9, 1985 were a part of Miller Time Concerts on the Pier.
  2. ^ a b The concert on July 13, 1985, was a part of Live Aid.[61]
  3. ^ The concert on January 18, 1986 was a part of We Still Have a Dream: From Selma to Soweto.
  4. ^ The concert on March 15, 1986 was a part of the Bammies.
  5. ^ The concert on March 15, 1986 was a part of the Music & Tennis Festival.
  6. ^ The concert on June 1, 1986 was a part of Suntory Beer Sound Market '86.
  7. ^ a b The concert on August 17, 1986 was a part of the 20th anniversary celebration of the Santana band.
  8. ^ a b The concerts on October 31–November 1, 1986 were a part of Crack Down![54]

Freedom Tour (1987)

[edit]
Freedom Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumFreedom
Start dateFebruary 14, 1987 (1987-02-14)
End dateSeptember 12, 1987 (1987-09-12)
Legs7
No. of shows55 in North America
45 in Europe
2 in Asia
102 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Freedom Tour (also known as The Freedom Concert '87 or The Freedom Concert 1987) was the twenty-first concert tour by Santana, supporting their album Freedom.

History

[edit]

In 1987, Santana did a long world tour promoting Freedom, their tenth international tour since 1970. Aside from visiting countries they have never visited before, such as East Berlin, the band did two shows in war-torn Israel on April 29 and 30. The concert at the Sultan's Pool in Jerusalem on the 29th attracted at least 10,000 Jewish and Arab fans. Lead guitarist Carlos Santana's highlight of the tour was on July 4 at the Izmailovo Stadium in Moscow, Russia, where the band, alongside James Taylor, the Doobie Brothers, Bonnie Raitt and more, played to more than 25,000 Russians, the band's first show in Russia.[71]

On the night of September 11, 1987, at the Sunrise Musical Theater in Sunrise, Florida, bass player Jaco Pastorius sneaked onstage before being kicked out by the theater's security team. He then made his way to the Midnight Bottle Club in Wilton Manors, Florida, where he ended up in a fight with Luc Havan, the club's manager, after reportedly kicking in a glass door, having been refused entry to the club. As a result of his injuries, he died on September 21, 1987, at the age of 35 at Broward General Medical Center in Fort Lauderdale.[72]

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from 1987 has appeared on the following releases:

  • Crowd shots from the concert on July 4 at the Izmailovo Stadium in Moscow were used for the 1988 video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana.

Tour band

[edit]

Set list

[edit]

A typical set list of this tour was as follows (a song not followed by the writer indicates that the writer of the song is unknown):[73]

  1. "The Beat of My Drum" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  2. "Veracruz" (Jeffrey Cohen, Buddy Miles, Gregg Rolie, Carlos Santana)
  3. "Primera Invasion" (Graham Lear, David Margen, Alan Pasqua, Santana)
  4. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, Margen)
  5. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  6. "One"
  7. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  8. "Body Surfing" (Santana, Alex Ligertwood)
  9. "Songs of Freedom" (Tom Coster, Miles, Santana)
  10. "Savor" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  11. "Cavatina" (Stanley Myers)
  12. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  13. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  14. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  15. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  16. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  17. "Once It's Gotcha" (Cohen, Coster, Alphonso Johnson)
Encore
  1. "The Healer" (John Lee Hooker, Roy Rogers, Santana, Chester Thompson)
  2. "By the Pool"
  3. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  4. "Right Now" (Ligertwood, Santana)
Second Encore
  1. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  2. "Deeper, Dig Deeper" (Sterling Crew, Miles, Santana, Thompson)

Tour dates

[edit]

The tour itinerary consisted of:[74]

North American show (February 14)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1987)
City Country Venue
February 14 Oakland United States Omni Club

European leg (March 5 – April 26)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1987)
City Country Venue
March 5 Helsinki Finland Helsinki Ice Hall
March 7 Stockholm Sweden Johanneshovs Isstadion
March 9 Lillestrøm Norway Skedsmohallen
March 10 Copenhagen Denmark Valby Idrætspark
March 12 West Berlin West Germany Deutschlandhalle
March 13 Kassel Eissporthalle Kassel
March 14 Würzburg Carl-Diem-Halle
March 16 Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
March 17 Stuttgart West Germany Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle
March 19 Frankfurt Festhalle Messe Frankfurt
March 20 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
March 21 Bremen West Germany Stadthalle Bremen
March 22 Hamburg Alsterdorfer Sporthalle
March 24 Eppelheim Rhein-Neckar-Halle
March 25 Essen Grugahalle
March 26 Hanover Eilenriedehalle
March 28 Paris France Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
March 29 Lyon Palais des Sports de Gerland
March 31 Munich West Germany Olympiahalle München
April 1 Saarbrücken Saarlandhalle
April 2 Cologne Sporthalle
April 3 Kiel Ostseehalle
April 5 East Berlin East Germany Palace of the Republic
April 6
April 24 Milan Italy Palatrussardi
April 25 Rome Teatro Tenda Pianeta
April 26

Israeli leg (April 29–30)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1987)
City Country Venue
April 29 Jerusalem Israel Sultan's Pool
April 30 Tel Aviv Yarkon Park

European leg (May 2–24)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1987)
City Country Venue
May 2 Clermont-Ferrand France Clermont-Ferrand Sports Hall
May 3 Perpignan Parc des Expositions de Perpignan
May 4 Bordeaux Patinoire de Mériadeck
May 6 Toulouse Palais des Sports
May 7 Montpellier Le Zénith Sud
May 8 Angers Parc des Expositions d'Angers
May 10 Guilers Parc des Expositions de Penfeld
May 12 Lausanne Switzerland Centre Intercommunal de Glace de Malley
May 13 Brussels Belgium Forest National
May 14 Rotterdam Netherlands Sportpaleis
May 16 London England Hammersmith Odeon
May 17
May 19 Biedermannsdorf Austria Jubiläumshalle
May 20 Graz Eisstadion Graz Liebenau
May 21 Budapest Hungary Hidegkuti Nándor Stadion
May 23[a] Konstanz West Germany Bodenseestadion
May 24[b] Sankt Goarshausen Freilichtbühne Loreley

U.S. leg (June 13 – July 1)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1987)
City Country Venue
June 13[c] Berkeley United States William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre
June 14[d] San Francisco Harrison Street
June 19
(2 shows)
Stateline Caesars Tahoe
June 20
(2 shows)
June 26 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
June 27 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theatre
June 28 Indianapolis Indianapolis Tennis Center
June 30 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
July 1 Canandaigua Finger Lakes Performing Arts Center

Russian show (July 4)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1987)
City Country Venue
July 4[e] Moscow Russia Izmailovo Stadium

North American leg (July 8 – September 12)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1987)
City Country Venue
July 8 Norfolk United States Chrysler Hall
July 10 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
July 11 Cleveland Nautica Stage
July 13 Mansfield Xfinity Center
July 14 Upper Darby Township Tower Theater
July 16 Holmdel Township Garden State Arts Center
July 17 New York City Pier 84
July 18 Wantagh Jones Beach Marine Theater
July 19 Syracuse Long Branch Park
July 21
(2 shows)
New Haven Toad's Place
July 23 Canandaigua Finger Lakes Performing Arts Center
July 24 Vaughan Canada Kingswood Music Theatre
July 25 Montreal Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier
June 26 Hampton Beach United States Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom
August 14 San Diego San Diego State University
August 15 Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre
August 16
August 19 Ventura Seaside Park
August 20 Irvine Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre
August 22[f] Angels Camp Calaveras County Fairgrounds
August 23[f]
August 26 Denver McNichols Sports Arena
August 27 Santa Fe Paolo Soleri Amphitheater
August 28
August 29 El Paso Special Events Center
September 1 Austin Lester E. Palmer Auditorium
September 4 San Antonio Sunken Garden Theater
September 5 Dallas State Fair Band Shell
September 6 Houston Buffalo Bayou Park
September 10 Tampa Expo Hall
September 11 Sunrise Sunrise Musical Theater
September 12

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1987)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
June 13[c] Berkeley, United States William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre 8,500 / 8,500 $150,873 [75]
July 11 Cleveland, United States Nautica Stage 4,110 / 4,110 $59,150 [76]
July 16 Holmdel Township, United States Garden State Arts Center 6,513 / 10,802 $97,847 [77]
July 18 Wantagh, United States Jones Beach Marine Theater 9,996 / 10,000 $184,926 [78]
August 20 Irvine, United States Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre 5,487 / 6,133 $72,958 [79]
August 22[f] Angels Camp, United States Calaveras County Fairgrounds 40,000 / 40,000 $840,000 [80]
August 23[f] [80]
August 27 Santa Fe, United States Paolo Soleri Amphitheater 4,587 / 4,587 $80,797 [79]
August 28 [79]
TOTAL 79,193 / 84,132 (94%) $1,486,551

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on May 23 was a part of Rock am See.
  2. ^ The concert on May 24 was a part of Open Air Festival Loreley.
  3. ^ a b The concert on June 13 was a part of the Twilight Dance Concert.
  4. ^ The concert on June 14 was a part of the Carnaval San Francisco.
  5. ^ The concert on July 4 was a part of the Soviet/American Peace Concert.
  6. ^ a b c d The concerts on August 22–23 were a part of Mountain Aire II.

Blues for Salvador Tour (1988)

[edit]
Blues for Salvador Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumBlues for Salvador
Start dateApril 29, 1988 (1988-04-29)
End dateMay 17, 1988 (1988-05-17)
Legs1
No. of shows16
Santana concert chronology

The Blues for Salvador Tour was the twenty-second concert tour by Santana in 1988, supporting leader Carlos Santana's 1987 solo album Blues for Salvador.

Tour band

[edit]

Known as "the Promise Band", the tour band was:[81]

Set list

[edit]

The tour lasted from April 29, 1988, at the Orpheum in Vancouver, Canada to May 17, 1988, at the Celebrity Theatre in Phoenix, Arizona. An average set list of this tour was as follows:[82]

  1. "Bailando/Aquatic Park" (Carlos Santana, Chester D. Thompson, Orestes Vilató)
  2. "Bella" (Sterling Crew, Santana, Thompson)
  3. "Smooth Criminal" (Michael Jackson)
  4. "The Healer" (John Lee Hooker, Roy Rogers, Santana, Chester Thompson)
  5. "Wayne I" (Wayne Shorter)
  6. "Super Boogie"
  7. "Hong Kong Blues" (Hoagy Carmichael)
  8. "Wonderful Combination"
  9. "Savor" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  10. "Goodness and Mercy" (Santana, Thompson)
  11. "'Trane" (Santana)
  12. "Cavatina" (Stanley Myers)
  13. "Cloud Nine" (Norman Whitfield, Barrett Strong)
  14. "Blues for Salvador" (Santana, Thompson)
Encore
  1. "Mandela" (Armando Peraza)
  2. "Tryin' Again" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler)
  3. "Hannibal" (Alex Ligertwood, Alan Pasqua, Raul Rekow)
  4. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  5. "Deeper, Dig Deeper" (Crew, Buddy Miles, Santana, Thompson)

Tour dates

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[83]
Date
(1988)
City Country Venue
April 29 Vancouver Canada Orpheum
April 30 Seattle United States Paramount Theatre
May 1 Spokane Spokane Opera House
May 2 Portland Portland Civic Auditorium
May 4 Eugene Silva Concert Hall
May 5 Redding Redding Civic Auditorium
May 6 Sacramento Community Center Theater
May 7[a] Berkeley William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre
May 8 Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium
May 10 Salinas Sherwood Hall
May 11 San Francisco The Fillmore
May 13 San Diego Open Air Theatre
May 14 Los Angeles Wiltern Theatre
May 15 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
May 16 Anaheim Celebrity Theatre
May 17 Phoenix Celebrity Theatre

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1988)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
April 30 Seattle, United States Paramount Theatre 2,870 / 2,870 $53,095 [84]
May 4 Eugene, United States Silva Concert Hall 2,449 / 2,449 $44,857 [85]
May 13 San Diego, United States Open Air Theatre 4,377 / 4,377 $76,014 [84]
May 17 Phoenix, United States Celebrity Theatre 2,545 / 2,701 $45,122 [85]
TOTAL 12,241 / 12,397 (99%) $219,088

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on May 7 was a part of the Cinco de Mayo Concert.

Viva Santana! Tour (1988–1989)

[edit]
Viva Santana! Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumViva Santana!
Start dateAugust 26, 1988 (1988-08-26)
End dateNovember 26, 1989 (1989-11-26)
Legs3
No. of shows62 in North America
47 in Europe
109 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Viva Santana! Tour was the twenty-third concert tour by American rock band Santana, supporting the Viva Santana! compilation album. Most of this tour was a reunion tour of sorts, as organist and lead vocalist Gregg Rolie, percussionist José Areas, and drummer Michael Shrieve accompanied the group for some performances.[86]

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from this tour has appeared on the following releases:

Tour band

[edit]

Set list

[edit]

A typical set list of this tour was as follows:[87]

  1. "Mandela" (Armando Peraza)
  2. "Batuka" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Michael Shrieve)
  3. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Coke Escovedo, Rolie, Willie Bobo, Melvin Lastie)
  4. "For Those Who Chant" (Luis Gasca)
  5. "The Healer" (John Lee Hooker, Roy Rogers, Carlos Santana, Chester Thompson)
  6. "Smooth Criminal" (Michael Jackson)
  7. "Taboo" (Areas, Rolie)
  8. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  9. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  10. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  11. "Se Acabó" (Areas)
  12. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  13. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  14. "Goodness and Mercy" (Santana, Thompson)
  15. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  16. "Everybody's Everything" (Santana, Milton Brown, Tyrone Moss)
  17. "Cavatina" (Stanley Myers)
  18. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  19. "Once It's Gotcha" (Jeffrey Cohen, Coster, Alphonso Johnson)
Encore
  1. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
Second Encore
  1. "Deeper, Dig Deeper" (Sterling Crew, Buddy Miles, Santana, Thompson)

Tour dates

[edit]

The tour dates were as follows:[88][89]

North American leg (August 26, 1988 – April 29, 1989)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
August 26, 1988 Tacoma United States Tacoma Dome
August 28, 1988 Eureka Six Flags St. Louis
August 31, 1988 Atlanta Chastain Park Amphitheater
September 2, 1988 Richmond The Mosque
September 3, 1988 Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion
September 4, 1988 Wantagh Jones Beach Marine Theater
September 5, 1988 Bristol Lake Compounce
September 8, 1988 Mansfield Great Woods Center for the Performing Arts
September 9, 1988 New York City Pier 84
September 10, 1988 Holmdel Township Garden State Arts Center
September 11, 1988 Wantagh Jones Beach Marine Theater
September 12, 1988 Poughkeepsie Mid-Hudson Civic Center
September 13, 1988 Wilkes-Barre Comerford Theater
September 14, 1988 New York City Pier 84
September 16, 1988 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
September 17, 1988 Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center
September 18, 1988 Chicago Poplar Creek Music Theatre
September 27, 1988 Los Angeles Greek Theatre
September 28, 1988
September 30, 1988 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
October 1, 1988 San Diego Open Air Theatre
October 2, 1988 Costa Mesa Pacific Amphitheatre
October 4, 1988
(2 shows)
Fresno Fresno Fairgrounds
October 6, 1988 Las Vegas Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts
October 7, 1988 Mesa Mesa Amphitheatre
October 8, 1988 Santa Fe Paolo Soleri Amphitheater
October 9, 1988 El Paso Special Events Center
October 12, 1988 Houston Houston Music Hall
October 13, 1988 Corpus Christi Bayfront Plaza
October 14, 1988 Austin Lester E. Palmer Auditorium
October 15, 1988 San Antonio Sunken Garden Theater
October 16, 1988 Dallas Coca-Cola Starplex Amphitheatre
November 5, 1988 León Mexico Estadio León
November 23, 1988 St. Petersburg United States Mahaffey Theater
November 25, 1988 Sunrise Sunrise Musical Theater
November 26, 1988
(2 shows)
November 27, 1988 Kissimmee Tupperware Convention Center
December 10, 1988
(2 shows)
San Quentin San Quentin State Prison
January 20, 1989 Miami James L. Knight Center Theater
April 14, 1989
(2 shows)
San Rafael Marin Veterans Memorial Auditorium
April 28, 1989
(2 shows)[a]
New Orleans Fair Grounds Race Course
April 29, 1989[a]

European leg (May 3 – July 27, 1989)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
May 3, 1989 Braunschweig West Germany Stadthalle Braunschweig
May 4, 1989 Grefrath Eissporthalle
May 5, 1989 Kassel Stadthalle Kassel
May 6, 1989 Würzburg Carl-Diem-Halle
May 8, 1989 Budapest Hungary Budapest Sportcsarnok
May 9, 1989 Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
May 11, 1989 West Berlin West Germany Deutschlandhalle
May 12, 1989 Kiel Ostseehalle
May 13, 1989 Frankfurt Alte Oper
May 15, 1989 Lausanne Switzerland Centre Intercommunal de Glace de Malley
May 16, 1989 Zürich Hallenstadion
May 17, 1989 Locarno Fevi Associazione
May 19, 1989 Cologne West Germany Sporthalle
May 20, 1989 Hamburg Freilichtbühne
May 22, 1989 Essen Grugahalle
May 23, 1989 Stuttgart Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle
May 24, 1989 Siegen Siegerlandhalle
May 26, 1989 Hanover Music Hall
May 27, 1989 Bremen Stadthalle Bremen
May 28, 1989
(2 shows)
The Hague Netherlands Statenhal
May 30, 1989 Kockelscheuer Luxembourg Patinoire de Kockelscheuer
May 31, 1989 Brussels Belgium Forest National
June 2, 1989 Paris France Zénith de Paris
June 24, 1989 Bournemouth England Bournemouth International Centre
June 25, 1989 London Hammersmith Odeon
June 26, 1989
June 27, 1989
June 29, 1989 Solihull NEC Arena
July 1, 1989[b] Ringe Denmark Dyrskuepladsen
July 3, 1989 Stockholm Sweden Gröna Lund
July 4, 1989 Oslo Norway Rockefeller Music Hall
July 5, 1989 Stavanger Kongeparken
July 8, 1989[c] Turku Finland Ruissalo
July 9, 1989 Tübingen West Germany Marktplatz
July 12, 1989 Livorno Italy N/A
July 13, 1989 Rome Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana
July 14, 1989 Lamezia Terme Stadio Guido D'Ippolito
July 16, 1989 Modena Stadio Alberto Braglia
July 17, 1989 Turin Parco della Pellerina
July 18, 1989 Milan Palatrussardi
July 19, 1989 Pistoia Piazza del Duomo
July 21, 1989 Sanremo Teatro Ariston
July 22, 1989 Fréjus France Arènes de Fréjus
July 23, 1989 Nîmes Arena of Nîmes
July 24, 1989 Dax Arènes de Dax
July 27, 1989[d] Nyon Switzerland La Prairie de Colovray

U.S. leg (September 1 – November 26, 1989)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
September 1, 1989 Las Vegas United States Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts
September 2, 1989 San Diego Open Air Theatre
September 3, 1989 Costa Mesa Pacific Amphitheatre
September 4, 1989 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
September 7, 1989 Saratoga Mountain Winery
September 8, 1989
September 9, 1989
September 10, 1989
September 13, 1989 Los Angeles Greek Theatre
September 14, 1989
September 15, 1989 Stateline Caesars Tahoe
September 16, 1989
(2 shows)
September 20, 1989 Bakersfield Kern County Fairgrounds
November 26, 1989[e] Watsonville Watsonville High School

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
September 11, 1988 Wantagh, United States Jones Beach Marine Theater 8,718 / 10,000 $161,283 [90]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b The concerts on April 28–29, 1989 was a part of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.
  2. ^ The concert on July 1, 1989, was a part of the Midtfyns Festival.
  3. ^ The concert on July 8, 1989, was a part of Ruisrock.
  4. ^ The concert on July 27, 1989, was a part of the Paléo Festival de Nyon.
  5. ^ The concert on November 26, 1989 was a part of the Earthquake Relief Benefit Concert.

References

[edit]

Citations

  1. ^ a b "Santanamigos. The Band". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  2. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at Festhalle, Frankfurt on July 11, 1980 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  3. ^ "Santanamigos. 1980". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  4. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at SDSU Open Air Theatre, San Diego State University, San Diego on September 5, 1980 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  5. ^ "Search for setlists: santana 1980 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  6. ^ "Santanamigos. 1980". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  7. ^ a b c "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. August 23, 1980. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  8. ^ a b c d "Top Box Office". Billboard. August 30, 1980. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  9. ^ "Top Box Office". Billboard. September 13, 1980. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  10. ^ "Top Box Office". Billboard. September 20, 1980. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  11. ^ "Top Box Office". Billboard. September 27, 1980. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  12. ^ "Santana German Concert Tour Poster 1981 Zebop Munich Olympiahalle". Collectors.com. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  13. ^ Santana 2005, p. 258
  14. ^ Santana 2005, p. 261
  15. ^ Santana 2014, p. 388
  16. ^ Santana 2005, p. 262
  17. ^ "Music Explosion". Billboard. July 4, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  18. ^ Searl, Hanford (July 25, 1981). "Talent in Action". Billboard. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  19. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of year: 1981 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  20. ^ a b c "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. February 28, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  21. ^ a b "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. March 7, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  22. ^ a b "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. March 14, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  23. ^ a b "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. March 28, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  24. ^ "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. April 4, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  25. ^ "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. April 18, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  26. ^ "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. May 9, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  27. ^ "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. May 16, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  28. ^ "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. June 13, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  29. ^ a b c "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. June 27, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  30. ^ a b "Top Box Office". Billboard. July 18, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  31. ^ a b "Top Box Office". Billboard. August 29, 1981. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  32. ^ "Top Box Office". Billboard. December 12, 1981. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
  33. ^ Meislin, Richard H. (November 21, 1982). "Altos de Chavon, Village of Artists". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  34. ^ a b c d e "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. December 25, 1982. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  35. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of year: 1982 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  36. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at Pallazo dello Sport, Rome on April 26, 1983 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  37. ^ "Santanamigos. 1982". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Site contains pictures of concert tour posters and ticket stubs.
  38. ^ a b "Santanamigos. 1983". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Site contains pictures of concert tour posters and ticket stubs.
  39. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. July 24, 1982. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  40. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. August 14, 1982. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  41. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. September 18, 1982. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  42. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. September 25, 1982. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  43. ^ a b c "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. November 13, 1982. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  44. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. November 20, 1982. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  45. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at Queen Elizabeth Stadium, Wan Chai on July 19, 1983 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  46. ^ "Carlos Santana -- Live at Melbourne (Aust) – 1983". YouTube. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  47. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at Universal Amphitheatre, Universal City on October 6, 1983". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  48. ^ "Search for setlists: santana 1983 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  49. ^ "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. October 15, 1983. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  50. ^ "Top Box Office" (PDF). Billboard. October 29, 1983. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  51. ^ a b c d e "Santanamigos. The Band". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  52. ^ "Santanamigos. The Band". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  53. ^ Weinger, Harry (November 17, 1984). "Talent in Action". Billboard. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  54. ^ a b Pareles, Jon (November 2, 1986). "Pop: Crack Down, An Eclectic Benefit Concert". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  55. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at Caesers Tahoe, Stateline on November 30, 1984 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  56. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of year: 1985 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  57. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of year: 1986 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  58. ^ "Search for setlists: santana 1984 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  59. ^ "Search for setlists: santana 1985 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  60. ^ a b c d "Search for setlists: santana 1986 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  61. ^ Shapiro 2002, p. 178
  62. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. June 1, 1985. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  63. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. May 25, 1985. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  64. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. June 22, 1985. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  65. ^ a b "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. June 29, 1985. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  66. ^ a b "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. July 13, 1985. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  67. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. July 27, 1985. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  68. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. August 24, 1985. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  69. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. August 30, 1986. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  70. ^ a b "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. November 8, 1986. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  71. ^ Slavicek 2006, p. 87
  72. ^ Krause, Renee (September 16, 1987). "Noted Musician Listed As Critical After Altercation". Sun-Sentinel. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  73. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of tour: Freedom | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  74. ^ "Search for setlists: tour:(Freedom) | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  75. ^ "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. June 27, 1987. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  76. ^ "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. July 25, 1987. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  77. ^ "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. August 8, 1987. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  78. ^ "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. August 1, 1987. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  79. ^ a b c "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. September 12, 1987. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  80. ^ a b "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. September 5, 1987. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  81. ^ "Santanamigos. The Band". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  82. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of tour: Blues for Salvador | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  83. ^ "Search for setlists: tour:(Blues for Salvador) | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  84. ^ a b "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. May 28, 2020. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  85. ^ a b "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. June 4, 2020. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  86. ^ "Santana live at Sunrise Music Theatre, Nov 26, 1988 at Wolfgang's". Wolfgang's. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  87. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of tour: Viva Santana! | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  88. ^ "Santanamigos. 1988". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  89. ^ "Santanamigos. 1989". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  90. ^ "Amusement Business" (PDF). Billboard. September 24, 1988. Retrieved 2020-05-25.

Bibliography

[edit]