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List of Santana live performances (1960s–1970s)

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Santana is an American rock band, formed in 1966 by 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.

1967–68 performances (1967–1968)

[edit]
Santana 1967–68 performances
Tour by Santana
Start dateMarch 1, 1967 (1967-03-01)
End dateDecember 31, 1968 (1968-12-31)
Legs1
No. of shows90 (approximately)
(92 scheduled)
Santana concert chronology

Santana, then known as the Santana Blues Band, performed in 1967 and 1968 in many line-ups throughout the West Coast of the United States.

History

[edit]

In January 1967, Carlos Santana was offered a slot by Bill Graham as an opener for an upcoming show at San Francisco's Fillmore Auditorium after Graham was impressed with Santana's performance with Paul Butterfield at the same venue in late January.[1][2] In February 1967, his group, the Santana Blues Band, was officially formed when guitarist Tom Fraser invited Carlos Santana to jam with his friend Gregg Rolie, after seeing Santana play with Butterfield at the Fillmore.[2][3] The band's first performance was on March 1, 1967, at The Ark club located inside a converted ferry boat in Sausalito, California.[4] At the second show on March 17 at the Winchester Cathedral in Redwood City, California, the band was paid $75 for their performance, and allegedly, future drummer Michael Shrieve was in the audience at that show.

After a hiatus due to Santana being treated for tuberculosis, the group opened for the Who at the Fillmore on June 16 and 17, 1967,[5] but the band was blacklisted from performing at the venue due to players Sergio "Gus" Rodriguez and Danny Haro showing up late for the gig on the 17th.[6] In July, manager Stan Marcum made Santana remove Rodriguez and Haro from the band, and Haro was replaced by Bob Wehr for one performance at the Grant & Green jazz bar, where David Brown was asked to join after the performance.[7][8][9] In November 1967, the band changed their name to Santana.[10]

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from these performances has appeared on the following:

Tour band

[edit]
  • Gregg Rolie – lead vocals, Hammond organ, piano
  • Carlos Santana – lead guitar, percussion, vocals
  • Tom Fraser – rhythm guitar (through August 1967)
  • Sergio "Gus" Rodriguez – bass guitar (through July 1967)[7]
  • David Brown – bass guitar (beginning July 1967)[9]
  • Danny Haro – drums (through July 1967)[7]
  • Bob Wehr – drums (in July 1967)
  • Rod Harper – drums (from July to November 1967)[8]
  • Bob "Doc" Livingston – drums (beginning November 1967)[8]
  • Michael Carabello – congas, percussion (to July 1967)[9]
  • Marcus Malone – congas, percussion (beginning July 1967)[9][11][12]

Set list

[edit]

The group's set list usually consisted of covers of Latin music and blues songs, such as Willie Bobo's "Fried Neckbones and Some Homefries" and Chico Hamilton's "Conquistadore Rides Again." The set list of the live album Live at the Fillmore 1968 consists of the following:

  1. "Jingo" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  2. "Persuasion" (Gregg Rolie)
  3. "Treat" (Carlos Santana, Rolie, David Brown)
  4. "Chunk a Funk" (Santana, Rolie)
  5. "Fried Neckbones and Some Homefries" (Willie Bobo, Melvin Lastie)
  6. "Conquistadore Rides Again" (Chico Hamilton)
  7. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Marcus Malone, Brown)
  8. "As the Years Go Passing By" (Deadric Malone)
  9. "Freeway" (Santana, Rolie)

Performance dates

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[13][14]
Date City Country Venue
March 1, 1967 Sausalito United States The Ark
March 17, 1967 Redwood City Winchester Cathedral
March 30, 1967 San Francisco California Hall
March 31, 1967
June 16, 1967[a] Fillmore Auditorium
June 17, 1967[a]
June 23, 1967[b] Folsom Street & 7th Street
July 28, 1967 San Carlos Carlmont YMCA
November 10, 1967[c] San Francisco 55 Colton Street
November 17, 1967 The Matrix
November 18, 1967
November 19, 1967
November 24, 1967[d] 55 Colton Street
November 29, 1967[c] Fresno Fresno State Amphitheater
December 1, 1967 San Francisco Straight Theater
December 2, 1967
December 3, 1967
December 26, 1967[e]
January 18, 1968 The Matrix
January 19, 1968
January 20, 1968
January 26, 1968 Sausalito The Ark
January 27, 1968
January 30, 1968 San Francisco Straight Theater
January 31, 1968
February 1, 1968
March 1, 1968
March 2, 1968
March 20, 1968[f] Avalon Ballroom
April 4, 1968 Los Altos Hills Foothill College
April 12, 1968 San Francisco Straight Theater
April 13, 1968
April 19, 1968 Carousel Ballroom
April 20, 1968
April 21, 1968
May 7, 1968 Straight Theater
May 8, 1968
May 9, 1968
May 10, 1968
May 11, 1968
May 17, 1968 Avalon Ballroom
May 18, 1968
May 19, 1968
May 24, 1968 San Jose Balconades Ballroom
May 25, 1968
May 28, 1968[g] San Francisco Avalon Ballroom
June 16, 1968[h] Fillmore Auditorium
June 20, 1968 South Lake Tahoe The Sanctuary
June 21, 1968
June 22, 1968
June 28, 1968 San Francisco Avalon Ballroom
June 29, 1968
June 30, 1968
July 20, 1968 Winters Lake Berryessa Bowl
July 26, 1968 Sacramento The Sound Factory
July 27, 1968
July 28, 1968[i] Stanford Laurence Frost Amphitheater
July 30, 1968 San Francisco Fillmore West
July 31, 1968
August 1, 1968
August 9, 1968 Avalon Ballroom
August 10, 1968
August 11, 1968
August 27, 1968 Fillmore West
August 28, 1968
August 29, 1968
August 30, 1968[j] Palace of Fine Arts
September 2, 1968[k] Sultan The Farm
September 12, 1968 San Francisco Fillmore West
September 13, 1968
September 14, 1968
September 21, 1968[l] San Jose Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
September 25, 1968[m] San Francisco Fillmore West
October 6, 1968 Berkeley Provo Park
October 18, 1968 Oakland St. Elizabeth High School
October 31, 1968 San Francisco Fillmore West
November 1, 1968
November 2, 1968
November 3, 1968[n] Fresno Selland Arena
November 13, 1968 San Francisco The Matrix
November 21, 1968[o] Los Altos Los Altos High School Gym
November 22, 1968 Moraga Campolindo High School
December 1, 1968[p] Los Altos Hills Foothill College
December 19, 1968 San Francisco Fillmore West
December 20, 1968
December 21, 1968
December 22, 1968
December 26, 1968[q] Daly City Cow Palace
December 28, 1968 Sacramento The Sound Factory
December 30, 1968 Fresno Rainbow Ballroom
December 31, 1968 San Francisco Winterland Ballroom

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b The band opened for The Who on June 16, 1967. They were also supposed to open for them on the 17th, but they were blacklisted from performing there that date.
  2. ^ The concert on June 23, 1967 was a part of the First Annual Synanon Street Fair.
  3. ^ a b The concert on November 10 and 29, 1967 was a part of the Peace & Freedom Party Rally.
  4. ^ The concert on November 24, 1967 was a part of the Peace & Freedom Party Benefit Dance.
  5. ^ The concert on December 26, 1967 was a part of the 2nd Annual Grope For Peace.
  6. ^ The concert on March 20, 1968 was a part of the KMPX Strike Fund Benefit.
  7. ^ The concert on May 28, 1968 was a part of the Spring Medicine Show: A Benefit for the Haight-Ashbury Free Medical Clinic.
  8. ^ The concert on May 28, 1968 was a part of The Matrix Benefit.
  9. ^ The concert on July 28, 1968 was a part of Stanford Summer Rock.
  10. ^ The concert on August 30, 1968 was a part of the Palace Of Fine Arts Festival.
  11. ^ The concert on September 2, 1968 was a part of the Sky River Rock Festival and Lighter Than Air Fair.
  12. ^ The concert on September 21, 1968 was a part of the Autumn Rock Concert.
  13. ^ The concert on September 25, 1968 was a part of the Peace & Freedom Benefit For Cabaret.
  14. ^ The concert on November 3, 1968 was a part of the Climax of the Autumnal Equinox.
  15. ^ The concert on November 21, 1968 was a part of the L.A.H.S. Fall Concert.
  16. ^ The concert on December 1, 1968 was a part of the Delano Benefit Concert.
  17. ^ The concert on December 26, 1968 was a part of the Holiday Rock Festival.

Santana Tour (1969–1970)

[edit]
Santana Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumSantana
Start dateJanuary 10, 1969 (1969-01-10)
End dateJune 28, 1970 (1970-06-28)
Legs4
No. of shows172 in North America
8 in Europe
180 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Santana Tour was the first concert tour by the American rock band Santana, promoting their self-titled debut album.

History

[edit]

1969 marked the first year Santana entered the mainstream, thanks to the group's appearance at the Woodstock festival, where drummer Michael Shrieve, aged 20,[15] was one of the youngest musicians to play at the festival, and the success of their self-titled debut album. They performed nearly non-stop in the United States during that year, appearing at several large music festivals such as the Texas International Pop Festival and the Altamont Speedway Free Festival.[16] During that year, the group's lineup was finalized, Carlos Santana on guitar, percussion, and vocals, David Brown on bass guitar, Gregg Rolie on Hammond organ and lead vocals, Michael Carabello on congas, José Areas on timbales, congas, and trumpet, and Shrieve on drums. In 1970, the group toured Europe (as well as playing at the Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music) and they played in Canada for the first time.[17]

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from this tour has appeared on a number of different releases:

  • The group's set at the Woodstock festival on August 16, 1969, has appeared on the following releases:
  • "Incident at Neshabur", "Soul Sacrifice", and "A Super Jam!" (with the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane) from the show on February 4, 1970, was released on the 2005 video A Night at the Family Dog. Plus, "Incident at Neshabur" was released on the video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana.
  • The band's performance in London on April 18, 1970, has appeared on the following releases:
    • "Se a Cabo", "Toussaint L'Overture", "Black Magic Woman", and "Gypsy Queen" were released on the 1998 remastered edition of Abraxas.
    • "Gumbo" and "Soul Sacrifice" were released on the 2001 video Legends of Rock: Live in Concert at the Royal Albert Hall.
  • "Gumbo", "Savor", and "Jin-go-lo-ba" from the band's performance at the Kralingen Music Festival in the Netherlands was released on the 1971 film Stamping Ground and the live album of the same name.

Tour band

[edit]

Typical set lists

[edit]

January 1969–April 1970: North American tour

[edit]

Known as the Santana Blues Band up around March 1969, the band performed extensively during this tour, playing at mostly high schools, colleges, clubs, small music venues, fairgrounds, and large rock festivals such as Woodstock throughout. The tour began at January 10, 1969, at The TNT in Olympic Valley, California and ended on April 12, 1970, at the Fillmore East in New York City. A typical set list from 1969 was as follows (all songs written by the members of Santana unless specified otherwise).[24]

  1. "Waiting" (Carlos Santana)
  2. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  3. "Savor"
  4. "Treat"
  5. "You Just Don't Care"
  6. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
  7. "Persuasion"
  8. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Gregg Rolie, David Brown, Marcus Malone)

A typical set list from 1970 (all songs written by the members of Santana unless specified otherwise) was as follows (actual set list taken from the first or second show on April 12):[25]

  1. "Se Acabó" (José Areas)
  2. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  3. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  4. "Savor"
  5. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Olatunji)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  7. "Hope You're Feeling Better" (Rolie)
  8. "Toussaint L'Overture"
  9. "Evil Ways" (Henry)
  10. "Persuasion"
  11. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  12. "Treat"

April 1970: One show in England

[edit]

On April 18, 1970, the band did one show in England for The Sound of the Seventies festival at the Royal Albert Hall in London, their first show in Europe and their first show outside North America. These are the songs known to have been performed there are (all songs written by the members of Santana unless specified otherwise):[26]

  1. "Se Acabó" (Areas)
  2. "Toussaint L'Overture"
  3. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  4. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  5. "Gumbo" (Santana, Rolie)
  6. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)

April–June 1970: Second North American tour

[edit]

A short North American tour followed the gig in England, lasting from April 24, 1970, at the Memorial Hall in Allentown, Pennsylvania and ending on June 13, 1970, at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York. Taken from the show on May 22 at the Waikiki Shell in Honolulu, a typical set list from this tour was as follows (all songs written by the members of Santana unless specified otherwise):[27]

  1. "Se Acabó" (Areas)
  2. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  3. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  4. "Savor"
  5. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Olatunji)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  7. "Toussaint L'Overture"
  8. "Evil Ways" (Henry)
  9. "Treat"
  10. "Gumbo" (Santana, Rolie)
  11. "Waiting" (Santana)
  12. "Hope You're Feeling Better" (Rolie)
  13. "Conquistadore Rides Again" (Chico Hamilton)

June 1970: European tour

[edit]

The group embarked on a short, 8-date European tour in June 1970, which commenced on June 16, 1970, at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England and concluded on June 28, 1970, at the Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music at the Royal Bath and West Showground in Shepton Mallet, England. This set list is representative of the show on June 28.[28] It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.

All songs written by the members of Santana unless specified otherwise.

  1. "Se Acabó" (Areas)
  2. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  3. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  4. "Savor"
  5. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Olatunji)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  7. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  8. "Toussaint L'Overture"
  9. "Evil Ways" (Henry)
  10. "Persuasion"
  11. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  12. "Gumbo" (Santana, Rolie)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American leg (January 10, 1969 – April 12, 1970)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
January 10, 1969 Olympic Valley United States The TNT
January 11, 1969
January 17, 1969 Santa Barbara Robertson Gymnasium
February 11, 1969 Woodside Woodside High School Gymnasium
February 13, 1969 San Francisco Fillmore West
February 14, 1969
February 15, 1969
February 16, 1969
February 21, 1969 Santa Barbara Earl Warren Showgrounds
February 25, 1969 San Francisco Fillmore West
February 28, 1969 Vallejo The Dream Bowl
March 1, 1969
March 1, 1969 Santa Barbara Earl Warren Showgrounds
March 7, 1969 San Jose James Lick High School
March 8, 1969 Fremont Washington High School
March 12, 1969 San Francisco Avalon Ballroom
March 14, 1969 San Jose Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
March 15, 1969 Pleasant Hill Diablo Valley College Gym
March 21, 1969 San Francisco Avalon Ballroom
March 22, 1969
March 23, 1969
March 26, 1969[a]
March 28, 1969 San Mateo CSM Gym
March 29, 1969 Las Vegas Las Vegas Ice Palace
April 1, 1969 Walnut Creek Las Lomas High School
April 3, 1969[b] San Jose Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
April 4, 1969[b]
April 5, 1969[b]
April 11, 1969 Pasadena Rose Palace
April 12, 1969
April 18, 1969 San Pablo Contra Costa College Gym
May 3, 1969 Seattle Hec Edmundson Pavilion
May 9, 1969 Pasadena Rose Palace
May 10, 1969[c] Stockton Pacific Memorial Stadium
May 11, 1969 San Diego Aztec Bowl
May 15, 1969 San Francisco Fillmore West
May 16, 1969
May 17, 1969
May 18, 1969
May 24, 1969[d] San Jose Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
May 25, 1969[d]
May 28, 1969[e] San Francisco Winterland Ballroom
May 29, 1969[f] Fresno Exhibit Hall
May 30, 1969[g] Merced Merced County Fairgrounds
June 10, 1969[h] Palo Alto Palo Alto High School
June 14, 1969 South Lake Tahoe The Fun House
June 20, 1969 San Francisco Fillmore West
June 21, 1969
(2 shows)
Salt Lake City Terrace Ballroom
June 28, 1969 San Diego San Diego International Sports Center
July 3, 1969 South Lake Tahoe The Fun House
July 4, 1969
July 5, 1969
July 11, 1969 San Francisco Fillmore West
July 12, 1969
July 13, 1969
July 19, 1969 Monterey Monterey Peninsula College Gymnasium
July 21, 1969 Concord Concord Armory
July 25, 1969[i] Woodinville Gold Creek Park
July 26, 1969[i]
July 30, 1969[j] Los Angeles The Century Plaza Hotel
August 1, 1969 New York City Fillmore East
August 2, 1969
August 3, 1969[k] Hamilton Township Atlantic City Race Track
August 8, 1969[l] Queens New York State Pavilion
August 9, 1969[l]
August 10, 1969 New York City Sheep Meadow
August 11, 1969 Stony Brook Stony Brook Student Activities Center
August 16, 1969[m] Bethel Yasgur Farms
August 18, 1969 Philadelphia Electric Factory
August 19, 1969
August 21, 1969 Boston Boston Tea Party
August 22, 1969
August 23, 1969
August 29, 1969 Philadelphia The Main Point
August 31, 1969[n] Lewisville Dallas International Motor Speedway
September 1, 1969[o] Prairieville Louisiana International Speedway
September 3, 1969 Grand Rapids Civic Auditorium
September 4, 1969 San Francisco Fillmore West
September 5, 1969
September 6, 1969
September 7, 1969
September 9, 1969 St. Louis N/A
September 10, 1969 Kansas City
September 11, 1969 Omaha
September 13, 1969 Sacramento Sacramento Memorial Auditorium
September 20, 1969 Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl
September 26, 1969 San Jose Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
September 27, 1969 Santa Rosa Santa Rosa Fairgrounds
October 1, 1969 Oakland Oakland Civic Auditorium
San Francisco Fillmore West
October 2, 1969
October 3, 1969 Winterland Ballroom
October 4, 1969
October 4, 1969[p] Amador County Lake Amador
October 9, 1969 Hayward Pioneer Gym
October 10, 1969 Fresno Exhibit Hall
October 11, 1969 Cincinnati Xavier University Fieldhouse
October 16, 1969 Minneapolis New City Opera House
October 17, 1969 Chicago Kinetic Playground
October 18, 1969
October 19, 1969
October 21, 1969
(2 shows)
Cincinnati Ludlow Garage
October 22, 1969
October 24, 1969 Detroit Eastown Theatre
October 25, 1969
October 31, 1969[q] Philadelphia Philadelphia Convention Hall and Civic Center
November 1, 1969[q]
November 2, 1969 Pittsburgh Civic Arena
November 7, 1969
(2 shows)
New York City Fillmore East
November 8, 1969
(2 shows)
November 9, 1969 Washington, D.C. N/A
November 13, 1969 Cambridge The Ark
November 14, 1969
November 15, 1969
November 16, 1969 Rindge Franklin Pierce College
November 21, 1969 Detroit Eastown Theatre
November 22, 1969
November 23, 1969
(2 shows)
Milwaukee Captain Frederick Pabst Theater
November 26, 1969 Denver Denver Coliseum
November 27, 1969 Salt Lake City Salt Palace
November 28, 1969 Dallas Dallas Memorial Auditorium
November 29, 1969 Phoenix Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
December 6, 1969[r] Tracy Altamont Speedway
December 18, 1969 San Francisco Winterland Ballroom
December 19, 1969
December 20, 1969
December 21, 1969
December 27, 1969[s] Pembroke Pines Miami-Hollywood Motorsports Park
December 29, 1969[s]
December 31, 1969 San Francisco Fillmore West
January 16, 1970
(2 shows)
New York City Fillmore East
January 17, 1970
(2 shows)
February 4, 1970 San Francisco Family Dog on the Great Highway
February 6, 1970[t] Berkeley Berkeley Community Theatre
February 23, 1970 San Francisco Winterland Ballroom
February 26, 1970 Fresno Selland Arena
February 27, 1970 Ventura Ventura College
February 28, 1970
(2 shows)
Santa Monica Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
March 6, 1970
(2 shows)
Reno University of Nevada Gym
March 7, 1970 San Jose Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
March 13, 1970 Lancaster Mayser Center
March 14, 1970 Philadelphia Electric Factory
March 15, 1970
(2 shows)
Boston Boston Tea Party
March 19, 1070 Atlanta Municipal Auditorium
March 21, 1970 Tampa Curtis Hixon Hall
March 29, 1970 Vancouver Canada PNE Agrodome
April 10, 1970
(2 shows)
New York City United States Fillmore East
April 11, 1970
(2 shows)
April 12, 1970
(2 shows)

U.K. show (April 18, 1970)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
April 18, 1970[u] London England Royal Albert Hall

North American leg (April 24 – June 13, 1970)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
April 24, 1970 Allentown United States Memorial Hall
April 26, 1970[v] Kingston Frank W. Keaney Gymnasium
May 15, 1970 Cleveland Allen Theatre
May 16, 1970
(2 shows)
Toronto Canada Massey Hall
May 22, 1970 Honolulu United States Waikiki Shell
May 23, 1970
June 11, 1970 Philadelphia Spectrum
June 12, 1970 Port Chester Capitol Theatre
June 13, 1970
(2 shows)

European leg (June 16–28, 1970)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
June 16, 1970 London England Royal Albert Hall
June 19, 1970 Lyceum Ballroom
June 20, 1970[w] Montreux Switzerland Montreux Casino
June 21, 1970 Hamburg West Germany N/A
June 23, 1970 Copenhagen Denmark Tivolis Koncertsal
June 26, 1970[x] Rotterdam Netherlands Kralingse Bos
June 28, 1970[y] Shepton Mallet England Royal Bath and West Showground

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on March 26, 1969 was a part of Rockarama!!! 5 Days of Music at the Avalon Ballroom.
  2. ^ a b c The concerts on April 3–5, 1969 were a part of the Teen Expo '69.
  3. ^ The concert on May 10, 1969 was a part of the Pacific Pop Festival.
  4. ^ a b The concerts on May 24–25, 1969 were a part of the Northern California Folk-Rock Festival II.
  5. ^ The concert on May 28, 1969 was a part of the People's Park Bail Ball.
  6. ^ The concert on May 29, 1969 was a part of the Sounds of the City.
  7. ^ The concert on May 30, 1969 was a part of the Memorial Day Rock Festival.
  8. ^ The concert on June 10, 1969 was a part of the Palo Alto High School's graduation dance.
  9. ^ a b The concerts on July 25–26, 1969 were a part of the Seattle Pop Festival.
  10. ^ The concert on July 30, 1969 was a part of the CBS Convention.
  11. ^ The concert on August 3, 1969 was a part of the Atlantic City Pop Festival.
  12. ^ a b The concerts on August 8–9, 1969 were a part of the Singer Bowl Music Festival.
  13. ^ The concert on August 16, 1969 was a part of the Woodstock Music & Arts Fair.
  14. ^ The concert on August 31, 1969 was a part of the Texas International Pop Festival.
  15. ^ The concert on September 1, 1969 was a part of the New Orleans Pop Festival.
  16. ^ The second concert on October 4, 1969 was a part of the Gold Rush Festival.
  17. ^ a b The concerts on October 31–November 1, 1969 was a part of the 3rd Annual Quaker City Rock Festival.
  18. ^ The concert on December 6, 1969 was a part of the Altamont Speedway Free Festival.
  19. ^ a b The concerts on December 27 and 29, 1969 were a part of the Miami Rock Festival.
  20. ^ The concert on February 6, 1970 was a part of the Black Panther Party Legal Defense Fund Benefit.
  21. ^ The concert on April 18, 1970 was a part of The Sound of the Seventies.
  22. ^ The concert on April 26, 1970 was a part of the Gansett Tribal Rock Festival.
  23. ^ The concert on June 20, 1970 was a part of the Montreux Jazz Festival.
  24. ^ The concert on June 26, 1970 was a part of the Kralingen Music Festival.
  25. ^ The concert on June 28, 1970 was a part of the Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music '70.

Abraxas Tour (1970–1971)

[edit]
Abraxas Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumAbraxas
Start dateAugust 4, 1970 (1970-08-04)
End dateMay 9, 1971 (1971-05-09)
Legs4
No. of shows44 in North America
16 in Europe
1 in Africa
61 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Abraxas Tour was the second concert tour by American rock band Santana.

History

[edit]

This tour was the first of two to feature guitarist Neal Schon. Schon joined the group in December 1970 after declining an invitation to be a part of Derek and the Dominos.[29][30] The band now boasted a powerful dual-lead-guitar act that gave their music a tougher sound. In January 1971, drugs were becoming a problem in the group, so Carlos Santana spoke to Michael Carabello about this problem, but it would be a long time before they fixed it.[31][32] Around the same time, José Areas was stricken with a near-fatal brain hemorrhage, and Santana hoped to continue by finding a temporary replacement (Willie Bobo played with the group for the sole African concert),[33] while others in the band, especially Michael Carabello, felt it was wrong to perform publicly without Areas. Cliques formed, and the band started to disintegrate. In March 1971, Coke Escovedo joined the group,[34][35] and these problems plagued the group into the start of the next tour.

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from this tour has appeared on a number of different releases:

  • "Toussaint L'Overture" and "Evil Ways" from the concert on August 18, 1970, in Lenox, Massachusetts were released on the 1988 video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana.
  • "Jungle Strut", "Waiting", "Black Magic Woman", and "Gypsy Queen" from the show on March 6, 1971, in Ghana were released on the 1971 film Soul to Soul.

Reception

[edit]

Billboard described one of the band's shows on August 10, 1970, at the Fillmore East in New York City as "exciting."[36]

Tour band

[edit]

Typical set lists

[edit]

This is a usual set list of the group's concerts in 1970 (actual set list taken from the August 18 Lenox show):[37]

All songs written by the members of Santana unless otherwise specified.

  1. "Batuka" (José Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Michael Shrieve)
  2. "Se Acabó" (Areas)
  3. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  4. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  5. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  6. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Carlos Santana)
  7. "Toussaint L'Overture"
  8. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  9. "Hope You're Feeling Better" (Rolie)
  10. "Treat"
  11. "Savor"
  12. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji
  13. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  14. "Gumbo" (Santana, Rolie)
  15. "Persuasion"

This is an average set list of the group's performances in 1971 (actual set list taken from the March 23 Inglewood show):[38]

  1. "Waiting"
  2. "Ballin'" (Carlos Santana, Gregg Rolie)
  3. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  4. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  5. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  6. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  7. "Toussaint L'Overture"
  8. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  9. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  10. "Jungle Strut" (Gene Ammons)
  11. "Everybody's Everything" (Santana, Milton Brown, Tyrone Moss)
  12. "Gumbo" (Santana, Rolie)
  13. "Black Magic Woman (Reprise)" (Green)
  14. "Oye Como Va (Reprise)" (Puente)
  15. "Guajira" (José Areas, David Brown, Rico Reyes)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American leg (August 4, 1970 – January 1, 1971)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
August 4, 1970 San Francisco United States The Matrix
August 10, 1970
(2 shows)
New York City Fillmore East
August 11, 1970
(2 shows)
August 12, 1970
(2 shows)
August 14, 1970 Baltimore Baltimore Civic Center
August 15, 1970
(2 shows)
Stony Brook Stony Brook Student Activities Center
August 18, 1970 Lenox Tanglewood Music Shed
September 9, 1970 San Diego Community Concourse
September 10, 1970 San Francisco Fillmore West
September 11, 1970
September 12, 1970
September 13, 1970
September 16, 1970 Denver Mammoth Gardens
September 17, 1970
September 18, 1970 Salt Lake City Salt Palace
September 19, 1970 Phoenix Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
September 20, 1970 San Bernardino Swing Auditorium
September 24, 1970 Oklahoma City Oklahoma City University
September 25, 1970 Houston Houston Music Hall
September 26, 1970 San Antonio HemisFair Arena
September 27, 1970 Fort Worth Will Rogers Memorial Center
October 8, 1970 Nazareth Nazareth National Speedway
October 9, 1970 Troy RPI Field House
October 10, 1970
(2 shows)
Providence Rhode Island Auditorium
October 11, 1970 Chestnut Hill Roberts Center
October 14, 1970
(2 shows)
Port Chester Capitol Theatre
October 17, 1970 Coral Gables University of Miami
October 21, 1970 San Francisco The Matrix
January 1, 1971[a] Honolulu Diamond Head

Ghanaian show (March 6, 1971)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
March 6, 1971[b] Accra Ghana Black Star Square

U.S. leg (March 20 – April 3, 1971)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
March 20, 1971 Sacramento United States California Exposition
March 22, 1971 Inglewood The Forum
March 23, 1971
March 26, 1971 San Francisco Winterland Ballroom
March 27, 1971
March 28, 1971
April 1, 1971 New York City Fillmore East
April 2, 1971
April 3, 1971

European leg (April 14 – May 9, 1971)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
April 14, 1971 Copenhagen Denmark K.B. Hallen
April 16, 1971 Stockholm Sweden Stockholm Concert Hall
April 18, 1971 Rotterdam Netherlands Sportpaleis
April 19, 1971 Frankfurt West Germany Jahrhunderthalle
April 20, 1971 Munich Circus Krone Building
April 23, 1971 Hamburg N/A
April 24, 1971 Paris France L'Olympia Bruno Coquatrix
April 25, 1971
April 27, 1971 Milan Italy Palazzetto Lido Sport
April 28, 1971 Rome N/A
April 29, 1971
May 1, 1971
(2 shows)[c]
Montreux Switzerland Montreux Casino
May 8, 1971 London England Hammersmith Odeon
May 9, 1971

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on January 1, 1971 was a part of the Sunshine '71 Festival.
  2. ^ The concert on March 6, 1971 was a part of Soul to Soul.
  3. ^ The concert on May 1, 1971 was a part of the Montreux Jazz Festival.

Santana III Tour (1971)

[edit]
Santana III Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumSantana
Start dateJune 10, 1971 (1971-06-10)
End dateDecember 6, 1971 (1971-12-06)
Legs3 (4 scheduled)
No. of shows42 (43 scheduled)
Santana concert chronology

The Santana III Tour was the third concert tour by American rock band Santana in 1971, supporting their album Santana, commonly known as Santana III.

History

[edit]

This tour was a rather unfavorable one for Santana. Due to David Brown's severe heroin use, he was replaced by Tom Rutley in August.[39][40] In late September, due to an argument, the group toured without Carlos Santana,[41] which Santana dismissed the group minus him as a "Santana tribute".[42][43] In mid-October, Santana returned to the band, and Michael Carabello was taken out of the group. Santana returned because during a series of shows in New York City, the group was booed because Santana wasn't playing with them.[44] An audience member from one of these shows, Mingo Lewis was chosen to play with the group in the meantime.[45]

A South American tour was cut short in Lima, Peru in December. The group was supposed to perform on December 11 at the Estadio Universidad Nacional Mayor San Marcos in Lima, but they were deported back to the United States due to student protests against U.S. governmental policies.[46] Even if around five million soles were sold in tickets, the concert was cancelled and its cancellation was announced on December 10 by the Minister of the Interior.[47]

Live releases

[edit]

Live material from this tour that has seen release all comes from the group's performance at the Fillmore West in San Francisco on July 4 and has appeared on the following:

Tour band

[edit]

Set list

[edit]

This is a usual set list of this tour (actual set list taken from the September 28 Denver show):[48]

  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. "Se Acabó" (Areas)
  5. "Waiting" (Carlos Santana)
  6. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  7. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  8. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  9. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  10. "In a Silent Way" (Joe Zawinul)
  11. "Marbles" (John McLaughlin)
  12. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  13. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  14. "Para los Rumberos" (Puente)
  15. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)

Tour dates

[edit]

U.S. leg (June 10 – September 18)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1971)
City Country Venue
June 10 Louisville United States Kentucky Exposition Center
June 11 Milwaukee Milwaukee Auditorium
June 12 Indianapolis Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum
June 13
(2 shows)
Chicago International Amphitheatre
July 4 San Francisco Fillmore West
July 18 Stanford Laurence Frost Amphitheater
September 16 Spokane Spokane Coliseum
September 17 Seattle Seattle Center Coliseum
September 18

Brazilian show (September 24)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1971)
City Country Venue
September 24 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Theatro Municipal do Rio de Janeiro

North American leg (September 28 – December 6)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1971)
City Country Venue
September 28 Denver United States Denver Coliseum
September 29
September 30
October 1 Cincinnati Cincinnati Gardens
October 2 Cleveland Public Auditorium
October 4 Detroit Detroit Olympia
October 5 Toronto Canada Massey Hall
October 7 Buffalo United States N/A
October 8 Syracuse Onondaga County War Memorial
October 11 Boston Boston Garden
October 12 Washington, D.C. D.C. Armory
October 14 New York City Felt Forum
October 15
(2 shows)
October 16
(2 shows)
October 18 Syracuse Onondaga County War Memorial
October 21 Greensboro Greensboro Memorial Coliseum
October 22 Richmond Richmond Coliseum
October 23 Baltimore N/A
October 24 N/A
October 25 Philadelphia Spectrum
October 27 Pembroke Pines Hollywood Sportatorium
October 28
October 31 San Juan Puerto Rico Hiram Bithorn Stadium
November 5 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena
November 6
(2 shows)
Fresno Selland Arena
December 5 Honolulu Honolulu International Center
December 6

Canceled South American leg (December 11)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1971)
City Country Venue
December 11 Lima Peru Stadium of the National University of San Marcos

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1971)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
October 14 New York City, United States Felt Forum 22,350 $122,959 [49]
October 15
(2 shows)
[49]
October 16
(2 shows)
[49]

Caravanserai Tour (1972–1973)

[edit]

The Caravanserai Tour was a series of performances by American Latin rock band Santana in support of their album Caravanserai during 1972 and 1973. It started on September 4, 1972, at the Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival in Griffin, Indiana, and ended on October 21, 1973, at Ginasio Municipal Novo in Brasília, Brazil. This tour could be considered to be the group's most eclectic tour at this point, as the band did concerts at every continent except Africa and Antarctica, including one of the first, if not the first, tours of Latin America by a major American rock act.[50]

The tour was the first and only tour to feature the group's second lineup, "The New Santana Band", consisting of guitarist Carlos Santana, percussionists Armando Peraza and José Areas, bassist Doug Rauch, drummer Michael Shrieve, and Tom Coster and Richard Kermode on keyboards. The group often performed material from Caravanserai along with other improvisations and covers.

Some concerts were recorded and filmed and released as albums and films. The shows on July 3 and 4, 1973 at the Osaka Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan in Osaka, Japan were released as the triple vinyl LP Lotus (1974). Select concerts during the tour's Latin American portion were filmed and incorporated into the documentary, Santana en Colores (1973).

Welcome Tour (1973–1974)

[edit]

The Welcome Tour was a concert tour by Santana promoting their album, Welcome. The tour began on November 13, 1973, at Colston Hall in Bristol, England and ended on October 29, 1974, at the William P. Cole, Jr. Student Activities Building in College Park, Maryland.

Borboletta Tour (1974–1975)

[edit]
Borboletta Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumBorboletta
Start dateNovember 16, 1974 (1974-11-16)
End dateDecember 31, 1975 (1975-12-31)
Legs5
No. of shows67 in North America
38 in Europe
16 in Asia
121 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Borboletta Tour was the sixth concert tour by American rock band Santana in 1974 and 1975 in support of their album Borboletta.

History

[edit]

After a performance in Honolulu, Hawaii, Santana toured Japan in November–December 1974. After the conclusion of the Japanese tour, the group performed extensively in North America from March to September 1975 with Eric Clapton and his band. Then, the band toured with Earth, Wind & Fire in Europe.[51] The European tour is notable as the group played two shows in Yugoslavia on October 4 and 5, 1975, their first performances behind the Iron Curtain.

The singer of the opening act for the show at the Beacon Theatre in New York City on April 11, 1975, Alex Ligertwood of Tone, influenced Carlos Santana to enroll him into Santana in 1979 because he was enamored by his performance.[52][53]

Tour band

[edit]

Typical set lists

[edit]

November–December 1974: Asian tour

[edit]

After a show in Hawaii, the group embarked on 16-date tour of Japan, starting on November 23, 1974, at Kanazawa City Tourism Center in Kanazawa, and ending on December 14, 1974, in Fukuoka Kyuden Kinen Gymnasium in Fukuoka. This is a usual set list for this leg (actual set list taken from the December 3 Yokohama show):[54]

  1. "Going Home" (Anton Dvorák; arranged by Alice Coltrane, Carlos Santana, Tom Coster, Richard Kermode, Doug Rauch, Michael Shrieve, José Areas, Armando Peraza)
  2. "A-1 Funk" (Santana, Coster, Kermode, Rauch, Shrieve, Areas, Peraza)
  3. "Every Step of the Way" (Shrieve)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  7. "Mirage" (Leon Patillo)
  8. "Just in Time to See the Sun" (Gregg Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  9. "Bambele" (Areas, Peraza)
  10. "Xibaba (She-Ba-Ba)" (Airto Moreira)
  11. "Give and Take" (Santana, Coster, Shrieve)
  12. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  13. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, David Brown, Marcus Malone)
  14. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  15. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Michael Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  16. "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)

March–September 1975: First North American tour

[edit]

This tour began on March 23, 1975, with a benefit concert for the San Francisco school system at Kezar Stadium before at least 60,000 people,[55] and stopped on September 1, 1975, at Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum in Oakland, California. A common set list for this tour was as follows (actual set list from the early May 29 Toronto concert):[56]

  1. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  2. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  3. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  4. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  5. "Let the Music Set You Free" (Coster, Patillo, David Rubinson, Santana)
  6. "Time Waits for No One" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards)
  7. "Give and Take" (Santana, Coster, Shrieve)
  8. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  9. "Mirage" (Leon Patillo)
  10. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Michael Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  11. "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  12. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)

September–October 1975: European tour

[edit]

This tour lasted from September 5, 1975, at the Birmingham Hippodrome in Birmingham, England to October 13, 1975, at the Pavillon de Paris in Paris, France. The most complete set list of this leg is from September 14 at the [Palace Manchester] in Manchester, England.[57]

  1. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  2. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  3. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  4. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  5. "Let the Music Set You Free" (Coster, Patillo, David Rubinson, Santana)
  6. "Time Waits for No One" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards)
  7. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  8. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Michael Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  9. "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  10. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)

November–December 1975: Second North American tour

[edit]

This brief tour of the United States commenced on November 14, 1975, at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom and concluded on December 31, 1975, at the Cow Palace in Daly City, California. The only set list of this tour available is the New Year's Eve gig.[58]

  1. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  2. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  3. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  4. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  5. "Tell Me Are You Tired" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Coster)
  6. "Time Waits for No One" (Jagger, Richards)
  7. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  8. "Give and Take" (Santana, Coster, Shrieve)
  9. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Michael Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  10. "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  11. "Let Me" (Coster, Santana)
  12. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American show (November 16, 1974)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
November 16, 1974 Honolulu United States Honolulu International Center

Japanese leg (November 23 – December 14, 1974)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
November 23, 1974 Kanazawa Japan Kanazawa City Tourism Center
November 25, 1974 Niigata Niigata Prefectural Civic Center
November 26, 1974 Akita Akita Prefectural Hall
November 29, 1974 Sapporo Hokkaido Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
November 30, 1974
December 3, 1974 Yokohama Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium
December 5, 1974 Nagoya Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall
December 6, 1974 Wakayama Wakayama Prefecture Cultural Hall
December 7, 1974 Osaka Osaka Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
December 8, 1974 Tokyo Shibuya Public Hall
December 9, 1974 Nippon Budokan
December 10, 1974
December 11, 1974 Kyoto Kyoto Kaikan
December 12, 1974 Osaka Osaka Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
December 13, 1974 Hiroshima Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center
December 14, 1974 Fukuoka Fukuoka Kyuden Kinen Gymnasium

North American leg (March 23 – September 1, 1975)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
March 23, 1975[a] San Francisco United States Kezar Stadium
April 1, 1975 Santa Monica Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
April 3, 1975 Watsonville Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds
April 4, 1975 San Jose San Jose Center for the Performing Arts
April 5, 1975 San Luis Obispo Mustang Stadium
April 6, 1975 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena
April 10, 1975 Buffalo Kleinhans Music Hall
April 11, 1975 New York City Beacon Theatre
April 12, 1975 Hempstead Calderone Concert Hall
April 15, 1975 Columbus Veterans Memorial Auditorium
April 16, 1975 Indianapolis Indiana Convention Center
April 18, 1975 Notre Dame Athletic & Convocation Center
April 19, 1975 Louisville Louisville Gardens
April 20, 1975 Cincinnati Armory Fieldhouse
April 21, 1975 Harrisonburg Godwin Hall
April 23, 1975 Hamilton Cotterell Court
April 24, 1975 Lewisburg Davis Gymnasium
April 25, 1975 Roanoke Roanoke Civic Center
April 26, 1975 Clemson Littlejohn Coliseum
April 27, 1975 Asheville Asheville Civic Center Arena
May 25, 1975 Ypsilanti Rynearson Stadium
May 29, 1975
(2 shows)
Toronto Canada Massey Hall
June 1, 1975 London London Gardens
June 4, 1975 Moncton Moncton Coliseum
June 14, 1975 Tampa United States Tampa Stadium
June 15, 1975 Jacksonville Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Coliseum
June 17, 1975 Mobile Mobile Municipal Auditorium
June 18, 1975 Memphis Mid-South Coliseum
June 19, 1975 Knoxville General James White Memorial Civic Coliseum
June 20, 1975 Charlotte Charlotte Coliseum
June 21, 1975 Cincinnati Cincinnati Gardens
June 23, 1975 Niagara Falls Niagara Falls International Convention Center
June 24, 1975 Springfield Springfield Civic Center
June 25, 1975 Providence Providence Civic Center
June 26, 1975 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
June 29, 1975 New Haven New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum
June 30, 1975 Pittsburgh Civic Arena
July 1, 1975 Detroit Olympia Stadium
July 3, 1975 Baltimore Memorial Stadium
July 4, 1975 Cleveland Richfield Coliseum
July 5, 1975 Chicago Chicago Stadium
July 7, 1975 Bloomington Metropolitan Sports Center
July 8, 1975 Madison Dane County Coliseum
July 10, 1975 Kansas City Municipal Auditorium
July 11, 1975 St. Louis Kiel Auditorium
August 3, 1975 Vancouver Canada Pacific Coliseum
August 4, 1975 Portland United States Veterans Memorial Coliseum
August 5, 1975 Seattle Seattle Center Coliseum
August 6, 1975 Spokane Spokane Coliseum
August 9, 1975 Stanford Frost Amphitheater
August 11, 1975 Salt Lake City Salt Palace
August 12, 1975 Denver Denver Coliseum
August 14, 1975 Inglewood The Forum
August 15, 1975 San Bernardino Swing Auditorium
August 16, 1975 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena
August 17, 1975 Tucson Tucson Community Center
August 31, 1975 Oakland Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
September 1, 1975

European leg (September 5 – October 13, 1975)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
September 5, 1975 Birmingham England Birmingham Hippodrome
September 6, 1975
(2 shows)
September 7, 1975
(2 shows)
Cardiff Wales Capitol Theatre
September 8, 1975
(2 shows)
Southampton England Gaumont Theatre
September 9, 1975
(2 shows)
London Hammersmith Odeon
September 10, 1975
(2 shows)
September 11, 1975
(2 shows)
September 13, 1975 Liverpool Liverpool Empire Theatre
September 14, 1975 Manchester Palace Theatre Manchester
September 15, 1975 Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle City Hall
September 16, 1975 Glasgow Scotland The Apollo
September 17, 1975
September 20, 1975 Frankfurt West Germany Jahrhunderthalle
September 21, 1975 Wiesbaden Rhein-Main-Hallen
September 22, 1975 Münster Halle Münsterland
September 23, 1975 Cologne Sporthalle
September 24, 1975 Düsseldorf Philips Halle
September 26, 1975 Hamburg Congress Centrum Hamburg
September 27, 1975 Gothenburg Sweden Scandinavium
September 28, 1975 Copenhagen Denmark Brøndbyhallen
September 30, 1975 West Berlin West Germany Deutschlandhalle
October 2, 1975 Linz Austria Linzer Sporthalle
October 3, 1975 Vienna Wighalle
October 4, 1975 Zagreb Yugoslavia Dom Sportova
October 5, 1975 Belgrade Pionir Hall
October 7, 1975
(2 shows)
Munich West Germany Circus Krone Building
October 8, 1975 Basel Switzerland St. Jakobshalle
October 9, 1975 Eppelheim West Germany Rhein-Neckar-Halle
October 10, 1975 Saarbrücken Messehalle 10
October 11, 1975 Rotterdam Netherlands Rotterdam Ahoy Sportpaleis
October 13, 1975 Paris France Pavillon de Paris

U.S. leg (November 14 – December 31, 1975)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
November 14, 1975 San Francisco United States Winterland Ballroom
November 15, 1975
December 4, 1975 Medford Medford Armory
December 5, 1975 Arcata Humboldt State University
December 6, 1975 Redding Cascade Theatre
December 7, 1975 Chico California State University, Chico
December 31, 1975 Daly City Cow Palace

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on March 23, 1975 was a part of the SNACK Benefit.[55]

Pacific Tour '76 (1976)

[edit]
List of Santana live performances
Tour by Santana
Associated albumAmigos
Start dateFebruary 1, 1976 (1976-02-01)
End dateMarch 17, 1976 (1976-03-17)
Legs2
No. of shows21 in Asia
8 in Oceania
29 in total
Santana concert chronology

Santana Pacific Tour '76 was the seventh concert tour of countries bordering the Pacific Ocean in February and March 1976 by Santana.

Overview

[edit]

This was a short, five-week tour of countries located in the Southern Hemisphere. It consisted of a tour of Australia and New Zealand and a tour of Japan. The tour began on 1 February 1976 with a performance at Carlaw Park in Auckland, New Zealand and ended on 17 March 1976 with a concert at Tsukisamu Dome in Sapporo, Japan.[59] The Oceanic concerts were promoted by Paul Dainty Corporation,[60] while the Japanese shows were promoted by Udo Concerts.[61]

Tour band

[edit]

Set list

[edit]

This is an average set list of this tour:[62]

  1. "Incident at Neshabur" (Carlos Santana, Alberto Gianquinto)
  2. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  3. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  4. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  5. "Let It Shine" (David Brown, Ray Gardner)
  6. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  7. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Coster, David Rubinson)
  8. "Give and Take" (Santana, Coster, Michael Shrieve)
  9. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  10. "Savor" (José "Chepito" Areas, Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  11. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Carlos Santana)
  12. "Let Me" (Coster, Santana)
  13. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)

Tour dates

[edit]

Oceanic leg (February 1–17)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1976)
City Country Venue
February 1 Auckland New Zealand Carlaw Park
February 4 Melbourne Australia Festival Hall
February 7 Adelaide Apollo Stadium
February 10 Perth Subiaco Oval
February 13 Brisbane Brisbane Festival Hall
February 15 Sydney Hordern Pavilion
February 16
February 17

Japanese leg (February 20 – March 17)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1976)
City Country Venue
February 20 Tokyo Japan Nippon Budokan
February 21
February 22 Osaka Festival Hall
February 25 Osaka Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
February 27 Kyoto Kyoto Kaikan
February 28 Takamatsu Takamatsu Shimin Kaikan
February 29
March 1 Osaka Osaka Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
March 2 Okayama Kenritsu Taiikukan
March 3 Kitakyushu Kokura Shimin Kaikan
March 5 Kumamoto Kumamoto Prefectural Gymnasium
March 6 Fukuoka Fukuoka Kyuden Kinen Gymnasium
March 8 Hiroshima Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center
March 9 Nagoya Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall
March 10 Yokohama Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium
March 11 Tokyo Shibuya Public Hall
March 12
March 13 Niigata Niigata Prefectural Civic Center
March 15 Noboribetsu Shin Nittetsu Muroran Taiikukan
March 16 Sapporo Tsukisamu Dome
March 17

Amigos Tour (1976)

[edit]
Amigos Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumAmigos
Start dateMarch 20, 1976 (1976-03-20)
End dateDecember 31, 1976 (1976-12-31)
Legs3
No. of shows35 in Europe
34 in North America
69 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Amigos Tour was the eighth concert tour by Santana supporting their album Amigos.

History

[edit]

The band spent most of 1976 supporting Amigos by embarking on a tour of the United States and Canada followed by a series of concerts in Europe, with the group finishing the year with a New Year's Eve concert at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom. Lineup changes were frequent during this tour: David Brown left and he was replaced by Bryon Miller. However, Miller was replaced by Pablo Tellez around the same time as Leon "Ndugu" Chancler was replaced by Gaylord Birch.[63] Armando Peraza was replaced by Raul Rekow and José "Chepito" Areas. Finally, Birch was replaced by Graham Lear, and Greg Walker was replaced by Luther Rabb for the European tour.[52] The only consistent members of the entire tour were Tom Coster and Carlos Santana.

Reception

[edit]

In a review of the band's show at New York City's Beacon Theatre on May 7, 1976, music critic John Rockwell described the concert as "unsuccessful." He stated that the gig had a poor sound system, and the music played at the performance was "faceless, Latin‐flavored jazz rock."[64] On the hand, Robert Ford Jr. gave the concert a more positive review in Billboard.[65]

Live releases

[edit]

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

  • Songs from different performances during the European tour were released on the 1977 album Moonflower. This is a list of songs from the album that were taken from a show during this leg:
    • "Carnaval", "Let the Children Play", and "Jugando" from the show on December 2 at Olympiahalle in Munich, West Germany.
    • "Savor" and "Toussaint L'Overture" from the gig on December 4 at the Théâtre de Plein Air in Colmar, France.
    • "Black Magic Woman", "Gypsy Queen", "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)", and "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" from the performance on December 5 at the Pavillon de Paris in Paris, France.
    • "Soul Sacrifice" and "Head, Hands & Feet" from the concert on December 15 at the Hammersmith Odeon in London, England.
      • Additionally, "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" was also featured on the 1988 video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana.

Tour band

[edit]

Typical set lists

[edit]

March–August: North American tour

[edit]

This tour began with a performance on March 20 at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona intended for the filming of A Star Is Born,[66] and concluded with a gig on August 25 at the Schaefer Music Festival in Central Park's Wollman Rink.[67] Here is a typical set list for this leg (actual set list taken from the May 8 Boston show):[68]

  1. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  2. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  3. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Tom Coster, David Rubinson)
  4. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Carlos Santana)
  5. "Let It Shine" (David Brown, Ray Gardner)
  6. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  7. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  8. "Savor" (José "Chepito" Areas, Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  9. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  10. "Let Me" (Coster, Santana)
  11. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  12. "Incident at Neshabur" (Santana, Alberto Gianquinto)
  13. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)

November–December: European tour

[edit]

This tour started on November 5 at Empire Pool in London, England, and ended on December 16 at an unknown venue in Lugano, Switzerland. Here is a typical set list for this leg (actual set list taken from the December 5 Paris show):[69]

  1. "Carnaval" (Coster, Santana)
  2. "Let the Children Play" (Leon Patillo, Santana)
  3. "Jugando" (Areas, Santana)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  6. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Chancler, Coster, Rubinson)
  7. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  8. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  9. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  10. "Revelations" (Coster, Santana)
  11. "Incident at Neshabur" (Santana, Gianquinto)
  12. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  13. "Let the Music Set You Free" (Coster, Patillo, Rubinson, Santana)
  14. "María Caracóles" (Pello el Afrokán)
  15. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  16. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American leg (March 20 – August 25)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1976)
City Country Venue
March 20[a] Tempe United States Sun Devil Stadium
April 7 Saskatoon Canada N/A
April 8 Edmonton
April 15 Milwaukee United States Riverside Theater
April 16 Minneapolis Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium
April 19 Detroit Cobo Arena
April 20 Madison Dane County Coliseum
May 2[b] Austin Texas State Highway 290
May 7
(2 shows)
New York City Beacon Theatre
May 8 Boston Orpheum Theatre
May 9 Landover Capital Centre
May 11 Nashville Nashville Municipal Auditorium
May 12 Chattanooga Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Auditorium
May 14 Johnson City Freedom Hall Civic Center
May 15 Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum
May 18 Toledo Toledo Sports Arena
May 26 Greater Sudbury Canada N/A
May 27 Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens
May 30[c] Des Moines United States Iowa State Fairgrounds
June 5[d] Oakland Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
July 2 Fresno Selland Arena
July 3 Anaheim Anaheim Stadium
July 5 San Diego Golden Hall
July 6 Las Vegas Las Vegas Convention Center
July 7 Tucson Tucson Convention Center
July 13 San Antonio HemisFair Arena
July 16 Lubbock N/A
July 18 Denver Mile High Stadium
July 24 Kansas City Royals Stadium
July 25 Tulsa Tulsa Fairgrounds Speedway
August 23[e] New York City Wollman Rink
August 25[e]

European leg (November 5 – December 16)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1976)
City Country Venue
November 5 London England Empire Pool
November 6
November 7 Leicester De Montfort Hall
November 8 Bournemouth Bournemouth Winter Gardens
November 10 Birmingham Birmingham Odeon
November 11 Manchester Kings Hall
November 12 Leeds University of Leeds Refectory
November 13 Glasgow Scotland The Apollo
November 14 Edinburgh Edinburgh Playhouse
November 15 Liverpool England Liverpool Empire Theatre
November 18 Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
November 19 Linz Linzer Sporthalle
November 20 Böblingen West Germany Sporthalle
November 21 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
November 23 Karlsruhe West Germany Schwarzwaldhalle
November 24 Frankfurt Festhalle Messe Frankfurt
November 25 Eppelheim Rhein-Neckar-Halle
November 26 Nuremberg Messezentrum Nuremberg
November 27 Saarbrücken Saarlandhalle
November 29 Brussels Belgium Forest National
November 30 Rotterdam Netherlands Sportpaleis
December 1 Düsseldorf West Germany Philips Halle
December 2 Munich Olympiahalle München
December 4 Colmar France Théâtre de Plein Air
December 5 Paris Pavillon de Paris
December 6
December 7
December 8 Cologne West Germany Sporthalle
December 9 Kiel Ostseehalle
December 10 Hamburg Ernst-Merck-Halle
December 11 West Berlin Eissporthalle an der Jafféstraße
December 12 Dortmund Westfalenhallen
December 14 Geneva Switzerland N/A
December 15 London England Hammersmith Odeon
December 16 Lugano Switzerland N/A

U.S. show (December 31)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1976)
City Country Venue
December 31 Daly City United States Cow Palace

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1976)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
April 15 Milwaukee, United States Riverside Theater 3,557 $20,933 [70]
April 16 Minneapolis, United States Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium 4,400 $24,300 [70]
May 7
(2 shows)
New York City, United States Beacon Theatre 5,298 $36,000 [71]
May 12 Chattanooga, United States Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Auditorium 3,024 $17,643 [72]
May 14 Johnson City, United States Freedom Hall Civic Center 3,947 $23,450 [72]
May 15 Cincinnati, United States Riverfront Coliseum 11,320 $68,671 [72]
June 5[d] Oakland, United States Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 40,173 $341,472 [73]
July 2 Fresno, United States Selland Arena 6,000 $38,893 [74]
July 3 Anaheim, United States Anaheim Stadium 55,000 $550,000 [75]
July 18 Denver, United States Mile High Stadium 62,000 / 62,000 $496,000 [75]
July 24 Kansas City, United States Royals Stadium 36,662 $291,824 [76]
July 25 Tulsa, United States Tulsa Fairgrounds Speedway 26,495 $225,948 [76]
December 31 Daly City, United States Cow Palace 14,500 / 14,500 $145,000 [77]
TOTAL 272,376 $2,280,134

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on March 20 was intended for the filming of A Star Is Born.[66]
  2. ^ The concert on May 2 was a part of Sunday Break.
  3. ^ The concert on May 30 was a part of Iowa Jam.
  4. ^ a b The concert on June 5 was a part of Day on the Green.
  5. ^ a b The concerts on August 23 and 25 were a part of the Schaefer Music Festival.

Festivál Tour (1977)

[edit]
Festivál Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumFestivál
Start dateJanuary 25, 1977 (1977-01-25)
End dateSeptember 14, 1977 (1977-09-14)
Legs2
No. of shows52 in North America
16 in Europe
68 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Festivál Tour was the ninth concert tour by Santana supporting their album Festivál.

History

[edit]

Following the release of Festivál in January 1977, the group embarked on a tour of North America, followed by a 17-date European tour. Lineup changes weren't as common as the last tour, but some members came and went throughout this tour. Greg Walker came back, replacing Luther Rabb in January, and bassist David Margen and percussionist Pete Escovedo took over from Pablo Tellez and José "Chepito" Areas respectively in June. During the tour, Carlos Santana cancelled shows to reconcile with his wife Deborah. Bill Graham booked the band to perform at New York City's Radio City Music Hall during this tour, but the concerts were cancelled when Santana told Graham he needed time to settle with his wife.[78] A show in Milan, Italy at Velodromo Vigorelli on September 14, 1977, was interrupted by leftist protesters in the beginning.[79]

Live releases

[edit]

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

  • The group's concert with Spanish flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucía from August 19 or August 21 was released on the video Light and Shade in 2001.
  • "Song of the Wind" from the show on August 23 or August 24 at the Arènes de Fréjus in Fréjus, France was released on the 1988 compilation album Viva Santana!. It was mislabeled on the album as being from a show in Paris.

Tour band

[edit]
  • Greg Walker – lead vocals, percussion
  • Carlos Santana – guitar, percussion, vocals
  • Tom Coster – Yamaha organ, Hammond organ, Minimoog, electric piano, keyboards, percussion, vocals
  • Pablo Tellez – bass guitar, vocals (through April 24)
  • David Margen – bass guitar (beginning June 29)
  • Graham Lear – drums
  • José "Chepito" Areas – timbales, congas, percussion, vocals (through April 24)
  • Raul Rekow – congas, bongos, percussion, vocals
  • Pete Escovedo – timbales, percussion (beginning June 29)

Reception

[edit]

The concert on January 30, 1977, at the Long Beach Arena in Long Beach, California was praised by Billboard.[80]

Typical set lists

[edit]

January–July: North American tour

[edit]

This leg began with a concert on January 25 at Robertson Gymnasium in Santa Barbara, California, and ended with a performance on July 9 at Seattle's Seattle Center Coliseum.[81] Here is a typical set list for this leg (actual set list taken from the March 6 Hempstead show):[82]

  1. "Carnaval" (Tom Coster, Carlos Santana)
  2. "Let the Children Play" (Leon Patillo, Santana)
  3. "Jugando" (José "Chepito" Areas, Santana)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  6. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Coster, David Rubinson)
  7. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  8. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  9. "Incident at Neshabur" (Santana, Alberto Gianquinto)
  10. "Let Me" (Coster, Santana)
  11. "Give Me Love" (Pablo Tellez)
  12. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  13. "Conga Solo" (Raul Rekow)
  14. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  15. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  16. "Revelations" (Coster, Santana)
  17. "María Caracóles" (Pello el Afrokán)
  18. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  19. "Let the Music Set You Free" (Coster, Patillo, Rubinson, Santana)
  20. "Transcendance" (Santana)

August–September: European tour

[edit]

This leg started on August 19 at Plaza de toros de las Arenas in Barcelona, Spain and ended on September 14 at Velodromo Vigorelli in Milan, Italy. Here is a typical set list for this leg (actual set list taken from the August 30 Bad Segeberg show):[83]

  1. "El Morocco" (Coster)
  2. "Let the Children Play" (Patillo, Santana)
  3. "Jugando" (Areas, Santana)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  6. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Chancler, Coster, Rubinson)
  7. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  8. "I'll Be Waiting" (Santana)
  9. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  10. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)
  11. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  12. "Savor" (Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Santana, Michael Shrieve)
  13. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  14. "Flor d'Luna (Moonflower)" (Coster)
  15. "Here And Now" (Armando Peraza, Santana)
  16. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  17. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  18. "Transcendance" (Santana)

Tour dates

[edit]

North American leg (January 25 – July 9)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1977)
City Country Venue
January 25 Santa Barbara United States Robertson Gymnasium
January 28 San Bernardino Swing Auditorium
January 29 Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium
January 30 Long Beach Long Beach Arena
February 2 San Diego Golden Hall
February 3 Phoenix Phoenix Convention Center
February 5 Denver McNichols Sports Arena
February 6 Colorado Springs United States Air Force Academy
February 7 Colorado Springs City Auditorium
February 9 Austin Municipal Auditorium
February 10 Houston Sam Houston Coliseum
February 11 Dallas Dallas Memorial Auditorium
February 12 Abilene Taylor County Coliseum
February 13 Corpus Christi Exhibition Hall
February 14 Kansas City Arrowhead Stadium
February 15 Kansas City Memorial Hall
February 16 St. Louis N/A
February 17 Bloomington
February 18 Chicago Aragon Ballroom
February 19
February 21 Des Moines Veterans Memorial Auditorium
March 4 New York City Roseland Ballroom
March 5
(2 shows)
Palladium
March 6 Hempstead Calderone Concert Hall
March 8 Toronto Canada Maple Leaf Gardens
March 9 Montreal Montreal Forum
March 10 Kingston Jock Harty Arena
March 12 East Lansing United States Jenison Fieldhouse
March 13 Port Huron St. Clair County Community College
March 14 Kalamazoo Wings Stadium
March 15 Detroit Detroit Masonic Temple
March 16 Boston Boston Garden
March 18 Durham Cameron Indoor Stadium
March 19 Landover Capital Centre
March 20 Philadelphia Spectrum
March 22 Atlanta Fox Theatre
March 23 Tampa Curtis Hixon Hall
March 24 Pembroke Pines Hollywood Sportatorium
April 1
(2 shows)
San Francisco Old Waldorf
April 2
(2 shows)
April 5 Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum
April 6 Pittsburgh Civic Arena
April 24[a] Soledad Correctional Training Facility
June 29
(2 shows)
Santa Cruz The Catalyst
July 4[b] Oakland Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
July 8 Portland Memorial Coliseum
July 9 Seattle Seattle Center Coliseum

European leg (August 19 – September 14)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1977)
City Country Venue
August 19 Barcelona Spain Plaza de toros de las Arenas
August 21 San Sebastián Palacio Municipal de Deportes
August 23 Fréjus France Arènes de Fréjus
August 24
August 27 Leiden Netherlands Groenoordhallen
August 28 Neumünster West Germany Holstenhallen
August 29 Bremen Stadthalle Bremen
August 30 Bad Segeberg Kalkberg Stadium
September 3[c] Nuremberg Zeppelinfeld
September 4[d] Karlsruhe Wildparkstadion
September 6 Essen Grugahalle
September 7 Brussels Belgium Forest National
September 10[e] London England Crystal Palace Bowl
September 12 Verona Italy Verona Arena
September 13 Turin Palazzetto dello sport Parco Ruffini
September 14[f] Milan Velodromo Vigorelli

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1977)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
January 30 Long Beach, United States Long Beach Arena 6,258 $40,012 [84]
February 2 San Diego, United States Golden Hall 4,172 / 4,172 $27,000 [85]
February 5 Denver, United States McNichols Sports Arena 10,305 $82,235 [85]
February 9 Austin, United States Municipal Auditorium 4,260 $27,690 [86]
February 12 Abilene, United States Taylor County Coliseum 4,065 $26,244 [86]
February 13 Corpus Christi, United States Exhibit Hall 5,002 $33,532 [86]
February 15 Kansas City, United States Memorial Hall 3,100 $21,700 [87]
March 5
(2 shows)
New York City, United States Palladium 6,766 / 6,766 $54,400 [88]
March 20 Philadelphia, United States Spectrum 18,950 / 18,950 $127,926 [89]
March 22 Atlanta, United States Fox Theatre 3,833 / 3,833 $28,748 [90]
March 23 Tampa, United States Curtis Hixon Hall 3,608 $23,740 [90]
April 6 Pittsburgh, United States Civic Arena 7,748 $46,485 [91]
July 4[b][g] Oakland, United States Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 102,239 $1,129,879 [92]
TOTAL[h] 180,306 $1,669,591

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on April 24 was part of Bread & Roses.
  2. ^ a b The concert on July 4 was part of Day on the Green.
  3. ^ The concert on September 3 was part of the Nuernberg Rock Festival '77.
  4. ^ The concert on September 4 was part of the Karlsruhe Rock Festival '77.
  5. ^ The concert on September 10 was part of Garden Party X.
  6. ^ The concert on September 14 was interrupted by leftist protesters in the beginning.[79]
  7. ^ The box office data for July 4 combines attendance and gross with July 2 show.
  8. ^ The total attendance combines attendance and gross from two Day in the Green shows; Santana only performed at the second show.

Moonflower Tour (1977–1978)

[edit]
Moonflower Tour
Tour by Santana
Associated albumMoonflower
Start dateOctober 8, 1977 (1977-10-08)
End dateOctober 16, 1978 (1978-10-16)
Legs4
No. of shows70 in North America
25 in Asia
2 in Oceania
97 in total
Santana concert chronology

The Moonflower Tour was the tenth concert tour by Santana supporting the Moonflower album. The tour consisted of shows in small to mid-sized venues and rock festivals, as well as universities.[93]

Live releases

[edit]

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

Tour band

[edit]
  • Greg Walker – lead vocals, percussion
  • Carlos Santana – lead guitar, percussion, vocals
  • Tom Coster – keyboards, synthesizer (through June 1978)
  • Chris Solberg – rhythm guitar, keyboards (beginning June 1978)
  • Chris Rhyne – keyboards (beginning June 1978)
  • David Margen – bass guitar
  • Graham Lear – drums
  • Pete Escovedo – timbales, percussion
  • Armando Peraza – congas, percussion, vocals
  • Raul Rekow – congas, bongos, percussion, vocals

Typical set lists

[edit]

November 1977: Australian shows

[edit]

The band performed twice in Australia during this tour, solely as an act of the Rockarena festival, occurring on November 11, 1977, at the Sydney Showground in Sydney and November 13 at the Calder Park Raceway in Melbourne, playing to crowds of more than 43,000 and 60,000 respectively.[94][95] The November 13 gig was televised, and the songs broadcast on television were:[96]

  1. "Zulu" (Tom Coster)
  2. "Let the Children Play" (Leon Patillo, Carlos Santana)
  3. "Jugando" (José Areas, Santana)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  6. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Coster, David Rubinson)
  7. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  8. "I'll Be Waiting" (Santana)
  9. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  10. "Batuka" (Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Michael Shrieve)
  11. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Coke Escovedo, Rolie, Willie Bobo, Melvin Lastie)
  12. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  13. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  14. "Oneness" (Santana)
  15. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  16. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  17. "Gitano" (Armando Peraza)
  18. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)

November–December 1977: Japanese tour

[edit]

Santana performed 25 concerts in Japan, starting on November 19, 1977, at Nakajima Sports Center in Sapporo and ending on December 16, 1977, at Kurashiki Civic Cultural Hall in Kurashiki. This is a usual set list for this series of concerts (actual set list taken from the December 9 Osaka show):[97]

  1. "Arise Awake" (Santana)
  2. "Light Versus Darkness" (Santana)
  3. "Jim Jeannie" (Chico Hamilton)
  4. "Transformation Day" (Alan Hovhaness, Santana)
  5. "Victory" (Santana)
  6. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  7. "Zulu" (Coster)
  8. "Let the Children Play" (Patillo, Santana)
  9. "Jugando" (Areas, Santana)
  10. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  11. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  12. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Chancler, Coster, Rubinson)
  13. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  14. "The River" (Patillo, Santana)
  15. "Batuka" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve)
  16. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Escovedo, Rolie, Bobo, Lastie)
  17. "Evil Ways" (Henry)
  18. "Oye Como Va" (Puente)
  19. "I'll Be Waiting" (Santana)
  20. "She's Not There" (Argent)
  21. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  22. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  23. "Flor d'Luna (Moonflower)" (Coster)
  24. "Guajira" (Areas, Brown, Rico Reyes)
  25. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  26. "Solamente una vez" (Agustín Lara)
  27. "Gitano" (Peraza)
  28. "Concierto de Aranjuez" (Joaquín Rodrigo)
  29. "Oneness" (Santana)
  30. "Dawn" (Coster)
  31. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  32. "Samba Pa Ti" (Santana)

December 1977–October 1978: North American tour

[edit]
A Belkin Productions print advertisement for October 1978 concerts in Northeast Ohio, including Santana's concert at the Memorial Gym in Kent, Ohio on October 7, 1978

This tour lasted from December 31, 1977, at the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco to October 16, 1978, at The Bottom Line in New York City. The band often performed at universities and clubs as well as large rock festivals. This set list is representative of the second show on October 16, 1978.[98] It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.

  1. "Marathon" (Carlos Santana)
  2. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  3. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  4. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  5. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  6. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Tom Coster, David Rubinson)
  7. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  8. "Dealer/Spanish Rose" (Jim Capaldi/Santana)
  9. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  10. "Victory" (Santana)
  11. "Move On" (Santana, Chris Rhyne)
  12. "Batuka" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve])
  13. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Escovedo, Rolie, Bobo, Lastie)
  14. "One Chain (Don't Make No Prison)" (Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter)
  15. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  16. "She's Not There" (Argent)
  17. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Greg Walker, David Margen)
  18. "Jungle Strut" (Gene Ammons)
  19. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  20. "Evil Ways" (Henry)

Tour dates

[edit]

U.S. leg (October 8–29, 1977)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
October 8, 1977 San Diego United States California Theatre
October 17, 1977 Atlanta Fox Theatre
October 24, 1977 New Orleans The Warehouse
October 25, 1977 Houston Sam Houston Coliseum
October 29, 1977 San Francisco Winterland Ballroom

Australian leg (November 11–13, 1977)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
November 11, 1977[a] Sydney Australia Sydney Showground
November 13, 1977[b] Melbourne Calder Park Raceway

Japanese leg (November 19 – December 16, 1977)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
November 19, 1977 Sapporo Japan Nakajima Sports Center
November 20, 1977 Noboribetsu Shin Nittetsu Muroran Taiikukan
November 21, 1977 Hakodate Hakodate Shimin Taiikukan
November 22, 1977 Akita Akita Prefectural Hall
November 24, 1977 Niigata Niigata-shi Taiikukan
November 25, 1977 Fukui Fukui Shiei Taiikukan
November 26, 1977 Kanazawa Ishikawa Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
November 27, 1977 Toyama Toyama-shi Kokaido
November 28, 1977 Tokyo Nippon Budokan
November 29, 1977
November 30, 1977 Nakano Sun Plaza Hall
December 1, 1977
December 2, 1977 Mito Prefectural Culture Center
December 3, 1977 Kōriyama Kōriyama Shimin Kaikan
December 5, 1977 Nagoya Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall
December 6, 1977 Kyoto Kyoto Kaikan
December 7, 1977 Osaka Osaka Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
December 8, 1977
December 9, 1977
December 10, 1977 Festival Hall
December 12, 1977 Kitakyushu Yahata Shimin Kaikan
December 13, 1977 Fukuoka Fukuoka Kyuden Kinen Gymnasium
December 14, 1977 Kumamoto Kumamoto Prefectural Gymnasium
December 15, 1977 Hiroshima Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center
December 16, 1977 Kurashiki Kurashiki Civic Cultural Hall

North American leg (December 31, 1977 – October 16, 1978)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date City Country Venue
December 31, 1977 San Francisco United States Winterland Ballroom
February 7, 1978 Buffalo Shea's Buffalo
February 8, 1978 Passaic Capitol Theatre
February 9, 1978
(2 shows)
New York City Palladium
February 10, 1978
(2 shows)
February 11, 1978 Philadelphia Spectrum
February 12, 1978 Cleveland Public Auditorium
February 13, 1978 Toledo N/A
February 14, 1978
(2 shows)
Detroit Detroit Masonic Temple
February 15, 1978 Flint IMA Sports Arena
February 16, 1978 Toronto Canada Maple Leaf Gardens
February 17, 1978 Montreal Montreal Forum
February 18, 1978
(2 shows)
Boston United States Music Hall
February 19, 1978 Syracuse Manley Field House
February 20, 1978 Landover Capital Centre
February 22, 1978 Houston Sam Houston Coliseum
February 24, 1978
(2 shows)
San Diego Fox Theatre
February 25, 1978 Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium
February 26, 1978 Fresno Selland Arena
March 12, 1978
(2 shows)
Portland Paramount Theatre
March 14, 1978 Seattle Seattle Center Arena
March 15, 1978 Boulder Balch Fieldhouse
March 16, 1978 Omaha Omaha Civic Auditorium
March 17, 1978 Minneapolis Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium
March 18, 1978[c] Ontario Ontario Motor Speedway
March 19, 1978 Chicago International Amphitheatre
March 20, 1978 St. Louis Kiel Opera House
March 21, 1978 Fort Worth Tarrant County Convention Center
March 22, 1978 New Orleans Municipal Auditorium
March 23, 1978 Mobile Municipal Auditorium
March 24, 1978 Atlanta N/A
March 25, 1978 Lakeland Lakeland Civic Center
March 26, 1978 Pembroke Pines Hollywood Sportatorium
June 3, 1978 Cincinnati Bogart's
June 4, 1978 Richmond Much More
June 5, 1978 Philadelphia Spectrum
June 7, 1978 Chicago B'Ginnings
June 8, 1978 Rockford Flight of the Phoenix
June 9, 1978 Toronto Canada Maple Leaf Gardens
June 10, 1978 Montreal Montreal Forum
June 23, 1978
(2 shows)
San Francisco United States Old Waldorf
June 25, 1978[d] Eugene Autzen Stadium
July 26, 1978[e] Oakland Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
September 1, 1978 Kansas City N/A
September 3, 1978[f] Atlanta Grant Field
September 9, 1978 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
September 10, 1978 Berkeley William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre
September 22, 1978
(2 shows)
Monterey Monterey Conference Center
September 28, 1978 Minneapolis Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium
October 1, 1978 Ann Arbor Hill Auditorium
October 5, 1978 Columbus Mershon Auditorium
October 7, 1978 Kent Memorial Gym
October 8, 1978 Dayton University of Dayton Arena
October 9, 1978 Passaic Capitol Theatre
October 12, 1978 Providence Alumni Hall
October 13, 1978 Vestal P.E. Center
October 16, 1978
(2 shows)
New York City The Bottom Line

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)
December 31, 1977 Daly City, United States Cow Palace 14,500 / 14,500 $144,160 [99]
February 8, 1978 Passaic, United States Capitol Theatre 3,356 $27,405 [100]
February 9, 1978
(2 shows)
New York City, United States Palladium 13,548 $111,604 [100]
February 10, 1978
(2 shows)
[100]
February 18, 1978
(2 shows)
Boston, United States Music Hall 8,450 / 8,450 $69,235 [101]
February 24, 1978
(2 shows)
San Diego, United States Fox Theatre 4,812 / 4,812 $39,146 [102]
March 12, 1978
(2 shows)
Portland, United States Paramount Theatre 5,679 / 5,679 $42,593 [103]
March 14, 1978 Seattle, United States Seattle Center Arena 6,000 / 6,000 $45,051 [104]
March 15, 1978 Boulder, United States Balch Fieldhouse 5,154 $34,468 [104]
March 18, 1978[c] Ontario, United States Ontario Motor Speedway 290,000 / 290,000 $2,500,000 [104]
March 23, 1978 Mobile, United States Municipal Auditorium 12,000 / 12,000 $87,568 [105]
March 25, 1978 Lakeland, United States Lakeland Civic Center 9,755 / 9,755 $68,285 [105]
June 25, 1978[d] Eugene, United States Autzen Stadium 48,713 $512,236 [106]
July 26, 1978[e] Oakland, United States Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 60,000 / 60,000 $750,000 [107]
September 9, 1978 Santa Barbara, United States Santa Barbara Bowl 4,324 $34,082 [108]
September 10, 1978 Berkeley, United States William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre 8,327 / 8,327 $64,281 [108]
September 22, 1978
(2 shows)
Monterey, United States Monterey Conference Center 4,900 / 4,900 $41,827 [109]
September 28, 1978 Minneapolis, United States Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium 4,800 / 4,800 $35,060 [110]
October 9, 1978 Passaic, United States Capitol Theatre 3,456 / 3,456 $28,182 [111]
October 13, 1978 Vestal, United States P.E. Center 3,200 / 3,200 $19,200 [111]
TOTAL 510,971 $4,654,383

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on November 11, 1977 was a part of the Rockarena festival.[94]
  2. ^ The concert on November 13, 1977 was a part of the Rockarena festival.[95]
  3. ^ a b The concert on March 18, 1978 was a part of California Jam II.
  4. ^ a b The concert on June 25, 1978 was a part of the Oregon Music Harvest.
  5. ^ a b The concert on July 26, 1978 was a part of Day on the Green.
  6. ^ The concert on September 3, 1978 was a part of the Champagne Jam.

European Tour 1978 (1978)

[edit]
Santana European Tour 1978
Tour by Santana
Associated albumInner Secrets
Start dateOctober 30, 1978 (1978-10-30)
End dateDecember 10, 1978 (1978-12-10)
Legs1
No. of shows34
Santana concert chronology

Santana European Tour 1978 was a concert tour of Europe by Santana, supporting the just released Inner Secrets album. The opening act for all of the shows was the Devadip Orchestra, a short-lived group led by Carlos Santana.[112][113] The tour started on 30 October 1978 at Wembley Arena in London, England and ended on 10 December 1978 at Marché aux Fleurs in Nice, France.[114]

Tour band

[edit]
  • Greg Walker – lead vocals, percussion
  • Carlos Santana – lead guitar, percussion, vocals
  • Chris Solberg – rhythm guitar, keyboards
  • Chris Rhyne – keyboards
  • David Margen – bass guitar
  • Graham Lear – drums
  • Pete Escovedo – timbales, percussion
  • Armando Peraza – congas, percussion, vocals
  • Raul Rekow – congas, bongos, percussion, vocals

Set list

[edit]
Carlos Santana performing at the Groenoordhallen in Leiden, Netherlands on 17 November 1978
Carlos Santana performing at the Groenoordhallen in Leiden, Netherlands on 17 November 1978

This set list is representative of the show on 11 November.[115] It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.

  1. "Marathon" (Carlos Santana)
  2. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  3. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  4. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  5. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  6. "Dance Sister Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" (Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Tom Coster, David Rubinson)
  7. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  8. "Dealer/Spanish Rose" (Jim Capaldi/Santana)
  9. "Victory is Won" (Santana)
  10. "Move On" (Santana, Chris Rhyne)
  11. "Batuka" (José "Chepito" Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Michael Shrieve)
  12. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Rolie, Coke Escovedo)
  13. "Life Is a Lady/Holiday" (Dennis Lambert/Santana)
  14. "One Chain (Don't Make No Prison)" (Lambert, Brian Potter)
  15. "Toussaint L'Overture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve, Santana)
  16. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  17. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Greg Walker, David Margen)
  18. "Well All Right (Reprise)" (Petty, Holly, Allison, Mauldin)
  19. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  20. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)

Tour dates

[edit]

The itinerary as shown inside the official Santana European Tour 1978 tour programme consisted of:[116]

List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1978)
City Country Venue
October 30 London England Wembley Arena
October 31
November 1
November 3 Stafford Bingley Hall
November 4 Manchester Manchester Apollo
November 5
November 7 Brussels Belgium Forest National
November 8 West Berlin West Germany Deutschlandhalle
November 9 Hamburg Congress Centrum Hamburg
November 11 Gothenburg Sweden Scandinavium
November 12 Lund Olympen
November 13 Oslo Norway Ekeberghallen
November 14 Copenhagen Denmark Falkoner Teatret
November 16 Bremen West Germany Stadthalle Bremen
November 17 Leiden Netherlands Groenoordhallen
November 18 Dortmund West Germany Westfalenhallen
November 19 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
November 21 Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
November 22 Passau West Germany Nibelungenhalle
November 24 Cologne Sporthalle
November 25 Frankfurt Festhalle Messe Frankfurt
November 26 Saarbrücken Saarlandhalle
November 27 Stuttgart N/A
November 28 Eppelheim Rhein-Neckar-Halle
November 30 Hanover Eilenriedehalle
December 1 Nuremberg Messehalle
December 2 Munich Olympiahalle München
December 3 Colmar France Théâtre de Plein Air
December 4 Paris Pavillon de Paris
December 5
December 6
December 7 Lyon Palais d'Hiver
December 9 Barcelona Spain Palau dels Esports de Barcelona
December 10 Madrid N/A

While the final dates performed were:

List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1978)
City Country Venue
October 30 London England Wembley Arena
October 31
November 1
November 3 Stafford Bingley Hall
November 4 Manchester Manchester Apollo
November 5
November 7 Brussels Belgium Forest National
November 8 West Berlin West Germany Deutschlandhalle
November 9 Hamburg Congress Centrum Hamburg
November 11 Gothenburg Sweden Scandinavium
November 12 Lund Olympen
November 13 Oslo Norway Ekeberghallen
November 14 Copenhagen Denmark Falkoner Teatret
November 15 Essen West Germany N/A
November 16 Bremen Stadthalle Bremen
November 17 Leiden Netherlands Groenoordhallen
November 18 Frankfurt West Germany Festhalle Messe Frankfurt
November 19 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
November 20 Ulm West Germany Donauhalle Ulm
November 22 Dortmund Westfalenhallen
November 24 Passau Nibelungenhalle
November 25 Sindelfingen Messehalle
November 26 Saarbrücken Saarlandhalle
November 27 Böblingen Sporthalle
November 29 Eppelheim Rhein-Neckar-Halle
November 30 Hanover Radrennbahn Messe-Sportpalast
December 1 Cologne Sporthalle
December 2 Munich Olympiahalle München
December 4 Paris France Pavillon de Paris
December 5
December 6
December 7
December 8 Saint-Étienne Palais des Expositions
December 9 Barcelona Spain Palau dels Esports de Barcelona
December 10 Nice France Marché aux Fleurs

North American Tour 1979 (1979)

[edit]
Santana North American Tour 1979
Tour by Santana
Associated albumInner Secrets
Start dateFebruary 3, 1979 (1979-02-03)
End dateSeptember 16, 1979 (1979-09-16)
Legs1
No. of shows52
Box office$1.512 million ($14.2 million in 2023 dollars)
Santana concert chronology

Santana North American Tour 1979 was a North American tour by Santana, supporting their album Inner Secrets.

Tour band

[edit]

Reception

[edit]

The concert on February 7, 1979, at the Convention Center in Anaheim, California was described as a "technically excellent, yet, surprisingly uninspiring nine-song nearly 90-minute set."[118]

Set list

[edit]

The tour commenced on February 3 at the Paramount Theatre in Portland, Oregon and concluded on September 16, 1979, at Albuquerque Sports Stadium in Albuquerque, New Mexico. An average set list of this tour was as follows (actual set list from September 2):[119]

  1. "Marathon" (Carlos Santana)
  2. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  3. "All I Ever Wanted" (Alex Ligertwood, Santana, Chris Solberg)
  4. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  5. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  6. "Hard Times" (Ligertwood, Margen, Alan Pasqua) - 3:57
  7. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  8. "Batuka" (José "Chepito" Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Michael Shrieve)
  9. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Rolie, Coke Escovedo)
  10. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  11. "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  12. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  13. "Lightning in the Sky" (Santana, Solberg)
  14. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, David Margen)
  15. "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" (John Lennon)
  16. "Drum Solo" (Graham Lear)
  17. "Percussion Solos" (Armando Peraza, Raul Rekow)
  18. "Stand Up" (Santana, Solberg)
  19. "Runnin" (Margen)
  20. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  21. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  22. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  23. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  24. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)

Tour dates

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue[120][121]
Date
(1979)
City Country Venue
February 3
(2 shows)
Portland United States Paramount Theatre
February 4 Seattle Seattle Center Arena
February 6 Sacramento Sacramento Memorial Auditorium
February 7 Anaheim Anaheim Convention Center
February 9 San Diego San Diego Civic Theatre
February 10 Las Vegas Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts
February 11 Tucson Tucson Arena
February 13 Fort Worth Tarrant County Convention Center Arena
February 14 Houston Sam Houston Coliseum
February 16 Tampa Curtis Hixon Hall
February 17 Pembroke Pines Hollywood Sportatorium
February 19 Atlanta Capri Ballroom
February 28 Cleveland Public Auditorium
March 1 Chicago International Amphitheatre
March 2
(2 shows)
Pittsburgh Stanley Theatre
March 3 Philadelphia Spectrum
March 5 Boston Boston Garden
March 7 Buffalo Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
March 8 Landover Capital Centre
March 9 Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum
March 10 Indianapolis Market Square Arena
March 11 Tucson Tucson Arena
March 13 Montreal Canada Montreal Forum
March 14 Rochester United States Rochester Community War Memorial
March 15 New York City Madison Square Garden
March 17 Detroit Cobo Arena
March 18 Toronto Canada Maple Leaf Gardens
March 23 San Rafael United States Marin Veterans' Memorial Auditorium
March 25 Berkeley Zellerbach Auditorium
April 22 San Francisco Old Waldorf
June 23 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
July 14
(2 shows)
Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre
July 15 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl
August 4 Milwaukee Henry Maier Festival Park
August 5[a] Chicago Comiskey Park
August 20 Kansas City Kemper Arena
August 28 Battle Creek W.K. Kellogg Auditorium
August 29 Saint Paul Midway Stadium
August 31 Omaha Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium
September 1[b] Kansas City Royals Stadium
September 2 Uptown Theater
September 3 Morrison Red Rocks Amphitheatre
September 6 Austin Municipal Auditorium
September 7 San Antonio Convention Center Arena
September 8 Corpus Christi Memorial Coliseum
September 9 McAllen La Villa Real Special Events Center
September 14 Las Cruces Pan American Center
September 15 Phoenix Celebrity Theatre
September 16 Albuquerque Albuquerque Sports Stadium

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1979)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
February 3
(2 shows)
Portland, United States Paramount Theatre 5,920 / 5,920 $48,875 [122]
February 4 Seattle, United States Seattle Center Arena 6,000 / 6,000 $50,932 [122]
February 6 Sacramento, United States Sacramento Memorial Auditorium 3,838 / 8,838 $32,245 [123]
February 7 Anaheim, United States Anaheim Convention Center 8,220 / 8,220 $64,552 [123]
February 16 Tampa, United States Curtis Hixon Hall 7,600 $60,288 [124]
March 2
(2 shows)
Pittsburgh, United States Stanley Theatre 7,400 / 7,400 $68,404 [125]
March 5 Boston, United States Boston Garden 9,200 $86,343 [126]
March 9 Cincinnati, United States Riverfront Coliseum 8,405 / 8,405 $63,000 [126]
March 10 Indianapolis, United States Market Square Arena 13,533 $104,950 [126]
March 11 Tucson, United States Tucson Arena 7,100 $54,800 [126]
March 14 Rochester, United States Rochester Community War Memorial 6,205 $41,510 [127]
March 15 New York City, United States Madison Square Garden 19,600 / 19,600 $171,000 [127]
March 23 San Rafael, United States Marin Veterans' Memorial Auditorium 2,000 / 2,000 $19,831 [128]
March 23 Berkeley, United States Zellerbach Auditorium 2,096 $16,276 [128]
September 1[b] Kansas City, United States Royals Stadium 34,087 $423,204 [129]
September 3 Morrison, United States Red Rocks Amphitheatre 8,500 / 8,500 $79,843 [130]
September 7 San Antonio, United States Convention Center Arena 7,284 $54,630 [130]
September 8 Corpus Christi, United States Memorial Coliseum 4,380 $37,142 [130]
September 9 McAllen, United States La Villa Real Special Events Center 4,000 / 4,000 $34,565 [131]
TOTAL 165,368 $1,512,360

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on August 5 was a part of Day in the Park.
  2. ^ a b The concert on September 1 was a part of Summer Jam '79.

1979 tour of Australia, Japan and the United States (1979)

[edit]
Santana's 1979 tour of Australia, Japan and the United States
Tour by Santana
Associated albumMarathon
Start dateOctober 1, 1979 (1979-10-01)
End dateDecember 2, 1979 (1979-12-02)
Legs3
No. of shows15 in North America
9 in Oceania
8 in Asia
32 in total
Santana concert chronology

During the last quarter of 1979, American rock band Santana toured Australia, Japan and the United States in support of their album Marathon. Eddie Money toured with the group through October 28.

Live releases

[edit]

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

Tour band

[edit]

Reception

[edit]

The band's concert on November 25, 1979, at the Palladium in New York City was praised in a review for Billboard.[132]

Typical set lists

[edit]

Australian dates

[edit]

The Australian tour lasted from October 1 in Apollo Stadium in Adelaide to October 10 at the Hordern Pavilion in Sydney. The most complete set list is from the 8th.[133]

  1. "Marathon" (Carlos Santana)
  2. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin)
  3. "All I Ever Wanted" (Alex Ligertwood, Santana, Chris Solberg)
  4. "Singing Winds, Crying Beasts" (Michael Carabello)
  5. "Black Magic Woman" (Peter Green)
  6. "Gypsy Queen" (Gábor Szabó)
  7. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Dennis Lambert, Brian Potter, Greg Walker, David Margen)
  8. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Tom Coster, Santana)
  9. "Batuka" (José "Chepito" Areas, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Gregg Rolie, Michael Shrieve)
  10. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Rolie, Coke Escovedo)
  11. "You Know That I Love You" (Ligertwood, Alan Pasqua, Santana)
  12. "Lightning in the Sky" (Santana, Solberg)
  13. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  14. "Stand Up" (Santana, Solberg)
  15. "Runnin" (Margen)
  16. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Marcus Malone)
  17. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  18. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  19. "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" (John Lennon)
  20. "Evil Ways" (Clarence "Sonny" Henry)
  21. "Shake Your Moneymaker" (Elmore James)

Japanese performances

[edit]

The band performed in Japan from October 16 at Fukuoka Kyuden Kinen Gymnasium in Fukuoka to October 25 at Festival Hall in Osaka. An average set list was as follows (actual set list from October 19):[134]

  1. "Marathon" (Santana)
  2. "Well All Right" (Petty, Holly, Allison, Mauldin)
  3. "All I Ever Wanted" (Ligertwood, Santana, Solberg)
  4. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Pasqua, Armando Peraza, Raul Rekow, Santana)
  5. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  6. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  7. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Walker, Margen)
  8. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  9. "Batuka" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Shrieve)
  10. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Rolie, Escovedo)
  11. "Incident at Neshabur" (Alberto Gianquinto, Santana)
  12. "Lightning in the Sky" (Santana, Solberg)
  13. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  14. "Stand Up" (Santana, Solberg)
  15. "Runnin" (Margen)
  16. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  17. "She's Not There" (Argent)
  18. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  19. "I Want You" (Arthur "T-Boy" Ross, Leon Ware)
  20. "Evil Ways" (Henry)

US tour

[edit]

This US tour commenced on October 28 at the Aloha Stadium in Honolulu and concluded on December 2 at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. Unusually, selections from Caravanserai were performed. An average set list was as follows (taken from November 17):[135]

  1. "Marathon" (Santana)
  2. "Well All Right" (Petty, Holly, Allison, Mauldin)
  3. "All I Ever Wanted" (Ligertwood, Santana, Solberg)
  4. "Tales of Kilimanjaro" (Pasqua, Peraza, Rekow, Santana)
  5. "Black Magic Woman" (Green)
  6. "Gypsy Queen" (Szabó)
  7. "Open Invitation" (Santana, Lambert, Potter, Walker, Margen)
  8. "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)" (Coster, Santana)
  9. "No One to Depend On" (Carabello, Rolie, Escovedo)
  10. "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  11. "Aqua Marine" (Pasqua, Santana)
  12. "Just in Time to See the Sun" (Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  13. "Song of the Wind" (Rolie, Santana, Schon)
  14. "Lightning in the Sky" (Santana, Solberg)
  15. "Savor" (Areas, Brown, Carabello, Rolie, Santana, Shrieve)
  16. "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji
  17. "You Know That I Love You" (Ligertwood, Pasqua, Santana)
  18. "Stand Up" (Santana, Solberg)
  19. "Runnin" (Margen)
  20. "Soul Sacrifice" (Santana, Rolie, Brown, Malone)
  21. "Incident at Neshabur" (Gianquinto, Santana)
  22. "Oye Como Va" (Tito Puente)
  23. "She's Not There" (Rod Argent)
  24. "Transcendance" (Santana)
  25. "I Want You" (Ross, Ware)
  26. "Evil Ways" (Henry)

Tour dates

[edit]

Australian leg (October 1–10)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1979)
City Country Venue
October 1 Adelaide Australia Apollo Stadium
October 2
October 3 Melbourne Festival Hall
October 4
October 5
October 7 Brisbane Brisbane Festival Hall
October 8 Sydney Hordern Pavilion
October 9
October 10

Japanese leg (October 16–25)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1979)
City Country Venue
October 16 Fukuoka Japan Fukuoka Kyuden Kinen Gymnasium
October 18 Hiroshima Yubin Chokin Hall
October 19 Osaka Osaka Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan
October 21[a] Tokyo Korakuen Hall
October 22 Nippon Budokan
October 23
October 24 Osaka Festival Hall
October 25

U.S. leg (October 28 – December 2)

[edit]
List of tour dates with date, city, country, venue
Date
(1979)
City Country Venue
October 28 Honolulu United States Aloha Stadium
November 15 San Diego Fox Theatre
November 16 Long Beach Terrace Theater
November 17
(2 shows)
San Francisco Warfield Theatre
November 21
(2 shows)
Detroit Detroit Masonic Temple
November 22 Chicago Uptown Theatre
November 24 Hempstead Calderone Concert Hall
November 25 New York City Palladium
November 27 Washington, D.C. DAR Constitution Hall
November 28 Passaic Capitol Theatre
November 29 Boston Music Hall
November 30 Upper Darby Township Tower Theater
December 2 Atlanta Fox Theatre

Box office score data

[edit]
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross, references
Date
(1979)
City Venue Attendance Gross Ref(s)
October 28 Honolulu, United States Aloha Stadium 12,193 $123,405 [136]
November 15 San Diego, United States Fox Theatre 2,285 / 2,285 $21,350 [137]
November 16 Long Beach, United States Terrace Theater 2,884 / 2,884 $27,932 [137]
November 17
(2 shows)
San Francisco, United States Warfield Theatre 4,199 / 4,199 $39,301 [137]
November 29 Boston, United States Music Hall 4,200 / 4,200 $38,837 [138]
TOTAL 25,761 $250,825

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The concert on October 21 was a part of Guitar Wars.

References

[edit]

Citations

  1. ^ Santana 2014, p. 151
  2. ^ a b Santana 2014, p. 152
  3. ^ Santana 2014, p. 153
  4. ^ "Other Venue Art". Chickenonaunicycle.com. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  5. ^ Santana 2014, p. 161
  6. ^ Santana 2014, p. 163
  7. ^ a b c Santana 2014, p. 169
  8. ^ a b c Santana 2014, p. 174
  9. ^ a b c d Santana 2014, p. 175
  10. ^ Santana 2014, p. 192
  11. ^ Santana 2014, p. 176
  12. ^ Santana 2014, p. 177
  13. ^ "Santanamigos. 1967". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Site contains pictures of concert tour posters and ticket stubs. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  14. ^ "Santanamigos. 1968". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Site contains pictures of concert tour posters and ticket stubs. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  15. ^ "Michael Shrieve". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  16. ^ "Search for setlists: santana 1969 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  17. ^ "Search for setlists: santana 1970 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  18. ^ Santana 2014, p. 206
  19. ^ Santana 2014, p. 207
  20. ^ Santana 2014, p. 208
  21. ^ a b Santana 2014, p. 202
  22. ^ Santana 2014, p. 204
  23. ^ Santana 2014, p. 205
  24. ^ "Santana Average Setlists of year: 1969 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  25. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at Fillmore East, New York on April 12, 1970 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  26. ^ "Santana Concert Setlist at Royal Albert Hall, London on April 18, 1970 | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
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Bibliography

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