Santana - Santana Sacred Fire
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 See Larger Image | Santana - Sacred Fire List Price : $19.98 USD Your Price : $10.97 USD ProductGroup: DVD Actor(s): Santana Movie Release Date : 2001-06-26 Studio : Island Label : Island Avg. Customer Rating : (48 reviews) Running Time : 97
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Santana Sacred Fire Finally found it! Rating: I've seen a couple of the videos from this DVD and have looked for it all over. Santana has it on his website but it's back ordered. I first searched for it here and came up with Sacred Fire live in South America? Then I searched again and found the Live in Mexico. Seems to me it's the same dvd but just in case I ordered the Live in Mexico since that's where the clips I've seen were filmed. I can't wait to see the whole concert. The version of "Samba Pa' Ti" is probably the best one I've seen him play. He takes the audience to the edge and just when they are about to fall he picks them back up again. Although I haven't seen the whole show I'm giving it 5 stars just from the four clips I've seen as the music is very high energy and if you've ever been to one of his concerts you know what I mean.
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Customer Reviews for Santana Sacred Fire Cd SUPER CONCERT Rating: THIS CONCERT TOOK ME BACK TO THE 70'S & 80'S, AND IT ALSO TOOK ME BACK TO THE OLD WAREHOUSE CONCERT DAYS BACK IN NEW ORLEANS. THE BEST CONCERT I HAVE SEEN WITHOUT LEAVING MY HOUSE. :)
Editorial Reviews for Santana Sacred Fire Audio Cd Amazon.com With its location in Mexico City and a dedication to Cesar Chavez, this live Santana set is clearly rooted in Carlos's Chicano heritage. Of course his heritage has been part of Santana's core sound since he blew crowds away with Latin beats, Spanish vocals, and his unmistakably yearning guitar sound in the late 1960s. But here, Carlos takes viewers back to a spiritual point of reference that gains meaning through the music and offers meaning back to the music. The 1993 vintage of the film naturally centers it on the latest of many, many incarnations of Santana. And even though the familiar faces from eras past are gone, the band still stirs up these tunes. Carlos calls on timeworn standards that should be familiar to any fan of the last generation's rock & roll, and the band dutifully churns out "No One to Depend On," "Black Magic Woman," "Oye Como Va," "Samba Pa Ti," "Guajira," and even the 1970s-era hit "Open Invitation." There are highlights aplenty, not the least of which is show-opener "Angels All Around Us" and "Soul Sacrifice." And the video stays largely focused on the music--save for the travelogue cutaways to sites in Mexico. As for Carlos, he plays as if the year were 1968--which is to say that he launched a career with his sound and vision almost fully formed. There has been development for the great one, but here he sticks with his soulful gospel of stirring, uncategorizable (is it world music? Latin rock?) guitar-driven rock & roll. --Andrew Bartlett
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