Label: PolyGram Records (Germany), 513 197-2
Style: Pop Rock, Latin Rock
Country: Autlan de Navarro, Mexico (July 20, 1947)
Time: 71:14
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 457 Mb
Charts: US #102, AUT #31, FRA #41, NLD #51, SWI #11, GER #47.
Santana signed to Polydor in 1991 after 22 years with Columbia Records. On this label debut album, the band has been altered by official addition of frequent sideman Raul Rekow and Karl Perazzols, replacement of longtime percussionist Armando Peraza. But this septet is still led by Carlos Santana and keyboardist Chester Thompson, with Alex Ligertwood singing. The record has a somewhat elegiac tone, beginning with a stage introduction by the late promoter Bill Graham, who was Santana's mentor and unofficial manager, being dedicated to Graham and Miles Davis, who also had died since the last album, and featuring an excerpt from a speech by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., solos taken from Davis and John Coltrane, and music written by Bob Marley, Coltrane, and Gil Evans. Despite the presence of all these heroic ghosts, however, Milagro is only an average Santana release, familiar-sounding but undistinguished, and it failed to arrest the band's commercial slide, becoming the first new Santana studio album not to crack the Top 100.
(allmusic.com/album/milagro-mw0000072179)
Santana signed to Polydor in 1991 after 22 years with Columbia Records. On this label debut album, the band has been altered by official addition of frequent sideman Raul Rekow and Karl Perazzols, replacement of longtime percussionist Armando Peraza. But this septet is still led by Carlos Santana and keyboardist Chester Thompson, with Alex Ligertwood singing. The record has a somewhat elegiac tone, beginning with a stage introduction by the late promoter Bill Graham, who was Santana's mentor and unofficial manager, being dedicated to Graham and Miles Davis, who also had died since the last album, and featuring an excerpt from a speech by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., solos taken from Davis and John Coltrane, and music written by Bob Marley, Coltrane, and Gil Evans. Despite the presence of all these heroic ghosts, however, Milagro is only an average Santana release, familiar-sounding but undistinguished, and it failed to arrest the band's commercial slide, becoming the first new Santana studio album not to crack the Top 100.
(allmusic.com/album/milagro-mw0000072179)
01. Milagro (07:36)
02. Somewhere In Heaven (09:59)
03. Saja - Right On (08:51)
04. Your Touch (06:35)
05. Life Is For Living (04:41)
06. Red Prophet (05:37)
07. Agua Que Va Caer (04:24)
08. Make Somebody Happy (04:14)
09. Free All The People (South A (06:06)
10. Gipsy - Grajonca (07:10)
11. We Don't Have To Wait (04:35)
12. A Dios (01:21)
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