Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Soul Sacrifice" is an instrumental composed and recorded by the American rock group Santana. Identified as one of the highlights of the 1969 Woodstock festival and documentary film , [ 1 ] "Soul Sacrifice" features extended guitar passages by Carlos Santana and a percussion section with a solo by drummer Michael Shrieve .
"Soul Sacrifice" saw release on the 1988 video Viva Santana! An Intimate Conversation With Carlos Santana . Additionally, the same song was released on the 1995 box set Dance of the Rainbow Serpent , the 1970 live album Woodstock: Music from the Original Soundtrack and More , and the 1970 film Woodstock .
The Woodstock Experience is a box consisting of a set of studio albums and live performances from the 1969 Woodstock Festival by the artists Santana, Janis Joplin, Sly and the Family Stone, Jefferson Airplane, and Johnny Winter. Each set consists of the 1969 studio album by the artist as well as each artist's entire Woodstock performance.
At age 20, Shrieve was the second youngest musician to perform at Woodstock. [citation needed] His drum solo during "Soul Sacrifice" in the Woodstock film has been described as "electrifying", [2] although he considers his solo during the same piece in 1970 at Tanglewood the superior performance. [3]
This was just the band's second performance together. [15] Neil Young skipped most of the acoustic set (the exceptions being his compositions "Mr. Soul" and "Wonderin'" and the final acoustic song, Stills' "You Don't Have to Cry") and joined Crosby, Stills and Nash during the electric set, but refused to be filmed. Young felt the filming was ...
The videography of Santana, a Mexican-American rock guitarist, and his band Santana currently consists of 10 concert tour videos, 13 video singles and 1 box set. Over a career spanning forty years, Santana has been seen as exemplifying latin rock , whilst diversifying into other genres.
The group found little success in the music scene until it was slated to perform at the August 1969 Woodstock Music Festival and began work on its debut album, Santana. Malone is credited as co-writer of "Soul Sacrifice", which featured on the album and which the band performed at
Shortly after Live! was issued, the editors of Billboard awarded it "Best New Album of the Week" in the Soul category, [4] and a reviewer commented: "This album should get the nod as one of the best live rock albums of the year... The musicians from both Santana and Miles complement each other on every track." [5]