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"Smooth" is a song performed by American rock band Santana and Rob Thomas of Matchbox Twenty, who sings the lead vocals. It was released to radio on June 15, 1999, as the lead single from Santana's 1999 studio album, Supernatural .
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.
It features a horse participating in a dressage competition in the Olympics -- and it is dancing to an instrumental cover of "Smooth" by Santana featuring Rob Thomas. The video is blowing up the ...
Santana concert chronology; Dance of the Rainbow Serpent Tour ... California was featured on the 2000 video Supernatural Live: ... "Smooth" (Shur, Thomas)
One of Shur's most notable works is the song "Smooth", which he co-wrote with Matchbox 20's Rob Thomas for Santana's Grammy Award winning album Supernatural. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] "Smooth" reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1999, [ 4 ] and won Shur and Thomas the 1999 Grammy Award for Song of the Year .
"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.
"Maria Maria" is a song by American rock band Santana featuring the Product G&B, included on Santana's 18th studio album, Supernatural (1999). The song was written by Wyclef Jean, Jerry "Wonda" Duplessis, Carlos Santana, Karl Perazzo, and Raul Rekow, while Jean and Duplessis produced it.
Supernatural is the eighteenth studio album by American rock band Santana, released on June 15, 1999, on Arista Records.After Santana found themselves without a label in the mid-1990s, founding member and guitarist Carlos Santana began talks with Arista president Clive Davis, who had originally signed the group to Columbia Records in 1969.