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CARLOS SANTANA - MAGAZINE COVER FEATURE STORY - WOODSTOCK MEMORIES - LATIN MUSIC
$ 5.28
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CARLOS SANTANA - MAGAZINE COVER FEATURE STORY - WOODSTOCK MEMORIES - LATIN MUSIC - TURNING 72Free Shipping: USPS Priority Mail Flat Rate Envelope.
This listing is for a 2019 magazine back issue.
The cover features story is about Carlos Santana.
You will receive the entire magazine.
The price includes fast, insured shipping.
This is from a non-smoking home.
CARLOS SANTANA
Magazine Cover Feature Story
“CARLOS SANTANA... RIFFS ON ROCK ‘N’ ROLL,
WOODSTOCK MEMORIES... AND AMERICA’S
LOVE OF LATIN RHYTHMS”...
Plus another feature titled “Woodstock... The Greatest Rock Festival: An Oral History”.
“THE 50-YEAR SUPERNATURAL, MAGICAL,
MUSICAL JOURNEY OF CARLOS SANTANA”
This great spotlight on Carlos Santana at 72 years old includes a great cover (suitable for framing), a small photo of Carlos at Woodstock on the table of contents(in a photo collage, next to Jimi Hendrix), a 5-page feature story on Santana with informative reading 2 photos. This feature is pat of the magazine’s Summer Music Issue.
Feature story writer: Leila Cobo
Color photographs by Ramona Rosales, shot at TRI Studios in San Rafael, California... Marin County.
The black & white photo of Carlos Santana at Woodstock is by Robert Altman/ Getty Images.
This publication has 84 pages. The Santana over feature story is 5 pages, not the entire issue.
Also included in this magazine: an illustrated editorial titled “Lives Touched By Woodstock, 50 Years On”, letters to the editor re Jeff Daniels acting on Broadway stage, a spotlight on Patricia Arquette, a food piece on grilling fruits & veggies, a few film reviews, a spotlight titled “The Melodies Of Our Lives” (includes Berry Gordy of Motown, David Crosby and the music documentary filmmaking of Ken Burns), a spotlight on Renée Zellweger, a recipe page on making healthy fast-food, health pieces, a great feature titled “The Rhythm Is Gonna Get You!” that includes Gloria Estefan, José Feliciano, Julio Iglesias, Linda Ronstadt, John Santos, Sergio Mendes, ‘The Legacy of La Bamba’, ‘Blame It On The Bossa Nova’, a piece on ‘Latin Music In America’ by Ernesto Lechner(includes an illustrated , condensed history of latin dance from 1900s-2000s).
Also includes a 7-page photo-illustrated feature titled “50 Years: Generation Woodstock” with informative reading, 20 great photos including photos of Woodstock performers Richie Havens, Country Joe McDonald, and Jimi Hendrix. Also a home re-design feature on Property Brothers with graphic novel-style illustrations by Remie Geoffroi, a wonderful feature on J. Robert Harris who is a 75-year old New Yorker who treks the international natural world, and a feature story on Frank Abagnale titled “Scam Me If You Can”, featuring Leonardo DiCaprio who portrayed Frank in ‘Catch Me If You Can’. Also a spotlight on former Milwaukee Brewer and country music legend Charley Pride, a piece about backyard foraging, and a fun spotlight on 50-year old Tyler Perry, and a nod to other celebrity milestone birthdays.
Such a great variety of reading and visuals compliment the feature story on Carlos Santana... nice!
Please see all photos.
Questions welcome.
This magazine measures 8” x 10”
Condition: This magazine is in very good condition, though the cover has a few small creases and one tiny edge tear(not on the Carlos Santana image).
The covers has a mailing label that has been blacked-out with a Sharpie.
The interior pages are very good condition.
Page 1 has a lightly folded top corner.
No ink pen or highlighter markings. No torn or missing pages.
The spine of the magazine is good, with light wear from previous shipping. The 3-staple binding is tight, staples have no oxidation.
This is from a non-smoking, non-vaping home.
Price: .00, Buy It Now.
Shipping: Free, USPS Priority Mail,
with insurance & tracking.
I can only ship to USA 50 states.
Payment: PayPal only.
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============MORE ABOUT CARLOS AT 72==========
Here’s a recent spotlight on Carlos Santana. (Source: Pop Expresso)
Look back at the beginning of his career and Santana’s debut album
“The legendary Carlos Santana turns 72”
A living legend, Carlos Santana it’s one of the most experimental and eclectic musicians in Rock music. His highly original blend of Latin-infused rock, jazz, blues, salsa and African rhythms led him to experiment with several different styles throughout his career that started back in the 1960’s in San Francisco, at the center of the Hippie movement. Carlos Santana was born on July 20, 1947 in Autlán de Navarro, Jalisco, Mexico and crossed the border to the U.S with his family that was searching for a better life, when he was around age 10. During the 1960’s, Santana witnessed the rise of the Hippie movement, and as a musician, he also smartly noticed how Rock music was changing along with culture. During that period he still was working as a dishwasher in a diner and busking for spare change, but, influenced by the social changes around him, in 1966 he decided to become a full-time musician. Santana, who was a frequent spectator at Bill Graham’s Fillmore West where he got acquainted to several important local Bay area Rock acts of the time such as the Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead and Big Brother and The Holding Company among others, got his first big break in that same year at the Filmore West.
During a Sunday matinee show, Paul Butterfield was slated to perform there but was unable to do so as a result of being intoxicated, which lead to Filmore’s boss Bill Graham to assemble an impromptu band of musicians he knew primarily through his connections with Butterfield’s band and with the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane, but he had not yet chosen all the guitarists when Santana’s manager, Stan Marcum, immediately suggested to Graham that Santana join the impromptu band and Graham agreed. During the jam session, Santana’s guitar playing and solo gained the notice of both the audience and Graham and Santana formed the Santana Blues Band, later shortened to Santana.
The band gained an immediate following on the San Francisco club circuit, specially due to their original sound blend, never before heard on any other band and even before they released a record, in August 1969, Santana were surprisingly invited to the Woodstock Festival and became one of the top acts; their set (reportedly played under LSD influence) was legendary and later the exposure of their eleven-minute instrumental “Soul Sacrifice” in the Woodstock film and soundtrack album vastly increased their popularity.
Soon after the Woodstock performance, that same month they signed a recording contract with Columbia Records, then run by Clive Davis, and released their outstanding debut “Santana”. Carlos Santana turns 72 today, we invite you to revisit the 1969 debut “Santana”.