|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
56 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE GATEWAY TO HEAVEN,
By C. J. "CJ "cruizerman"" (Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
Carlos and the Santana band made their name on the strength of their first three albums. Such was the power and quality of the music, but Caravanserai surmounted that and is arguably the best Santana has ever produced, representing also Santana's first deviation into the dreamy, mystical, jazzy sounds.The "spirit of creativity" must have descended on Earth to infuse the Santana band with supernatural musicianship when this album was made...then departed back to heaven, for such work is rarely seen, rarely repeated. To this day the music remains fresh, original, spiritual. Such is the quality of this album, that it was once described as music for musicians. Every single track a masterpiece, even the cover art is mystical. The album retains a linear and uniform feel throughout as the tracks merge smoothly into each other. Intensity gradually builds up, then letting go in cycles of sheer musical ecstasy. "Stone flower" (track 8), is authored by none other than Antonio Carlos Jobim, need we say more? An absolute must to anyone's collection; this album is an all-time classic of epic proportions. Dare say Carlos will never again achieve this level transcendental spirituality in his music, judging by what followed and his latter works. Caravanserai was released in 1972 and consists of ten tracks. Some people are of the opinion that this album has major personnel changes, hence the new musical direction into the jazzy sounds. Not so! The original cast is still there, Chepito, Rolie, Shrieve, etc. There are however some personnel changes from track to track, and surprisingly the feel of the music is pleasantly well balanced. Each song complements the other. Follow these instructions: Place CD in player, unplug the telephone, lights down low, incense sticks smoking, sit back in armchair with favorite beverage, volume up high.....and hit the play button for a soul-lifting ride into heaven. Then do it again!
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good music requires effort to appreciate,
By KrizBiz (Vista, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
I bought this album when it came out in 1972 at the ripe age of 15. I was a big fan of the first 3 albums and bought it without hearing a note. Imagine my adolescent surprise when this album required much more effort to adore. I've since learned that music I like immediately loses it's flavor on the bedpost overnight. The toe tapping fades with the umpteenth playback...This work represents a unique moment in time and a significant artistic accomplishment. You don't have to love every track to appreciate the expression and departure from easy commercial returns. It stands alone as a bold canvas created to satisfy Santana's inner exploration instead of a records company's profit motives. Like a lot of great music, this one captured a lot more ears because the artist had a name, and I for one, am richer for the effort. This stands as my favorite Santana album. Push yourself to learn every cut and you'll find it takes you someplace you've never been. The greatest musical gift of all.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Santana's finest hour,
By
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
"Caravanserai" represents Carlos Santana's finest moment, in my book, even considering his superb first two albums. His jazz/rock fusion becomes largely dominated by jazz here, with less of the raw latin beat/latin sound, altho these are present in more refined form. The jazz is modern, fairly often fast-paced and hard driving, and very rhythmic and melodic. It is the music that is the thing, for only three of the entries have lyrics. Santana delivers a tour de force, a work of compelling beauty, and one of my all-time favorite recordings.A highlight (in fact, probably the best track) is the group's rendition of Jobim's "Stone Flower." The Santana band not only expands upon, but outdoes, the Brazilian master's composition, delivering terrific, smooth guitar and keyboards, par excellence as a rhythmic display. Piano sometimes take over the lead, and the percussion is also great, including a cuica, a new Brazilian instrument. Everything else is also very enjoyable. Among the other songs, "Fuente del Ritmo," which comes after "Stone Flower," has a latin percussion beat, sort of bouncy in feel, combined with jazzy guitar work. "Every Step of the Way," the brilliant concluding number, while repetitive, has a great fast-paced guitar motif that carries one down the visual horizon. As to the earliner tunes, the opener, "Eternal Caravan of Reincarnation," is very pretty with moderate substance, reminiscent of "Singing Winds, Crying Beasts." It leads right into the excellent "Waves Within," with soft, beautiful, smooth-flowing riffs, yes, like waves. After more good but brief instrumentation in "Look up (To See What's Coming Down)," we hit our first vocals in "Just in Time to See the Sun." Then, "Song of the Wind," a Santana classic, showcases Carlos's and Neal Schon's ability for pretty, high-pitched guitar twangs (reference "Samba Pati Ti," "Europa," "Moonflower"). It is followed by "All the Love of the Universe." Can it match the title? Yes, its great! Schon and organist Gregg Rolie deliver blistering, jazzy solos. In fact, each of the titles to the songs seems to be a visual representation of the particular song's lovely music, always accompanied by great percussion. Hardly anything I've ever heard matches the fabulous music, the fluid, driving pleasure that the Santana group dishes out here.
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Caravanserai Is A Timeless Masterpiece,
By Gita (Newport, Rhode Island) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
There are few musicians who elevate the art form to the levels achieved by Carlos Santana, Mike Shrieve, Gregg Rolie, and Neal Schon on this album. CARAVANSERAI was created at a transitional phase in the band's evolution which was marked by Carlos' spiritual inner journey and a high degree of openness and experimentation in the band's approach to the music. Added to these factors are the sheer virtuosity and musicianship of the band members, who were now at the peak of their craft. There have been only a few albums that achieve the level of beauty and mastery that this album does. Do I dare name them? The Beatles - Magical Mystery Tour, Jefferson Airplane's - Volunteers, Jimi Hendrix - Electric Ladyland.CARAVANSERAI is one of life's mysteries that I don't want to figure out. I don't know why it moves my heart and soul, but it does, from beginning to end. It is easily Santana's best work.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Santana's movement from genre to innovator,
By
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
The initial Santana albums created a latin-inflected pop-rock sound that was infectious but ultimately risked becoming a stereotypical sound, respectable but not on the cutting edge. With Caravanserai, Santana demonstrated that its sound transcended the "Black Magic Woman" and "Everybody's Everything" latino jazz-pop labels. Caravanserai is a languid, luxuriant atmospheric burst of jazz-inflected rock, equal parts fusion, sixties jam, and smooth melodic meditation music. The solos on this record set a standard for melodic guitar, and the combination of dynamic energy and easy pacing makes the songs on this album stand out. This is not an album of singles--it's a great Friday-night-at-ten-with-friends-over CD. Santana could easily have avoided taking the risks that Caravanserai took--another album of catchy maracas-drenched pop songs would have sold much more handsomely. But Caravanserai marks Santana's break with easy commercialism, and signalled a willingness to explore different paths. In its time, it was not accorded sufficient respect either by the more rockist of the Santana fans, nor among fans of "real jazz". Years later, the distinctions seem altogether artificial, and Santana's attempt to straddle genres holds true. While it's true that some great bands elected never to "branch out", and remained genre bands to the end--Madness comes to mind--in hindsight the listener must be grateful that in 1972 Carlos Santana understood that his longevity depended on transcending the sytle of his earliest records. This album is not at all dated--it's a grand listen nearly thirty years later. If you love ringing guitar solos and easy, jazzy rhythms, pick this up today.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Masterpiece from a legend,
By NDBx "NDBx" (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
When Santana burst upon the scene, he startled and delighted us with his unique blend of Rock and Latin music forms. With this album, he delights, surprises and leaves us breathless with an album of such beauty and depth. This recording is one you listen to from beginning to end. No track skipping her. A wonderous sonic journey. I found new admiration for an artist brave enough to attempt a new direction having enjoyed tremendous success to that point. True highpoints are "Song of the Wind" with it's samba tempo as Carlos solos beautifully and ardently, "All the Love in the Universe" with it's Spanish feel and two part harmonies. It glides in on castanets, vocals and guitars and builds to a burning climax and melliflously floats away. "La Fuente Del Ritmo" is a latin-jazz burner. "Every Step of the way" takes out at a dead run with the band backed by a symphony orchestra. Inventive, original, melodic. A recording of striking beauty. Possibly the best Santana recording ever.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
the musical orchid of its era,
By bukhtan (Chicago, Illinois, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
What a window onto the world when the LP of this music came out! As rock music eltonjohn'ed down, many of us were looking for a way out of the silliness and inconsequentiality of Anglo-American pop music. Santana was an open door: their music was popular, enough so to get onto AM radio in a big way ("Oye como va" would have gotten old, if it hadn't been Santana) and yet it suggested depth and freedom of form that wasn't present in even the furthest-out "prog rock". Those of us who were guitargod crazy were of course onto Carlos Santana, and I believe that he still stands, with his best work, as the greatest lyricist of the electric guitar, outside of jazz.
Remember that this was before the great waves of Latin migration into the United States, so this sound was quite exotic to the ears of most of America. Moreover, cultures that aim at conformity and homogeneity, as America did at that time, tend to objectify "the other", negatively or positively. Some people reacted to the Latin nature of the music with slurs, some with the idea that this was a hot-blooded, "get dirty" kind of music. This was a gross, mindless response to the first three Santana records, fine in their own right, of course, but imagine what simple heads made of this band when it recorded, and performed, this relentlessly probing, spiritual music. "Boring". But not for some of us. And unlike some of the stuff that came out in this period that seemed interesting to those of us who were looking for something more, this has stayed interesting. I don't think it was terrible profitable for Carlos and his colleagues, though. After the LP's "Welcome" and "Borboletta", also interesting but not of the perfection of Caravanserai, Santana came out with disappointing "Amigos", a paint-by-numbers affair that simultaneously pandered to disco fever and the the whitebread America notion of the simple Latin. Well, you do have to make enough money to live on ...
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Santanas best ever,
By Robert Keller (Stockholm, Sweden) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
The first time I heard Caravanserai, I was 17 years old playing chess with French friend in a small fisherman's house on the windy island Yeu outside the coast of France. Concentrated on the game, the first song or two I only vaguely heard but when the marvellous "Song of the wind" came out of the loudspeakers, the mood of the song entered into the game in a strange way. I played as in a trance and, as far as I remember also eventually won the game. This was many years ago, but the album still is one of my all-time favourites and by far the best Santana album ever. This is if you prefer the jazzier style to the sing-along-pop that came later. The first six songs should be listened to in sequence, from the "exotic" mood of the introductory song (Eternal caravan of reincarnation) through "Song of the wind" ending with the fast moving final "All the love of the universe". The last four songs required a few more listenings, but are also really good. The final "Every step of the way" has an unsurpassed energy and really pulls you into the music. Try to keep the rhythm of the bongo drums on that one if you can!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I rate this album, and only this album, 10 stars,
By Albert Mora (Costa Mesa, California USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
This is my favorite album in the world.The level of creativity, dynamics, musicianship, and production quality of this album is beyond decription with words. It can only be understood by experiencing it. Turn off the rest of the world, sit down with a glass of wine, and listen to this masterpiece from the first cricket-chirp to the last organ growl. When it's done, it may take you a while to remember your name and address. Carlos Santana and Neil Schon put on the greatest display of rock/jazz guitar virtuosity I've ever heard. Gregg Rollie's Hammond B3 work sets the standard for the incredible range of tones and feelings that instrument delivers -- in the right hands. There are timeless contributions by jazz greats such as Tom Coster. The drum/latin percussion section is so heavy, it would have completely eclipsed any other set of front-line musicians. I've played guitar professionally for over 20-years. In my opinion, this album will still be heard in 1,000 years. I can say that confidently only about the Beatles, Stevie Wonder, Jobim, Cole Porter, the Berlins, Beethoven, and Tchaikovsky. This album is that good. Buy it.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Song for the Wind,
By A Customer
This review is from: Caravanserai (Audio CD)
The guitar solo on Song for the Wind by itself is probably one of the greatest solos of rock/fusion/jazz guitar. His phrasing is along the lines of the great jazz pianist Bill Evans. Just listen to the demo on this site and you'll see what I mean -- the actual solo is considerably longer but this gives a good taste of the album. I owned it in 1973 and just re-purchased and it has held up greatly with time.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Caravanserai by Santana (Audio CD - 1990)
Used & New from: $4.42
| ||