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    Lotus

    Lotus
    Artist: Santana
    Label: Sony
    Category: Music

    List Price: $19.98
    Buy New: $13.92
    You Save: $6.06 (30%)



    New (18) Used (9) Collectible (1) from $9.00

    Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 49 reviews
    Sales Rank: 6293

    Format: Live
    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 2
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.9

    MPN: 46764
    UPC: 074644676426
    EAN: 0074644676426
    ASIN: B0000027D5

    Release Date: February 26, 1991
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      Disc 1
      • Going Home
      • A-1 Funk
      • Every Step of the Way
      • Black Magic Woman
      • Gypsy Queen
      • Oye Como Va
      • Yours Is the Light
      • Batuka
      • Xibaba (She-Ba-Ba)
      • Stone Flower (Introduction)
      • Waiting
      • Castillos de Arena, Pt. 1 (Sand Castle)
      • Free Angela
      • Samba de Sausalito

      Disc 2
      • Mantra
      • Kyoto
      • Castillos de Arena, Pt. 2 (Sand Castle)
      • Incident at Neshabur
      • Se a Cabo
      • Samba Pa Ti
      • Mr. Udo
      • Toussaint l'Overture

    Similar Items:

      • Borboletta
      • Oneness: Silver Dreams Golden Reality
      • Moonflower
      • Caravanserai
      • Welcome

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com essential recording
    Long held as a talisman by Santana fans, who had to buy it as a triple-LP Japanese import before Columbia finally issued it on CD in 1991, Lotus is a live album that finds Carlos Santana and his octet (a.k.a. the New Santana Band) at a nexus between rock, Latin music, jazz fusion, and spiritually driven communiques to the gods. Some of the early hits are performed, such as "Black Magic Woman" and "Oye Como Va," but long, intense instrumentals are the order of the day, as on the breathtaking "Incident at Neshabur," "Every Step of the Way," and "Toussaint L'Overture." --Daniel Durchholz

    Album Details
    Japanese Limited Edition Issue of the Dsd Mastered Album Classic in a Deluxe, Miniaturized LP Sleeve Replica of the Original Limited Vinyl Album Artwork. This Legendary Package Has 22 Sides and Folds Out....well, Like a Lotus Blossom! Includes a Special History Booklet (In Japanese) with Numerous Pictures of the Period and Miniaturizations of all the Cards that were Enclosed with the Original LP Issue. The CDs Themselves Are Picture Discs. The LP Edition was an Extremely Limited Edition and Predictably, this Edition Will Be as Well! the Japanese have Perfected the Art of Re-creating Original Album Covers in the Digital Age and this Set is One of their Most Outstanding Packages Ever!


    Customer Reviews:   Read 44 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars Burnin'   November 27, 2001
    G B (Connecticut)
    31 out of 31 found this review helpful

    Lotus was recorded during the heart of Santana's jazz-rock period. But whereas Caravanserai and Welcome (whose lineup is featured here) are relatively quiet, meditate affairs, Lotus is a fiery testament to a band that was at its peak. The guitar playing, mixing speaker-frying leads with more avant-garde sounds, foresees the style Pete Cosey would perfect with Miles Davis a year later; and the rhythm section has loosened up to the point were they can switch from groove to groove effortlessly. Leon Thomas contributes a few vocals ("Black Magic Woman" and his trademark yodelling on "Mr. Udo") but the music is almost entirely instrumental.

    The long fusion jams -- "Every Step of the Way", "Toussaint L'Overture" and an absolutely bonkers "Incident at Neshabur" -- are definitely high points of this concert. But you can't overlook the 30 minute medley that closes disc 1 either. The only real weak spot is Mike Shrieve's long drum solo "Kyoto" (hey, this was the 70s). If a sound halfway between Caravanserai and Miles Davis's acid funk albums Agharta/Pangaea sounds exciting, you must hear this.


    5 out of 5 stars Not A Well Recieved Album but an Amazing Album Nonetheless   June 17, 2003
    Barrett (Dallas, TX United States)
    34 out of 35 found this review helpful

    Many complaints have been lodged against this album including comments regarding the excess length of songs, the constant noodling, the missing presence of Carlos Santana, the lack of an overall melody, and poor sound quality.

    To begin with, the length of the songs is excellently chosen. And believe it or not Supernatural fans, each song is well planned out. Most reviewers who have a beef with this album's length don't like jazz to begin with, and desire that Carlos keep within the bounds of his late 60's and late 90's hit making three minute song machine. The greatness of Lotus is its ability to take all of Carlos' beautiful melodies and expand them each into a work of pure awesomeness.

    Despite the extended length of songs on Lotus, there is no excessive noodling. Each solo has a central rhythmic and melodic structure that was used to express in a moment what can never been repeated. Unlike earlier Santana albums, Carlos allows other musicians to express beautiful melodies over a palette of amazing chord progressions and tight rhythms. In addition Carlos is in his best recorded form, from the subtlety displayed on Samba Pa Ti to the incredible Incident at Neshabur. Lotus is pure genius if for nothing but the second disk of material. Carlos' Guitar Tone on Lotus is perfect in its ability to express cleanly when played gently and fire up when played with great passion.

    Lotus is the single greatest achievement of a guitar player to completely harness and realize the melodic powers of the guitar. No other guitarist I have heard (Jimi, Django, Allman, Clapton, Beck, and even McLaughlin) has unlocked the mystery of a melodic singable solo more completely than Carlos Santana did on this record.

    In regards to the recording quality, I believe it to be the best live album ever made. This album is not meant to sound up-front like a studio album or have lots of crowd noise like live albums made in the late 70's till today have. Lotus is meant to sound endless and reverberate with great warmth. The mic positioning, engineering, and mixing is top notch. Every instrument is balanced and every subtlety is audible and clear. If you have never tried to mix a live album, you would never know how hard it is to achieve the level of warmth and tonal quality Lotus produces.

    Lotus is within the top five recorded pieces of music of all time. Many years after "Black Magic Woman" and "Smooth" are forgotten, future generations and historians will look upon Lotus as one of the single most important achievements in modern music history. Lotus' sound will be emulated and its ultimate modal scale vision realized in popular music by the end of our lifetimes.


    5 out of 5 stars Too good to be true   June 1, 2002
    David C. Heires (Bronxville, NY USA)
    38 out of 40 found this review helpful

    Lotus is a dream come true. A recording of two Santana concerts in Osaka, Japan in support of Caravanserai, it blends songs from the group's then-current (mid-70s) jazzy period with old favorites, and is dished out by both the "New Santana Band" of the time and the "Old Santana Band." Yes, a live Santana CD with Michael Shrieve, Chepito Areas, and Armando Peraza (New) all on percussion! Tom Coster remains most prominent with his Hammond organ, but Lotus also features Richard Kermode (New) on keyboards. In substance, only one song from Caravanserai is included, a great version of "Every Step of the Way," but Welcome is represented by "Samba de Sausalito" and the pretty "Yours Is the Light." Coster bedazzles on the rockers from the first three albums as well as Airto's Brazilian jazz "Xibaba," one of the best moments in so many great ones. There is a 16-minute, unforgettable version of "Incident at Neshabur," with an extended, lovely coda--What more could you ask for? Carlos's superpowered guitar is mesmerizing, always; the entire atmosphere is otherworldly, dark, beautiful, modern jazzy (there is also a nod to Chick Corea), and most of all, electrifying. Early Santana and Lotus rule.


    5 out of 5 stars At their very best.   August 19, 1999
    16 out of 17 found this review helpful

    Paul Henderson's review criticises this record largely because of a certain lack of vitality. I agree that this can be interpreted here, but largely because of the mix, which is awful. Much as I love Santana's guitar playing, it's *way* too upfront in the mix. The keyboards against which he is playing and relying on for harmonic inspiration are buried and sound tinkly and twee. That can lead to the impression of a lack of vitality. A remix would change his opinion, I'm sure.

    As for me, I re-mix the album in my head every time I listen. It's a *great* record. Incident at Neshabur, as the band breaks out from the slow ballad section and slowly builds to a crescendo, is fantastic. I've rarely heard Carlos Santana play with more speed and inventiveness than on the extended Gypsy Queen.

    I could go on. The general hindsight view of Santana's career is that he/they began to go astray after the first three albums, and that the jazzy experimentaions were a mistake from which they never fully recovered...

    My own view is that these excursions (Caravanserai, Welcome, Borboletta and Lotus) were the zenith of Santana and that they only began to go off the rails when they balked at the lesser (though still extremely healthy) record sales and went back to trying to be popular with Amigos etc.

    This is Santana captured at their very peak. Just after Caravanserai and just before Welcome. BUY IT!!


    5 out of 5 stars At his best   January 8, 2000
    R. Wyatt (London)
    10 out of 10 found this review helpful

    This must be the best of all the Santana albums. Dating from the time when the band moved from being an outstanding latin-rock outfit to being an outstanding latin-rock-jazz outfit, it is easily the match of Caravanserai, Welcome, Borboletta and Love Devotion & Surrender etc (with McLaughlin) from this period. The edge that this recording has are the keyboard interplay of Coster and Kermode and Santana's guitar. Too often a live album is just cashing in with a poor quality reverb heavy recording of studio material with the added annoyance of audience noise. In this case the recording is superb and there is none of the inane whooping, whistling and hollering that spoil too many live shows. Additionally, it is very unusual in the rock world to hear anything approaching improvisation in live performance but this album is one of a few notable exceptions. Beatles refrains and other references are thrown in for added interest in some of the longer solos.


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