Santana III is an album that undeservingly stands in the shadows behind the towering legend that is the band's second album,
Abraxas. This was also the album that brought guitarist
Neal Schon -- who was 17 years old -- into the original core lineup of
Santana. Percussionist
Thomas "Coke" Escovedo was brought in to replace (temporarily)
José Chepitó Areas, who had suffered a brain aneurysm, yet who recovered quickly and rejoined the band. The rest were
Carlos, organist
Gregg Rolie, drummer
Michael Schrieve, bassist
David Brown, and conguero
Michael Carabello. "Batuka" is the powerful first evidence of something being very different. The band was rawer, darker, and more powerful with twin leads and
Schon's harder, edgier rock & roll sound paired with
Carlos' blend of ecstatic high notes and soulful fills. It cooks -- funky, mean, and tough. "Batuka" immediately transforms itself into "No One to Depend On," by
Escovedo,
Carabello, and
Rolie. The middle section is highlighted by frantic handclaps, call-and-response lines between
Schon and
Rolie, and
Carlos joining the fray until the entire track explodes into a frenzied finale. And what's most remarkable is that the set just keeps on cooking, from the subtle slow burn of "Taboo" to the percussive jam workout that is "Toussaint l'Overture," a live staple in the band's set list recorded here for the first time (and featuring some cooking
Rolie organ work at its beginning). "Everybody's Everything" is here, as is "Guajira" and "Jungle Strut" -- tunes that are still part of
Santana's live show. With acoustic guitars, gorgeous hand percussion, and
Santana's fragile lead vocal, "Everything's Coming Our Way" is the only "feel good" track here, but it's a fitting way to begin winding the album down with its
Schon and
Santana guitar breaks. The album ends with a completely transformed reading of
Tito Puente's "Para los Rumberos," complete with horns and frantic, almost insanely fast hand drumming and cowbell playing. It's an album that has aged extremely well due to its spare production (by
Carlos and the band) and its live sound. This is essential
Santana, a record that deserves to be reconsidered in light of its lasting abundance and vision.