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  1. The first song from 1972's jazz/rock Caravanserai penned by Tom Rutley, Neal Schon, and Michael Schrieve with some great travel destinations and landmarks.Mu...

  2. 17 de feb. de 2023 · At the end of 1971 Santana was on a quest for a bass player. Tom Rutley did a fine job with the band, but that was a temporary solution. They lucked out with a perfect bassist who Michael Shrieve described as a genius, “One who added a whole dimension to our sound.”

  3. Este disco supone una fuerte inflexión en la música de la banda de Carlos Santana, separándose de forma clara de la línea seguida en sus tres primeros álbumes. En 1971 dejó la banda su bajista original, David Brown, quien fue reemplazado por Doug Rauch y Tom Rutley, así como el percusionista Mike Carabello, sustituido por Armando Peraza.

  4. Desde el inicio apreciamos una vibratoria y misteriosa melodía compuesta por Tom Rutley, Neal Schon y Michael Shrieve y donde se hacen escuchar “ranitas nocturnas” a la que se les incorporan la guitarra de Schon, el piano de Wendy Haas, el bajo acústico de Rutley, la batería de Shrieve, Mingo Lewis en la percusión, Hadley Caliman en el ...

  5. Caravanserai is the fourth studio album by American rock band Santana, released on October 11, 1972. The album marked a period of transition for Santana as it was the band's last to feature several key early members, while shifting in a more instrumental, progressive jazz fusion direction.

  6. 8 de may. de 2021 · The track also features great contributions from Tom Rutley on acoustic bass and Wendy Haas on electric piano, and a rare sharing of vocals by Santana and Shrieve. Santana has a nice solo here, on which he said: “I was thinking Nature Boy, Love on a Two-Way Street.

  7. 24 de feb. de 2023 · This is the story of Caravanserai. Many influences paved the path that Carlos Santana and Michael Shrieve embarked on during that period. They were mainly musical, but they blended with a newly-found spiritual awareness.