RR said:
I used to subscribe to Guitar Player Magaziine in the late 70s through the 80s and read up all these rock guitarists gear.
Same here. That's how I learned about Carlos' choice of humbuckers. Bill Lawrence worked for Gibson in the early 70's and had Carlos try out his
"Superhumbuckings" during 1972 or 73. Carlos had these installed in his Les Paul and then Bill Lawrence designed the L6-S with the Superhumbuckings as the stock
pickups. In Guitar Player magazine, sometime in the 70's, Carlos attributed his sustain to the Bill Lawrence pickups. He said something profound
like " My sustain? It's all from the Bill Lawrence pickups, man." Hmmm......
Supersonico said:
Carlos didn't go exclusively to Boogies until probably Caravanserai, though I could be wrong.
Juan
Hey Juan,
My understanding is that Carlos still used a Twin during the recording of Carvansarai in 1972 and then discovered the Boogie just before Love Devotion and Surrender with John McLaughlin (I've got a source bookmarked somewhere :? Sources from that place and time are a little shaky, IMHO ). I read somewhere else that Carlos began using the Boogie during the recording sessions of Caravansarai and is used only on a couple tracks. I tend to believe the 1st statement, where Carlos used his Twin exclusively for Caravansarai. He and Neal both used the Twin for "Song of the Wind" which would explain why their tones are so close. Same guitars, same amp......and......different fingers and snakeskin tennis shoes.
Here's some Santana tones coming from his 1st Boogie Mk1 . 1973 I'd be happy with this to say the least;
This starts a few minutes into the video, for some reason I can't figure out. Pull it back to the beginning. On my computer, Carlos is coming through the right speaker.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qaCIG6ykWts