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Carlos Santana

Carlos Santana

Photo: Roberto Finizio

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For Carlos Santana, Joy Is The Ultimate Medicine carlos-santana-new-album-blessings-and-miracles-interview-divided-world-vitality

Carlos Santana On New Album 'Blessings And Miracles,' Healing A Divided World & Remaining Vital: "Joy Is The Ultimate Medicine And Remedy Against Fear"

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The Aztec deity of rain doesn't appear on Santana's new album 'Blessings & Miracles' for nothing: Carlos Santana believes we can be happy, healed and prosperous in a multiplicity of forms, from spiritual to emotional to financial
Morgan Enos
GRAMMYs
Oct 18, 2021 - 1:27 pm

Carlos Santana has been doing press interviews for long enough to be sensitive to misquotation. In fact, he's of the opinion that one of the most famous utterances of all time — one from the Gospels — was penciled in during post-production.

"Some people in the past say it's easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into heaven. They blame it on Jesus, but Jesus would never say such an ignorant thing," he tells GRAMMY.com. "The kingdom of heaven is an avalanche, an abundance, a multiplicity. So ask away. Don't worry about the zeroes to the right and don't worry about how."

This conceptual dissonance is on Santana's mind a lot these days. He's reading Joseph Murphy, the New Thought minister famous for Positive Mental Attitude books like 1946's Supreme Mastery of Fear and 1966's Your Infinite Power to Be Rich. At 74, the illustrious guitarist and Santana bandleader is trying to square two enterprises: Spiritual and material wealth. In both planes of existence, he claims, you can have Blessings and Miracles.

That's the title of Santana's new album, which was released Oct. 15 and features collaborators from Chris Stapleton("Joy") to Kirk Hammett ("America For Sale") to Chick and Gayle Corea ("Angel Choir/All Together"). That’s to say nothing of his son, Salvador, and daughter, Stella, who each contributed a tune — plus the return of the ageless Rob Thomas ("Move"), who you may remember from a certain oddball 1999 collaborative hit.

Read More: GRAMMY Rewind: Watch Santana & Rob Thomas Self-Assuredly Win Record Of The Year For "Smooth" In 2000

When surveying Santana's spiritual studies and six-decade career, it's apparent this is a man whose heart is open to the full spectrum of bounties: Not only radio stardom, critical accolades and a multi-million-dollar house on Kauai, but what a certain man called "treasures in heaven." 

But don't take that so two-dimensionally as a rock star desiring to have and eat cake. There's another component at play in his words: An epidemic of bottomed-out self-respect, which Santana proposes to combat via "shelters for self-worth."

But until then, we have Blessings and Miracles, which Santana calls "mystical medicine music to heal an infected world of fear and darkness." Read on for an in-depth interview about his relationship to nostalgia, what keeps him creatively vital in his seventies and what he learned from spiritual and musical teachers Chick Corea and Alice Coltrane.

This interview has been lightly edited and condensed for clarity.

When you survey the pop/rock landscape for potential collaborators, how do you identify someone as the right fit?

On "America For Sale," I knew intuitively that it would be an incredible thing to have two solos. So, I invited Kirk Hammett to play with me again and share with me again. We called Steven Tyler, but he couldn't do it. We left him a message. I think he was in Maui; we were in Kauai. I think he had other priorities in his life, so he couldn't commit to doing it.

So, I asked Kirk Hammett. I said, "Do you know anybody who can sing the song? I'm looking for that vibe like the singer with AC/DC, like [Mimics catlike yowl.]" He said, "Oh yeah, I know one. He's my best friend." So, he invited Mark Osegueda.

It's funny because where I am now, it seems like more than ever, nothing's outside the reach of the hand of God, sweet baby Jesus, the universe, divine intelligence, or whatever you want to call it. Just submit your request with intentionality and you'll be surprised. Your mind will be blown with an abundance of miracles and blessings.

What do those words — miracles and blessings — connote to you? I think of them through the Christian lens.

Oh, it's beyond Christian. People have been doing miracles and blessings before Jesus was here. Nobody can corner God's grace. It's not like a monopoly — only one religion or ideology can [hoard] it. Nobody owns God like that. It's not like Bank of America or Wells Fargo. God is for everybody, like rain. For me, miracles and blessings are the connection with grace. Grace is in all denominations and beliefs.

The way to access grace is with gratitude. I say this pretty much every night: The two components, ingredients, nutrients, for a human being, an individual — even atheists, of course — is to be connected with grace via gratitude. That makes so much sense.

Africa Speaks was a very earthy, live-in-the-room album. What made you want to get back out there on the pop battlefield? 

Intuition, again. Intuition told me to go to Rick Rubin and create Africa Speaks with [vocalist] Buika and not necessarily have any need to go into radio. And the same voice guides me to say: It's time to get back on the radio in the four corners of the world and touch people's hearts. Because of this [pandemic], people need hope and courage. So, implant in them the seeds to validate and celebrate their own light.

Blessings and Miracles is a divine attempt to help people have a deep sense of self-worth. There are a lot of people out there who have very low self-esteem.

That rings true in a divided era where young people are struggling to find work, moving back in with their parents, losing faith in themselves.

When I finally got to talk with my brother, Chris Stapleton, and he wanted to know what kind of music I wanted to do, I said, "Mystical medicine music to heal a twisted, crooked, infected world, with fear and darkness and separation." He said, [Slightly taken aback.] "Oh. Oh! OK."

I said, "I'm coming from the same place as Bob Marley and John Lennon. We believe that we really are all one, and I want to create music with you, together, where the lyrics, melodies, and direction — the whole frequency of it — is mystical medicine music to heal an infected world of fear and darkness."

He loved it, so he created a song based on our conversation on the phone, and it's called "Joy." Joy is the ultimate medicine and remedy against fear.

Many artists of your generation are content to rest on their laurels and say, "Job well done," but it seems like you're more prolific than ever. How do you maintain your vitality and creative urge?

All her life, my wife Cindy [has exhibited] discipline to her body with her diet and exercise. She's an Olympic-class athlete like Usain Bolt. She's like Jimi Hendrix, Bruce Lee and Usain Bolt all in one! She has this incredible consistency of playing drums where most men would probably pass out if they tried to play that long, with that intensity, on a set.

She has helped me get a trainer, and one of the trainers was Gabrielle Reece, the incredible volleyball champion. She suggested this other lady named Kiana, and Kiana focuses on breathing and stretching exercises. The three words that can give you stamina, longevity and vibrancy are "Balance, equilibrium, confidence."

How do they apply to these exercises you speak of?

For me, everything starts with the breath. You take a deep breath [Inhales sharply] and then sharpen your vision — what your trajectory is, what you are going toward with intense intentionality. Then, you receive [your aspirations] a lot sooner and faster.

Procol Harum's "A Whiter Shade of Pale" is a beautiful song. I love your version of it on Blessings and Miracles. What do you appreciate about it, and what made you want to give it a go?

Well, we were in Hyde Park in London doing this concert with my brother Eric Clapton. I went on stage and Gary Clark [Jr.] was playing. I went really close to Steve Winwood because it wasn't the pandemic yet and we weren't afraid to get close. 

I put myself next to his ear gently and said, "Hey, Stevie, I hear you singing 'A Whiter Shade of Pale' and playing the organ and me playing guitar, and doing it completely differently — more like an African, Cuban, Puerto Rican guajira style. Very sexy." But he wouldn't look at me. He just kept looking at Gary Clark. Within 10 seconds, I guess he heard what I was hearing. He turned to me and said, "Carlos! I hear it! I see what you're saying!"

So, I called my brother Narada Michael Walden and he put it all together with us. Like I was telling you: You submit your request and there it is!

Read More: In Remembrance: Chick Corea Played In More Ways Than One

It's great to see that Gayle Moran Corea is on this record. What's your background with her and/or Chick?

Oh my god — we go back to 1970 or '72. It seems like every year, right around Christmas, I would always get cards from them, back and forth. They were always inspired to do something with me, but for some reason, we never got around to doing it. 

Then, all of a sudden, Gayle said they had a song for me and they wanted to finally collaborate. So, I said yes. And as soon as he sent me the song he finished, of course, he transcended and left for the next plane. 

But he sent the song, so he [had] played all the keyboards. Everything was done in Zoom anyway, so we brought it to San Rafael and I put the band in it — bass, timbales, congas, vibes — with Dave Matthews, Cindy and myself. It sounded like Cal Tjader in 1958 with Mongo Santamaria and Willie Bobo — that era, you know?

Read More: Histories: Salsa Music In NYC: Tony Succar Praises The History & Embraces The Future Of Salsa

Did you connect with Chick on a spiritual level over the years?

Oh, yes, of course.

What did you learn from him in that regard?

Discipline. Because we traveled so much, the both of us — separately, of course — to Japan and a lot of places in the East, we learned they believe in discipline and accountability. It seems like the mentality in the Western mind — a lot of people say, "The devil made me do it, but Jesus has got my back." 

But in the East, they say: With all respect to that, we believe in karma. We will not steal or take anything that doesn't belong to us because we're accountable and responsible. We don't necessarily believe in sin the way that you look at sin. We look at it like an error or mistake that doesn't need to be made. Since we believe in karma, we believe we don't have to do stupid stuff and have Jesus clean it up for us.

GRAMMYs

The cover art for Blessings and Miracles is beautiful, with that oceanic color scheme. Who is that figure in the foreground?

That's Tlaloc — the god of rain from the Aztecs. The other parts I'm really grateful for are my daughter's song, "Breathing Underwater," and my son's song, "Rumbalero." I heard the [latter] song from afar and said, "This song is very haunting." It kept showing up somewhere. I Shazam-ed it and my son's face appeared. I went, "Oh my god! My son wrote this song!"

I called him and said, "Hey, man. I really love your song. Do you mind if Cindy and I and my band played on it and I put it on my album?" He went, "Are you kidding?" I said, "No, I'm not kidding!"

So, I did the same thing with my daughter. I said, "Hey, I love your song. I can't stop playing it. It's really incredible. It reminds me of being somewhere in Switzerland or something at five o'clock in the morning. Can I play guitar on it and put it on my album?" And she was like, "Are you kidding?" [Laughs.] I'm like "No!"

It's incredible that Cindy and Salvador and my daughter [Stella] are on the album as well.

Carlos Santana

Carlos Santana performing at Woodstock in 1969. Photo: Tucker Ransom/Hulton Archive/Getty Images​

Some listeners might primarily associate you with Woodstock and "Smooth," but your legacy spans six decades and is miles deep. What's your relationship with nostalgia? Do you feel compelled to portray yourself as a relevant artist in the now, or are you fine with however fans perceive you?

Words like "nostalgia" or "tired" or "predictable" or anything like that are not in my constitution. They're not in my orbit. I'm just in the now, you know?

I did an interview with Anderson Cooper and one thing that really shook him up was when I said "I pretty much live in a place with no gravity and no time." Here is what Michael Jordan calls 'in the zone.' When you get in the zone, you throw the ball and it goes in because it looks like the hoop is gi-mungous.

Athletes call it "the zone," but for me, it's called grace. By connecting with grace, as soon as I wake up in the morning, I'm able to stay in love. I don't fall in love. I ascend to love; I don't fall. Therefore, when you're taking the best solos you ever take, there's no time or gravity in there.

From Eric Clapton to myself to John McLaughlin to whoever, the best solos from anybody are when they're not thinking. They're out of their minds.

Another great teacher you collaborated with was Alice Coltrane. What are your memories of her?

Oh, there are so many. But the main one I remember is when she said — very gently but very stern — "Walk like a giant like us. You're one of us." I was like, [Taken aback] 'Oh, she's saying I'm like Coltrane and her and Wayne and Herbie and Miles.'" But the way she said it was unapologetic.

Carlos Santana

Carlos Santana. Photo: Jay Blakesberg

I'd like to close out with an industry question: From your perspective, what does the music industry circa 2021 look like? Have streaming and the pandemic rendered it unrecognizable?

Whether it's a phonograph, eight-track, cassette, record, or CD, to me, it's just another highway. It used to be Route 66, coast to coast. People are always going to be thirsty, so I want to say with clarity the same thing Beethoven said to a king.

One time, they invited Beethoven to this party and there was some king from some nation. He was a little weird and he said to Beethoven, [Harumphing voice.] "So, you're the great Beethoven!" Beethoven says, "Kings come and go. There's only one Beethoven."

What are you reading lately?

I'm reading books by Joseph Murphy. He's a positive writer — beyond religion or anything like that. It's a monetary thing. When I say "Miracles and blessings," I'm talking about an avalanche — an abundance.

Some people in the past say it's easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into heaven. Whoever wrote that utterly didn't know what they were talking about. They blame it on Jesus, but Jesus would never say such an ignorant thing. Because God said, "It gives me great joy to give you the kingdom."

The kingdom of heaven is an avalanche, an abundance, a multiplicity. So ask away. Don't worry about the zeroes to the right and don't worry about how. Just submit your request from the center of your heart and know that all the billionaires on this planet arrive in the same way — by visualizing, and intense intentionality.

You don't have to be a genius. You don't have to be this or that. You just have to utilize your heart's prayer. So, I'm reading about that because I'm intent on helping people financially with shelters [to improve their] self-worth. Shelters to feed people, like three squares.

There are so many ways to help humanity. Not just to inspire them through music, but financially — to create institutions that would help feed, clothe and educate people. Not through any religion, but through a spiritual code of conduct.

Tom Morello On His New Album The Atlas Underground Fire, Working With Eddie Vedder & Bruce Springsteen, And The Liberating Power Of The Electric Guitar

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Album Of The Year GRAMMY Winners: '90s

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Bob Dylan, Lauryn Hill, Whitney Houston, and Santana are among the artists who took home music's biggest album prize
THE GRAMMYs
GRAMMYs
May 15, 2017 - 2:36 am

An incalculable number of albums have been released in music history, but only 58 have earned the coveted distinction of Album Of The Year GRAMMY winner so far. From Henry Mancini's The Music From Peter Gunn to Taylor Swift's 1989, some of these elite albums have arguably surprised, some were seemingly consensus choices and still others have fostered lasting debate. In part four of Album Of The Year GRAMMY Winners, explore the albums that won — and were runners-up for — music's biggest prize for the 1990s.

1990 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Back On The Block
Quincy Jones (And Various Artists)

Almost 40 years after launching his career as a young jazz trumpeter in Lionel Hampton's band, Quincy Jones utilized his wide range of skills as a performer, composer, arranger, and producer to create Back On The Block, an album with a spectrum of musical colors spaning jazz to rap, soul, world music, and pop. Varied contributors include Joe Zawinul, Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Chaka Khan, Herbie Hancock, Ray Charles, Kool Moe Dee, Ice-T, Melle Mel, and pre-teen R&B star Tevin Campbell. Because of its eclecticism, the album brought home GRAMMYs in divergent categories including arrangement, rap and jazz, and Jones was named Producer Of The Year (Non-Classical) for the third time.

Other Nominees:
Mariah Carey, Mariah Carey
… But Seriously, Phil Collins
Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em, M.C. Hammer
Wilson Phillips, Wilson Phillips

1991 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Unforgettable With Love
Natalie Cole

Prior to releasing Unforgettable With Love, Natalie Cole — named Best New Artist for 1975 at the 18th GRAMMY Awards — had kept a fair distance from her musical heritage, creating mostly pop- and R&B-based recordings. But she seemed to come to peace with her lineage on Unforgettable …, striking a beautiful balance of jazz and R&B standards, and taking advantage of technological recording advances allowing her to "duet" with her late father, jazz icon Nat "King" Cole. (The massive success of the album led her to move even further toward jazz on subsequent albums.) In addition to Album Of The Year, Unforgettable With Love's title track was dubbed both Record Of The Year and Song Of The Year (won by songwriter Irving Gordon).

Other Nominees:
Heart In Motion, Amy Grant
Luck Of The Draw, Bonnie Raitt
Out Of Time, R.E.M.
The Rhythm Of The Saints, Paul Simon

1992 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Unplugged
Eric Clapton

In a year of incredibly strong albums, including U2's heralded Achtung Baby and Annie Lennox's solo debut, an acoustic effort by a guitar legend was recognized as the year's standout. One of the more stellar albums of the MTV "Unplugged" series, Eric Clapton's 1992 effort (recorded in front of an intimate audience at Bray Studios in London) was a high point in his '90s output. The stripped-down yet genuine collection included a reworking of the classic "Layla," traditional blues numbers "Rollin' And Tumblin'" and "Before You Accuse Me," and "Tears In Heaven," a touching farewell to his young son Conor, who had died the previous year. The track won both Song and Record Of The Year; in total, Unplugged garnered six GRAMMYs.

Other Nominees:
Ingenue, k.d. lang
Diva, Annie Lennox
Achtung Baby, U2
Beauty And The Beast — Motion Picture Soundtrack, Various Artists

1993 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

The Bodyguard — Original Soundtrack Album 
Whitney Houston

Seven years after her splashy self-titled debut, Whitney Houston took a detour from pop superstardom into acting with the film The Bodyguard. Although the romantic thriller failed to garner critical acclaim, the explosive popularity of the soundtrack resulted in an increase in box-office receipts. The album featured such standout Houston performances as "I'm Every Woman," the soaring "I Have Nothing" and the monumental yet plaintive "I Will Always Love You." Penned by Dolly Parton, it wasn't the first time the latter song was heard in a film: The same year "I Will Always Love You" appeared on Parton's album Jolene (1974), Martin Scorsese used it in his romantic drama Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore. The Bodyguard would spend 20 weeks at No. 1 and sell more than 17 million copies, making it the biggest-selling soundtrack album in history.

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Whitney Houston - I Have Nothing (Official Video)

Other Nominees:
Kamakiriad, Donald Fagen
River Of Dreams, Billy Joel
Automatic For The People, R.E.M.
Ten Summoner's Tales, Sting

1994 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

MTV Unplugged
Tony Bennett

More than 40 years into his career, 68-year-old Tony Bennett — one of the most enduring and respected pop standards interpreters — suddenly gained a whole new appreciative audience, many of whom were not even born when he'd won Record Of The Year for 1962 for "I Left My Heart In San Francisco." Under the shrewd guidance of his son and manager Danny, MTV Unplugged became the apex of a refreshed phase of Bennett's career. Ably supported by his loyal and elegant Ralph Sharon Trio (and joined by guests Elvis Costello and k.d. lang) on MTV Unplugged, Bennett introduced a new generation to the Great American Songbook, once again proving that standards are hard to beat — in any era. 

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Tony Bennett - I Left My Heart in San Francisco (from MTV Unplugged)

Other Nominees:
The 3 Tenors In Concert 1994, Jose Carreras, Placido Domingo, Luciano Pavarotti, and Zubin Mehta
From The Cradle, Eric Clapton
Longing In Their Hearts, Bonnie Raitt
Seal, Seal

1995 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Jagged Little Pill
Alanis Morissette

Alanis Morissette was quite successful as a child actress and teen pop star years before she took the world by storm in the mid-'90s. And storm is no exaggeration: Jagged Little Pill, her moody, angst-filled debut for Maverick Records was embraced by pretty much anyone who needed a soundtrack to a relationship gone sour. Co-written and produced by Glen Ballard, the album — which has become one of the best-selling recordings by a woman ever — features a solid lineup of tracks, including "You Oughta Know" (a double GRAMMY winner), "Ironic," "You Learn," and "Hand In My Pocket."

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Alanis Morissette - You Oughta Know (OFFICIAL VIDEO)

Other Nominees:
Daydream, Mariah Carey
History Past, Present And Future Book I, Michael Jackson
Relish, Joan Osborne
Vitalogy, Pearl Jam

1996 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Falling Into You
Celine Dion

Celine Dion won her first GRAMMY and became a household name in 1992 primarily through her duet with Peabo Bryson on the title track to the Disney animated film Beauty And The Beast. But the expansiveness of Falling Into You, featuring the gorgeous ballad "Because You Loved Me," written by Diane Warren, foreshadowed the artistic level Dion would subsequently reach. Embellished with love-struck strings and shimmery touches of Latin American and dance-floor rhythms, the album perfectly captures the emotions and confidence of a then-recently married Dion. It also set her up perfectly to record the most recognizable song of her career: four-time GRAMMY winner "My Heart Will Go On," from the 1997 film Titanic.

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Céline Dion - Because You Loved Me

Other Nominees:
Odelay, Beck
The Score, Fugees
Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness, the Smashing Pumpkins
Waiting To Exhale — Motion Picture Soundtrack, Various Artists

1997 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Time Out Of Mind
Bob Dylan

After a significant creative break from original recordings, Bob Dylan returned in 1997 with Time Out Of Mind, a rough-hewn collection of dark songs produced with the help of Daniel Lanois. Written during a long snowy winter in Minnesota and recorded in Miami's Criteria Studios, Time Out Of Mind's foreboding feel was heralded by critics as a return to form for Dylan. Said to be haunted by the influence of Buddy Holly during the sessions, he was further spooked by a serious chest infection that sidelined him during the final production of the album. Dylan would recover and, interestingly, share the media spotlight during this period with his son Jakob, whose band the Wallflowers were enjoying success with Bringing Down The Horse.

Other Nominees:
The Day, Babyface
This Fire, Paula Cole
Flaming Pie, Paul McCartney
OK Computer, Radiohead

1998 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill
Lauryn Hill

After several rewarding years with the Fugees, Lauryn Hill branched out on her own with The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill, a soulful stew of hip-hop, reggae, R&B, and Motown. The album was propelled by the hit single "Doo Wop (That Thing)," which picked up GRAMMYs for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and Best Rhythm & Blues Song — in total, she brought home five GRAMMYs at the 41st GRAMMY Awards. Although named Best New Artist, Hill was certainly not new to the entertainment industry. Before her solo success, she'd dipped her toes into acting ("As The World Turns" and Sister Act 2) and was a member of the Fugees, two-time GRAMMY winners for 1996's The Score.

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Lauryn Hill - Doo-Wop (That Thing) (Official Video)

Other Nominees:
The Globe Sessions, Sheryl Crow
Version 2.0, Garbage
Ray Of Light, Madonna
Come On Over, Shania Twain

1999 ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Supernatural
Santana

With the help of then-Arista head Clive Davis, Carlos Santana reintroduced himself to the world in 1999 in a new light. Already a veteran dating back to San Francisco's Summer of Love, Supernatural found Santana paired up with an array of contemporary stars, including Matchbox Twenty's Rob Thomas ("Smooth"), Lauryn Hill and Cee Lo Green ("Do You Like The Way"), rock en español act Maná ("Corizon Espinado"), as well as fellow six-stringer Eric Clapton ("The Calling"), for an album that crossed both musical and generational divides. New fans of Santana reveled in their discovery, but tenured fans knew he'd been a master of unique collaborations for years (including work with Alice Coltrane, John McLaughlin and Nigerian drummer Babatunde Olatunji, among many others). Supernatural was anointed with nine GRAMMYs, including Album, Record and Song Of The Year (the latter for writers Rob Thomas and Itaal Shur). 

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Santana - Smooth ft. Rob Thomas

Other Nominees: 
Millennium, Backstreet Boys
Fly, Dixie Chicks
When I Look In Your Eyes, Diana Krall
Fanmail, TLC 

writer Leila Cobo poses in a chic room

Leila Cobo

Photo: Courtesy of artist

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Leila Cobo On "Decoding 'Despacito'" music-journalist-leila-cobo-dives-deep-groundbreaking-latin-music-songs-decoding

Music Journalist Leila Cobo Dives Deep Into Groundbreaking Latin Music Songs On "Decoding 'Despacito'"

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"Decoding 'Despacito'" is an enthralling read uncovering new truths and inspirations behind some of the groundbreaking songs we'll never forget—from José Feliciano's "Feliz Navidad" to Rosalía's "Malamente"
Ana Monroy Yglesias
GRAMMYs
Jun 14, 2021 - 5:13 pm

Colombian author, music journalist and VP/Latin Industry Lead at Billboard Leila Cobo is a true resource and gem in the music industry. In her enthralling and informative new book, "Decoding 'Despacito:' An Oral History Of Latin Music," she unpacks 19 of the biggest Latin music songs that shook the U.S. pop world over the last 50 years. Her mission led her to speak with the people who made those major moments in music happen, including artists, songwriters, composers, producers, music execs, and managers.

The book, released on March 2 (with English and Spanish editions), is an enthralling read uncovering new truths and inspirations behind some of the songs we'll never forget, from José Feliciano's Christmas classic "Feliz Navidad" to Los Del Río's '90s anthem "Macarena" to Daddy Yankee's '00s reggaeton banger "Gasolina," up to Rosalía's groundbreaking Latin GRAMMY-winning nu-flamenco jam "Malamente."

After devouring the bop-filled page-turner, GRAMMY.com chatted with Cobo to learn more about the book and the songs and artists that went into it, the biggest thing she learned from working on it, and her advice she'd give to her younger journalist self.

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What was your inspiration for writing the book?

Well, I confess that the book came to me. In other words, the publisher was thinking of doing a book on the history of Latin music, and someone contacted me and said, "Would you be interested in doing something like this?" And I said, "I would because that's my subject matter, I know it intimately. But I don't want to just do a history."

I have a lot of histories in my bookshelves of Latin music, of Latin rock and corridos. I wanted to do something that was different and that was really readable and that didn't sound like a history. After much back and forth, we came up with the idea of doing an oral history of songs, which I love.

I love to ask artists, "How did you write this song? What inspired you?" I love to hear the stories behind the songs. And when they get really generic, saying things like, "Oh yeah, we went to the studio and I wrote it with my friend." I always say, "No, but why? What were you thinking about this day? What kind of song did you want to write? Who wrote this? Who wrote that?" I really like to get super detailed when I tell those stories, and I replicated that in the book. And I love hearing from the different players. That's how the story of the book came along.

Once I started doing the reporting on the songs— 90 percent of it is fresh reporting—you start to see that there's really a connection between all of them. They're not just standalone songs, one thing that leads to another, and I found that fascinating. I love that. The fact that you can tell one story and say, oh wow, that's really similar to this other story and I never thought there would be.

You can talk about José Feliciano saying, "I decided to put a line in English so they would have to put me on the radio," and then you have J Balvin 45 years later saying, "You know what, I'm not going to sing in English. I'm going to do it all in Spanish and they're going to have to put me on the radio." There are all these intertwined threads, and I thought that was fascinating.

It's a really fun read, to feel like you're sitting in the room with the producer, the songwriters and the artists. For "Smooth" and "Livin' La Vida Loca" [both released in 1999], the songwriter of "Smooth," Itaal Shur, said it was one of the last popular songs where they recorded all of the instruments live. And with "Livin' La Vida Loca," producer/songwriter Desmond Child was talking about how it was one of the first songs created all in Pro Tools. That's something that I would have never known.

Me either, and it's one of those things that makes you go back to the song and hear it with new ears, doesn't it? I went back to "Smooth" after he told me that—I had interviewed Carlos [Santana] and Rob Thomas years ago—and then I re-interviewed Carlos and I interviewed Itaal for the first time. When Itaal told me that I was like, "Wow really? Is this how this happened?"

And when Desmond talks about how he did it "in the box" and how all the Latin artists back then had all this reverb, but he wanted it to sound really dry. It's all these engineering terms, but it's really fascinating. And when you realize all the thought that goes into a song—people think they're sitting here, putting them out as if they were bread, and they're not. They're really thinking a lot about how they want things to sound.

Thankfully in the past couple of years we've been talking more about diversity and inclusion, and what that really looks like. And when we have more women, more people of color in positions of power in the music industry, it allows for more diverse artists to come through the pipeline.

And it gives listeners the choice. If they don't like the music, they don't have to listen to it. I always try to tell people by including you're not taking away, you're simply adding. I'm not taking away something from the buffet, so to speak. I'm simply putting different things in the buffet. And If no one likes them, then we'll retire them from the buffet. We do that every day with everything we do. We choose, okay, this doesn't happen. We don't like this and things go out of business because people are not responding to it. But this notion that somehow I'm taking away from you by adding something else is just not right.

The reason I think I see it differently than many people in my position is because I grew up in Latin America. Hearing music in English was so inspirational, and you got so excited when this music played. I loved Queen, that was my favorite band of all time. Oh my God, every time a new album came out and if it wasn't available in Colombia it was like, "Oh, can somebody bring it to me from the States?" And people, whole populations that didn't speak English, learn phonetically how to sing these songs, and it's beautiful. So when the reverse happens, I'm like, why isn't this a good thing? This is a great thing. It's a cultural exchange.

When I was a kid, I was obsessed with Ricky Martin, Enrique Iglesias, Shakira and J.Lo. Looking back at the millennium, a "crossover" required them singing in English, that's what the music industry thought. Now in this new generation—J Balvin, Rosalía and Bad Bunny—they all sing primarily in Spanish. Do you feel like that's important and significant, that now artists can be who they are and speak their native language and be popular?

I think it's huge. I have to tell you, I didn't think it was going to happen, just because language is really important. I always thought that. And you have these one-off [hits] with a song in Spanish or in German—remember "99 Red Balloons?" After, people always say, "Oh, language doesn't matter." I didn't believe that, I always thought it did matter, a lot. So when J Balvin in an interview five years ago told me, "We're going to end up with a No. 1 in Spanish on your Hot 100 chart." I honestly did not see that, I have to admit. I've been very surprised at this turning of the tide.

And I think in part it's because of streaming, because now everyone that is Spanish speaking can stream the music, and they can contribute to that volume that you couldn't see before. And also much to my surprise, I think people are just more open to it. But I think it all builds on itself, it's a snowball rolling downhill. I think people are more open because they're streaming, and because they're streaming, they can hear music in other languages and they start to get used to it.

Also, I say this a lot and I don't think I said it in the book and I wish I had; Zumba was very key. You have people all over the world in all these different countries, in Russia, in India, dancing Zumba with music primarily in Spanish. So I think people got used to the language. I've had people tell me, "Oh, maybe the next wave is going to be from India," and I always say it could be. Never say never. I think with Spanish, we're very lucky because it's spoken in so many countries. I don't see any other language like that besides English.

I feel like in 2017 when "Despacito" happened, a lot of the conversation felt reductive or removed from this larger context of Latin music. The timeline, which you very elegantly lay out in your book, is all these other pieces that led to "Despacito" and this current moment we're in. Why do you think the U.S. mainstream media and the pop music machine so often sidelines Latin artists and Spanish language music?

It's so frustrating to me and I think language was a big factor. I think the fact that it was in Spanish and that you couldn't understand what they were saying was a big, big barrier. That's my personal opinion. It's the fear of the unknown. I don't think that it was deliberately, "Let's not include them," but it's, "Oh, that's music in another language. That's for Latins, it's in Spanish, they speak Spanish, we don't have to worry about it."

I think, too, the fact that you didn't have Latin representation in those rooms has a lot to do with it. It took me a lot of time to settle into this one. I watched the documentary about Ruth Bader Ginsburg the other day. She was at Harvard [Law School] and walks in, and she looks around and there are three women. I turned to my husband and I said, "That's how I felt through the years!" I'll be in a newsroom and I'm the only one. And it's great because you're the only one and so you get some leeway and on the other hand, it's not great because you have to constantly explain why this is important.

The thing that I think is very different now, is that before you had to explain why this is important and you had nothing to substantiate it. It was just "Trust me." "Trust me, this is important. Trust me, I saw their tour and they're playing 20 sold out arena dates in the United States." You saw them on the Latin charts, but you didn't see them in the big charts, but now you do have those numbers. So that's also a factor.

When Bad Bunny was the most streamed artist for Spotify around the world in 2020, and you're a media company and you ignore that, you're an idiot. Where are you living? You can't pretend it's not happening anymore. So the numbers are key, but the streaming made the numbers possible. I hate to say that, but it did. It really did, because otherwise they had to sing in English to make those charts and those numbers, or they had to do so phenomenally well in Spanish. Even "Despacito."

When [the original version of] "Despacito" was happening, I remember that every week we would watch it climb the [Hot 100] chart. I remember it hit a point where I thought, "Oh my God, this song is going to become No. 1!" All this time I'm saying, "This song is really big, we should be writing about it. "It's No. 1 everywhere [else]." People really weren't paying that much attention [here] until Justin Bieber got on the song. And I think that was in a way, a little bit of the last barrier. Now we don't wait for a Justin Bieber to jump on a song. Maybe Taylor Swift tomorrow decides to do a song with Maluma, we're going to be all over it. But we don't need her to do that for us to pay attention.

It does feel like things are so different now, with streaming and just the internet as it is, where you can find articles about everything, and so many translations, and music from everywhere. I know YouTube is popular in Latin America, and it's finally showing on the charts. Because before, the only way you could get on the charts was through radio and album sales, correct?

Yes, and it was so difficult. There were a lot of handicaps. It was radio. It was the fact that Latin music was not sold everywhere because not every store catered to a Latin audience. It was also that Latin music was disproportionately pirated when we had CDs. It was all these things.

On the other hand, to be perfectly fair, when you compete in what we call the "mainstream" world, the competition is fierce. You're competing with everything: country, rock, hip-hop and R&B. You really need to have something special to rise to the top. While I do love about what's happening now, I don't think the music is necessarily better. There's an opportunity for some of it to rise and I think that the responsibility that we have in the Latin music industry is to continue making music that's really good.

That's the flip side of our modern era, that technically anyone can put music on SoundCloud. It has created a lot of careers, including Bad Bunny's, but there's also a lot of noise. Thinking about some of the songs in the book, even just back to "Despacito," which felt like the song of 2017, you heard it everywhere. Now it feels like songs cycle more quickly because there's so much music out there and our attention is getting even shorter.

I still have "Despacito" on my workout playlist. And I have to say, I tried to pick the songs in the book like that. I thought, okay, which songs are really emblematic of the time? Not just that they were humongous hits, but that they were songs that to this day I still listen to them, and I still marvel at them. And "Livin' La Vida Loca," you couldn't not have that song.

And I always feel that there's so many anthologies of great American hits, the great American song book, and great British rock hits, and we all know those songs and they're great songs. And why can't we have an anthology of great Latin hits? I think every song in this book can go toe-to-toe with a great American song.

What was your selection criteria? I'm sure there were so many songs that you wanted to include or thought about including, so how did you narrow it down?

Well, I wanted people who were alive so they could tell me the story, that was super important to me. And I really wanted Selena, who's clearly not alive. When I spoke about it with my editor, I said, "I'll put Selena on if I can get either her dad or her brother to speak. Otherwise, I can't do it." Celia Cruz is not in the book. I would have loved to include her, but the story wouldn't work because the people that brought it alive aren't there. That was a criteria, and that's why I finally settled on 1970 as a starting point.

The process was a group effort. I would send emails and say, "What do you think of this song?" We wanted songs that really had cut through, all those big "crossover songs," they were in the running. "Livin' La Vida Loca" was very key. "Feliz Navidad" was so very key. "Macarena," even though it could even be a silly song, but it connected to such a degree that it had to be there. I wanted to include these big, epic, global hits to draw the reader in. I wanted to have the players, I wanted songs that I felt had made a difference, culturally, that somehow had moved the needle forward for the music and for the culture.

It doesn't mean that every song that should be here is here because there were some songs that I should have brought in but I couldn't because I ran out of time, I ran out of space. Or I couldn't find the right people at the right time so I had to say, I'm letting it go, and I hope we do a part two, and then I can bring them all back here.

Más: GRAMMY Rewind: Shakira Wins Her First GRAMMY For Best Latin Pop Album In 2001

How long did it take to compile and write it? 

It took a while. But once I got into it, I would say about a year. And it was a lot of doing the interviews. Then it was [editing] those interviews because I didn't want the book to repeat itself. I didn't want Shakira saying something and then Tim Mitchell and Tommy Mottola or Emilio [Estefan] saying the same thing, so it was important that each narrator brought something different to the table. That's also why I don't have more than one producer, or more than one arranger, I wanted the different points of view in the chapter as much as possible.

And if you notice too, some of the later chapters have more players. And this has to do with people dying. Los Tigres Del Norte were around, but the composer and the producer [of their 1974 breakout song "Contrabando y Traición"] weren't around, they had died.

Read More: José Feliciano On 50 Years Of "Feliz Navidad," New Album 'Behind This Guitar' & Hitting The Big Screen

Why did you start with "Feliz Navidad?"

I thought it was such a great beginning because it was a bilingual song. I just think it's amazing how [José Feliciano] had the presence of mind in 1970 [to do that], being as young as he was then, at a time when no one [in the U.S. pop market] was doing anything in Spanish. First of all, his arranger, Rick Jarrard was the one who said, "Let's do something in Spanish." And José kind of did it as a joke, but then he did have the presence of mind to say, "Rick, if we're going to do it in Spanish, let me put a couple lines in English so that they don't have an excuse not to play it."

I think maybe I started to make the list in December and "Feliz Navidad" was playing. To me, it was the first big crossover song in my mind that was bilingual. I just thought everything about it was kind of perfect. It was bilingual and it was all those years ago, José Feliciano is still active. And then it just so happened that the song had its [50th] anniversary, which I wasn't planning; the book got delayed because of the election and the pandemic. I just thought it was the perfect bookend to begin with that song.

And I was going to end with J Balvin's "Mi Gente" in 2017. After I turned it all in, Rosalía kind of exploded and I felt I needed more women to end the book. And everybody started asking me, "Why don't you include a Rosalía song?" And I said, "Okay, that's a great idea." And I think "Malamente" was been absolutely groundbreaking. I didn't have time to interview the video producers, which I would've loved to do, but [that final chapter] was done very quickly.

What's one of the biggest things you learned from your research for the book?

Well, I learned A: I don't know everything.

But I'm saying that with the utmost respect because a lot of the songs and the people in this book, I have interviewed a lot. Some I hadn't, but most of them, I had interviewed at least once, but there are some artists here that I've interviewed quite a bit. And I would say the only song that I really knew the story to was "Despacito." It did inspire the book. When the book proposal came, I had just done an oral history of "Despacito" for Billboard. So that format and that song were in my head.

For each chapter, I learned the real story behind each song, and each is beautiful. So overall, what I learned that I didn't know before, A: that every song had so many influences from so many places, even the most apparently regional song fed off many different things. And that surprised me. It surprised me to speak with somebody like Juan Luis Guerra, who I know loves The Beatles because he says this a lot, but it surprised me to have him kind of explain in detail how the Beatles guitar influenced "Burbujas de Amor."

I had no idea, for example, the guy who discovered Los Tigres del Norte was a Brit. [He's] telling me this story and I'm thinking, "How did I not know this?" I googled it and found they spoke about it 35 years ago. I never heard that story before. That really surprised me. I loved that.

Related: How Gloria Estefan Crossed Latin Music Boundaries On Her Second Spanish-Language Album, 'Abriendo Puertas'

I'm sure all the conversations are just so illuminating.

They were, and you know what else I really loved? When you sit down to interview artists on a normal day-to-day, it's because they're doing something, promoting something. But in this case I said, "I just want to talk how you make this one song. I want to know everything about the song." Once they sat down and realized what the interview was, they were, "Oh, let me tell you this. And did you know this?"

I think that it also made me realize how much artists love their art. I mean, it sounds like a stupid thing to say, but they're very proud of what they do. Well, I think anybody who'd had a song like this would be really proud as well. It's something to be incredibly proud of. I felt very happy to give those bragging rights, so to speak.

And in the current digital media cycle, it's onto the next song. Anniversary pieces for bigger albums or bigger songs are popular, but there's so much music that probably means a lot to an artist that they never get to talk about again, you know? So it's always cool to have deep dives.

I want to think that they loved telling the stories. I hope they did. And also, you realize how important this is to them. I think as writers, as music journalists, we're moving fast, too. So it's easy to sometimes forget that you're covering intimate manifestations of self, if you will. And they do mean a lot to the people that make them, whether we like them or not. If you have a song in this book, these are meaningful songs. These are songs that had a lot of reach. So to understand that they were made thinking they were important makes it all the more meaningful. That's important because it also kind of gives value to what we do.

If you could go back and give your younger self, when you were like starting out in the industry, any piece of advice, what would it be?

Oh my God, I have so many pieces of advice. I would tell myself first and foremost, you have to always thank people that help you. And you have to thank people that give you an opportunity because they don't have to. Being thankful is very important.

I would tell myself you have to be more diplomatic with everyone that you work with. I think this is something you learn with time. This is a small industry, you're going to run into everybody again at some point. You have to remember to be diplomatic, kind and thankful.

And if you're going to have side projects, you have to have a lawyer read your contracts. And even though I was always very measured in it, I tell people you have to be careful with your social media. I have a lot of opinions I keep to myself because they can be misrepresented, misheard, mis-whatever. And while I always tell people that, listen, it's your social media. You feel completely sure of what you're saying if you don't care what anyone is going to say in return, dalé. But if you are even remotely concerned what people are going to say, then you have to think how you're going to say things before you post them.

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Carlos Santana performs at the 2020 Pre-GRAMMY Gala and GRAMMY Salute to Industry Icons

Carlos Santana performs at the 2020 Pre-GRAMMY Gala and GRAMMY Salute to Industry Icons

Photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

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Amazonia Benefit: Carlos Santana & More Confirmed carlos-santana-jane-fonda-herbie-hancock-kali-uchis-and-more-confirmed-artists-united

Carlos Santana, Jane Fonda, Herbie Hancock, Kali Uchis And More Confirmed For "Artists United For Amazonia" Livestream Benefit

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Taking place Thursday, May 28, the online event will benefit the Amazon Emergency Fund, which supports indigenous communities and organizations in the Amazon basin who are facing threats from the COVID-19 pandemic
John Ochoa
GRAMMYs
May 23, 2020 - 12:02 pm

The creative, entertainment and music worlds are banding together to raise donations for the Amazon Emergency Fund, which supports indigenous communities and organizations in the Amazon basin who are facing threats from the COVID-19 pandemic, via a star-studded global livestream event. 

Taking place Thursday, May 28, at 5 p.m. PST/8 p.m. EST, the online benefit, dubbed the Artists United For Amazonia: Protecting The Protectors, will feature celebrities, activists and scientists from across various industries, including Carlos Santana, Peter Gabriel, Jane Fonda, Morgan Freeman, famed primatologist and anthropologist Jane Goodall and Brazilian environmental and indigenous activist and politician Sônia Guajajara, among many others. 

Hosted by "Game Of Thrones" actress Oona Chaplin, the livestream benefit will also feature "living-room musical performances, interviews, and calls to action," with confirmed performers including Herbie Hancock, Rocky Dawuni, Butterscotch Clinton, Brazilian GRAMMY nominee Ivan Lins and Brazilian GRAMMY winner Luciana Souza, Deadline reports. Other guests and participants include Kali Uchis, Chloe Smith from Rising Appalachia, Wade Davis and many others.

The livestream will be available via the event's website and Facebook page.

Launched last month, according to Deadline, the Amazon Emergency Fund raises and channels "resources to indigenous communities and grassroots organizations who face the COVID-19 emergency in the entire Amazon basin," according to a press release.

The fund's website states that "100% of each donation will go directly to Indigenous and Forest Communities and Organizations facing COVID-19 in the Amazon Rainforest." The fund will support Rapid Response Grants to provide services including: urgent COVID-19 prevention and care, food and medical supplies, emergency communications and evacuation, and more. 

The Amazon Emergency Fund is accepting donations now.

Read: Recording Academy And MusiCares Establish COVID-19 Relief Fund

As the coronavirus pandemic spreads across the Amazon Basin, the virus has killed 25 indigenous people in the rainforest and surrounding remote villages and more than 100 people in urban areas, according to The New York Times.

"As the COVID-19 pandemic spreads across the Amazon Basin, it threatens the lives and the future of indigenous peoples and traditional forest communities, the Guardians of the Forest," the Amazon Emergency Fund website states. "These populations are disproportionately vulnerable to contracting the illness due to the persistent lack of access to equal and adequate public services, such as housing and health care, and the consequences of centuries of colonization and racism.

"For over 500 years, indigenous peoples of the Amazon and across the Americas have faced invasions and loss of their ancestral territories, ethnic and socioeconomic discrimination, and the constant threat of physical and cultural extermination resulting in displacement, disease, and genocide. Now, indigenous peoples – particularly the elders, wisdomkeepers and those living in voluntary isolation – are gravely at risk by the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. Traditional forest communities are similarly threatened, including  riverine, quilombola, rubber-tappers, and other extractive populations, who have been defending the forest with their lives."

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Felly

Felly

Photo: Christian Diaz

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Felly On "Heartstrings," New Album & Icons felly-talks-heartstrings-vulnerability-new-album-learning-icons

Felly Talks "Heartstrings," Vulnerability On New Album & Learning From Icons

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"I think it's all just getting closer to your true self and your true soul, which I think has a godly element to it," the young L.A.-based rapper/singer-songwriter recently said of his musical journey
Ana Monroy Yglesias
GRAMMYs
Oct 29, 2019 - 2:59 pm

24-year-old Connecticut-born, Los Angeles-based artist Felly is on a roll. Since his first mixtape in 2014, he's released at least one major project a year, culminating in his debut studio album, 2018's Surf Trap. He's gathered a growing fan base along the way, with his laid-back demeanor and experimental approach to surf-rock-drenched, at-times-jazzy, hip-hop.

Today, he dropped a buzzy new single, "Heartstrings," electrified by the otherworldly guitar riffs of 10-time GRAMMY-winner Carlos Santana. The music video was directed by Felly himself—his directorial debut—and shot by Christian Diaz, primarily in the serene desert of Joshua Tree, Calif.  

Ahead of the shimmering new track, the Recording Academy caught up with Felly over the phone to learn more about the magical collaboration with Santana, getting closer to his true self, being human and more.

So you're about to drop your new song "Heartstrings" featuring none other than Carlos Santana. What are you most excited for about sharing this new song?

I'm just ready to put out new music to the people because I have been making all this amazing stuff, and have been listening to it over and over. And my friends have been hearing it, but everybody [else] still references my old stuff. So I want to let people know it's a new day.

I'm just happy to reinvent myself again, and to be an artist and be in this world where I'm able to do something like that. It's kind of a purifying feeling, and it's just fun.

You explore a lot of different sounds across your already-extensive music catalog. How you would summarize your musical journey and evolution through the different projects?

I think it's all just getting closer to your true self and your true soul, which I think has a godly element to it. The closer you can get to being your truest, purest form of yourself, it's a beautiful thing for the world to see, but also for you to feel.

I've released a lot of projects where I've sort of been on that search. People admire that because they can relate to that feeling of searching themselves, and trying to discover themselves. To know that somebody else is going through that same journey is nice. It's comforting, it's inspiring and it helps us to relate to each other. With this release, I just feel like I have gotten a lot closer; with how I've been living my life, and things that I've cut out of my life, and things that I have added into my life.

I'm honing in on myself, so each project kind of shows that. When I listen back to all the projects, I'll be able to identify certain areas where maybe I'm out of pocket, or confused with myself, or who I want to be. But that's all part of it, and is the current state of it, too. Everything grows.

my new record with Carlos Santana is dropping next week. the first single off my new album. Wait on it. @SantanaCarlos pic.twitter.com/irO5SoqQp5

— felly (@fellythekid) October 17, 2019

Going back to "Heartstrings," I'm curious how you connected with Carlos for the song, and what it was like working with him in the studio.

We had been looking for someone to get on that record because we thought it's a super strong record, and I previously hadn't really been collaborative with anybody else. Just out of not being in a position to, not really knowing people, not really having the credibility yet. So getting to the point where people actually want to get in with you, and work with you, that's largely because music's better. It was sort of getting to that time.

So we were searching for someone that could complement the record. And I felt like, unless it came organically, it would sound like a ploy or whatever. And you see a bunch of these ploys that people do to get noticed by a Spotify playlist, by curators, or just kind of to get press. Those all feel very stunt-y to me. I don't want to be one of those artists that just does stunts, because I feel like those are here today and gone tomorrow.

But yeah, when the Carlos thing happened, it was completely organic. He had heard the record through someone at my label sending it to his camp, saying, "Hey, this is Felly's new record, what do you guys think of it?" He loved it and wanted to be a part of it. And he didn't care if I'm not as big as him or any of that stuff. He connected with the actual music; the soul and the personality of the record.

So meeting him and feeling that, and just seeing that come to fruition, reminded me that, you know, real sh*t is still alive. True personal connection, soul connection is still alive. You could get persuaded differently being in L.A., or being in this industry, that it has to be some fake ploy, and you have to do sh*t like buy followers, plays or features.

The idea of buying a feature from a rapper kind of irked me, because I know my fans know me as someone who's real, genuine and upfront. Something from Carlos Santana that came genuinely, and he just so happens to be probably the coolest musician on this earth, and the best person I could imagine getting a feature from. It's sort of like God showing me that I'm right to feel how I felt, and blessing me for having patience and stuff.

What was your biggest takeaway from seeing him at work and collaborating with him?

I think I aged like 60 years of knowledge in just that one session. Honestly. They pretty much gave me the torch, and kind of said, "Hey, you're next up. And in this journey, you're the guy who's going to carry the torch for us." This is surreal, but it was really the type of sh*t that they said to me. And that, combined with different rock star knowledge and them treating me like I'm going to be a rock star, was really cool.

They just treated me as an equal, which is really awesome to see. Santana sees soul value in people and he's just super connected to spirituality, and kind of taught me about those types of things. That if you put energy, compassion and clear intention into your work, it will have that connection.

He did this gesture where he said, "It's like this." And he looked up at the sky, held his hands out, brought it back into his heart, and then extended his hands out to the people in the room. And he kind of took energy from the sky and gave it to the people in the room. And I was like, "Yes, that's exactly what it's like."

And so he taught me about having your mind step out of the way, and to approach things as if you've never heard them, or never done this before, because that's when things can get stale and mundane, or you can kind of let your ego run its way. But if you do the things that he is talking about, you'll create something fresh and new, and people will resonate with that. When we made the record, I think he kind of recognized that, and that's why he wanted to be a part of it.

Felly & Carlos Santana

Felly & Carlos Santana | Photo: Christian Diaz

If I'm not mistaken, this song is going to be the lead single for your upcoming album. I was curious to know what you're going for with this next project as a whole?

Yeah. It's sort of an album about coming home to oneself, you know, feeling oneself in all the true colors and just getting closer to them, cutting out the bullsh*t. It's a very raw project that soul is the carrying factor through it. Soul, emotion and just truth. And it's not trying to be flashy by any means. You'll get some of the flashiness on these singles, maybe. But it's something that can make you feel human again. It's called Mariposa, which means butterfly in Spanish, and is about becoming one's true self, taking a new form.

A butterfly goes through many stages before it can actually branch out and fly, be the beautiful creature that it is. It's metaphoric of the time I'm going through. And I kind of felt I've gone through the cocoon, been in the dark and been in forms that I wasn't sure if I would make it to feel like a true form of myself. Luckily, I do feel that way.

What did it feel like for you working on this project versus the last one? Did it feel sort of cathartic to write these songs?

I wrote half of it when I got back from tour, where I was super depressed and depleted. I had given all my energy to the world and didn't feel any satisfaction from it, and was in a very dark place. And so you have that side of the album. But the past few months I've been working on it, I've been adding the element of, you know, light and love.

And so it has a healthy balance of dark and light, which I think life and the spiritual journey is reminiscent of, especially the metaphor of a butterfly. It kind of has to be in the dark for awhile before it can fly. And so I've been adding those elements of love, and just good energy, light, and just been sort of feeling it more in the past couple of months. I'm still etching away at how I want to make it happen.  It was very hard to write some of these songs at first. It's very vulnerable. But then as it got more under my skin, it got really fun.



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faith // rage

A post shared by felly (@felly) on Aug 13, 2019 at 12:03pm PDT

Zooming out a little bit, what made you want to go into music?

I don't know. I think it was in my DNA, in my soul and my upbringing in Connecticut. And you know, losing my father and, because of those combinations, of not really having anyone around me. My mom was dating and my older brothers were out doing their own things, so I had like a lot of alone time and thoughtful time. So that led to, "Okay, how can I make something light of this situation? How can I create something?" And so creation, to me, became the base of my life, and sort of how I can transcend a dark moment.

When you were younger, did you have an artist or someone that you looked up to, like, "Okay, like maybe I can be like them; if they can do it, I can too," or something like that?

Yeah, I really liked to listen to Atmosphere. I mean I had many artists, even local artists, and people that I looked up to. I really liked Rhymesayers, an independent record label in Minnesota [that Atmosphere and other indie rappers are on]. And I thought that was so cool that they were able to like be successful, and do their own things, as just kind of random dudes, white dudes who were just like me. That definitely inspired me.

If you don't have people around like that to kind of pat you on the a** to keep going, and to encourage you that you can do these things, a lot of people quit and lose hope in it. So that support, whether you find it, or it comes to you, it's super important to keep it going.

What is your favorite part about life as an artist? And what do you think is the hardest part?

My favorite part about life as an artist is being on my own schedule and being able to do whatever I want. And not that I take advantage of that, but just that I can feel like my time is mine, and kind of create infinite possibilities out of that. That's an amazing freedom.

The least favorite is—I mean, I think everything comes with a balance, so if something's sh*tty in one way, it's going to be good in another. But I think with that freedom comes a lot of responsibility, or overthinking, or stuff that you can just get caught up in, like comparison. I don't really like flying. That's kind of it.

I like your attitude because it's true. Sometimes something can seem really overwhelming, but then you do it and its like, "Man, I did that!"

Yeah, definitely. I mean, my attitude, it's definitely not always like this. Everyone thinks I'm like a super happy, bright dude, but not all the times for sure. I'm human, just like everyone else.



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200 mil+ independent streams siikkkk. thank you to the fans who knock my music and the people who help me get it to them. love u all. next one gold on God.

A post shared by felly (@felly) on Jun 7, 2019 at 1:03pm PDT

We just talked about it a bit, but I wanted to look more at your influences. Who were your favorite artists when you were a teen?

I really liked a lot of independent hip-hop and a lot of indie music. I'm the youngest of five, I have three older brothers and a sister. So they pushed a lot of different genres on to me. That was a good opportunity because I'd get old-school Lil Wayne from my stepbrother, and then I would get Taking Back Sunday, Hawthorne Heights, harder rock, Rage Against The Machine, from my other brother. And then my sister would show me acoustic music and stuff like that.

So everyone was sort of fighting for "What is Chris going to dig?" But I also had a fusion of everybody else's stuff. It was a lot of Bob Marley. The first record I ever recorded on was at a Universal theme park. You could pay 15 bucks or whatever to record and mine was "Buffalo Soldier" by Bob Marley. I still wish I could find that record. I was like eight and that was my first time in the booth.

Carlos Santana On Woodstock & The Power Of Music: "These People Wanted The Same Things We Want Today"

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Some of the content on this site expresses viewpoints and opinions that are not those of the Recording Academy and its Affiliates. Responsibility for the accuracy of information provided in stories not written by or specifically prepared for the Academy and its Affiliates lies with the story's original source or writer. Content on this site does not reflect an endorsement or recommendation of any artist or music by the Recording Academy and its Affiliates.