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"Black Magic Woman" is a song written by British musician Peter Green, which first appeared as a single for his band Fleetwood Mac in 1968. Subsequently, the song appeared on the 1969 Fleetwood Mac compilation albums English Rose (US) and The Pious Bird of Good Omen (UK), as well as the later Greatest Hits and Vintage Years [2] compilations.
In 1998, Sony published a remastered version, which included three previously unreleased live tracks: "Se a Cabó", "Toussaint L'Overture" and "Black Magic Woman/Gypsy Queen", recorded at the Royal Albert Hall on April 18, 1970. In 1998, SME records in Japan, part of Sony Music, also released the remastered version as an SACD. This disc is ...
Format: CD, digital download; 9 67 5 96 36 — — — 14 58 US: 2× Platinum [32] Santana IV: Released: April 15, 2016; Label: Santana IV Records; Format: CD, digital download, vinyl; 5 11 11 29 7 8 24 29 7 4 Africa Speaks: Release date: June 7, 2019; Label: Concord; Format: CD, digital download, vinyl; 3 55 9 50 63 — — — 6 35 Blessings ...
Black Magic Woman is a compilation album by British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac, released in 1971. It is a double album, composed of songs from two Peter Green-era albums, Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac (in its entirety, making up the first LP of the two) and English Rose, as well as several non-album tracks. The U.S. Epic double album contains ...
He was their original lead vocalist, with his voice appearing on well-known Santana songs such as "Black Magic Woman" (US #4), "Oye Como Va", "No One To Depend On" and "Evil Ways". He also became well known for his skill on the Hammond B3 organ, with solos on many of the aforementioned hits. He has song-writing credits on many tracks from this ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Ultimate Santana is a compilation by rock band Santana, ... "Black Magic Woman" (from Abraxas, 1970)
The Ultimate Collection is a 1997 compilation album by Santana. It is unique in that it includes material from his early Columbia days up to the 1992 Milagro release on Polydor . No other compilation album includes material from Milagro .
According to Carlos Santana, "If you take the words from 'Black Magic Woman' and just leave the rhythm, it's 'All Your Love'—it's Otis Rush". [6] A variety of musical artists have recorded the song, often as "All Your Love", [7] although that is also the title of a different song by Magic Sam. [1]