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Carlos Santana: Light of the Supreme: Carlos Santana’s Devadip Trilogy
ByCarlos Santana
guitarb.1947
Fleetwood Mac
band / ensemble / orchestra
David Brown
guitarb.1969

Santana
band / ensemble / orchestra
John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Michael Shrieve
drumsb.1949
It was the launching album for an extended period of exploration, musical and spiritual, which included collaborations with guitarist

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Alice Coltrane
piano1937 - 2007
The music on the three Devadip albums was made primarily with jazz musicians and released under the name "Devadip Carlos Santana," to clearly signify that these works were separate from the Santana band. It varies widely from the first, issued in 1974, to the last, which came out in 1980. What ties the three together is an adherence to a jazz aesthetic and sound, as well as a lack of concern for commercial acceptance. These works are some of the purist expressions of the guitarist's musical vision, works he refers to in his autobiography, The Universal Tone, as "his most personal."
In the summer of '74 Columbia issued a Santana Greatest Hits album and the high sales gave him a little leeway to continue the less commercial direction the band had taken. Concurrently, Illuminations came about when Alice Coltrane asked to add arrangements to a collection of new, more spiritual compositions Santana had been putting together in the down time after the Caravanserai tour. Living in Queens, NY at the time at Chinmoy's meditation center, he was attempting to re-evaluate where he was in his professional life and bring it more in line with the new direction his personal life had taken. Coltrane, though not a follower of Chinmoy, was on a similar path and had taken the name Turiya (short for Turiyasangitananda, translated as "the highest song of God") hence her credit as "Turiya Alice Coltrane" on the album.
Illuminations is quite a bold album, marking an abrupt departure from rock tropes and Latin rhythms and including a string orchestra on some tracks. The majority of the music was co-written with organist

Tom Coster
keyboardsb.1941

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942

Dave Holland
bassb.1946

Jules Broussard
saxophoneThe album is all about drama and grandiosity, from the opening short monologue by Chinmoy, to the string orchestra, to the overblown cover art. One thing that remains from Santana's earlier works is his signature guitar sound, emphasising long sustained notes and soulful string bends. That wasn't enough to save the album in the eyes of the public, however, and it created further distance between the musician and those wanting another "Black Magic Woman" or "Oye Como Va."
A five year gap ensued until the next Devadip album. It was not a gap of silence, by any means, with several new configurations of the Santana group and stabs at regaining commercial acceptance with songs such as "Dance Sister Dance" and a cover of " data-original-title="" title="">The Zombies' "She's Not There." Through this time he remained a student of Chinmoy and after the band's Inner Secrets (Columbia, 1978), there was the rapid succession of what would be the last two Devadip albums, in 1979 and 1980.
With the first of the two, Oneness: Silver DreamsGolden Reality, Carlos Santana's name didn't appear on the cover at all, with just the word Devadip appearing above the title. Even though this was essentially his first solo record, it marked the work as a definite remove from any "Santana sound," perhaps to avoid the inevitable comparisons which had plagued Illuminations. Ironically, though, Oneness is much more accessible than Illuminations and more likely to appeal to fans of the band. Gone are the lengthy and often meandering tracks of the first Devadip album, and Santana explores many avenues of expression, including live songs, acoustic songs, R&B, rock, and muscular fusion influenced by

Weather Report
band / ensemble / orchestraTwo other highlights include "Transformation Day," based on classical composer
Alan Hovhaness
b.1911
Narada Michael Walden
drumsb.1952
The Swing of Delight is the most straightforward and "non-mystical" of the three Devadip albums. A clean-cut Santana (as pictured on the back cover) ventures through nine jazz fusion tracks, with detours into the percussion-heavy Latin excursion "La Llave" and an unlikely but affecting cover of "Love Theme from Spartacus" from the 1960 film.
Originally a double album, Swing hangs together remarkably well and still sounds fresh today. This is in no small part due to the exemplary accompanying musicians -essentially

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Premik Russell Tubbs
saxophoneb.1952
Unfortunately, all three of the albums are now relative obscurities in Santana's discography, despite being some of his most interesting works. When originally released, they barely appeared on the general public's radar, and critical reviews varied considerably. For example, notoriously cranky critic Robert Christgau hated them, whereas jazz publications like Downbeat were more charitable.
What can't be argued is that the Devadip albums touch on a myriad of moods and styles, and are important steps in the evolution of Carlos Santana the artist. They show him in a light where he was less concerned with selling records and pleasing record companies, and guided solely by his muse. ">
Track Listing
Personnel
Carlos Santana
guitarAlbum information
Title: Light of the Supreme: Carlos Santana’s Devadip Trilogy | Year Released: 2015 | Record Label: Columbia Records
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