Fifty-one years after the Santana Blues Band played its first shows, Carlos Santana never fails to surprise. He's one of the spiritual founding fathers of the Sixties counterculture but currently lives in, of all places, Las Vegas with his wife, Santana drummer Cindy Blackman. "I've never had that gambling bug at all," he says, "but everything I said I would never do is in front of me. I didn't realize that some of the most gifted musicians, like Nat 'King' Cole and Sinatra, did [Vegas]. So I rearranged my position." He records with modern pop acts and has covered AC/DC and Def Leppard – but reunited an early lineup of Santana last year and is about to release Power of Peace, his first-ever collaboration with longtime friends Ronald and Ernie Isley. Here, Santana shares life lessons from his five-decade cosmic journey – the beliefs that keep him going, how he's trained his inner child and the times when he'll defend himself.
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What are the best and worst parts of success?
I get to meet like-minded people like Harry Belafonte and Desmond Tutu. I also got to meet Dr. J and Wilt Chamberlain. You ask Wilt, "Hey, how's the weather up there?" He says, "Which state?"
Sometimes you also get to meet a knucklehead. If I'm out at a restaurant, I'm more than happy to take a photo with someone, but if they get a little too intense or drunk, I tell them, "I need you to honor my wife and honor me because you may have to call an ambulance for you and the police for me." They say, "Oh, I thought you were spiritual." I say, "I am, and I'm trying to stay that way."
What was your favorite book as a kid, and what does it say about you?
Anthony Quinn's autobiography The Original Sin. He had an inner child who was always putting him down. Everyone has some serious inner child that can be a demon and make you feel like crap. I learned to train that child to respect me and honor me.
What's the most indulgent purchase you ever made?
A fire-engine-red Excalibur car,
around 1970 or '71. I didn't know how
to drive, so after 15 miles on the free-way, the police pulled me over. The guy
says, "You're Santana, right? Don't even try looking for your license because I know you don't have one. We're gonna help you." He gave me a card for someone who would pick me up and teach me how to drive. People have always been very, very gracious and accommodating to this Mexican.
What album do you put on to chill out?
John Coltrane's A Love Supreme. That music could compel a person who is strapping themselves with bombs to cry like a woman cries when she gives birth. They'll think, "What was I thinking?" Coltrane's music corrects a twisted and crooked mind.
You'll turn 70 on July 20th. You used to say you would retire around this age.
I'm retired from retiring. We just recorded our next album, with Rick Rubin. It's mostly African rhythms, and I'm going to call it Global Revelation. Rick doesn't know that yet.
For a period in the Seventies, you followed the Indian guru Sri Chinmoy and renamed yourself "Devadip." Does anyone still call you that?
Only certain people who are still in the spiritual path. I'm really grateful for those 10 years
I spent with that spiritual master. I don't believe I will be lost in the evil ocean, because what I learned was very much like a West Point discipline, like a Marine.
Given that you were born in Mexico, what are your thoughts on Trump and his wall plans?
Frankly, man, as soon as I wake up in the morning I thank Nikola Tesla, because he invented the remote control. I use the remote control to tune [Trump] right out of my house. So he has no power or no attention span from me. I just turn him off immediately. We should learn that we're at that point as humans to make the table bigger and not the wall taller.
Given your spiritual beliefs, do you think Trump is redeemable?
I want to see his light. I already know about his darkness, his fear and his greed. And it's redundant to speak over and over about that, but the man might have some light because he is a child of God just like you and me. And if we concentrate on that, hopefully one day he might shock everybody. Starting in New York he can start fixing schools, invest all that money he has, or at least some of the gravy money, to institutions right there in Manhattan.
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