Emissaries For Peace Tour
This article relies too much on references to primary sources. (October 2020) |
Tour by Santana | |
Start date | July 27, 2005 |
---|---|
End date | August 2, 2005 |
Legs | 1 |
No. of shows | 5 |
Santana concert chronology |
The Emissaries For Peace Tour was a tour of Japan by American Latin rock band Santana, lasting from July 27, 2005 to August 2, 2005.[1]
Tour band[]
- Andy Vargas – lead vocals
- Carlos Santana – lead guitar, percussion, vocals
- Tommy Anthony – rhythm guitar
- Lionel Loueke – rhythm guitar, vocals
- Chester D. Thompson – keyboards, vocals
- Herbie Hancock – keyboards
- Benny Rietveld – bass guitar
- Dennis Chambers – drums
- Wayne Shorter – saxophone
- William Ortiz – trumpet
- Jeff Cresman – trombone
- Karl Perazzo – timbales, percussion, vocals
- Raul Rekow – congas, bongos, percussion, vocals
Set list[]
This is an average set list of this tour:[2]
- "Novus" (Carlos Santana, Gábor Szabó, Walter Afanasieff, Greg DiGiovine, Ritchie Rome)
- "Day of Celebration" (Santana, Chester D. Thompson, Tony Lindsay)
- "I Am Somebody" (William Adams, Jr., George Pajon)
- "Africa Bamba" (Santana, Touré Kunda, Karl Perazzo)
- "Safiatou"
- "Concierto de Aranjuez" (Joaquín Rodrigo)
- "Maria Maria" (Santana, Perazzo, Rekow, Jean, Duplessis)
- "Foo Foo" (Yvon André, Roger Eugène, Yves Joseph, Hermann Nau, Claude Jean)
- "Jin-go-lo-ba" (Babatunde Olatunji)
- "Venus" (Pharoah Sanders)
- "(Da Le) Yaleo" (Santana, Shakara Mutela, Christian Polloni)
- "In a Silent Way" (Joe Zawinul)
- "It's About That Time" (Miles Davis)
- Encore
- "Apache" (Jerry Lordan)
- "Smooth" (Itaal Shur, Rob Thomas)
- "Dame Tu Amor" (Abraham Quintanilla, Ricky Vela, Richard Brooks)
- "A Love Supreme" (John Coltrane)
Tour dates[]
Date | City | Country | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
Asia[3] | |||
July 27, 2005 | Yokohama | Japan | Yokohama Arena |
July 29, 2005 | Nagasaki | Nagasaki Brick Hall | |
July 31, 2005 | Osaka | Festival Hall | |
August 1, 2005 | |||
August 2, 2005 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan |
References[]
- ^ Miller, Hal. "Emissaries For Peace – The Japan Tour". Santana.com. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
- ^ "Santana Average Setlists of tour: 2005 Emissaries For Peace Tour | setlist.fm". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
- ^ "Santanamigos. July 26/27/29/30, August 1/2, 2005". Santanamigos.pagesperso-orange.fr. Site contains pictures of concert tour posters and ticket stubs. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
External links[]
- Santana Past Shows 2005 at Santana official website
Categories:
- Santana (band) concert tours
- 2005 concert tours
- Concert tours of Japan