The Magnetism of "Black Magic Woman": A Look at Its Release Date

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"Black Magic Woman" is a song that was released by the British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac in 1968. The song was written by Peter Green, who was the guitarist of the band at the time. It was originally included in their album "Fleetwood Mac" but gained popularity when it was re-recorded and released as a single in 1968. "Black Magic Woman" showcases the band's bluesy sound and Green's exceptional guitar skills, which captivated audiences at the time. The song's mystical and seductive lyrics combined with its infectious melody made it a hit and it has since become one of Fleetwood Mac's most iconic and enduring songs. Over the years, numerous artists have covered "Black Magic Woman" and it continues to be a beloved classic in the world of rock music.



Nov 14, 1970: Santana Issues ‘Black Magic Woman’

They’d wowed America in the Woodstock movie and had slid into the Top 10 in 1969 with the single, “Evil Ways,” from the self-titled first album by the group led by the guitarist Carlos Santana . They needed another popular song to break the group through to sustained success.

“Black Magic Woman” was the tune that did that from Abraxas, the second album from Santana, released later that year. [The song is generally considered to have been released on this day, though November 14, 1970 is actually the publication date for the various industry trade magazines when the song debuted on the U.S. singles charts.]

The song debuted on the singles chart on Nov. 14, 1970

It ultimately went to #4 on the Billboard Hot 100, helping to power the LP to #1 and eventual sales of five million copies in the U.S. alone. Sung, as with “Evil Ways,” by keyboard player Gregg Rolie – who went on to found Journey and be its original lead singer – it became one of Santana’s signature songs and remained their highest-charting U.S. single until 1999’s “Smooth.”

It had already been a minor U.K. hit for a band who, not too many years later, would become an almost unstoppable hit machine. Written by Fleetwood Mac’s founding member, guitarist Peter Green, “Black Magic Woman” was first released as a single in 1968 and reached #37 on the U.K. charts, and was included the following year on the band’s English Rose album. It was a favorite among Fleetwood Mac fans that the group continued to play after Green left the band.

The two versions have their strong similarities. Obviously the Latin percussion and lilt on the Santana version plus Gabor Szabo’s “Gypsy Queen” as the coda was the secret sauce that made the song really hit.

Listen to the original Fleetwood Mac version

And now the Santana version of “Black Magic Woman.”

Santana have announced dates well into 2024. Tickets are available here and here .

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Borrowed notes: The complicated, cross-Atlantic evolution of Black Magic Woman

When Santana had a Top 5 single with Black Magic Woman in 1971, it was a great example of how music can often be the result of – to borrow a phrase from Sir Isaac Newton - “standing on the shoulders of giants.” In this case, guitar-wielding giants.

The evolution of Black Magic Woman stretches back to 1957, with an obscure record by Chicago guitarist Jody Williams. Williams had cut his teeth in the early '50s, playing on the street with his mentor Bo Diddley, then gigging with such blues artists as Memphis Minnie and Elmore James. That's him playing the incendiary solo on Diddley's classic Who Do You Love?

In his extended break, you can hear several licks that would inform the styles of both Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page. Williams made his own records too, and the B-side to his 1957 single You May was an instrumental called Lucky Lou. From the phrasing of the opening guitar riff to the slinky Afro-Cuban groove, it's obviously the blueprint for Black Magic Woman.

A year later, fellow Chicago blues guitarist Otis Rush “borrowed” that riff and feel for his record All Your Love (I Miss Your Loving), adding a vocal melody. Produced by Willie Dixon and featuring Ike Turner on rhythm guitar, it became one of Rush's signature hits.

Eight years later, in 1966, it was covered by John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, on the landmark “Beano” LP featuring Eric Clapton. The bass player on that record was John McVie. And a year later, after Clapton left to form Cream, there was a brief three-month window when the Bluesbreakers line-up included McVie, drummer Mick Fleetwood and lead guitarist Peter Green, the nucleus of the soon-to-be-formed Fleetwood Mac.

From there, we cut to Green writing a song for his svelte fashion model girlfriend, Sandra Elsdon, who he'd nicknamed “Magic Mama.” Green said in Peter Green: The Biography: “One of the things John Mayall said was that if you really like something, you should take the first lines, and make up another song from them. So that's what I did with Black Magic Woman.”

The song, nodding to All Your Love and Lucky Lou, was released as a single by Fleetwood Mac in 1968 and hit #37 on the UK charts.

And that's where Carlos Santana enters the picture. In the book Guitar Greats, he said, “I used to go see the original Fleetwood Mac, and they used to kill me, just knock me out. To me they were the best blues band.”

So in 1970, when Santana keyboardist Gregg Rolie started to play Black Magic Woman during a soundcheck, it was a memorable moment. Santana told Rolling Stone, “I swear to you, and this is for real, whenever we play the song, I remember the first time we played it in a soundcheck in Fresno in a parking lot. Gregg brought the song from Fleetwood Mac, Peter Green. And I remember saying, 'Hmm, I can bring a little bit of Otis Rush here and a little bit of Wes Montgomery here.'”

Santana's recorded version, featuring Rolie on lead vocals, was on the their best-selling second album, Abraxas. Adding yet another shoulder and another giant, the single switched gears into a double-time outro jam, based on Gypsy Queen, by Hungarian jazz guitarist Gábor Szabó. Discussing the song's long journey, Santana told Raised On Radio in 2016: “We all listened to everything, and we sculpture our own beauty and expression from the things that we love.”

In 1998, when Santana was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the band was joined by Peter Green for a seven-minute version of Black Magic Woman.

Black Magic Woman by Fleetwood Mac

An adaptation is a musical work, which uses elements (music or lyrics) from another musical work.

  • 重溫舊夢written by unknown author(s) Chinese 1972
  • Magic Womanwritten byHeinz Isenbug German 1971

Over the years, numerous artists have covered "Black Magic Woman" and it continues to be a beloved classic in the world of rock music..

Versions

Title Performer Release date Info
Black Magic Woman Fleetwood Mac March 1968 First release
Black Magic Woman/Gypsy Queen Santana September 1970 Hit song
More famous than the original
Medley
Black Magic Woman Tirso Cruz III 1970 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Terry Baxter / His Orchestra & Chorus 1971
Black Magic Woman ABC Company 1971
Black Magic Woman Dennis Brown 1972
Black Magic Woman Amazonas [GB] 1973
Black Magic Woman The Button-Down Brass featuring Ray Davies 1976
Black Magic Woman Earth and Stone 1980 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Omen [GB] 1981
Black Magic Woman The World of Pooh 1985
Black Magic Woman Brad Is Sex 1987
Black Magic Woman Uno 1988 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Samurai & Hardbartle 1990
Black Magic Woman Hellmenn 1990
I'll Fly for You/Oye como va/Black Magic Woman (Medley) Mina [IT] 1992 Medley
Black Magic Woman El Vez 1992
Black Magic Woman J. & B. Orchestra 1992 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Larry McCray August 22, 1995
Black Magic Woman Kungens Män 1995
Black Magic Woman / Gypsy Queen Tyburn Tall 1997 Live
Medley
Black Magic Woman Notis 1997
Black Magic Woman Peter Green Splinter Group March 1999
Black Magic Woman Ty Garner 1999
Black Magic Woman Patricia Barber 1999
Black Magic Woman Sonny Moorman 1999
Black Magic Woman Richie Arndt & The Bluenatics 1999
Black Magic Woman Michael Coleman [US] November 28, 2000
Black Magic Woman Charlie Musselwhite 2000
Black Magic Woman Alejandro March 25, 2002 Version from TV talent show
Black Magic Woman Out of Phase July 2002
Black Magic Woman The Go Getters 2003
Black Magic Woman Project: Pimento 2003
Black Magic Woman World Classic Rockers 2003
Black Magic Woman Keith G Gatsby 2003
Black Magic Woman Snowy White & The White Flames 2004
Black Magic Woman Andy Timmons - Pawn Kings 2004 Live
Black Magic Woman Siggi Schwarz & The Rock Legends June 17, 2005
Black Magic Woman Albert Kuvezin and Yat-Kha August 30, 2005
Black Magic Woman Janice Hagan 2005
Black Magic Woman Pierre Sibille 2005 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Daddy Mack Blues Band February 10, 2006
Santana Medley - Evil Ways / Oye Como Va / Black Magic Woman Type O Negative March 14, 2006 Medley
Black Magic Woman Rudy Rotta & Friends April 25, 2006
Black Magic Woman Mannheim Steamroller September 12, 2006
Black Magic Woman John Verity Band 2006 Live
Black Magic Woman Beverley Skeete 2007
Black Magic Woman The Ghost Doctors 2007
Black Magic Woman Lila Downs Featuring Raul Midón 2008
Black Magic Woman Billy Holiday [US2] January 2009
Black Magic Woman Jerry Cortez March 3, 2009
Black Magic Woman Steve Flack's Guitar Heroes April 17, 2009
Black Magic Woman The Hit Co. (Planet Music Studio Artists) 2009
Black Magic Woman Gregg Rolie Band (Gregg Rolie) 2009 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Pink Turtle August 16, 2010
Black Magic Woman Goad 2010
Black Magic Woman Santana with Peter Green November 15, 2011
Black Magic Woman Mark Bodino July 4, 2012
Black Magic Woman Egon Eichener 2012 Live
Black Magic Woman Peter Volland 2013
Black Magic Woman Rick Devin feat. Chet McCracken 2013
Black Magic Woman Sweet Baby J'ai September 21, 2015
Black Magic Woman The Sunshowers 2015 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Cuarenta Y Cinco 2016 Unverified
Black Magic Woman The Majorleans October 28, 2017
Black Magic Woman The Magic of Santana featuring Alex Ligertwood & Tony Lindsay 2017
Black Magic Woman Hector Anchondo Band 2017
Black Magic Woman Gregor Hilden & Richie Arndt 2018
Black Magic Woman Madeaux 2019 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Haze Acoustic Trio June 16, 2020 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Eric Clapton November 12, 2021 Live
Black Magic Woman Barry Leef Band [AU] March 2022 Unverified
Black Magic Woman Tierra Whack July 1, 2022
Title Performer Release date Info
i Black Magic Woman Percy Faith & His Orchestra 1971
i Black Magic Woman Hugo Strasser und sein Tanzorchester 1971
i Black Magic Woman Jiro Inagaki & Soul Media - Tadaaki Misago & Tokyo Cuban Boys 1971
i Black Magic Woman Kiyoshi Sugimoto Sextet 1971
i Black Magic Woman Takeshi Inomata & Sound Limited 1971
i Black Magic Woman Roberto Delgado 1971
i Black Magic Woman Harald Winkler - The Norman Candler Orchestra 1972
i Black Magic Woman Takeshi Terauchi & His Blue Jeans 1974
i Black Magic Woman Mjölby stadsmusikkår och storband 1978
i Black Magic Woman Skalär musiken 1980
i Black Magic Woman The Gino Marinello Orchestra 1988
i Black Magic Woman Samantha Blue with The London Starlight Orchestra 1992
i Black Magic Woman Lex Vandyke 1993
i Black Magic Woman The London Rock Orchestra 1994
i Black Magic Woman Manhattan Jazz Orchestra 1997
i Black Magic Woman [CMH Studio Artists] March 28, 2000
i Black Magic Woman - Gipsy Queen The Guitar Vagabonds 2000
i Black Magic Woman The Latin Sound of Guitars (Cleopatra Studio Artists) 2001
i Black Magic Woman Hot Strings 2002
i Black Magic Woman Walter Chancellor Jr. ‎ June 22, 2004
i Black Magic Woman Ed Calle August 17, 2004
i Black Magic Woman Vitamin String Quartet August 24, 2004
i Black Magic Woman The Sunset Lounge Orchestra 2007
i Black Magic Woman Mike Sedmak 2008
i Black Magic Woman John Goldie 2010 Unverified
i Black Magic Woman Robin Morris 2012
i Black Magic Woman Arcade Player December 27, 2018
i Black Magic Woman 8 Bit Arcade January 2019
When was black magic woman released

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Reviews for "Black Magic Woman": Diving into Its Release Date"

1. John - 2/5 stars: Personally, I didn't enjoy "When was black magic woman released". The plot was weak and lacked depth, and the characters felt one-dimensional. I also found the pacing to be quite slow, which made it difficult for me to stay engaged throughout the film. Overall, I was disappointed with this release.
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3. Mike - 1/5 stars: To put it bluntly, I thought "When was black magic woman released" was a total waste of time. The plot was clichéd and unoriginal, and the dialogue felt forced and cheesy. The performances were lackluster, and I found myself rolling my eyes at several points throughout the film. Overall, I cannot recommend this movie to anyone looking for a quality viewing experience.
4. Emily - 2/5 stars: I was really disappointed with "When was black magic woman released". The story felt disjointed and lacked coherence, making it difficult for me to fully understand what was happening. Additionally, the film relied heavily on jump scares and cheap horror tropes, which didn't add much substance to the overall narrative. While there were a few redeeming qualities, they were overshadowed by the film's overall lackluster execution.
5. David - 1/5 stars: "When was black magic woman released" was a huge letdown for me. The acting was subpar, and the characters were underdeveloped and unrelatable. The plot was predictable, and there were no surprises or moments that made me feel invested in the story. I found myself checking my watch multiple times throughout the film, eagerly waiting for it to be over. Overall, I strongly disliked this release and do not recommend it.

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