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Karl Perazzo Santana Now: A Force Of Nature A rhythmic force of
nature since its inception in San Francisco's Mission District in 1966,
the Santana
band has always set the bar high. And now, with superstar
drummer Dennis Chambers joining percussionists Raul Rekow and
Karl
Perazzo, the bar (and the expectation) is even higher. The chops
level is, of course, at a peak. But even more
impressive is how
intently the bandmembers are all listening. It's not the frightening
technique, but the calm, evenness of
the groove--grounded yet
explosive--that is most inspiring. The band has been sizzling in
concert, whether rearranging
Santana staples like "Oye Como Va,"
cranking out "Maria Maria" from the 2000 smash Supernatural, or stretching out on
a bold new instrumental called "Victory Is Won."
Capping it off with a world tour in support of a new Santana album
(due
out shortly), Dennis Chambers has had a very visible year. He appears
on Niacin's Time Crunch (Magna
Carta), Uncle Moe's Space Ranch (Tone Center), and Mike Stern's Voices
(Atlantic). But Santana is
clearly where his focus is now. Chambers
rarely took his eyes off his bandmates during a recent show in North
Carolina, and
he seems quite content in the Santana drum seat. He
clearly delights in listening to the exciting, veteran percussion
section.
"I'm having a blast," he smiles. Raul Rekow joined
Santana's ranks as a bad-ass young conguero to play
alongside Jose
"Chepito" Areas and drummer Gaylord Birch on the Festival
album in 1976. Since then Rekow has
worked in Santana alongside such
percussionists as Pete Escovedo, Armando Peraza, Orestes Vilato, and
Francisco
Aguabella, and drummers such as Graham Lear, Craig Krampf,
Chester Thompson, Walfredo Reyes Jr., Rodney Holmes,
Horacio "El Negro"
Hernandez, Ricky Wellman, and Billy "Shoes" Johnson. Karl Perazzo
joined Santana in the late 1980s
after stints as percussionist and
drummer with Pete Escovedo, Sheila E, and Prince. In the current
Santana show, either
Chambers gets an extended solo, or Rekow and
Perazzo do their percussion solo together, but usually not both in the
same
night. When I attended a second show on the tour, Chambers
recalled that at the first show I had seen his solo. He
persuaded
Carlos to change the set so that I could see Rekow and Perazzo do their
solo that night. No question, the Santana
rhythm team is the most
impressive in the business.
Carlos Santana appreciates his new drummer's musical
qualities, his
pedigree, and his thoughtfulness. "I'm a fan of Mike Stern, John
McLaughlin, and John Scofield," he says,
"so I'm really honored that
Dennis wants to be here. It seems he wants to be part of a family
thing. And he has an
enormous spiritual disposition, so we can hang
beyond the music and with the music."
MD: How
much time did the band spend in rehearsal before going out?
Raul: Seven days. We really only did a couple of
songs a day at
first. We didn't do a whole lot of rehearsing. Dennis is such a quick
learner, as we all
know.
Dennis: A few accents - other than that I'm okay.
MD: I would think that those
accents have to be there, because there's so much emphasis placed on them.
Raul: Absolutely. Carlos
wants those accents to be there, and if
they're not--we'll be killed. [laughs] But it's really important to
the
music, especially Carlos's vision, that he can make his music come
across the way he wants it
to.
MD: At the concert, I thought you were ten for ten on the accents.
Dennis: Fooled you. [laughs]
No, I don't think we had any major boo-boos.
MD: Dennis, your mounted bass drum is great for letting the
audience feel, as well as hear, those accents.
Dennis: It's just a bass drum on a stand. Most drummers know
it
as a gong bass drum. But Pearl doesn't offer one like Tama does, so
they made me a 16x20 bass drum and put it on
a stand. I've had it for a
while, but this is the first time I've used it in a band.
Karl: As for the
rehearsals, I think they helped us to adapt to
Dennis' playing, to his groove, and vice versa. And once it's in,
it's
there. But we had the kind of rehearsals where we were thinking, "We'd
better listen." And I think that's
why we're really tight now.
Raul: Every drummer has his own pocket, and it was just a matter
of
getting acclimated to the way Dennis plays. Every day is a learning
process--and we're students for life. Now we're
getting close to all
being at the exact same place at the same time. That's surprising,
because it didn't take very
long with Dennis. And for me, to be able to
play between him and Karl, another one of the best in the world, is
just amazing.
It's so easy to play. It's like connect-the-dots. [laughs]
MD: What was the adjustment like for each of
you?
Dennis: The adjustment for me was just one of playing with a big
band again. Since P-Funk, I haven't
played with more than four pieces.
That means your ears have to adjust, because you have to listen to
everybody on stage.
That's a lot of people. And everybody plays a real
important role in the band. Also, I've never ever played with
two percussionists in a band. I have to listen really hard.
MD: Is it difficult listening to two percussionists like
that?
Dennis: It's really like listening to one person, because Raul and Karl move so well
together.
Raul: I was telling Karl last night, he's like my right hand.
When I play with other percussionists,
it's not the same. The very
first time I played with Karl he knew everything I was doing, where I
was going, and even how
I was going to end phrases. So it's nice to
know that the chemistry is happening and we can lock up on the
same
spot. Now when Dennis goes into his solo stuff, I'm sitting there
with my jaw on the floor. It's amazing.
He goes where Elvin Jones goes.
He's the only guy that I know of who can play four different time
signatures at the
same time, and swing it. It's ridiculous.
Dennis: Meanwhile, I'm sitting there trying to figure out what
I'm supposed to be doing. Who's driving this bus anyway? [laughs]
MD: In terms of the actual groove, do
you find that the Santana
groove is right on top of the beat, where P-Funk maybe was a
little
behind?
Dennis: I think it's more on the beat. But also, sometimes
Carlos wants to pull it back.
So when he gives a sign or indicates with
a body movement, I try to put it right where he wants it, right where
he
is.
MD: You're watching him pretty closely.
Dennis: I'm watching everybody
closely, especially Karl, Raul, Carlos, and Chester [Thompson, keyboardist].
Raul: Dennis said something when
we first started playing
together. He said that the music's more important than any one
individual. And that's so
true. The music really dictates what you're
supposed to be. The groove, and where the pocket sits, is more on the
beat
and behind than it used to be. It used to always be on top and
always pushing, and the tendency was to speed up. But it was a
natural
thing, a Santana thing. But now we're playing songs like "Maria Maria"
and "Smooth," where you don't want
to push too hard.
MD: Dennis, is this band something that you want to try to schedule in
regularly?
Dennis: Definitely. I'm having a blast. This is the first time
in a long while that I'm a part
of something that feels like a family.
Being around a bunch of great guys with no egos is also refreshing. You
can talk to
anyone on that stage and they don't take offense.
Raul: That's a prerequisite for this band--you have to
be a good
person first. What sold me on Dennis was his morals and principles as a
human being. Believe it or not, a lot of
people don't care about that.
Robin Tolleson
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