Los Angeles Times

Mega Nova? It’s a big name

A supergroup led by Carlos Santana struggles to make its talents cohere.

- By Chris Barton

Give your latest project a name that sounds like an explosive cosmic event and, sure, maybe expectatio­ns run a little high.

However, every bit as challengin­g for Mega Nova — the new project led by Carlos Santana that debuted at the Hollywood Bowl on Wednesday night — was the idea to round out the band with a couple of jazz immortals in revered bandleader­s and onetime Miles Davis sidemen Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock, the last of whom also serves as the creative chair for jazz with the L.A. Philharmon­ic.

Add in a rhythm section that included another former Davis collaborat­or in bassist Marcus Miller and drummer Cindy Blackman Santana, who performed with the Tony Williams tribute Spectrum Road (another Davis connection), and you have all the makings of that somewhat perilous musical concept, the supergroup.

Supergroup­s have a long

history and often struggle to become more than the sum of their parts (see Velvet Revolver, Audioslave). And while no band on this year’s Bowl schedule has a more influentia­l combined artistic output, Mega Nova — named, according to Santana, in tribute to Shorter’s 1969 album — also offered only fleeting glimpses of its superstar components coming together into a single whole.

Early on, Mega Nova resembled something akin to a casual, mid-tempo jam session, not unlike a similarly star-studded bill that Hancock assembled at the Bowl in 2012 called Celebratin­g Peace, which also included Miller and Santana.

As Blackman Santana and a second percussion­ist laid into a clattering, Latinfunk groove that could snugly fit with anything in her husband’s storied back catalog, Shorter’s soprano saxophone explored the margins with Hancock’s flickering piano as the band toyed with a jazz-rock fusion that recalled John McLaughlin’s Mahavishnu Orchestra.

The connection felt natural as Santana recorded with McLaughlin on the fretboard-burning 1973 John Coltrane tribute, “Love, Devotion, Surrender.” That album’s take on Coltrane’s “Acknowledg­ement” from the landmark “A Love Supreme” was also echoed later on Wednesday as Shorter, seated in the curve of Hancock’s grand piano, made the increasing­ly rare shift to tenor saxophone to offer his own gently swerving nod to the late master. Behind Santana and Miller, the song too quickly shifted into a more hip-swiveling groove before the homage could coalesce.

Coltrane’s legacy was further explored with a nod toward his arrangemen­t of Mongo Santamaria’s “Afro Blue” as Shorter switched to soprano saxophone, and the band also took on Hancock’s early breakthrou­gh “Watermelon Man,” which featured a slippery lead from Santana that gracefully gave way to Shorter, who frequently gripped the Bowl crowd with his twisting, questionin­g solos.

Perhaps most successful­ly, Mega Nova also dipped into Davis’ spacious 1969 album “In a Silent Way,” a landmark recording with no shortage of open-ended avenues. In a welcome illmannere­d sonic moment, Hancock cut through a simmering rhythm with a spookily sharp keyboard texture, which eventually gave way to Davis’ “It’s About That Time” propelled by a purring bass clarinet by Miller.

But for all the unannounce­d ventures into the jazz canon (no one in the band addressed the crowd to introduce themselves or their music over the night), it’s perhaps inevitable that Santana’s music drew the greatest response. “Soul Sacrifice” churned forward on the guitarist’s lead but left little room for further ventures by Shorter or Hancock, and a dip into Santana’s durable cover of Tito Puente’s “Oye Como Va” earned a roar of recognitio­n.

Confusingl­y, the night ended on what typically would be considered an evening-opener in “The Star Spangled Banner,” which Santana also teamed with his wife to cover before an NBA Finals game earlier this year.

Santana’s lead offered a familiar fire but little of the fury of Jimi Hendrix’s version, which inevitably all guitar covers of the anthem are measured against. It was a muddled close to a night that often struggled to find a cohesive voice.

Still, much of the crowd was quickly pulled to its feet in tribute. When the stars call, what else can you do but answer?

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? CARLOS SANTANA, right, leads Mega Nova. Its members include Wayne Shorter, left, and Marcus Miller.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times CARLOS SANTANA, right, leads Mega Nova. Its members include Wayne Shorter, left, and Marcus Miller.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? CARLOS SANTANA’S music, including old faves like “Oye Como Va,” stood out as crowd-pleasers.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times CARLOS SANTANA’S music, including old faves like “Oye Como Va,” stood out as crowd-pleasers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States