The Morning Call (Sunday)

Documentar­y loving, respectful portrait of guitar icon Santana

- By Mark Kennedy R (language, some drug content and brief nudity)

A new documentar­y on rock icon Carlos Santana begins with the legendary philosophe­r-guitarist asking a simple question: “Do you believe in magic?”

“Magic. Not tricks — the flow of grace,” he says.

You may be convinced you do a little less than 90 minutes later by director Rudy Valdez’s intimate portrait of a man with a magical ability and a story told with few tricks.

“Carlos” is a traditiona­l linear tale, tracing Santana’s formative years in Tijuana, Mexico, his set at Woodstock, his relentless touring and dive into spirituali­ty, climaxing with his triumphant 1999 “Supernatur­al” album.

It’s lovingly told — and intimate. There is the first known recording of a 19-year-old Santana in 1966 — already a guitar master with a familiar, blistering style — and one later in life in which he delights his children behind a couch with sock puppets.

But some of the most powerful images are several old homemade clips Santana made himself, alone at home just jamming. It’s like hearing the magic flow straight from the source, watching unfiltered genius work while his guitar gently wails.

Valdez uses various images almost like a collage to capture his subject — talk show clips, old concerts, and newly conducted interviews with the master, one at sundown with the icon beside a fire.

A highlight is watching Santana and his band play in the rain during 1982’s Concert for the Americas in the Dominican Republic. Other directors might show a short clip and go,

but Valdez lets it play long, a treat.

We see Santana grow up to a violinist father and a fierce mother, who became mesmerized by the bluesrock of Ray Charles, B.B. King and Little Richard. He was pressing tortillas at a diner in San Francisco in the late 1960s and went to the Fillmore to listen to the Grateful Dead and Country Joe and the Fish.

After being busted trying to sneak into the legendary venue without paying, impresario Bill Graham was so impressed by this skinny guitarist that he invited him to open for the Who, Steve Miller and Howling Wolf.

His first royalty check was spent on a home and a refrigerat­or for mom, fulfilling a promise. “It’s better than Grammys and Oscars and Heisman trophies. It feels better than anything,” he says in the documentar­y.

Inevitably, the fall comes, with the drugs and overindulg­ence. Shocked by the deaths of Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, Santana decides he must choose between heroin or spiritual meditation. He picks the latter, dresses in white, eats healthy, turn to jazz and decides to “surf the cosmos of imaginatio­n.”

With enduring hits like “Oye Como Va” and “Black Magic Woman,” Santana was voted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in

1998, the first person of Hispanic heritage to be inducted. But he wasn’t done yet. “This Earth time is an illusion,” he argues, after all.

Valdez shows real style illustrati­ng that Santana’s bands were far from stable when it came to its lineups — he cleverly shows various different singers belt out the same section of “Black Magic Woman” live — and captures Santana today watching an old concert he did with his late dad. “He’s proud of me, and I’m proud of him. And I miss him,” he tells the camera.

Santana deserves to be on the Mount Rushmore of rock, and that’s why in so many ways “Carlos” is a corrective to the thinking of people like Jann Wenner, co-founder of Rolling Stone, who overlooked Santana for his new book of transcende­nt rockers, “The Masters.” A master is hiding in plain sight.

MPA rating:

Running time: 1:27

How to watch: In theaters

 ?? AMY HARRIS/INVISION 2019 ?? Rudy Valdez’s new documentar­y “Carlos” covers the music career of artist Carlos Santana.
AMY HARRIS/INVISION 2019 Rudy Valdez’s new documentar­y “Carlos” covers the music career of artist Carlos Santana.

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