San Diego Union-Tribune

Santana planning annual benefit concert in Tijuana

- BY GEORGE VARGA george.varga@sduniontri­bune.com

GUITARIST, WHO GREW UP IN THE MEXICAN BORDER CITY, WANTS TO GIVE RESIDENTS ‘A BETTER OPPORTUNIT­Y FOR LIFE’

Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee Carlos Santana is poised to return to Tijuana, the Mexican border city where he grew up and honed his guitar chops in nightclubs as a teenager before moving to San Francisco in the mid-1960s.

The Latin-rock pioneer hopes to spearhead a fundraisin­g concert next spring in Tijuana, where he has not performed since a 1992 homecoming concert at the coastal city’s now-shuttered bullring by the sea. If all goes according to plan, the concert will become an annual event.

“It’s around the corner. We want to be there pretty soon,” Santana, 74, told The San Diego UnionTribu­ne of his planned fundraisin­g concert launch.

“I’m going to try to make a connection with certain people in Tijuana, and then possibly start doing it in April or May.”

Santana will kick off his summer tour tonight at

Chula Vista’s North Island Credit Union Amphitheat­re. The goal of his proposed benefit concerts in Tijuana is, he said, “to feed people, clothe people, educate people and give them a better opportunit­y for life.”

A 2013 Kennedy Center Honors recipient, Santana is a native of Autlán de Navarro in the southweste­rn Mexican state of Jalisco. He grew up mostly in Tijuana’s Colonia Libertad neighborho­od, which had neither electricit­y nor running water at the time. He and his younger brother, Jorge — who died in 2020 — would help their parents make ends meet by selling gum on street corners.

In 1998, Santana founded the Milagro Foundation. A publicly funded organizati­on, it gives grants to community-based, tax-exempt groups worldwide that work with under-resourced children to provide education, health care and exposure to the arts. The foundation has thus far distribute­d $18 million in grants to nonprofits in 36 states and 18 countries.

Speaking last week from Las Vegas, Santana said he hopes to obtain support for the Tijuana fundraiser­s from other organizati­ons and individual­s.

“It would be a yearly concert,” he said. “I’ll invite also other people with deep pockets and big hearts to contribute and just give away food, clothing, books and education.

“With music, I’m able to do something more than just be ‘the guitar player from Tijuana.’ I want to be a positive force that helps people discover their own divinity.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? TUCKER RANSON
Santana and bassist David Brown are shown onstage in 1969 at the Woodstock music festival in upstate New York. The performanc­e catapulted Santana and the band that bears his names to global stardom. Now he’s hoping to give back to his hometown of Tijuana.
GETTY IMAGES TUCKER RANSON Santana and bassist David Brown are shown onstage in 1969 at the Woodstock music festival in upstate New York. The performanc­e catapulted Santana and the band that bears his names to global stardom. Now he’s hoping to give back to his hometown of Tijuana.
 ?? LESTER COHEN GETTY IMAGES ?? Guitarist Carlos Santana performs onstage in Tijuana in 1992.
LESTER COHEN GETTY IMAGES Guitarist Carlos Santana performs onstage in Tijuana in 1992.

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