Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Santana - Inner Secrets (1978) | Review, Fun Facts & Trivia

Santana - Inner Secrets (1978) album front coverSantana - Inner Secrets (1978) album back cover
Santana - Inner Secrets (1978)

Santana – Inner Secrets (1978) | Album Guide, Tracklist, Fun Facts & Trivia

🎧 Overview of Inner Secrets

Santana released Inner Secrets in October 1978, marking a clear shift toward a more mainstream rock, pop-rock, and AOR-oriented sound.

After years of jazz fusion and world-music exploration, the band pivots back toward concise songwriting, radio-friendly production, and tighter arrangements, while still retaining touches of Latin percussion and Carlos Santana’s signature guitar tone.

It’s often viewed as the start of Santana’s late-70s commercial repositioning phase.


📀 Tracklist

Standard edition:

  1. Dealer / Spanish Rose
  2. Move On
  3. One Chain (Don’t Make No Prison)
  4. Stormy
  5. Well All Right
  6. Open Invitation
  7. Life Is a Lady / Holiday
  8. The Facts of Love
  9. Wham!
  10. One Chain (Don’t Make No Prison) – reprise (some editions)

🎤 Album Credits & Lineup

  • Carlos Santana – guitar
  • Greg Walker – vocals
  • Chris Solberg – guitar, vocals
  • Tom Coster – keyboards
  • David Margen – bass
  • Graham Lear – drums
  • José “Chepito” Areas – percussion

Production:

  • Producer: David Rubinson
  • Label: Columbia Records

🧠 Musical Direction & Themes

  • AOR and pop-rock oriented production
  • Shorter, more structured songs
  • Reduced improvisational jazz elements
  • Continued Latin percussion textures
  • Emphasis on groove and accessibility

The album prioritizes radio appeal and streamlined songwriting over extended fusion exploration.


🌟 Fun Facts & Trivia

  • “Well All Right” is a cover of a song by Buddy Holly.
  • “Stormy” is a cover of a song originally performed by Classics IV.
  • “Open Invitation” became one of the stronger rock-oriented tracks on the album.
  • The album reflects Santana adapting to late-70s commercial rock trends.

🤯 Did You Know?

  • Inner Secrets is often seen as Santana’s most straightforward rock album of the 1970s.
  • It marked a noticeable departure from the experimental Caravanserai era.
  • The album helped maintain the band’s chart presence during a stylistic transition.
  • It set the stage for their early-80s sound evolution. 

🎸 15-minute mashup video. 348 rockstars, 84 guitarists, 64 songs, 44 drummers, 1 mashup 🥁