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Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Santana - Marathon (1979) | Review, Fun Facts & Trivia

Santana - Marathon (1979) album front coverSantana - Marathon (1979) album back cover
Santana - Marathon (1979)

Santana – Marathon (1979) | Album Guide, Tracklist, Fun Facts & Trivia

🎧 Overview of Marathon

Santana released Marathon in September 1979, continuing the band’s shift toward a more AOR-driven, radio-friendly rock sound established on Inner Secrets (1978).

The album blends hard rock, pop-rock, and subtle Latin percussion, with a stronger focus on structured songwriting and polished production. It represents Santana fully adapting to the late-70s mainstream rock landscape while retaining a recognizable guitar-led identity.


📀 Tracklist

Standard edition:

  1. Marathon
  2. Lightning in the Sky
  3. Aqua Marine
  4. You Know That I Love You
  5. All I Ever Wanted
  6. Stand Up
  7. Runnin’
  8. Summer Lady
  9. Love

🎤 Album Credits & Lineup

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

Production:

  • Producer: Gary Lyons
  • Label: Columbia Records

🧠 Musical Direction & Themes

  • AOR and melodic rock focus
  • Clean, polished late-70s production
  • Reduced improvisation compared to earlier fusion era
  • Continued use of Latin percussion textures
  • Emphasis on radio-friendly hooks and song structure

The album reflects Santana’s fully consolidated mainstream rock direction at the end of the decade.


🌟 Fun Facts & Trivia

  • “You Know That I Love You” became one of the album’s better-known melodic tracks.
  • The title track “Marathon” reflects the band’s touring and endurance mindset.
  • The album continues the stylistic line from Inner Secrets.
  • Alex Ligertwood’s vocals became more prominent in this era.

🤯 Did You Know?

  • Marathon is often seen as part of Santana’s late-70s commercial rock phase trilogy (Inner Secrets → Marathon → early 80s transition).
  • It was designed to fit the AOR radio format dominant at the time.
  • The album shows the band balancing identity with mainstream accessibility.
  • It set the stage for their early-80s MTV-era evolution.