is a must-have for fans who enjoy the "Supernatural" era of Santana—where his soulful guitar work acts as the glue for a wide array of vocalists—while still offering enough jazz-fusion depth (via Miles Davis and Cindy Blackman) to satisfy those who prefer his experimental side. Classic Rock Magazine - Facebook

: The opening track, "Let The Guitar Play," is a rework of 2021’s "Song for Cindy." It features Darryl “DMC” McDaniels

The first track was credited to "A Few: Delta Drones." It was a slow, fuzzed-out meditation on the 1920s Delta blues, but played through synthesizers and bottleneck slide guitar. The voice that came in was cracked, ancient, and entirely synthetic—an AI trained on Son House, singing about server farms and floodwaters.

A focused search on general search engines using the full title is your best bet to find a digital version.

The year 2021 was a significant one for Santana. In October of that year, the band released its twenty-sixth studio album, through BMG Rights Management. The album featured collaborations with icons like Kirk Hammett (Metallica), Chick Corea, and Steve Winwood. It represented a return to the eclectic, guest-star-heavy formula that had brought Santana mainstream success with Supernatural in 1999.

A typical online "Santana and A Few" blues compilation bypasses high-energy commercial pop. Instead, it focuses on moody, instrumental-heavy, and deeply emotional tracks. Key tracks and styles routinely featured on these viral playlists include: Every Day I Have the Blues - song and lyrics by Santana

Here, the "A Few" are the Greyhounds, a Texas blues-soul band. Santana swaps his usual PRS for a ’59 Les Paul, conjuring a muddy, Delta growl. The result is less Woodstock, more juke joint on a Saturday night.