“Black Magic Woman” was written by Peter Green in 1968, with lyrics inspired by his former girlfriend, Sandra Elsdon, whom Green had nicknamed “Magic Mamma”. Green has acknowledged that “Black Magic Woman” was musically influenced by “All Your Love”, an Otis Rush song that had been recorded two years earlier by Green’s former band, John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers (albeit with Eric Clapton, Green’s predecessor, on lead guitar). Green said in Peter Green: The Biography: “One of things [Mayall] said was that if you really like something, you should take the first lines and make up another song from them. So that’s what I did with ‘Black Magic Woman’.”
In 1970, the song was released as the first single from Santana’s album Abraxas. The song, as sung by Gregg Rolie, reached number four on the US and Canadian charts, and its chart success made Santana’s recording the better-known version of the song.
Black Magic Woman
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Magic_Woman
“Black Magic Woman” was written by Peter Green in 1968, with lyrics inspired by his former girlfriend, Sandra Elsdon, whom Green had nicknamed “Magic Mamma”. Green has acknowledged that “Black Magic Woman” was musically influenced by “All Your Love”, an Otis Rush song that had been recorded two years earlier by Green’s former band, John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers (albeit with Eric Clapton, Green’s predecessor, on lead guitar). Green said in Peter Green: The Biography: “One of things [Mayall] said was that if you really like something, you should take the first lines and make up another song from them. So that’s what I did with ‘Black Magic Woman’.”
In 1970, the song was released as the first single from Santana’s album Abraxas. The song, as sung by Gregg Rolie, reached number four on the US and Canadian charts, and its chart success made Santana’s recording the better-known version of the song.
Peter Green
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Green_(musician)
Fleetwood Mac
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleetwood_Mac