Santana Supernatural Cd -

Track 5: “Callejon del Olvido” (Alley of Forgetting) . This one changed people . Leo’s mom, who’d been yelling about his homework, suddenly smiled and asked if he wanted to go for ice cream. She used his father’s pet name for him—a name she’d sworn to never speak after the divorce. The ghost of a marriage flickered back into existence.

The fragments spun in the air like snow. Each shard played a different ghostly note. The world shuddered. His mom’s smile froze, then faded into confusion. The goldfish vanished. The blue car turned red again.

The world shifted. A car that had just been red turned blue. A “For Sale” sign on a lawn vanished. Leo’s dead goldfish, Bubba, whom he’d flushed a year ago, swam past in a neighbor’s kiddie pool.

Back at the station, the CD was now spinning on its own, the laser reading ahead. Track 7 was seconds from auto-playing. Leo’s mom was in the booth, humming a lullaby she’d forgotten she knew. The trucker Earl was pulling up outside, tears in his eyes, claiming he’d just heard his dead wife’s voice on the AM band. santana supernatural cd

Desperate, Leo drove to her house. It was a burnt-out shell, charred since 1978. Neighbors said no one had lived there for decades. But in the ash of the living room, he found a single, melted CD case. Inside, a note: “The dead don’t want to be heard. They want to be finished. But finishing their song means giving them your unwritten measures.”

The Ghost in the Tracks

He called the old woman’s number on the garage sale flyer. It rang to a funeral home’s voicemail. Track 5: “Callejon del Olvido” (Alley of Forgetting)

“Next time, write your own song.”

Leo laughed it off. The CD was a bootleg—probably a live recording from the '73 tour. He popped it into his portable player on the walk home.

August, 1999. Leo’s bedroom in Albuquerque smelled of plastic shrink-wrap and burnt toast. At seventeen, he ran the smallest, most pitiful radio show on KZUM, "The Dusty Groove," playing classic rock deep cuts for an audience of approximately three: his mom, a cat, and a trucker named Earl. She used his father’s pet name for him—a

The clock on the wall melted to 11:11 and stayed there. The phone rang—but there was no line. He picked it up. A voice, dry as autumn leaves, whispered: “You found the unfinished business. Santana didn’t write these songs. He just channeled them. They’re ghosts, boy. Each track is a dead musician’s unfinished symphony. Play them all, and you’ll rewrite not just your life—but theirs.”

As the needle (well, laser) hit the disc, the station’s ancient transmitter hummed to life on its own. The track bled out of the studio monitors, and Leo watched in horror as the real world began to fray.

In the summer of 1999, a disenchanted teenage DJ discovers a bootleg Santana CD that doesn’t just play music—it rewrites reality, forcing him to decide if the cost of perfection is worth losing the soul of the song.

Leo understood: every track undid a loss. A dead pet. A broken home. A forgotten dream. But Track 7—the final, unlabeled track—was different. Its waveform on the CD’s pre-master was a straight black line. Silence. But the title in the metadata read: “El Precio” (The Price).