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Santeria (song)

"Santeria"
Santeria (song).jpg
Single by Sublime
from the album Sublime
Released January 7, 1997
Recorded 1996
Genre
Length 3:03
Label MCA
Writer(s) Bradley Nowell, Bud Gaugh, Eric Wilson
Producer(s) Paul Leary and David Kahne
Sublime singles chronology
"What I Got"
(1996)
"Santeria"
(1997)
"Wrong Way"
(1997)

"Santeria" is a song by American ska punk band Sublime on their 1996 album Sublime. The song was released as a single on January 7, 1997. Although the song was released after the death of lead singer Bradley Nowell, "Santeria" along with "What I Got" are often considered the band's signature songs.

The song includes the bassline and guitar riff from Sublime's earlier song "Lincoln Highway Dub" off the 1994 album Robbin' the Hood.Santería is an Afro-Cuban religion, practiced Cuba, South Florida and exported to other areas in the Caribbean.

The song tells the story of a jealous ex-boyfriend who is planning to take revenge on the man who stole his girlfriend. The man then decides to find a new girlfriend, instead. However, the man then mentions using violent force as he speaks of "popping a cap in Sancho" and "putting that barrel straight down Sancho's throat" if he ever sees him again. The lead singer of Sublime, Bradley Nowell, refers to the man as "sancho" and his ex-girlfriend as "Heina". In Mexican or Chicano/a culture, a man who steals another man's girlfriend is often referred to as "sancho" while a man's woman or girlfriend is referred to as "jaina", which is adapted from the Spanish word reina, meaning "queen" in English.

Nowell died from a heroin overdose shortly before the song's release.

A music video was filmed in 1997 after the death of lead singer Bradley Nowell, who makes a cameo via stock footage. During the video, his beloved Lou Dog is seen along with the other members of Sublime remembering him. The video was a visualization of the story told in the song in the form of a Western, and featured Tom Lister, Jr. as Sancho. "Santeria" was a moderate U.S. crossover hit in the spring of 1997, cracking the Top 5 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart as well as reaching number 43 on the Hot 100 Airplay chart. It is also a playable track on the 2008 video game Guitar Hero World Tour, and was released as a downloadable song for Rock Band 3 in 2012 as well as Rocksmith 2014 in 2014. The song was featured in the movies Idle Hands, Knocked Up, Remember the Daze and This is 40.


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