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He Said, If You Know ‘Black Magic Woman’ So Well, Play It to Carlos Santana — But Eric Clapton Heard

The young man who threw that challenge across the room was named Derek Halt, 28 years old, a Berkeley College of Music graduate with two years of session work in Nashville and a recent feature in Guitar Player Magazine’s 30 under 30 list. Derek was not untalented. That was important to understand first. He was genuinely gifted.

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He had the kind of technical precision that comes from disciplined practice. The kind that impresses other musicians and makes those without training feel they are witnessing something rare. But talent when it is validated too frequently and too early has a way of hardening into something else entirely. It stops being a tool and becomes an identity.

And when talent becomes identity, the first thing a person loses is the ability to recognize something greater than themselves standing in the same room. Derek had been chosen as the evening’s featured performer. The headline act, the young guitarist the foundation’s board had identified as the strongest candidate for that year’s development grant.

He had played Blackmagic Woman as his showcase piece, and he had played it well. His fingers moved across the fretboard with clean authority. Every transition landed exactly where it was supposed to land. Every chord change was deliberate, controlled, and technically sound. When he finished, three board members made notes on their clipboards, and the room gave him the kind of measured, professional applause that told a performer he was being taken seriously.

But Derek had not left the stage. He had stepped to its edge, half on, half off, in the way of a man who wants to stay visible after a performance that landed. And it was from that position that he heard the voice from the side table, quiet, unhurried, carrying the specific cadence of a man who had grown up speaking English on the border of two worlds.

One observation about the rhythmic delay in the original B minor phrasing, the half-breath pause before the resolution that Derek’s version had not carried. Three sentences, calm, specific, irrefutable. Derek found the voice in the dim room, an older man, seated alone, no instrument case beside him, nothing that marked him as anyone of significance.

and a smile appeared on Derrick’s face, not a warm one. The particular smile of someone who has confused being celebrated with being right. He stepped back toward the microphone and he made the kind of decision that follows a person for the rest of their career. The words landed in the room the way a glass lands on a stone floor, loudly, completely, and with no possibility of being taken back.

Derek’s voice through the microphone was steady and deliberate. Each syllable placed with the satisfaction of a man who believed he was winning. The challenge was clear. The stage was there. The guitar was there. And if the old man at the side table had something to say about Black Magic Woman, then the old man at the side table was welcome to come up and prove it in front of everyone.

Laughter moved through the front rows. light, comfortable laughter, the kind that follows when an audience senses that someone has been put in their place and the social order of the room has been confirmed. A few people near the center tables glanced toward the sidewall, curious, before looking away again.

Most of the room had already returned their attention to Derek because Derek was the one with the microphone, and in most rooms, the microphone decides who matters. The man at the side table did not laugh. He did not shift in his seat. He set his water glass down slowly with the same unhurried precision he had used to pick it up, and he looked at Derek with an expression that was not anger and was not hurt and was not the expression of a man searching for a response.

It was something older and quieter than any of those things. It was the expression of a man who had been in enough rooms across enough decades to know exactly what kind of moment this was and exactly how it would end. The laughter in the front rows faded faster than it should have. Something about that stillness was unsettling in a way that no one in the room could yet name.

A music producer in the third row stopped writing mid-sentence. A woman near the back leaned forward in her chair. The air in the Filillmore had shifted, not loudly, not dramatically, but with the certainty of pressure changing before weather arrives. In the far right corner, the gay-haired man with the wire- rimmed glasses had slowly unfolded his arms.

He was leaning forward now, both elbows on the table, his full attention on the man at the side table, watching, waiting, his expression unreadable to everyone in the room, except perhaps to the man he was watching. Then the man at the side table stood up. He did not rush. He did not speak.

He simply reached behind his chair, lifted a brown leather guitar strap from where it had been hanging quietly all evening, and began walking toward the stage. If you have ever watched someone walk into a moment they were born for, subscribe now and do not look away because it starts in the next second.

He did not ask for permission to take the stage. He did not introduce himself. He did not look at Derek, did not look at the board members with their clipboards, did not look at the 80 people whose eyes were now tracking his every movement across the floor of the Fillmore. He walked to the Gibson SG resting in its stand at the side of the stage, amber-bodied, warm under the stage light, and he picked it up the way a man picks up something that has always belonged to him.

Not carefully, not reverently, naturally. The strap went over his shoulder in one motion. His left hand found the neck. His right hand touched the strings once lightly, the way you touch a surface to test its temperature. He made two small adjustments to the tuning pegs without looking down. Then he sat on the edge of the stage, not standing, not performing, just sitting, and he closed his eyes.

The room was completely silent. He played the first note of Blackmagic Woman. one note and the difference was immediate. It was not louder than what Derek had played. It was not faster. It did not announce itself with any of the technical theatrics that typically signal to an audience that something significant is happening.

It was simply correct. The way a word spoken by the person who invented it sounds different from the same word spoken by everyone who learned it afterward. There was a weight inside that single note that had no technical explanation. It was the weight of the story behind it. The weight of 1970, of a recording session in San Francisco, of a young Mexican-American musician who had taken a Peter Green composition and rebuilt it from the inside out until it became something that belonged to the whole world and to him alone simultaneously.

By the third note, Derek had stopped breathing at a normal rate. By the seventh, his hand had dropped entirely to his side. And then came the B minor passage, and with it, that half breath paused before the resolution. That tiny, specific, unhurried silence between one phrase and the next, that Dererick’s version had moved through without stopping, because Derek had learned the notes, but had never learned what lived between them.

The pause arrived exactly where the man had said it would. And in the moment it arrived, in that half second of deliberate silence, every person in the Filillmore heard the difference between a copy and the original. Not intellectually, physically. The recognition did not arrive all at once. It moved through the room in a wave, the way recognition always moves, starting with the person who was paying the closest attention, then spreading outward.

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