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War

One of the most popular funk groups of the '70s, War were also one of the most eclectic, freely melding soul, Latin, jazz, blues, reggae, and rock influences into an effortlessly funky whole. Although War's lyrics were sometimes political in nature (in keeping with their racially integrated lineup), their music almost always had a sunny, laid-back vibe emblematic of their Southern California roots. War kept the groove loose, and they were given over to extended jamming -- in fact, many of their studio songs were edited together out of longer improvisations. Even if the jams sometimes got indulgent, they demonstrated War's truly group-minded approach: no one soloist or vocalist really stood above the others (even though all were clearly talented), and their grooving interplay placed War in the top echelon of funk ensembles.

The roots of War lay in an R&B cover band called the Creators. Guitarist Howard Scott and drummer Harold Brown started the group in 1962 while attending high school in the Compton area, and three years later, the lineup also featured keyboardist Leroy "Lonnie" Jordan, bassist Morris "B.B." Dickerson, and saxophonist/flutist Charles Miller (all of them sang). The group had an appetite for different sounds right from the start, ranging from R&B to blues to the Latin music they'd absorbed while growing up in the racially mixed ghettos of Los Angeles. Despite a two-year hiatus following Scott's induction into the service, they released several singles locally on Dore Records (their first, "Burn Baby Burn," was with singer Johnny Hamilton), and backed jazz saxophonist Jay Contreli, formerly of the psychedelic band Love; they also went by the names the Romeos and Señor Soul during this period. In 1968, the band was reconfigured and dubbed Nightshift; Peter Rosen was the new bassist, and percussionist Thomas Sylvester "Papa Dee" Allen, who'd previously played with Dizzy Gillespie, came onboard, along with two more horn players. B.B. Dickerson later returned when Rosen died of a drug overdose. In 1969, Nightshift began backing football star Deacon Jones (a defensive end for the L.A. Rams) during his singing performances in a small club, where they were discovered by producer Jerry Goldstein. Goldstein suggested the band as possible collaborators to former Animals lead singer Eric Burdon, who along with Danish-born harmonica player Lee Oskar (born Oskar Levetin Hansen) had been searching L.A. clubs for a new act.

After witnessing Nightshift in concert, Burdon took charge of the group. He gave them a provocative new name, War, and replaced the two extra horn players with Oskar. To develop material, War began playing marathon concert jams over which Burdon would free-associate lyrics. In August 1969, Burdon and War entered the studio for the first time, and after some more touring, they recorded their first album, 1970's Eric Burdon Declares War. The spaced-out daydream of "Spill the Wine" was a smash hit, climbing to number three and establishing the group in the public eye. A second album, The Black Man's Burdon, was released before the year's end, and over the course of two records it documented the group's increasingly long improvisations (as well as Burdon's growing tendency to ramble). It also featured War's first recorded vocal effort on "They Can't Take Away Our Music." Burdon's contract allowed War to be signed separately, and they soon inked a deal with United Artists, intending to record on their own as well as maintaining their partnership with Burdon. However, Burdon -- citing exhaustion -- suddenly quit during the middle of the group's European tour in 1971, spelling the beginning of the end; he rejoined War for a final U.S. tour and then left for good.

War had already issued their self-titled, Burdon-less debut at the beginning of 1971, but it flopped. Before the year was out, they recorded another effort, All Day Music, which spawned their first Top 40 hits in "All Day Music" and "Slippin' Into Darkness"; the album itself was a million-selling Top 20 hit. War really hit their stride on the follow-up album, 1972's The World Is a Ghetto; boosted by a sense of multicultural harmony, it topped the charts and sold over three million copies, making it the best-selling album of 1973. It also produced two Top Ten smashes in "The Cisco Kid" (which earned them a fervent following in the Latino community) and the title ballad. 1973's Deliver the Word was another million-selling hit, reaching the Top Ten and producing the Top Ten single "Gypsy Man" and another hit in "Me and Baby Brother." However, it had less of the urban grit that War prided themselves on; while taking some time to craft new material and rethink their direction, War consolidated their success with the double concert LP War Live, recorded over four nights in Chicago during 1974.

Released in 1975, Why Can't We Be Friends returned to the sound of The World Is a Ghetto with considerable success. The bright, anthemic title track hit the Top Ten, as did "Low Rider," an irresistible slice of Latin funk that became the group's first (and only) R&B chart-topper, and still stands as their best-known tune. 1976 brought the release of a greatest-hits package featuring the new song "Summer," which actually turned out to be War's final Top Ten pop hit; the same year, Oskar released his first solo album, backed by members of Santana. A double-LP compilation of jams and instrumentals appeared on the Blue Note jazz label in 1977, under the title Platinum Jazz; it quickly became one of the best-selling albums in Blue Note history, and produced an R&B-chart smash with an edited version of "L.A. Sunshine."

Yet disco was beginning to threaten the gritty, socially aware funk War specialized in. Later in 1977, the band switched labels, moving to MCA for Galaxy; though it sold respectably, and the disco-tinged title track was a hit on the R&B charts, it fizzled on the pop side, and proved to be the last time War would hit the Top 40. After completing the Youngblood soundtrack album in 1978, the original War lineup began to disintegrate. Dickerson left during the recording of 1979's The Music Band (which featured new female vocalist Alice Tweed Smith), and not long after, Charles Miller was murdered in a robbery attempt. After The Music Band was released, the remaining members attempted to refashion their image to fit the glitz of the era, and added some new personnel: bassist Luther Rabb, percussionist Ronnie Hammon, and saxophonist Pat Rizzo (ex-Sly & the Family Stone). The Music Band 2 flopped, and the group was thrown into disarray; Smith exited, and the follow-up took an uncharacteristic three years to prepare. Released in 1982, Outlaw was a moderate success; the title track was a Top 20 R&B hit, and "Cinco de Mayo" became a Latino holiday standard. Yet it didn't restore War's commercial standing. Rizzo left later in the year; Harold Brown followed in 1983, after Life Is So Strange flopped; and Rabb was replaced with Ricky Green in 1984. In the years that followed, War was essentially a touring outfit and nothing more. Papa Dee Allen collapsed and died on-stage of a brain aneurysm in 1988, leaving Jordan, Hammon, Oskar, and Scott as the core membership (Oskar would finally leave in 1992). Interest in War's classic material remained steady, however, thanks to frequent sampling of their grooves by hip-hop artists. 1992's Rap Declares War paired the band with a variety of rappers, paving the way for the 1994 comeback attempt Peace Sign; for that record, Brown returned on drums, and Jordan (now on bass), Scott, and Hammon were joined by saxophonists Kerry Campbell and Charles Green, percussionist Sal Rodriguez, harmonica player Tetsuya "Tex" Nakamura, and Brown's son, programmer Rae Valentine (plus guests Lee Oskar and José Feliciano). The album failed to chart, however, and the group returned to the touring circuit. Brown and Scott left the lineup in 1997. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi
full bio

Selected Discography

Comments

marley_1
takes me back to my low ridin dayz!!!!!!!! ! ! ! !
one of the best band n the 70s im mann !! n like war songs
Interesting for my Ted Nugent station
Funk-Groovy! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
HAHAA I made a reference to War in class the other day (eigth Grade) and my teacher said Hey arent you a lil young to know War? I smiled and said yes, Yes i am
Old school music at its best!
this me the moment the sound its me
It just don't get any better than this!!
CLARICE? CLARICE!!!? GO GET MA BENSON N HEDGES OUT THE FREEZER N PUT ON SOME WAR BABY...OLE LEON WANNA GET HIS MONEY TAKEN, N WHEN I'M DONE TAKE THE KIDS TO YA MOM'S, WE GOIN OUT TONIGHT LOVE!!! *REMENICE*
The World Is A Ghetto is a rockin cd
HEY WHAT SHE SAY WHAT SHE SAY......... . . . . . . . . WAR AWSOME
gypsy man makes me smile every time i play it,and yes the world is a ghetto,just ask me and baby brother,movi n g on to the southern part of texas,to visit the cisco kid and we will deliver the word that WAR must be the reason why, music was made ,thank you for the memories.wd
One of the best songs ever,makes me want ta' do lots of things!!!!!! haha
If you want to see 4 ORIGINAL artists of WAR in concert nowadays, you have to look for THE LOWRIDER BAND. THEIR WAR name was stolen from them by a shady producer and they didn't bow down to being OWNED for the NAME that THEY made famous. It's too bad that one WAR brother of theirs did cave to all that the WAR name brings him and his puppetmaster . That's why they get away with their lies, because they can use the WAR name, while the ORIGINAL artists that gave us WAR music are forgotten. SO WRONG!
The only real dancing, listening. cursing music.
twhaight59
I saw Lee Oskar play at the Ritzville Blues Festival a few years ago with Magic Dick from the J Giels Band in a harmonica blowout. Great stuff
Classic group; gotta love them
Saw war for the first time in san diego. Man these guys are awesome can really jam. I'm a war fan for life! There is a lot more to this band then just lowrider!
breezynisi
My 5 year old grandson got a Lee Oskar (in C) harmonica for his 5th birthday and is on his way to playing like Lee! That harmonica is a beautiful thing!
best of the best.....
Always one my favorite all-time bands. The true band sound never gets old. Great for driving on a summer day, for that matter any and all day, all day.
one of the greatest bands
pure love n truth .
I know every word, note, grunt, clap and f*rt in every song this group ever made. That's word.
The best!!!
bmille501
this is what i love
retrobiz4
good stuff
May GOD Bless you B.B.Dickerso n in ever thing you do in your life,your one of thy best saxophone player of all times,and Ive still got that three finger Ivory spoon the emblem for WAR, just wanted to say thanks
pnickel8
If you get a chance, support the Lowrider Band with Howard E. Scott, B.B. Dickerson, Lee Oskar, and Harold Brown. Burden and Lonnie Jordan are the only originals now with War. (And, most of the War hits came after Burden left the group!)
pnickel8
This article does not mention that 4 original members now tour as "Low Riders". They are prevented by court order from ever using the name War in any public setting. Eric Burden took them to court and won arguing that he has exclusive rights to the name. He now tours with one other original and a bunch of studio musicians, playing to sold-out audiences as "War". When I saw Low Riders in 2009 in San Diego the audience was less than 500. The concert was great!
awsome music, keeps me young at heart
chaaaaaaaaaa a o w
deadheaddan5 3
I saw Carlos in 1976 and he still inspires!
ecarrionjr
Blues Latno the best!!!
Just read the lyrics to this song...fun :)
alleycatsw
crazy beat man
alleycatsw
Orale ese.
i was 17 when i started listening to them and i never stopped. im 50 now.
soliz.lorrai n e
this group still can draw crowds at their concerts at the pomona fair on opening day gotta love them all.
this group can play consistant chicano oldies like no other,and they really catch the feel.
the entire anthology would be better
WAR will alwayst be on my favorits groups and their latino beat will be around forever.
improcu
I Love War
My Brother gave me "Why Can't We Be Friends" - on my Fiftieth Birthday -Many Years Ago - in response to Rodney King's Question -Can't we just get along? Not when they're whippin your head with a billyclub! BF.
More than just "All Day" Music. BF.
blk96gti
i drive a low rider :p
klwjazz
SYMBA GREW UP ON GROUPS LIKE WAR, EWF AND MAZE. WE LOVE TODAY LIKE THE MUSIC IS SOMETIME NEW THAT WE'VE HEARD FOR THE VERY FIRST TIME. i CAN ONLY HOPE THAT WE KEEP THE MUSIC ALIVE!!!
ahiggs
Their music is like oxygen to my blood, creates those goosebumps. I am in my 60's and they still give me those infusions of soul, jazz, and melodic feelngs of freedom...
jman572
Saw them live way back in the day. AWESOME! Groups like this are no more sad to say.
Never gets old! Timeless!
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