War began in 1969 as an unlikely alliance between a Geordie, a Dane and a group of multi-ethnic Los Angeles musicians whose unique, unclassifiable sound was a melting pot of assorted styles. After quitting British R&B band The Animals, Newcastle-born Eric Burdon relocated to LA, where he fell in with the Long Beach-based funk-rock aggregation, who had hooked up with the virtuoso Danish harmonica player Lee Oskar. After cutting two albums on which Burdon took top billing, War made bigger commercial strides as an autonomous act, releasing a sequence of US hit singles that included their No.1 R&B smash, Low Rider. They enjoyed even greater success on the albums charts, topping the R&B listing three times between 1972 and 1975 (their biggest release, The World Is A Ghetto, has celebrated its 50th anniversary with an expanded 5LP reissue subtitled The Complete Sessions). To celebrate the band’s entire career, we take a look at the best Eric Burdon And War songs.
Listen to the best of Eric Burdon And War here, and check out the best Eric Burdon And War songs, below.
10: Galaxy (from ‘Galaxy’, 1977)
The title track from War’s tenth album, 1977’s Galaxy was a percussion-powered floor-filler that found the group building on the Latin elements that had long been present in their grooves. One of War’s more bubbly tunes, the track’s theme is escapism and fleeing the “rat race”; it also playfully references Superman and Batman in its lyrics, and, to emphasise its outer-space theme, finds the band using a robotic vocoder effect. Esteemed US critic Robert Christgau described the parent album as “P-Funk on Thorazine”. Galaxy made it to No.5 on the US R&B chart and was the band’s third UK hit, peaking at No.14.