War United Artists 706 Oct. 1975 Billboard: #7 ![]() ![]()
After years of experience in the service of others, War was eager to break out and had no problem developing its own material. "All Day Music" was their second single, and it proved them to be a formidable outfit with sufficient talent of their own. The well-crafted and mellow 45 cracked the Top 40 at #35, and War was on its way. From this point on, the group pulled out all the stops and released single after single that featured a relentless funk groove with Latin underpinnings. "Slippin' into Darkness," "The World Is a Ghetto," "Cisco Kid," and "Gypsy Man" are uncompromising in their rhythmic appeal and made War one of the top-selling funk/crossover acts of the decade. The band's material was often the result of intensive jamming, and its singles all exhibit a live feel that captures the spontaneous energy of their ensemble playing. Surprisingly, "Low Rider" was the only War 45 to reach #1 on the R&B charts. Written about the West Coast Latino subculture that lived to cruise the boulevards, this song is about as stylishly cool as the culture it describes. Pieces of funk, Latin, and rock rhythms all blend together under an astoundingly simple melody, forcing the groove to stand out front and center. The funky minimalism that was pioneered by James Brown is on display here in a locked-down rhythm that instantly captivates. By 1975, the steady deconstruction of soul music had reached its minimalist peak, as soul was about to be completely snuffed out by the looming disco machine. "Low Rider" marked the end of an era, a point made all the more obvious when its replacement at #1 on the R&B charts was "Fly, Robin, Fly" by the Silver Convention. - Thomas Ryan, American Hit Radio, Prima Entertainment, 1996.
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