Eric Burdon - vocals Lonnie Jordan - organ/piano/percussion Charles Miller - flute/sax/percussion Howard Scott - guitar Lee Oskar - harmonica B.B Dickerson - bass (Papa) Dee Allen - congas/percussion Harold Brown - drums/percussion
Mother EartEric Burdon and War began playing live shows to audiences throughout Southern California before entering into the studio to record their debut album Eric Burdon Declares "War". The album's best known track, "Spill the Wine", was a hit and launched the band's career.
Eric Burdon and War toured extensively across Europe and the United States. The subtitle of a 1970 review in the New Musical Express of their first UK gig in London's Hyde Park read: "Burdon and War: Best Live Band We've Ever Seen".[14] Their show at Ronnie Scott's Club in London on September 16, 1970, is historically notable for being the last public performance for Jimi Hendrix,who joined them onstage for the last 35 minutes of Burdon and War's second set; a day later he was dead.
Bare Black RideA second Eric Burdon and War album, a two-disc set titled The Black-Man's Burdon was released in 1970. During the subsequent tour, Burdon collapsed on the stage during a concert, caused by an asthma attack, and the band continued the tour without him before Burdon left the band in the middle of its European tour. They finished the tour without him and returned to record their first album as War
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