Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Box set of landmark War album coming

The Long Beach band also has shows lined up as `The World Is a Ghetto' turns 50

- By Richard Guzma■ riguzman@scng.com

Loaded with just six songs, and recorded in under a month in a studio on Vine Street in Hollywood, War's fifth album, “The World Is a Ghetto,” is widely considered a masterpiec­e that helped bring progressiv­e Black music to the mainstream with its mix of soul, funk, blues, Latin, a bit of psychedeli­a and songs about inner city life.

It became the best-selling album in the U.S. in 1973, and as it turns 50, it could become one of the hottestsel­ling albums on Record Store Day's Black Friday next month.

The band's triple-platinum album, which generated two gold singles and landed on Rolling Stone's 2003 list of 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, is being re-released as “The World Is a Ghetto: 50th Anniversar­y Collector's Edition.” The five-LP box set includes never-before-heard-songs from the album sessions and behind-the-scenes recordings. Only 4,000 copies will be released Nov. 24 The original album and bonus tracks are pressed on two gold vinyl LPs, while “the making of” tracks are pressed on three black vinyl LPs.

“It still sounds fresh to me even, and when I talk to people about the album they say the same thing because it's still different than any music that's out there today, and then,” said Compton native Leroy “Lonnie” Jordan, one of the founders of the band, which came together in Long Beach in 1969.

“It all started in Long Beach. That's where we started creating `The World Is a Ghetto.' Our surroundin­gs, we knew we were in the hood back then, and that pretty much inspired us,” Jordan said.

Jordan and the band will be performing around California before the release of the box set, with shows scheduled at Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez tonight, The Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Saturday and The Grammy Museum in Los Angeles on Wednesday inside the venue's 200-seat Clive Davis Theater (sold out). The band returns to the Southland on Dec. 2 for a show at The Magnolia in El Cajon.

“I think to myself: Dang, we did all that and what really goes through my mind is how people still react to our music when we perform,” Jordan said.

Those who buy a copy of the box set will hear the original six tracks, which include “The Cisco Kid” and the 10-minute title track, plus six unreleased songs that didn't make the original album.

“To me it's amazing the stuff we did 50 years ago and how good it sounds today,” said Jerry Goldstein, who helped put the band together and produced the album.

“We didn't know any better back then; we were just street bums. Jerry took us from the streets. He didn't even try to make us sophistica­ted; he just said, do what you do and I'll push the buttons,” Jordan added.

For fans who want to take a deep dive into the record, the set includes unreleased “the making of” recordings that trace the evolution of each of the six original songs from the first note to the final take.

“We decided that we wanted to bring the audience into the studio and listen to how we recorded each song. It's amazing; we expose the good and the crazy and it's fun. You hear a little cursing here and there, a little direction here and there,” Goldstein said.

“The feeling in the studio when we made the record was really amazing. And nobody thought about what it was going to be, and we sat down and listened to the different tracks and we blew our minds on this one,” Goldstein added.

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