Eric Burdon & War - Toba cco Road - (jammin' in Paris, 1971)

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
21,017
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Apr 1, 2009

Awesome concert performance of Eric Burdon & War - 'Tob acco Road', Paris, 1971. (There are three clips which I've edited together).

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 - bongos/congas/percussion
Harold Brown - drums/percussion

From the album - Eric Burdon declares ''War''

Available from Amazon:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Eric-Burdon-Declares-War/dp/B0000032V6

http://www.amazon.com/Eric-Burdon-Declares-War/dp/B0000032V6

Category:

Music

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 2 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Top Comments

  • The greatest singer ever with the top-performance band WAR.

  • Soo Good, thought the black and white clip of "Spirit" might be one of my favorite Burdon performances. If you ask me he proves here that he is a better frontman than Mick. Coulda been soooo much better had it not been for LSD and booze.

    Thanks for posting!

see all

All Comments (23)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • anyone got the intro? i like it when he starts singing and the crowd react, and he gives that cheeky lil' smile! great great great!

  • i like the bit from 0 to 6.54 best..

  • @richardvollin, Turning green, richardvollin, but not HULK green. lol I'm very happy for you actually. It's so exciting when you find those kinds of treasures. Gotta get off my bootay and do some treasure hunting too. Congrats!!!! : )

  • @richardvollin Actually... the bond itself was intact with no folds. I found it snug between the folds of the poster. Simply too much.

    Must have been a hold-over from the previous album release.

    Can't believe United Artist Records included it.

    But it was (after all) good through the end of 1973.

  • @lowriderbandfan And guess what ? Just got back (11 Sept.) from 'BackSpin' Records here in Austin, Texas. Bought a 'still sealed' copy of "All Day Music" ! Still had the purple sticker for the single "Slippin' Into Darkness" on the shrink wrap !

    Folded inside the crisp and clean poster....a "WAR bond" ! Serial number B 022269 !

    Didn't even think that the bonds overlapped into the release of "All Day Music".

    What an amazing find !

    But there it was.

    Need to inform 'BigsbyDude' !

    There out there!

  • @BigsbyDude Still have my "WAR" Bonds...three in fact. The one that came with "The Black-Man's Burdon" is Series W B 010130 and is probably worth more than the album itself. Most probably lost or misplaced theirs. Or maybe even used them to purchase two tickets to see the band perform. My other two came with the first and third LP. Too bad they earn a dividend huh ? Far Out should have considered that in the beginning.......

  • I haven't a clue if this performance was from the first MIDEM Music Festival Gala...but if it was - It was Elton John's first taste of one-up-manship and he had to eat crow and bow low and pay his respect to the power of WAR and Eric Burdon.

    Elton had to relent the stage to WAR.

    WAR performed for 70 minutes (and they were only allotted 14 minutes).

    Elton never took the stage. How could he ?

    No one band or performer could upstage this act.

    Elton was humbled. And history made.

  • different one than I've heard before.

    thanks for the video

  • great song

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more