Peace Sign (War album) explained

Peace Sign
Type:Album
Artist:War
Cover:War Peace Sign.jpg
Released:1994
Length:78:21 (LP), 75:28 (CD)
Label:Avenue
Producer:Jerry Goldstein, Lonnie Jordan
Prev Title:Life (is So Strange)
Prev Year:1983
Next Title:Greatest Hits Live
Next Year:2008

is an album by War, released on Avenue Records (distributed by Rhino Records) in 1994. Its title is a graphic of the peace symbol. It is often referred to as Peace Sign, the title of the first track, though arguably it could also be called Peace, the antonym of the group's name. It was released as a CD and also as a double LP, the latter containing an extra track titled "Africa", and a shorter version of "Peace Sign".

This was their first non-compilation album in over a decade, during which time the group had toured sporadically. Most living original members appeared on the album, B.B. Dickerson (bass) being the only exception; but Lee Oskar (harmonica) is not credited as a group member, and only makes a guest appearance on two songs. Another former member Pat Rizzo (saxophone) also makes a guest appearance on the same songs where Oskar appears. Some of the official members of this album's nine-person lineup made somewhat minimal contributions: Ron Hammon is only credited with providing "drum fills" on two songs, while Rae Valentine is mainly credited with "music programming". Only five group members contributed to more than half of the songs, and Lonnie Jordan (keyboards) is the only one who plays on every song (Valentine contributing music programming to all but one). The album carries a dedication to War's deceased members, Papa Dee Allen (congas) and Charles Miller (saxophone).

This album's lineup toured to promote the album, then broke up in 1996 when most of the original members wished to gain independence from producer Jerry Goldstein, who owned the group's name, and created a new group called Lowrider Band. Goldstein then created a new version of War with Lonnie Jordan as the only remaining original member.[1]

A 12-inch single was released with four versions of "Peace Sign". Another track, "I'm the One (Who Understands)", is a re-recording of a song from The Music Band (1979). José Feliciano makes a guest appearance on "East L.A.".

Track listing

Side one

  1. "Peace Sign" (Howard E. Scott, Harold Brown, Milton Myrick) – 4:29
  2. "East L.A." (Jerry Goldstein, Scott, Lonnie Jordan) – 5:40
  3. "Wild Rodriguez" (Scott, Myrick, Brown, Goldstein) – 4:48
  4. "I'm the One (Who Understands)" (Papa Dee Allen, Brown, B.B. Dickerson, Jordan, Charles Miller, Lee Oskar, Scott, Goldstein) – 5:14

Side two

  1. "Da Roof" (Scott, Goldstein, Myrick) – 7:36
  2. "The Smuggler (The Light in the Window)" (Goldstein, Brown) – 5:57
  3. "U B O.K." (Scott, Brown, Myrick) – 5:31

Side three

  1. "Smile for Me" (S. Ball, E. Baker, Goldstein) – 6:29
  2. "Let Me Tell You" (Scott, Myrick, Brown, Goldstein, Jordan) – 5:47
  3. "Angel" (Goldstein) – 6:34

Side four

  1. "What If" (Brown, Myrick, Goldstein, Jordan, Scott) – 5:00
  2. "Africa" (unknown) – 4:29
  3. "Homeless Hero" (H. Scott, J. Scott, Goldstein, Jordan) – 10:47

CD edition

With the exception of "Peace Sign", differences in timings are trivial and are taken from covers and labels. "Africa" does not appear on the CD edition. See LP listing above for composer credits.

  1. "Peace Sign" – 5:57
  2. "East L.A." – 5:41
  3. "Wild Rodriguez" – 4:49
  4. "I'm the One (Who Understands)" – 5:15
  5. "Da Roof" – 7:37
  6. "The Smuggler (The Light in the Window)" – 5:58
  7. "U B O.K." – 5:32
  8. "Let Me Tell You" – 5:47
  9. "Smile for Me" – 6:30
  10. "What If" – 5:01
  11. "Angel" – 6:34
  12. "Homeless Hero" – 10:47

Personnel

Credits below are missing information for "Africa".

Official members

Other musicians, arrangers, programmers

Technical personnel

References

  1. Web site: Peace Sign - War Songs, Reviews, Credits. AllMusic. en-us. 2019-04-28.