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Presale codes were last updated (3 days, 20 hours ago) at 09-29 17:52 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.
Presale codes were last updated (3 days, 20 hours ago) at 09-29 17:52 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.

Right now there are presales for WAR with events scheduled in
El Cajon, CA
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Low-rider roots and renewal with WAR
WAR came out of late 60s Southern California, first backing Eric Burdon, mixing funk, Latin rhythm, and jazz improv.
From barrio grooves to big stages
Today WAR is steered by Lonnie Jordan, the last founding member on stage, after a long split that also birthed The Lowrider Band. The identity stays the same: streetwise grooves, hand percussion up front, and sing-along hooks that land fast.What you will likely hear
Expect a set that leans on Low Rider, Why Can't We Be Friends?, The Cisco Kid, and Slippin' into Darkness, with conga breaks and call-and-response stretching the forms. The crowd skews multi-generation, from crate-digging funk fans to families, plus car-culture folks nodding to the lowrider heritage. A neat note: those famous unison lines often stack sax with harmonica, a stamp shaped early by Lee Oskar, and many arrangements were born from live-in-the-room jams. For clarity, take these song and production expectations as informed possibilities rather than a locked blueprint.The WAR scene, from jackets to joyful choruses
The scene feels neighborly, with elders and teens swapping nods and stories in merch lines and at the rail.
Low rider spirit, city by city
You will spot jackets with embroidered patches, crisp caps, vintage tees, and clean sneakers tuned for dancing more than posing. When the whistle pops and that low-slung riff starts, the room often chants the three-syllable title before the first verse lands. On the softer numbers, the crowd leans into easy call-and-response, which the band encourages with short cues.Shared choruses and souvenirs
Merch trends lean classic: logo caps, ringer tees in retro colors, and art that nods to city car culture without cartooning it. Before encores, fans sometimes trade stories about hearing the band at parks, fairs, and street festivals, a reminder of how these songs live in day-to-day life. It comes off relaxed and proud, more family cookout than club flash, and the groove sets the tone for how people treat each other.How WAR keeps the pocket deep on stage
Live, WAR centers the pocket, with drums and congas locking a slow-burn sway that lets riffs breathe.
Pocket first, flash second
Vocals often trade between lead and group shouts, so hooks feel communal instead of solo showpieces. Horns ride the melody in short phrases, and the keys color the groove with clav or organ more than piano sheen. The guitar favors clean, percussive strums, leaving space for bass to speak, and the bass sometimes gets doubled by baritone sax to thicken the floor.Small choices, big feel
Tempos tend to sit mid-range, but the band nudges sections half-time or double-time to lift choruses without speeding the whole tune. A recurring live move is stretching Slippin' into Darkness into layered percussion breaks, then snapping back on the one for a cheer. Visuals usually keep a warm, saturated wash so your ears stay on the groove while the stage glows like a sunset.If you vibe with WAR, try these kindred crews
Fans of Santana will find a similar Latin pulse, guitar-and-percussion interplay, and a jam-friendly arc.