
Good Morning! Welcome to another Song Lyric Sunday where our host, Jim Adams, gives us a prompt word and we find a song with the prompt word in the title or within the lyrics. This week the prompt is Cars or Trucks suggested by our friend Clive from the Take it Easy blog. I have picked ‘Low Rider’ by War because I love this old song.
The Song
The song “Low Rider” was written in 1974 by members of the band War and producer Jerry Goldstein and released in 1975 on their album Why Can’t We Be Friends?. The song was written during a studio jam session, with lyrics developed from inspiration by the lowrider car culture.
A low rider is a car, and also a culture. “Low Riders” are modified with hydraulic lifts that allow the driver to lower each wheel and make the car bounce. They are often customized with outrageous paint jobs, tiny steering wheels and swivel seats. The culture formed around these cars is big in the Southwestern US, and popular in Latino culture. Most of the band grew up in Southern California and were immersed in low rider culture.
War’s drummer Harold Brown, who was a founding member of the band, knows his way around cars and had his own business working on them for a while, which kept him from getting drafted during the Vietnam War. Brown told Songfacts: “The first time I knew about what we called Low Riders were my cousin Leon and a few more cruising up and down the coast in California. You also had Hot Rodders, which were a different breed racing around town. They were from the other side of the tracks. Leon left his 1953 yellow Mercury with black prime spots on it, tuck and roll seat covers from Tijuana Mexico, lowered in the front, parked on the side of the house. He eventually lowered it all the way around after returning from the Korean War.
My brother KB and I had a 1953 Dodge. We’d chop our springs with torches – this would lower the car a few inches. It made for a hard ride up until homies started putting hydraulics on them. If you were driving a truck with lift gates on the rear, you’d better check to see if someone has stolen your hydraulics – it happened to me.
We would drive from Pomona California to South Los Angeles taking side streets and main drags through El Monte, Whittier, Watts, and Compton, then eventually into Long Beach/San Pedro, California. When they finally built freeways in Southern California we would cruise in the slow lane just in case we had to pull over and do some repairs. There wasn’t any AAA for us folks.
Back in 1965-66, The Sheriffs would stop us for our car being too low. At first they would have a long rod with a clamp on it. Then they would take a pack of Camel cigarettes and clamp it on to the rod sliding it under the chassis of your hooptie. If it didn’t go from one side to the other they would give you a ticket or impound your ride. You have to call your daddy or momma to come give you a rider. After a couple of years they became more sophisticated by having a stick with a caliper on the end made as a ruler. The Sheriffs would measure from the ground up to your rims, then slide the calipers from one side to the other to make sure you had proper clearance. Could you imagine having a blow out? You would be dragging along the cement. Thank God for lifts.”
The lines “Take a little trip” and “Rides a little higher” led many listeners to believe this song was about drugs, but Brown tells a different story: “We did not want it to sound as if we were referring to drugs. As a rule most Lowriders are not big druggies, because we all had regular jobs as machinists, body and fender and mechanics. We didn’t have any extra money for drugs. We put the money into our cars. Drugs didn’t come into the picture then. That became a Hollywood thing for some reason. Maybe Cheech and Chong?
We were trying to convey that the Lowrider gets a little higher by riding in his automobile, being proud of how he takes care of his ride. It’s like riding around in your trophy. We have found that if you are a real Lowrider with a nice ride and it’s clean you will find that his or her home and work place is neat and in order. We Lowriders like to make our surroundings better by taking pride in what we are blessed with.
‘Take a little trip, take a little trip with me and see.’ That’s how it felt with my big brother Charles Miller. He’s the one that sung the song. When he and I would cruise in his 1948 Chevy (You can see Charles Miller in our Lowrider film on Youtube.com) we never knew what adventure we would encounter. One morning about 2:30 – 3:00 AM we came up on a fire in an apartment complex in Long Beach, California. The people were all asleep. Charles jumped out of his hooptie (1948 Chevy), me following close behind, and started banging on doors and throwing barrels and things against the building to get the attention of the residents inside. I had forgotten about that little trip out of many that we took.”
The group’s sax player, Charles Miller, came up with the idea for the song. Harold Brown told Songfacts: “What happened on ‘Low Rider’ was in the studio, we were jamming, and I was supposed to have been on the downbeat. But all of the sudden I was on the upbeat. And I said, ‘Oh, boy. I got the beat turned around.’ I didn’t panic. I said, ‘Wait a minute. Stay there. Don’t change it. Stay.’ Because as long as you keep doing it over and over and over, it won’t be a mistake.
We were just messing around, you know. Then the next thing I know, Charles started just singing, ‘Low ri-der drives a little slower. The low…’ he was just pumping it. And then the next thing I know Lee’s over there putting that harmonica on, because Lee is a melody man all the time. And then – boom.
If you’d hear the original version of it, all with that jam, that would be worth a million right there. When we finished it, all of us looked at it, ‘That’s a hit.’ We didn’t know that it was going to be an icon.
You’ve got to say it’s Americana. I don’t care if you’re driving a Cadillac or a Rolls Royce or if you have a hooptie – hearing it thumping, it just works because it predicts historically a time period in America. That’s true about all music, pretty much. If you go back and look at a lot of music from 1800 to the turn of the century, all through the 1900s, how they used to write songs, ‘You’re my little tulip.’ And then when you go into the 1940s all of the sudden you’re talking about growing squash corn, and you’re relating your love to that. Then you went into the ’50s, you started getting Fats Domino and all them Hollywood types singing – that time period relating to it. Or even Chuck Berry. And then you got into our music, and then you started having all the other artists doing it, like we’re not the only ones. But there were certain things during that time period, especially when we went into the Vietnam War, stuff was happening. Then we came on past the Vietnam War, and then all of the sudden the disco stuff started happening. And then right up to now. You’ll be able to look at it, you can tell what was going on, just like food or anything. What was happening. Clothes and everything. So our music, like ‘Low Rider,’ started setting a trend right there.”
Disco was starting to become popular around this time. The slow funk groove on this song sounded nothing like the heavily produced dance beats that would soon dominate the charts.
The group was known as Nite Shift before they were asked to back up Eric Burdon and renamed War. Burdon had been lead singer of The Animals, and brought them instant notoriety. After two albums and the hit “Spill The Wine,” Burdon left War, but the band continued without him, racking up several hits in the ’70s.
Korn covered this song for their Life Is Peachy album in 1996. In their version, lead singer Jon Davis played the main melody on his bagpipes.
“‘Low Rider’ was just a song that, it fit with the crowd of people that come out to the shows,” Davis explained to Rock N Roll Experience. “It’s a cool song, it just fit…the song was just perfect for us for some reason and doing the bagpipes just made it sicker, I like it.”
In the 2000 movie Gone in 60 Seconds, this song got the “old school” car thieves into the mood to steal the cars. It’s also the opening song in the 1978 Cheech & Chong comedy movie Up In Smoke, and along with “Why Can’t We Be Friends?” one of two War songs featured in the 1993 film Dazed And Confused, which is set in 1976.
It also appear in these films:
The Happytime Murders (2018)
The Internship (2013)
Beverly Hills Chihuahua (2008)
Robots (2005)
21 Grams (2003)
A Knight’s Tale (2001)
Contact (1997)
Beverly Hills Ninja (1997)
Friday (1995)
Love Potion No. 9 (1992)
Colors (1988)
This was the theme song to the ABC sitcom The George Lopez Show, which ran from 2002-2007.
The Offspring’s “Original Prankster” is attributed as “containing portions” of this song.
The Lowrider Band consists of four of the five surviving original core group members of War: Howard E. Scott, B.B. Dickerson, Lee Oskar and Harold Brown. These members lost the right in federal court to use and tour under the name “War” in the mid-1990s to Far Out Productions (producer and songwriter Jerry Goldstein). The band’s original keyboardist Lonnie Jordan began touring using the name “War” under Goldstein’s guidance.
Marmite used “Low Rider” in their UK advertising during the late 1990 and early 2000s, particularly as part of the famous “Love it or Hate it” and “Hate/Mate” campaigns.
Thanks to Songfacts
Well, I really thought I was the only one who would pick “Low Rider” for this challenge, but the very first post I read in response to this week’s SLS prompt is yours, and you chose the same song. My post is scheduled to be published in five hours, at 3:00 am my time.
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I think it’s great! I love it when more than one person picks the same song ☺️ Way to go Fan!!
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Hold on .., there is a third one!! Marina picked Low Rider too!!
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A popular choice for today!
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What an interesting and informative write up you gave this song. I have always loved it but this really put the icing on the cake getting to learn the personal histories of the guys who made it! Bravo!
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Thanks Jody. I remember using it before on SLS but it was a long time ago. I notied two others picked the same song!! ☺️
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Nice choice, Christine. I love the Latin-influenced percussion with the congas and cowbells, as it creates a hypnotic, cruising vibe that perfectly complements the lyrics.
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Thanks so much for commenting Jim even though three of us picked the same song. I am still surprised that no one offered up Fast Car by Tracy Chapman. I felt sure that would have been a #1 pick ☺️
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There are so many car songs to choose from. and I think that any band that has been around for a few albums has a car song. Ribert Hunter the lyricist for the Grateful Dead told the group that they needed a car song and that he had to go on tour with them to write it and he came up with ‘Trucking’ which is one of their best-known songs.
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A great choice for today’s prompt hehe 🙂
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Such a brilliant song so many memories 🍁🍂💜💜😛
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Thanks Willow. Yes memories!!! 🥰❤️
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yes indeed 👍
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Christine I learned a lot from your post about the group and the song. This part really piqued my interest:
The group was known as Nite Shift before they were asked to back up Eric Burdon and renamed War. Burdon had been lead singer of The Animals, and brought them instant notoriety. After two albums and the hit “Spill The Wine,” Burdon left War, but the band continued without him, racking up several hits in the ’70s.
Korn covered this song for their Life Is Peachy album in 1996. In their version, lead singer Jon Davis played the main melody on his bagpipes.
So they used to be Nite Shift, became War, and now The Low Rider Band. They got a lot of mileage (no pun intended :)) out of this song.
I just don’t see Korn doing a cover it, so I must go find it…. OK, it’s a little bit different, but not bad
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I could hardly believe it when I read it either. So funny that you found the video. I just don’t think the bagpipes did anything for that song!! it was rather weird, wasn’t it? 🤣
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It’s Korn 😉 and flakes might be appropriate to add for this one lmao.
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🤣
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classic choice! One I never get tired of hearing
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Thanks Jilly ☺️💗
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Cool song and very popular this week! I was always drawn to the fun sound of Low Rider and now I know more about this song than I thought possible! Excellent write up, Christine.
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Oh dear you were in my spam again Nancy! I will have to work on that again, Clive was in there too this week 🫤
Yes a popular song for sure. Thanks for your kind comments 🥰
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Christine, I had a feeling you were gonna say that. Every time I write a comment and I don’t see it on the screen after I click reply, it’s a good indication that I’m going to end up in spam. I honestly don’t know why that happens and if I had to guess I would say it’s on your end. I’m afraid you ‘ll just have to keep hounding WordPress for help and hopefully a solution. Thanks for fishing me out of spam ..… I really don’t like it in there. 🤣
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Oh dear yes you were! I really must get Askimet to stop sending you to spam. In the meantime I’ll keep looking for you in you know where 🫤
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