Me And Baby Brother
by War

Album: Deliver the Word (1973)
Charted: 21 15
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Songfacts®:

  • "Me and Baby Brother" appears on Deliver the Word, the album that cemented War's reputation as the high priests of funk-humanism. The song tells the story of two brothers who "used to run together," hanging out on the block. But somewhere between the corner and adulthood, something went sideways. The brother fell into "law and order," and by the outro the funk has turned from celebration to supplication.
  • The band never issued a tidy press release to explain what the song really meant, but War rarely trafficked in mystery for mystery's sake. Their music always had its roots in lived experience, the kind of kitchen-table politics that made "Slippin' Into Darkness" so chilling and "Why Can't We Be Friends?" such a direct call to unity. In "Me and Baby Brother," you can hear all of that: the pride, the loss, and the weary humor of people trying to keep their balance in a world that keeps shifting underfoot.

    As the band said of their mission: "Our instruments and voices became our weapons of choice and the songs our ammunition. We spoke out against racism, hunger, gangs, crimes, and turf wars, as we embraced all people with hope and the spirit of brotherhood."
  • War's 1973 lineup was a multi-ethnic musical septet that transcended racial and cultural barriers. You've got Lonnie Jordan on keyboards and vocals, Howard E. Scott on guitar, Lee Oskar on harmonica, B.B. Dickerson on bass, Harold Brown on drums, Papa Dee Allen on percussion, and Charles Miller on sax and flute. All seven are credited as songwriters on "Me and Baby Brother."
  • The song started as a slow blues jam. "We were messing around in the studio, and I think Harold and Charles Miller started doing it as a much faster, more percussive funk track, with Lee playing this wailing riff over the top," Harold Brown recalled to Uncut magazine.
  • War debuted the slower blues version two years earlier as "Baby Brother" on their 1971 live album All Day Music. That version stretches to nearly eight minutes, a slow-burn jam that lets the groove breathe and the horns smolder. The 1973 studio take tightens everything up: same sentiment, same sorrow, but with a sharper suit and quicker step.
  • The song was used in these movies:

    Don't Worry He Won't Get Far On Foot (2018)
    Brothers In Arms (2005)
    Secretary (2002)
    Committed (2000)
    Young Soul Rebels (1991)

    And these TV shows:

    Sneaky Pete ("Maggie" - 2018)
    How To Make It In America ("Crisp" - 2010)
    The Wire ("Straight and True" - 2004)
    The Wire ("Hotshots" - 2003)
    Californication ("Glass Houses" - 2009)

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