Last week (May 11), Eric Burdon turned 82 years. Since the first moment I heard him I’ve always thought he’s one of the most compelling white blues vocalists. It also reminded me of a post I published in February 2019. Here it is again with the added bonus of a Spotify playlist at the end. Yes, it’s a bit of a beast! š
Tumultuous Path Of A Journeyman And Survivor
For more than 50 years, Eric Burdon has been one of rockās most distinctive vocalists
Oftentimes, I feel the best blog ideas are inspired by a previous post. In this case, it was my writing about great covers performed by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, which included Iām Crying by The Animals. The tune reminded me of Eric Burdon and a voice Iāve always felt was made for singing the blues. Just like many other blues artists or more generally those who started out during the ā60s and ā70s, Burdon has experienced it all, from the highest high to the deepest low and everything else in-between. Unlike many fellow artists, heās still there, which I think makes him one of the ultimate survivors.
Eric Victor Burdon was born on May 11, 1941, in the northeastern English industrial town of Newcastle upon Tyne. His upbringing in a lower-class working family was rough. Burdon started smoking at the age of 10 and skipping school with friends to drink beer. He described his early school years as a Dickens novel-like ādark nightmare,ā which included bullying, sexual molestation and sadistic teachers hitting kids with a leather strap. While his father Matt Burdon struggled as an electric repairman, this allowed the family to have a TV by the time Eric was 10. Yet again the TV sparking it all!
Seeing Louis Armstrong on the tube triggered Burdonās initial interest in music, first in the trombone, then in singing. The next decisive stage in his life was secondary school and a teacher named Bertie Brown who helped him get into the local art college. There he met John Steele, the original drummer of The Animals. They ended up playing in a band called The Pagan Jazzmen. By early 1959, keyboardist Alan Price had joined. After a few iterations and name changes, the band evolved into The Animals in 1962.

The initial lineup featured Burdon (lead vocals), Steele (drums), Price (keyboards), Hilton Valentine (guitar) and Chas Chandler (bass), who later became the manager of Jimi Hendrix. Between September and December 1963, The Animals developed a following in Newcastle by playing local clubs there. During that period, Burdon met some of his blues heroes, including John Lee Hooker and Sonny Boy Williamson. The Animals also backed Williamson during a local gig.
In December 1963, The Animals recorded their first single Baby Let Me Take You Home. It climbed to a respectable no. 22 on the UK singles chart. But it was the second single, The House Of The Rising Sun from June 1964, which brought the big breakthrough, topping the charts in the UK, U.S., Canada and Sweden. It also started the beginning of the bandās demise when the arrangement of the traditional was only credited to Price who collected all the songwriting royalties.
The bandās first studio album The Animals appeared in the U.S. in September 1964. Their British debut record followed two months later. As was quite common at the time, the track listing between the two versions differed. Altogether, the original incarnation of The Animals released five U.S. and three U.K. studio albums. Hereās the above-mentioned Iām Crying, which was included on the second U.S. record The Animals On Tour, a peculiar title for a studio album. Co-written by Burden and Price, itās one of only a few original tracks by the band that was mostly known for fiery renditions of blues and R&B staples by the likes of John Lee Hooker, Jimmy Reed and Ray Charles.
In May 1966, The Animals released Donāt Bring Me Down. Co-written by songwriter duo Gerry Goffin and Carole King, the tune became Burdonās favorite single, he told Louder/The Blues during a long interview in April 2013. The song also became the opening track to the bandās fourth U.S. album Animalization released in July 1966. The great tune is characterized by a distinct Hammond B3 sound played by Dave Rowberry, who had replaced Alan Price following his departure in late 1965, and Hilton Valentineās fuzz guitar. Burdon recalled the songās recording in a hotel in the Bahamas. āThere was an old record player in the room where we were recording and it had this strange, thin electrostatic speaker. Dave Rowberry connected it to his Hammond B3 and thatās where the sound comes from on that track.ā
By September 1966, The Animals had dissipated and Burdon started work on his first solo album Eric Is Here, which wouldnāt appear until the following year. Meanwhile, in December 1966, he formed Eric Burdon & The Animals. In addition to him, the band included Barry Jenkins, who had replaced John Steel on drums during the first incarnation of The Animals, John Weider (guitar, violin, bass), Vic Briggs (guitar, piano) and Danny McCulloch (bass). The band subsequently relocated from the U.K. to San Francisco. By that time, Burdon had become a heavy user of LSD.
In October 1967, Eric Burdon & The Animals released their debut. Appropriately titled Winds Of Change, it featured mostly original tracks and psychedelic-oriented rock, a major departure from the past. But, as Louder/The Blues noted, except for San Franciscan Nights, āthe British public were reluctant to accept Ericās transformation from hard-drinking Geordie bluesman to LSD-endorsing, peace and love hippy.ā Three more albums followed before this second incarnation of The Animals dissolved in late 1968. Hereās Monterey, the opener to their second record The Twain Shall Meet from May 1968. Reflecting the bandās drug-infused experiences at the Monterey Pop Festival, where they also had performed, the tune is credited to all five members.
Disillusioned with the music business, Burdon went to LA to try acting. But after one year, he returned to music, fronting a Californian funk rock band that would be called War. Together they recorded two original albums in 1970. Hereās Spill The Wine from the first, Eric Burden Declares āWarā, which appeared in April 1970. Credited to the members of War, the tune became the bandās first hit, peaking at no. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. It also marked Burdonās last major chart success.
Burdonās relationship with War abruptly unraveled after the band had decided to record their next album without him. It was around the same time his friend Jimi Hendrix passed away. Burdon was devastated. āThat became the end of the parade because it affected us so much,ā he stated during the above Louder/The Blues interview. āIt was tough for me. It was tough for everybody.ā Unfortunately, one of Burdonās answers was drugs and more drugs.
During the ā70s and ā80s, Burdon had numerous drug excesses. In 1983, this led to an arrest in Germany where he had lived since 1977. Subsequently, he returned to the U.S. Yet despite all the upheaval, Burdon still managed to continue recording albums and touring. In 1971, he teamed up with American jump blues artist Jimmy Witherspoon for a record titled Guilty! Hereās Home Dream, a great slow blues tune written by Burdon.
In August 1977, the first incarnation of The Animals released the first of two reunion albums, Before We Were So Rudely Interrupted, billed as The Original Animals. Despite positive reviews, the record only reached no. 70 on the Billboard 200. Lack of promotion, no supporting tour and most importantly appearing at a time when punk and disco ruled were all factors. Hereās the great opener Brother Bill (The Last Clean Shirt), a tune co-written by Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller and Clyde Otis.
Next up: Going Back To Memphis, a song co-written by Burdon and Steve Grant. It appeared on Burdonās 1988 album I Used To Be An Animal. Released in the wake of his autobiography I Used To Be An Animal, But Iām Alright Now, it was Burdonās first new album in almost four years.
In April 2004, My Secret Life appeared, Burdonās first new solo record in almost 16 years. Hereās the opener Once Upon A Time, a nice soulful tune co-written by Burdon and Robert Bradley.
āTil Your River Runs Dry is Burdonās most recent studio release, which came out in January 2013. His website calls it his āmost personal album to date.ā Hereās Old Habits Die Hard, co-written by Burdon and Tom Hambridge. āThis song is dedicated to the people in Egypt and Libya trying to throw off the shackles of all those centuries of brutality,ā Burdon told Rolling Stone a few days prior to the recordās release. āIt reminds me of Paris in 1968 when I saw the kids going up against the brutal police force or the L.A. uprising. I went through these experiences and theyāre still with me today. The struggle carries on. I wrote this song so I wonāt forget and to say, even though Iām older now, I am still out there with you.ā
Burdonās most recent recording is a nice cover of For What Itās Worth, written by Stephen Stills and originally released by Buffalo Springfield in December 1966. He commented on his website: The whole idea of recording this song came as a result of a conversation I had with a young fan backstage, when she asked me, āWhere are the protest songs today?ā Right then and there, I wanted to write something about the brutality thatās going on in the world today but I couldnāt find any better way to say it than Buffalo Springfield did in āFor What Itās Worth.
In 1994, Eric Burdon was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame as part of The Animals, along with the other original members of the band. He did not attend the induction ceremony. Burdon remains active to this day and uses the name The Animals for his backing band, which includes Evan Mackey (trombone), Davey Allen (piano), Dustin Koester (drums), Johnzo West (guitar), Justin Andres (bass) and Ruben Salinas (saxophone).
While Burdonās website currently does not list any upcoming gigs for this year, according to Consequence of Sound, Eric Burdon & The Animals are part of the lineup for the KAABOO Festival in Arlington, Texas, May 10-12. The band is also scheduled to perform on May 26 at Avila Beach Blues Festival in California.
Asked by Louder/The Blues during the above interview how he would sum up the past 50 years, Burdon said, āIād been screwed by [War], Iād been screwed by The Animals. All use Burdon because heās a great front guy and then come payday whereās the money? A lot of people had a great ride off me being on stage and I didnāt get much of it.ā With a little chuckle he added, āIām not bitter. Iām bittersweet.ā
– END –
The original post, which was published on February 10, 2019, ended here. One thing that happened since then is a 2020 British TV documentary titled Eric Burdon, Rock’ n’ Roll Animal, which was written and directed by Hannes Rossacher, an Austrian film director and producer. It featured interviews with Burdon, Sting, Bruce Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt, George Thorogood and Patti Smith. An edited version is available here.
Other than an awkward 2022 remix of Spill the Wine, I’m not aware of any music associated with Burdon, which has appeared since the time the above post was published first. The most recent evidence of live performances I could find on Setlist.fm was from November 2019. The lack of more recent concerts could largely be explained by the pandemic. There’s an Eric Burdon website, but other than what looks like a fairly recent photo, it’s not evident whether it is active. Perhaps Eric is simply taking it easy these days, which after 60-plus years since the start of his career would be more than deserved!
Last but not least, here’s the aforementioned Spotify playlist. It features all of the above tracks except For What It’s Worth, as well as a good number of additional tunes from throughout Burdon’s recording career.
Sources: Wikipedia; Louder/The Blues; Deutsche Welle; Eric Burdon website; Rolling Stone; Consequence of Sound; Eventbrite; Setlist.fm; YouTube; Spotify