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Slippin' into Darkness

1971 single by War From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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"Slippin' into Darkness" is a song written and performed in 1971 by War. The song was produced by Jerry Goldstein.[3] A live version of the song was featured as the B-side to their 1974 single "Ballero".

Quick Facts Single by War, from the album All Day Music ...
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Background

This song is an unusual blues form with the first lines being repeated in an African and Latin rhythm. The song is from the perspective of someone whose friend's life was taken away, who withdraws from reality, having to pay the consequences. Because of the song's length in the album version, at 6:59, the single radio edit version of 3:59 omits the slower introduction plus the second verse of the song.

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Chart performance

It reached #12 on the U.S. R&B chart and #16 on the U.S. pop chart in 1972,[4] logging 22 weeks on that chart,[5] tied for most total weeks inside that year with Gallery's "Nice to Be with You".[6] It was featured on their 1971 album All Day Music.[7] The song ranked #23 on Billboard magazine's Top 100 singles of 1972.[8] In Canada, it reached #13.[9]

Other versions

Sampling

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  • War's version was featured in the fifth episode of 2016 season of The Get Down.
  • War's version was featured on the soundtrack of the 2016 film Suicide Squad.
  • War's version was featured on the soundtrack of the 1992 film American Me.
  • War's version was featured on the last season of the TV show Snowfall.
  • War's version was featured in the fourth episode (season 1) of the series Duster on HBOMax.

Certifications

More information Region, Certification ...

References

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