The United States of America (band)

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The United States of America
(Back, l-r, Byrd, Moskowitz, Marron.Front, l-r, Bogas, Woodson, Forbes)
(Back, l-r, Byrd, Moskowitz, Marron.
Front, l-r, Bogas, Woodson, Forbes)
Background information
Origin Los Angeles, CA, U.S.
Genre(s) Experimental rock, pop, psychedelic rock, progressive rock
Years active 1967 - 1968
Label(s) Columbia
Associated acts Joe Byrd and the Field Hippies
Former members
Ed Bogas
Rand Forbes
Gordon Marron
Dorothy Moskowitz
Craig Woodson
Joseph Byrd
For the 90's alternative group see: The Presidents of the United States of America.

The United States of America was an experimental rock and psychedelic band whose works are an example of early electronic music in rock and roll.

Contents

[edit] History

Formed in 1967 by Joseph Byrd, the band membership consisted of the following: Joseph Byrd (electronic music, electric harpsichord, organ, calliope, piano, and Durrett Electronic Music Synthesizer), Dorothy Moskowitz (lead vocals), Gordon Marron (electric violin, ring modulator), Rand Forbes (an early adopter of the fretless electric bass) and Craig Woodson (electric drums and percussion). Ed Bogas also performed on the record with occasional organ, piano, and calliope; he became a full member of the band on its first and only tour.

[edit] Album

For further information see The United States of America (album)

Their self-titled record was recorded in December 1967, produced by David Rubinson for CBS Records, and released in 1968. It was rereleased on CD by Sundazed Records in 2004 with various alternate takes, demos, and outtakes.

Their sound blended a range of musical genres, including avant-garde, psychedelic, and progressive. One of the more notable points of the band was that it had no guitar player, which for its time was quite radical, as the electric guitar occupied a central position in rock music of the time. Instead, they used strings, keyboards and electronics, including primitive synthesizers, and various audio processors, including the ring modulator.

The record was released in early 1968, at a time when there was a receptive audience for “underground music” which combined musical experimentalism with radical social and/or political lyrics – other examples, in their very different ways, including the Velvet Underground (who shared a common background in the New York experimental music scene; according to Moskowitz, Nico at one point tried to join the USA), Frank Zappa (whom Byrd considered a niche-marketer "subsumed in a self-referential loop"[1]), Love’s Forever Changes, Country Joe and the Fish, and Jefferson Airplane.

Whether intended or not, the record took the form of a coherent “song cycle”, a radical commentary on contemporary American society. The words ranged from satires on decadence ("The American Metaphysical Circus" , "..Wooden Wife..") to lyrical expressions of longing (the pastoral "Cloud Song", the political "Love Song For The Dead Che"). Musically, the songs ranged from pseudo-classical elegance ("Stranded In Time", "Where Is Yesterday") to aggressive discordance and hard rock ("The Garden of Earthly Delights", "Hard Coming Love"), with heavy electronic distortion and collages of “found” music such as brass bands, Byrd being heavily influenced by Charles Ives. The final suite "The American Way of Love" integrates most of these elements, with a dreamlike ending containing a collage of earlier tracks.

[edit] Break-Up

Despite the widespread support of music critics, the album sold poorly and soon disappeared - at least in the USA, although in the UK it remained fondly remembered, in part because of one track ("Wooden Wife") being used on a popular CBS sampler album.

The band's tour in support of the record led to difficulties of its own. Members of the band were arrested for drug possession, and they had a number of serious equipment failures - these and other tensions made Byrd increasingly difficult to work with, and the group largely unmanageable, and resulted in the band splitting up.

  • Joseph Byrd went on to form Joe Byrd and the Field Hippies, who released an LP, The American Metaphysical Circus, in 1969. Byrd also released a number of additional recordings under his own name, as well as scoring a number of films, writing music for television, and working as a music producer. He is married, lives in northern California near the Oregon border, and teaches music-related classes at College of the Redwoods.
  • Dorothy Moskowitz(-Falarski) later worked with Country Joe McDonald's All-Star Band, married, has two daughters, and lives in a suburb of Oakland, California. She writes for and teaches music to children in her local school system, and has developed a number of other music projects in the San Francisco Bay area.
  • Gordon Marron became a Los Angeles studio musician and now lives in Hawaii.
  • Craig Woodson teaches percussion in the Cleveland, Ohio area and has toured with the Kronos Quartet. He has also developed the educational World Drumming project used in American schools nationwide.
  • Ed Bogas composed soundtracks for Peanuts and Garfield TV cartoon specials and for Ralph Bakshi's film Fritz the Cat.
  • Rand Forbes has worked as an Oracle DBA, owned a software development company, and continues to play classical bass in Southern California.

[edit] Influence

Snakefinger covered "The Garden Of Earthly Delights" on the 1982 release "Manual Of Errors".

The British group Northern Picture Library released a cover version of "Love Song For The Dead Che" as their debut single in 1993.

The USA were thanked by the triphop group Portishead in the liner notes of their 1997 album Portishead, for the song "Half Day Closing" which bears a more than superficial resemblance to "American Metaphysical Circus".

UK band Broadcast also cite USA as a major influence.

Serious Black/Steve Mecca covered "The Garden Of Earthly Delights" on the 2002 CD "Barbican" [1].

The song "Over! Over!" on the 2007 album "Reformation! Post-TLC" by British band The Fall has been described [2] as "steal[ing] both chorus and riff" from the USA song "Coming Down".

[edit] Discography

Albums

Singles

[edit] References

  1. ^ Kevin Holm-Hidson. Progressive Prck Reconsidered, Routledge, 2002, p. 61

[edit] External links

Languages