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The United States of America (band)

The United States of America was an American experimental rock band founded in Los Angeles in 1967 by composer Joseph Byrd and vocalist Dorothy Moskowitz, with electric violinist Gordon Marron, bassist Rand Forbes and drummer Craig Woodson. Their 1968 self-titled album, often cited as an early showcase for the use of electronic devices in rock music, was met with critical acclaim and minor chart success.[2] They disbanded shortly after its release.

The United States of America
Back (l-r): Byrd, Moskowitz, Marron. Front (l-r): Bogas, Woodson, Forbes
Background information
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres
Years active1967–1968
LabelsColumbia
Past members

The group’s sound was grounded in both psychedelia and the avant-garde. Unusually, the band had no guitar player; instead, they used strings, keyboards and electronics, including primitive synthesizers, and various audio processors, including the ring modulator. Many of the songs' lyrics reflected Byrd's leftist political views. AllMusic described them as "among the most revolutionary bands of the late '60s."[2]

History edit

Background and formation edit

Composer Joseph Byrd and lyricist and singer Dorothy Moskowitz first met in New York City in early 1963 when Byrd was working on a recording of Civil War period music for Time-Life. A devotee of composer Charles Ives, Byrd had already become a respected and innovative composer, involved in experimental music as part of the Fluxus movement with John Cage, Morton Feldman, La Monte Young, David Tudor, Yoko Ono and others.[5][6] Moskowitz was studying music at Barnard College, where she was taught by Otto Luening; she also sang in a vocal group with Art Garfunkel, and worked with David Rubinson on a musical theatre production, as well as on the Time-Life project. Byrd and Moskowitz began a relationship – he has referred to their "profound musical and personal relationship",[6] and she has described him as being her "aesthetic guru" [7] – and he helped her obtain a post with Capitol Records; when she left, she was replaced in turn by Rubinson.[6][8]

Later in 1963, Byrd and Moskowitz moved together to Los Angeles, where Byrd started a doctorate in ethnomusicology at UCLA.[7] According to Moskowitz: "Joe brought with him a New York avant-garde cachet ... a background in electronic music ... and composing skills ... He attracted immediate attention. Exciting musicians, dancers and visual artists sought collaboration with him. The talent pool for what eventually became the USA was sourced from this group."[8] Byrd co-founded the New Music Workshop in Los Angeles with jazz trumpeter Don Ellis, and, after Ellis left, began to incorporate elements of performance art into his events. Moskowitz helped stage Byrd's performances, and performed in some of them.[9] Both Byrd and Moskowitz also contributed to an album of Indian raga music by Gayathri Rajapur and Harihar Rao, recorded in 1965[10] and released by Folkways Records in 1968.[11] On one occasion in 1965, as the concluding part of a series of concerts and events called "Steamed Spring Vegetable Pie" (a title taken at random from The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook), Byrd organized a blues band fronted by his friend Linda Ronstadt, to play during a "happening". Byrd said that "the realization that rock was an access to a larger public came out of that concert, and the idea of forming a band began taking shape."[6]

Byrd became increasingly attracted to radical politics, and became a member of the Communist Party, explaining that it was "the one group that had discipline, an agenda, and was willing to work within the existing institutions to educate and radicalize American society." He left UCLA, but continued to stage performance art events, albeit on a reduced budget. After their personal relationship broke down in 1966, Moskowitz returned to New York, but she and Byrd stayed in contact. In early 1967 Byrd started to form a rock band with another politically radical composer, Michael Agnello, together with Moskowitz, bassist Stuart Brotman (previously of Canned Heat and later of Kaleidoscope), and African drumming expert Craig Woodson who had also been involved in the New Music Workshop. Audition recordings by this version of the band, from September 1967, are included on some later CD reissues.[12] However, Agnello left the project on a point of principle when a commercial recording contract with Columbia Records was being considered, and Brotman also left.[7]

The first public line-up of the band included Byrd, Moskowitz, Woodson, and two contemporary classical musicians with whom Byrd had worked on earlier experimental projects in the New Music Workshop: Gordon Marron (violin) and Rand Forbes (bass). Later, for some of their recordings and performances, they added Marron's friend and writing partner Ed Bogas (keyboards).[6][7] Byrd initially commissioned electrical engineer Tom Oberheim to build him a ring modulator, later replaced by electronic oscillators in a monophonic synthesizer built by aerospace engineer Richard Durrett.[11][13] Among other effects, Marron used an octave divider on his electric violin, and Woodson attached contact microphones to his drum set and hung slinkies from his cymbals for a musique concrète effect.[10][13]

As the group's founder and leader, Byrd stated that his aesthetic aims for the band and album were to form "an avant-garde political/musical rock group with the idea of combining electronic sound (not electronic music) ... musical/political radicalism ... [and] performance art."[11] According to Moskowitz, the choice of the band name "The United States of America" was intentionally provocative: "Using the full name of the country for something so common as a rock group was a way of expressing disdain for governmental policy. It was like hanging the flag upside down."[8] As well as crediting the influence of Dada-inspired band The Red Crayola,[14] Byrd said:

We were very conscious that we were plunging into rock without any real knowledge of, or experience in, the medium. We had played Cage and Stockhausen, African and Indian music, and I thought we could simply bring all that to rock. But we knew almost nothing about the roots of rock and roll. We all improvised, of course, but in a "contemporary music" style. In retrospect, creating a rock band with no rock musicians was a bad decision on my part. Still, since I considered myself the most eclectic composer on the planet, I was confident that whatever the others couldn't do I could write.[6]

The demo recorded by the band secured the interest of Clive Davis at Columbia. Through their friend David Rubinson—who had started working for Columbia as a record producer, for bands and musicians including Moby Grape and Taj Mahal—they gained a recording contract.[7]

Performances and recording edit

The band undertook their first live performances in late 1967, at the Ash Grove in Los Angeles, when Agnello was still performing with the band.[15] Byrd explained:

the two engagements at The Ash Grove helped define us as a combination of experimental rock and performance art. Everything we did on the album we had performed live, via the addition of two tape decks on stage. We traveled with a bunch of gear, including a calliope, a 3' x 4' neon American flag (which had alternately flashing red and white stripes), and a full-size plaster nun. We may have been the first to use fog machines: the low-lying fog and the flashing flag created a striking environment. We tended to use low stage lighting when we could, with only a pin spot for the vocalist. And since we often played from written scores, we used stand lights, which also added a kind of other-worldly lit-from-below effect.[6]

Electronic devices were used live as well as on the album, to process other instruments and Moskowitz's voice as well as providing their own musical textures.[11] The band's performances got mixed receptions. They undertook a short tour of the East Coast, with Richie Havens and The Troggs, with their performances in Boston and Greenwich Village being especially well received.[6][7] Byrd later said of their shows: "Audiences generally were positive, sort of ... it was a new kind of experience, and it wasn't just the music, it was performance art."[6]

They recorded their first and only album in December 1967, produced by Rubinson, with Byrd credited as providing electronic music, electric harpsichord, organ, calliope, piano, and Durrett Electronic Music Synthesizer. Besides Byrd, Moskowitz (lead vocals), Marron (electric violin, ring modulator), Forbes (fretless electric bass), and Woodson (drums and percussion), several of the tracks also credited Bogas. Moskowitz and Byrd collaborated in writing most of the songs, with Byrd responsible for both words and music on three tracks, "The American Metaphysical Circus", "Love Song for the Dead Ché", and "The American Way of Love". Byrd described "The American Metaphysical Circus" and "The American Way of Love" as "comments on the media as a means of thought-control, and the bourgeois sentimentality of the hippies' "Summer of Love" compared with the realities of love under capitalism."[15]

In "Garden of Earthly Delights", Byrd wrote the lyrics for the first verse and chorus; Moskowitz came with the track's title and some of the melody and lyrics. On "Coming Down", Moskowitz contributed to the melody line as well as writing the second and third verses. On "Hard Coming Love", Byrd wrote the title and first verse, and Moskowitz contributed what she referred to as the "lame doggerel that follows".[8] Byrd's song "Love Song for the Dead Ché" reflects his leftist views; Columbia Records originally wanted the title changed because of its political implications.[11] Two tracks, "Where Is Yesterday" and "Stranded in Time", were written by Marron and Bogas. Byrd later described "Stranded in Time", arranged by Marron, as "a weak Beatle-esque copy of 'Eleanor Rigby', [which] could not be performed live because it called for string quartet. It should never have been included [on the album], but Dave Rubinson loved it."[6]

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),[10] Frank Zappa (whom Byrd disliked, considering him a niche-marketer "subsumed in a self-referential loop"),[11] Love's Forever Changes, Country Joe and the Fish, and Jefferson Airplane.

The album is littered with references to Byrd's obsession with old-time American music such as the Dixieland jazz intro on "I Won't Leave My Wooden Wife for You, Sugar". "The American Metaphysical Circus" starts out with five layers of sound being heard in a collage: a calliope playing "National Emblem", a ragtime piano playing "At a Georgia Camp Meeting", two marching bands playing "Marching Through Georgia" and "The Red, White and Blue" switching between left and right channels. The other two tracks are of electronic sounds.[11] The marching bands were arranged and conducted by Byrd, rather than being taken from existing recordings.[14]

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..." (this title being a parody of the 1905 music hall song "I Wouldn't Leave My Little Wooden Hut for You" by Tom Mellor and Charles Collins)) 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" and "Where Is Yesterday") to aggressive discordance and hard rock ("The Garden of Earthly Delights" and "Hard Coming Love"), with heavy electronic distortion and collages of music such as brass bands, in line with 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. According to Lillian Roxon, the three-part suite "dealt most explicitly with the activities of homosexual prostitutes on New York's notorious 42nd Street".[16]

Break-up edit

The band fell apart shortly after their album was released. One factor was disagreement between Byrd, Marron and Bogas over musical direction, with Marron's promotion of lighter "McCartney-esque"[12] material conflicting with Byrd's original vision for the band, and conversely Marron and Bogas becoming unhappy with the priority given to Byrd's songs.[6] Dissent led to a backstage fist fight between Marron and Byrd after the band's performance supporting the Troggs at the Fillmore East, when the English band's fans had heckled the United States of America and Byrd and Marron competed against each other in turning up the volumes on their amplifiers.[7] At another show in Orange County, band members were busted for smoking marijuana during the show, leading to it having to be completed by just Moskowitz and Byrd, who later complained that Marron, Forbes and Woodson were "often sloppy in performance" as a result of their drug use.[6]

There were tensions between Byrd on one side, and Moskowitz and Rubinson on the other. Byrd commented that "as I tried to make our sound harder, Dorothy was trying to go softer, perhaps responding to an unconscious influence of autobiographic women songwriters of the time: Janis Ian, Laura Nyro, and Joni Mitchell."[12] According to Byrd, there was a lack of enthusiasm for the band from the record company, who felt challenged by both the band's music and Byrd's politics.[7] In contrast, Moskowitz has said that the company were "just trying to market us", and "we were the ones who were being sanctimonious ... [and] rigid ...", also claiming that producer Rubinson lost interest in the band after Agnello left.[8] A further factor was other band members' unhappiness with the initial mixing of the album in New York City by Byrd and Rubinson, which, when played back in Los Angeles, according to Byrd, sounded "utterly wimpy and lame. The band blamed me, and they were right. My credibility with my own musicians suffered immeasurably."[12]

Moskowitz has referred to the band's "internal conflicts, fisticuffs and power struggles."[8] Byrd has claimed that "Columbia dumped me from the band";[6] specifically, that Rubinson and the band's manager Malcolm Terrence manoeuvered to remove him, and promote Moskowitz as the band's figurehead and potential solo star.[6][11] Though Moskowitz disputes that claim,[7] she also said that "although I didn't agree with David [Rubinson] aesthetically, I felt loyal to him. He was, after all, the one who had put us on the map."[10] In any event, Byrd announced that he was leaving, and, according to Moskowitz, when he changed his mind, "the manager pleaded with me to accept him back, but I wouldn't. There was never a conspiracy towards a solo career or some 'back story' between Rubinson and myself. It was primarily intransigence and anger about band governance on my part that propelled the final train wreck."[7]

Byrd subsequently commented: "The idea was to create a radical experience. It didn't succeed. For one thing, I had assembled too many personalities; every rehearsal became group therapy. A band that wants to succeed needs a single, mutually acceptable identity. I tried to do it democratically, and it was not successful."[10] Rubinson said: "Joe Byrd was one of the most insane examples of control freak that I've, to this day, ever experienced ... he was really bizarre, and a very, very difficult person to deal with. So there were constant personality conflicts in and among the band. People quitting, people getting replaced, arguments, yelling about intonation, and so forth. They were very talented people, and I don't think they liked being dictated to. But he had a vision of what he wanted."[10]

Marron, Forbes and Bogas left the band after their East Coast tour in spring 1968.[7] After Byrd also left, Rubinson and Moskowitz attempted to keep the band name alive, and Moskowitz recorded several tracks in July 1968 with a new and more conventional band of Los Angeles musicians: Jeff Marinell (guitar), Richard Grayson (keyboard), Carmie Simon (bass), and Dennis Wood (drums). Their recordings surfaced on the 2004 CD reissue of The United States of America.[12] However, plans to continue with the band soon came to nothing.[7]

Reception and legacy edit

The album was described by critic Richie Unterberger as "a near classic",[17] "a tour de force (though not without its flaws) of experimental rock that blended surprisingly melodic sensibilities with unnerving blasts of primitive synthesizers and lyrics that could range from misty romanticism to hard-edged irony. For the relatively few who heard it, the record was a signpost to the future with its collision of rock and classical elements, although the material crackled with a tension that reflected the United States of America itself in the late '60s."[10] Describing Moskowitz's vocals as "reminiscent of an icier Grace Slick", he also said that the electronic textures crafted by Byrd "were not simulations of strings and horns, but exhilarating, frightening swoops and bleeps that lent a fierce crunch to the faster numbers, and a beguiling serenity to the ballads."[10]

According to Unterberger, "the very fact that the equipment was so primitive... lent a spontaneous resonance and warmth that has rarely been achieved by subsequent synthesizer technology."[10] Producer David Rubinson commented:

The ring modulator and the volt-control oscillators and voltage control filters – they didn't come in a set, like they did in a Moog. You had to build each one – which they did – and actually hard-wire them together. It was an eight-track album. So all that synthesized stuff was painstakingly layered in, sound by sound, one oscillator at a time. Now you may get a bank of oscillators and you can run six, eight, twelve of them in a row, and make all kinds of wonderful waves, shapes, and it can be very complicated. But at that time, it was not possible. It had one oscillator, one ring modulator, one voltage control filter – that's it. It looked funny. It was like aluminum boxes, little knobs sticking out, and patch cords. And it was very exciting to me, because it was a marriage of a lot of what was happening in what people called classical music at the time. When people think about what Steve Reich was doing then, and Terry Riley was doing then, and what Joe Byrd was doing then, it was very, very similar in different areas.[10]

According to critic Kevin Holm-Hudson, "what distinguishes the United States of America from some of its contemporaries ... is the seriousness and skill with which they incorporated avant-garde and other influences into their music."[11]

Despite the widespread support of music critics, the album sold poorly and soon disappeared—at least in the US, although in the UK it remained fondly remembered, in part because of one track ("Wooden Wife") being used on a popular budget-price CBS sampler album, The Rock Machine Turns You On. The band was later described as an influence by several British bands, including Portishead and Broadcast. The band's album was first reissued on CD in 1997, and in an expanded edition by Sundazed Records in 2004.

Later activities edit

  • Joseph Byrd (born 1937) went on to record a second album for Columbia, The American Metaphysical Circus, credited to Joe Byrd and the Field Hippies, in 1969. Byrd also released a number of additional recordings under his own name, as well as scoring films, writing music for television and commercials, and working as a music producer. In the 1970s he founded the Yankee Doodle Society, dedicated to the popular music of the mid-19th century, and released several albums of songs of the period. He is married, lives in northern California near the Oregon border, and since 2000 has taught music-related classes at College of the Redwoods.
  • Dorothy Moskowitz (born 1940) later became a member of Country Joe McDonald's All-Star Band, touring and recording with them and appearing on McDonald's 1973 album, Paris Sessions.[18] She also composed theater music, recorded commercials, and sang jazz in clubs.[19] She married in 1978, taking the name Dorothy Falarski, and had two daughters. She began writing music for children in the 1980s and 1990s. In 2003, she became a music teacher for elementary schools in Piedmont, California, introducing students to the basics of brass instruments and vocal techniques.[19] She has developed a number of other music projects in the San Francisco Bay area and lives in a suburb of Oakland, California.
  • Gordon Marron (born 1943) became a Los Angeles studio musician on recordings by David Ackles, Carole King, Alice Coltrane, Helen Reddy and others. He co-wrote the Vic Dana song "The Love in Your Eyes", and worked on film soundtracks with composer Reid Reilich. He later moved to Kauai, Hawaii, where he continues to perform on violin and keyboards.[20]
  • Craig Woodson (born 1943) gained a doctorate from UCLA and recorded with David Ackles, Linda Ronstadt and others before starting a small business making ethnic musical instruments in the 1970s. He also worked as a percussion teacher, lecturer and consultant, as well as presenting educational concerts and touring with the Kronos Quartet. He won several patents for musical instrument technology, and led a three-year project in Ghana producing instruments for use in local schools. He founded Ethnomusic, Inc., a world music education consultancy, in 1976. For two years, he was senior director of education at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He later lived in Ohio.[21][22] In 1998, Woodson arranged a ceremony to apologise for his white ancestors' involvement in the slavery that had oppressed members of Carter G. Woodson's family. Following the reconciliation, both sides of the family developed the Black White Families Reconciliation (BWFR) Protocol, using the creative arts, particularly drumming and storytelling, with the aim of healing racial divides within black and white families who share a surname.[23]
  • Ed Bogas (born 1942) composed soundtracks for Peanuts and Garfield TV cartoon specials and for Ralph Bakshi's film Fritz the Cat.[24]
  • Rand Forbes (January 28, 1947–December 23, 2020) became a software engineer. He worked as an Oracle database administrator, and owned a software development company. He later lived in the Cleveland, Ohio area, close to Craig Woodson. He died in 2020 following a lengthy illness and after contracting COVID-19.[25]

Discography edit

Albums edit

Year Title Peak chart positions
UK[26] US[27]
1968 The United States of America 181

Singles edit

  • "The Garden of Earthly Delights" / "Love Song for the Dead Ché" (CBS 3745, UK, 1968)[28]
  • "Hard Coming Love" / "Osamu's Birthday" (Sundazed, 2004)

References edit

  1. ^ Martin, Bill (1998). Listening to the Future: The Time of Progressive Rock, 1968–1978. Open Court. ISBN 0-8126-9368-X.
  2. ^ a b c d "The United States of America | Biography, Albums, Streaming Links". AllMusic. Retrieved June 15, 2021.
  3. ^ Reynolds, Simon. "King of the Cosmos". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  4. ^ Greene, Doyle (2016). Rock, Counterculture and the Avant-Garde, 1966–1970: How the Beatles, Frank Zappa and the Velvet Underground Defined an Era. McFarland. p. 182. ISBN 978-1-4766-2403-7.
  5. ^ "The Singularity of Sound in a Plurality of Vision: The Early Works of Joseph Byrd" (PDF). New World Records. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Breznikar, Klemen (February 9, 2013). "The United States Of America | Joseph Byrd | Interview". It's Psychedelic Baby! Magazine. from the original on September 16, 2016. Retrieved December 25, 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Budd, Christopher; Moskowitz, Dorothy (2014). "How Much Fun It's Been". Shindig!. Cambridge, England: Volcano Publishing (42): 38–43.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Spozio, Iker (2003). "The United States of America - The Garden of Earthly Delights" (PDF). Ptolemaic Terrascope. Retrieved May 9, 2008.
  9. ^ This information has been indicated in the sources as follows:
    • "Concert Happening" (PDF). Los Angeles Free Press (advertisement). Vol. 3, no. 7. February 18, 1966.
    • Mount, Andre (November 11, 2011). Happenings, Freak Outs, and Radical Reflexivity: Avant-Garde and Countercultural Overlap in 1960s Los Angeles. American Musicological Society Seventy-Seventh Annual Conference. p. 11.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Unterberger, Richie (1998). "The United States of America, excerpt from Unknown Legends of Rock'n'Roll". San Francisco: Miller Frogman Books. pp. 365–370. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Holm-Hudson, Kevin (2002). Progressive Rock Reconsidered. Taylor & Francis. pp. 48–61. ISBN 0-8153-3714-0.
  12. ^ a b c d e The United States of America (CD reissue sleevenotes). Sundazed. 2004.
  13. ^ a b Brend, Mark (2012). The Sound of Tomorrow: How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream. USA: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 139–140. ISBN 9781623561536.
  14. ^ a b Colli, Beppe (26 August 2004). "An Interview with Joseph Byrd". Clouds and Clocks. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  15. ^ a b Doggett, Peter (2008). There's a Riot Going on: Revolutionaries, Rock Stars and the Rise and Fall of '60s Counter-culture. Canongate Books. pp. 143–145. ISBN 9781847671141.
  16. ^ Roxon, Lillian (1972). Lilian Roxon's Rock Encyclopedia (Universal Library ed.). Grosset and Dunlop. p. 502. ISBN 0-448-00255-8.
  17. ^ Unterberger, Richie. "The United States of America: The United States of America". AllMusic.com. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  18. ^ Bill Belmont. "Country Joe McDonald". Countryjoe.com. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  19. ^ a b "Interview Between Dorothy Falarski Tri-school Brass and Vocal Teacher and Vicky O' Bresly HPC President" (PDF). Google.com. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-06-03. Retrieved 2015-06-17.
  21. ^ Craig Woodson biography, Roots of Rhythm 2015-06-18 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 16 June 2015
  22. ^ Craig Woodson biography, Ethnomusic.com. Retrieved 15 June 2015
  23. ^ "Black-White Woodson Reconciliation", Drums of Humanity, October 2, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2021
  24. ^ "Bogas Productions: Who are we?". Ebogas.com. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  25. ^ "Dorothy Moskowitz Falarski". Facebook.com. Retrieved June 15, 2021.
  26. ^ Warwick, 2004. p.320
  27. ^ "The United States of America > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums". AllMusic. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  28. ^ Record Collector Rare Record Price Guide 2010, ISBN 978-0-9532601-9-5

united, states, america, band, confused, with, presidents, united, states, america, band, united, states, america, american, experimental, rock, band, founded, angeles, 1967, composer, joseph, byrd, vocalist, dorothy, moskowitz, with, electric, violinist, gord. Not to be confused with The Presidents of the United States of America band The United States of America was an American experimental rock band founded in Los Angeles in 1967 by composer Joseph Byrd and vocalist Dorothy Moskowitz with electric violinist Gordon Marron bassist Rand Forbes and drummer Craig Woodson Their 1968 self titled album often cited as an early showcase for the use of electronic devices in rock music was met with critical acclaim and minor chart success 2 They disbanded shortly after its release The United States of AmericaBack l r Byrd Moskowitz Marron Front l r Bogas Woodson ForbesBackground informationOriginLos Angeles California U S GenresExperimental rock 1 psychedelia 2 avant garde 2 acid rock 3 proto prog 4 Years active1967 1968LabelsColumbiaPast membersJoseph Byrd Dorothy Moskowitz Michael Agnello Stuart Brotman Craig Woodson Gordon Marron Rand Forbes Ed Bogas Jeff Marinell Richard Grayson Carmie Simon Dennis WoodThe group s sound was grounded in both psychedelia and the avant garde Unusually the band had no guitar player instead they used strings keyboards and electronics including primitive synthesizers and various audio processors including the ring modulator Many of the songs lyrics reflected Byrd s leftist political views AllMusic described them as among the most revolutionary bands of the late 60s 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background and formation 1 2 Performances and recording 1 3 Break up 2 Reception and legacy 3 Later activities 4 Discography 4 1 Albums 4 2 Singles 5 ReferencesHistory editBackground and formation edit Composer Joseph Byrd and lyricist and singer Dorothy Moskowitz first met in New York City in early 1963 when Byrd was working on a recording of Civil War period music for Time Life A devotee of composer Charles Ives Byrd had already become a respected and innovative composer involved in experimental music as part of the Fluxus movement with John Cage Morton Feldman La Monte Young David Tudor Yoko Ono and others 5 6 Moskowitz was studying music at Barnard College where she was taught by Otto Luening she also sang in a vocal group with Art Garfunkel and worked with David Rubinson on a musical theatre production as well as on the Time Life project Byrd and Moskowitz began a relationship he has referred to their profound musical and personal relationship 6 and she has described him as being her aesthetic guru 7 and he helped her obtain a post with Capitol Records when she left she was replaced in turn by Rubinson 6 8 Later in 1963 Byrd and Moskowitz moved together to Los Angeles where Byrd started a doctorate in ethnomusicology at UCLA 7 According to Moskowitz Joe brought with him a New York avant garde cachet a background in electronic music and composing skills He attracted immediate attention Exciting musicians dancers and visual artists sought collaboration with him The talent pool for what eventually became the USA was sourced from this group 8 Byrd co founded the New Music Workshop in Los Angeles with jazz trumpeter Don Ellis and after Ellis left began to incorporate elements of performance art into his events Moskowitz helped stage Byrd s performances and performed in some of them 9 Both Byrd and Moskowitz also contributed to an album of Indian raga music by Gayathri Rajapur and Harihar Rao recorded in 1965 10 and released by Folkways Records in 1968 11 On one occasion in 1965 as the concluding part of a series of concerts and events called Steamed Spring Vegetable Pie a title taken at random from The Alice B Toklas Cookbook Byrd organized a blues band fronted by his friend Linda Ronstadt to play during a happening Byrd said that the realization that rock was an access to a larger public came out of that concert and the idea of forming a band began taking shape 6 Byrd became increasingly attracted to radical politics and became a member of the Communist Party explaining that it was the one group that had discipline an agenda and was willing to work within the existing institutions to educate and radicalize American society He left UCLA but continued to stage performance art events albeit on a reduced budget After their personal relationship broke down in 1966 Moskowitz returned to New York but she and Byrd stayed in contact In early 1967 Byrd started to form a rock band with another politically radical composer Michael Agnello together with Moskowitz bassist Stuart Brotman previously of Canned Heat and later of Kaleidoscope and African drumming expert Craig Woodson who had also been involved in the New Music Workshop Audition recordings by this version of the band from September 1967 are included on some later CD reissues 12 However Agnello left the project on a point of principle when a commercial recording contract with Columbia Records was being considered and Brotman also left 7 The first public line up of the band included Byrd Moskowitz Woodson and two contemporary classical musicians with whom Byrd had worked on earlier experimental projects in the New Music Workshop Gordon Marron violin and Rand Forbes bass Later for some of their recordings and performances they added Marron s friend and writing partner Ed Bogas keyboards 6 7 Byrd initially commissioned electrical engineer Tom Oberheim to build him a ring modulator later replaced by electronic oscillators in a monophonic synthesizer built by aerospace engineer Richard Durrett 11 13 Among other effects Marron used an octave divider on his electric violin and Woodson attached contact microphones to his drum set and hung slinkies from his cymbals for a musique concrete effect 10 13 As the group s founder and leader Byrd stated that his aesthetic aims for the band and album were to form an avant garde political musical rock group with the idea of combining electronic sound not electronic music musical political radicalism and performance art 11 According to Moskowitz the choice of the band name The United States of America was intentionally provocative Using the full name of the country for something so common as a rock group was a way of expressing disdain for governmental policy It was like hanging the flag upside down 8 As well as crediting the influence of Dada inspired band The Red Crayola 14 Byrd said We were very conscious that we were plunging into rock without any real knowledge of or experience in the medium We had played Cage and Stockhausen African and Indian music and I thought we could simply bring all that to rock But we knew almost nothing about the roots of rock and roll We all improvised of course but in a contemporary music style In retrospect creating a rock band with no rock musicians was a bad decision on my part Still since I considered myself the most eclectic composer on the planet I was confident that whatever the others couldn t do I could write 6 The demo recorded by the band secured the interest of Clive Davis at Columbia Through their friend David Rubinson who had started working for Columbia as a record producer for bands and musicians including Moby Grape and Taj Mahal they gained a recording contract 7 Performances and recording edit See also The United States of America album The band undertook their first live performances in late 1967 at the Ash Grove in Los Angeles when Agnello was still performing with the band 15 Byrd explained the two engagements at The Ash Grove helped define us as a combination of experimental rock and performance art Everything we did on the album we had performed live via the addition of two tape decks on stage We traveled with a bunch of gear including a calliope a 3 x 4 neon American flag which had alternately flashing red and white stripes and a full size plaster nun We may have been the first to use fog machines the low lying fog and the flashing flag created a striking environment We tended to use low stage lighting when we could with only a pin spot for the vocalist And since we often played from written scores we used stand lights which also added a kind of other worldly lit from below effect 6 Electronic devices were used live as well as on the album to process other instruments and Moskowitz s voice as well as providing their own musical textures 11 The band s performances got mixed receptions They undertook a short tour of the East Coast with Richie Havens and The Troggs with their performances in Boston and Greenwich Village being especially well received 6 7 Byrd later said of their shows Audiences generally were positive sort of it was a new kind of experience and it wasn t just the music it was performance art 6 They recorded their first and only album in December 1967 produced by Rubinson with Byrd credited as providing electronic music electric harpsichord organ calliope piano and Durrett Electronic Music Synthesizer Besides Byrd Moskowitz lead vocals Marron electric violin ring modulator Forbes fretless electric bass and Woodson drums and percussion several of the tracks also credited Bogas Moskowitz and Byrd collaborated in writing most of the songs with Byrd responsible for both words and music on three tracks The American Metaphysical Circus Love Song for the Dead Che and The American Way of Love Byrd described The American Metaphysical Circus and The American Way of Love as comments on the media as a means of thought control and the bourgeois sentimentality of the hippies Summer of Love compared with the realities of love under capitalism 15 In Garden of Earthly Delights Byrd wrote the lyrics for the first verse and chorus Moskowitz came with the track s title and some of the melody and lyrics On Coming Down Moskowitz contributed to the melody line as well as writing the second and third verses On Hard Coming Love Byrd wrote the title and first verse and Moskowitz contributed what she referred to as the lame doggerel that follows 8 Byrd s song Love Song for the Dead Che reflects his leftist views Columbia Records originally wanted the title changed because of its political implications 11 Two tracks Where Is Yesterday and Stranded in Time were written by Marron and Bogas Byrd later described Stranded in Time arranged by Marron as a weak Beatle esque copy of Eleanor Rigby which could not be performed live because it called for string quartet It should never have been included on the album but Dave Rubinson loved it 6 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 10 Frank Zappa whom Byrd disliked considering him a niche marketer subsumed in a self referential loop 11 Love s Forever Changes Country Joe and the Fish and Jefferson Airplane The album is littered with references to Byrd s obsession with old time American music such as the Dixieland jazz intro on I Won t Leave My Wooden Wife for You Sugar The American Metaphysical Circus starts out with five layers of sound being heard in a collage a calliope playing National Emblem a ragtime piano playing At a Georgia Camp Meeting two marching bands playing Marching Through Georgia and The Red White and Blue switching between left and right channels The other two tracks are of electronic sounds 11 The marching bands were arranged and conducted by Byrd rather than being taken from existing recordings 14 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 this title being a parody of the 1905 music hall song I Wouldn t Leave My Little Wooden Hut for You by Tom Mellor and Charles Collins 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 and Where Is Yesterday to aggressive discordance and hard rock The Garden of Earthly Delights and Hard Coming Love with heavy electronic distortion and collages of music such as brass bands in line with 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 According to Lillian Roxon the three part suite dealt most explicitly with the activities of homosexual prostitutes on New York s notorious 42nd Street 16 Break up edit The band fell apart shortly after their album was released One factor was disagreement between Byrd Marron and Bogas over musical direction with Marron s promotion of lighter McCartney esque 12 material conflicting with Byrd s original vision for the band and conversely Marron and Bogas becoming unhappy with the priority given to Byrd s songs 6 Dissent led to a backstage fist fight between Marron and Byrd after the band s performance supporting the Troggs at the Fillmore East when the English band s fans had heckled the United States of America and Byrd and Marron competed against each other in turning up the volumes on their amplifiers 7 At another show in Orange County band members were busted for smoking marijuana during the show leading to it having to be completed by just Moskowitz and Byrd who later complained that Marron Forbes and Woodson were often sloppy in performance as a result of their drug use 6 There were tensions between Byrd on one side and Moskowitz and Rubinson on the other Byrd commented that as I tried to make our sound harder Dorothy was trying to go softer perhaps responding to an unconscious influence of autobiographic women songwriters of the time Janis Ian Laura Nyro and Joni Mitchell 12 According to Byrd there was a lack of enthusiasm for the band from the record company who felt challenged by both the band s music and Byrd s politics 7 In contrast Moskowitz has said that the company were just trying to market us and we were the ones who were being sanctimonious and rigid also claiming that producer Rubinson lost interest in the band after Agnello left 8 A further factor was other band members unhappiness with the initial mixing of the album in New York City by Byrd and Rubinson which when played back in Los Angeles according to Byrd sounded utterly wimpy and lame The band blamed me and they were right My credibility with my own musicians suffered immeasurably 12 Moskowitz has referred to the band s internal conflicts fisticuffs and power struggles 8 Byrd has claimed that Columbia dumped me from the band 6 specifically that Rubinson and the band s manager Malcolm Terrence manoeuvered to remove him and promote Moskowitz as the band s figurehead and potential solo star 6 11 Though Moskowitz disputes that claim 7 she also said that although I didn t agree with David Rubinson aesthetically I felt loyal to him He was after all the one who had put us on the map 10 In any event Byrd announced that he was leaving and according to Moskowitz when he changed his mind the manager pleaded with me to accept him back but I wouldn t There was never a conspiracy towards a solo career or some back story between Rubinson and myself It was primarily intransigence and anger about band governance on my part that propelled the final train wreck 7 Byrd subsequently commented The idea was to create a radical experience It didn t succeed For one thing I had assembled too many personalities every rehearsal became group therapy A band that wants to succeed needs a single mutually acceptable identity I tried to do it democratically and it was not successful 10 Rubinson said Joe Byrd was one of the most insane examples of control freak that I ve to this day ever experienced he was really bizarre and a very very difficult person to deal with So there were constant personality conflicts in and among the band People quitting people getting replaced arguments yelling about intonation and so forth They were very talented people and I don t think they liked being dictated to But he had a vision of what he wanted 10 Marron Forbes and Bogas left the band after their East Coast tour in spring 1968 7 After Byrd also left Rubinson and Moskowitz attempted to keep the band name alive and Moskowitz recorded several tracks in July 1968 with a new and more conventional band of Los Angeles musicians Jeff Marinell guitar Richard Grayson keyboard Carmie Simon bass and Dennis Wood drums Their recordings surfaced on the 2004 CD reissue of The United States of America 12 However plans to continue with the band soon came to nothing 7 Reception and legacy editThe album was described by critic Richie Unterberger as a near classic 17 a tour de force though not without its flaws of experimental rock that blended surprisingly melodic sensibilities with unnerving blasts of primitive synthesizers and lyrics that could range from misty romanticism to hard edged irony For the relatively few who heard it the record was a signpost to the future with its collision of rock and classical elements although the material crackled with a tension that reflected the United States of America itself in the late 60s 10 Describing Moskowitz s vocals as reminiscent of an icier Grace Slick he also said that the electronic textures crafted by Byrd were not simulations of strings and horns but exhilarating frightening swoops and bleeps that lent a fierce crunch to the faster numbers and a beguiling serenity to the ballads 10 According to Unterberger the very fact that the equipment was so primitive lent a spontaneous resonance and warmth that has rarely been achieved by subsequent synthesizer technology 10 Producer David Rubinson commented The ring modulator and the volt control oscillators and voltage control filters they didn t come in a set like they did in a Moog You had to build each one which they did and actually hard wire them together It was an eight track album So all that synthesized stuff was painstakingly layered in sound by sound one oscillator at a time Now you may get a bank of oscillators and you can run six eight twelve of them in a row and make all kinds of wonderful waves shapes and it can be very complicated But at that time it was not possible It had one oscillator one ring modulator one voltage control filter that s it It looked funny It was like aluminum boxes little knobs sticking out and patch cords And it was very exciting to me because it was a marriage of a lot of what was happening in what people called classical music at the time When people think about what Steve Reich was doing then and Terry Riley was doing then and what Joe Byrd was doing then it was very very similar in different areas 10 According to critic Kevin Holm Hudson what distinguishes the United States of America from some of its contemporaries is the seriousness and skill with which they incorporated avant garde and other influences into their music 11 Despite the widespread support of music critics the album sold poorly and soon disappeared at least in the US although in the UK it remained fondly remembered in part because of one track Wooden Wife being used on a popular budget price CBS sampler album The Rock Machine Turns You On The band was later described as an influence by several British bands including Portishead and Broadcast The band s album was first reissued on CD in 1997 and in an expanded edition by Sundazed Records in 2004 Later activities editJoseph Byrd born 1937 went on to record a second album for Columbia The American Metaphysical Circus credited to Joe Byrd and the Field Hippies in 1969 Byrd also released a number of additional recordings under his own name as well as scoring films writing music for television and commercials and working as a music producer In the 1970s he founded the Yankee Doodle Society dedicated to the popular music of the mid 19th century and released several albums of songs of the period He is married lives in northern California near the Oregon border and since 2000 has taught music related classes at College of the Redwoods Dorothy Moskowitz born 1940 later became a member of Country Joe McDonald s All Star Band touring and recording with them and appearing on McDonald s 1973 album Paris Sessions 18 She also composed theater music recorded commercials and sang jazz in clubs 19 She married in 1978 taking the name Dorothy Falarski and had two daughters She began writing music for children in the 1980s and 1990s In 2003 she became a music teacher for elementary schools in Piedmont California introducing students to the basics of brass instruments and vocal techniques 19 She has developed a number of other music projects in the San Francisco Bay area and lives in a suburb of Oakland California Gordon Marron born 1943 became a Los Angeles studio musician on recordings by David Ackles Carole King Alice Coltrane Helen Reddy and others He co wrote the Vic Dana song The Love in Your Eyes and worked on film soundtracks with composer Reid Reilich He later moved to Kauai Hawaii where he continues to perform on violin and keyboards 20 Craig Woodson born 1943 gained a doctorate from UCLA and recorded with David Ackles Linda Ronstadt and others before starting a small business making ethnic musical instruments in the 1970s He also worked as a percussion teacher lecturer and consultant as well as presenting educational concerts and touring with the Kronos Quartet He won several patents for musical instrument technology and led a three year project in Ghana producing instruments for use in local schools He founded Ethnomusic Inc a world music education consultancy in 1976 For two years he was senior director of education at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame He later lived in Ohio 21 22 In 1998 Woodson arranged a ceremony to apologise for his white ancestors involvement in the slavery that had oppressed members of Carter G Woodson s family Following the reconciliation both sides of the family developed the Black White Families Reconciliation BWFR Protocol using the creative arts particularly drumming and storytelling with the aim of healing racial divides within black and white families who share a surname 23 Ed Bogas born 1942 composed soundtracks for Peanuts and Garfield TV cartoon specials and for Ralph Bakshi s film Fritz the Cat 24 Rand Forbes January 28 1947 December 23 2020 became a software engineer He worked as an Oracle database administrator and owned a software development company He later lived in the Cleveland Ohio area close to Craig Woodson He died in 2020 following a lengthy illness and after contracting COVID 19 25 Discography editAlbums edit Year Title Peak chart positionsUK 26 US 27 1968 The United States of America Released 1968 Label Columbia Formats Compact disc vinyl 181Singles edit The Garden of Earthly Delights Love Song for the Dead Che CBS 3745 UK 1968 28 Hard Coming Love Osamu s Birthday Sundazed 2004 References edit Martin Bill 1998 Listening to the Future The Time of Progressive Rock 1968 1978 Open Court ISBN 0 8126 9368 X a b c d The United States of America Biography Albums Streaming Links AllMusic Retrieved June 15 2021 Reynolds Simon King of the Cosmos The Guardian Retrieved 4 January 2020 Greene Doyle 2016 Rock Counterculture and the Avant Garde 1966 1970 How the Beatles Frank Zappa and the Velvet Underground Defined an Era McFarland p 182 ISBN 978 1 4766 2403 7 The Singularity of Sound in a Plurality of Vision The Early Works of Joseph Byrd PDF New World Records Retrieved 15 June 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Breznikar Klemen February 9 2013 The United States Of America Joseph Byrd Interview It s Psychedelic Baby Magazine Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved December 25 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l Budd Christopher Moskowitz Dorothy 2014 How Much Fun It s Been Shindig Cambridge England Volcano Publishing 42 38 43 a b c d e f Spozio Iker 2003 The United States of America The Garden of Earthly Delights PDF Ptolemaic Terrascope Retrieved May 9 2008 This information has been indicated in the sources as follows Concert Happening PDF Los Angeles Free Press advertisement Vol 3 no 7 February 18 1966 Mount Andre November 11 2011 Happenings Freak Outs and Radical Reflexivity Avant Garde and Countercultural Overlap in 1960s Los Angeles American Musicological Society Seventy Seventh Annual Conference p 11 a b c d e f g h i j Unterberger Richie 1998 The United States of America excerpt from Unknown Legends of Rock n Roll San Francisco Miller Frogman Books pp 365 370 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help a b c d e f g h i Holm Hudson Kevin 2002 Progressive Rock Reconsidered Taylor amp Francis pp 48 61 ISBN 0 8153 3714 0 a b c d e The United States of America CD reissue sleevenotes Sundazed 2004 a b Brend Mark 2012 The Sound of Tomorrow How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream USA Bloomsbury Publishing pp 139 140 ISBN 9781623561536 a b Colli Beppe 26 August 2004 An Interview with Joseph Byrd Clouds and Clocks Retrieved 11 June 2015 a b Doggett Peter 2008 There s a Riot Going on Revolutionaries Rock Stars and the Rise and Fall of 60s Counter culture Canongate Books pp 143 145 ISBN 9781847671141 Roxon Lillian 1972 Lilian Roxon s Rock Encyclopedia Universal Library ed Grosset and Dunlop p 502 ISBN 0 448 00255 8 Unterberger Richie The United States of America The United States of America AllMusic com Retrieved 15 June 2015 Bill Belmont Country Joe McDonald Countryjoe com Retrieved March 23 2015 a b Interview Between Dorothy Falarski Tri school Brass and Vocal Teacher and Vicky O Bresly HPC President PDF Google com Retrieved March 23 2015 Kauai wedding Music Kauai musicians for wedding receptions and parties Gordon Marron Archived from the original on 2015 06 03 Retrieved 2015 06 17 Craig Woodson biography Roots of Rhythm Archived 2015 06 18 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 16 June 2015 Craig Woodson biography Ethnomusic com Retrieved 15 June 2015 Black White Woodson Reconciliation Drums of Humanity October 2 2019 Retrieved August 25 2021 Bogas Productions Who are we Ebogas com Retrieved 15 June 2021 Dorothy Moskowitz Falarski Facebook com Retrieved June 15 2021 Warwick 2004 p 320 The United States of America gt Charts amp Awards gt Billboard Albums AllMusic Retrieved 2008 06 09 Record Collector Rare Record Price Guide 2010 ISBN 978 0 9532601 9 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The United States of America band amp oldid 1189178263, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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