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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Holy Grail Of Psychedelia
Turn out the lights, turn up the volume and relax. You're in for one hell of a ride. Your mind will be taken to places it's never been before. Places that are dark, mysterious, terrifying and beautiful. Welcome to The United States Of America.

This album is, no questions asked, the single greatest psychedelic album ever created, straight from the warped minds of...

Published on May 7, 2004 by Josh H.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Psychedelic Nation
-Contrasting chaotic and calming sounds- Despite a few weak songs, this group's one and only album is a worthy relic of the 1960s. The United States Of America features ten tracks of synthesized madness and the crystalline voice of Dorothy Moskowitz. If you have any interest in psychedelic music then listening to this album is a must.
Published on February 15, 2000 by Julie Bates


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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Holy Grail Of Psychedelia, May 7, 2004
By 
Josh H. (Toledo, Oh (USA)) - See all my reviews
Turn out the lights, turn up the volume and relax. You're in for one hell of a ride. Your mind will be taken to places it's never been before. Places that are dark, mysterious, terrifying and beautiful. Welcome to The United States Of America.

This album is, no questions asked, the single greatest psychedelic album ever created, straight from the warped minds of five visionary intellectuals. And I do mean 'visionary'. This album was so creative and ahead of it's time, which is probably why it didn't catch on. It was the first rock album to prominently feature synth as a lead instrument. On some spots, the electronic effects are so mind-blowing they practically make you dizzy. We can thank Joseph Byrd for this. And we can thank Dorothy Moskowitz for the most lovely, ethereal, haunting vocals ever captured on a rock album. Gordon Marron provides us with brain-rattling electric violin, and the rhythm section of Rand Forbes and Craig Woodson is awesome. It's a shame that some musicians never get the respect they deserve. You don't need drugs to enjoy it. This album IS the drug. Just listening to it makes you high.

THE AMERICAN METAPHYSICAL CIRCUS: Psychedelia at it's absolute best. Begins with actual circus music and makes you feel like you're listening to a Broadway show or something. That is, until it changes tempo and turns into a dark, twisted psychedelic song with absolutely chilling vocals from Dorothy, who also distorts her voice with the ring modulator to an incredible effect. Also a very melodic bass line and eerie swirls of electronic sounds. It's like something right out of a nightmare. If I were hard pressed to sum up the essence of psychedelia in one song - this would be it.

HARD COMING LOVE: This song intoxicates you right off the bat with a blistering, ear-piercing psychotic blast of electric violin. It screeches and screams so excellently that I really can't even describe it. Note the way that Marron makes his violin sound exactly like a guitar. Classic. But after the intro, it slows down and Dorothy enters with some very seductive vocals. This song features the most mind-blowing use of electronic effects on the whole album, particularly right before the final verse.

CLOUD SONG: Bliss. Divinity. Joy. Comfort. Peace of mind. This is the most beautiful ballad ever written. Marron's lovely violin notes, the gentle piano and, above all, Dorothy's Heavenly vocals. God, it's amazing. She sings like an angel, and I swear it can lull you right to sleep. If you ever want to experience Heaven on earth, just listen to this song in the dark.

THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS: Back to a**-kicking psychedelic rocking! This one is incredible. The title, of course, is taken from the famous painting by Hieronymous Bosch (which was also used on the cover of Deep Purple's self-titled third album). This is a genuinely far-out song. Excellent bass playing and more hypnotizing vocals from Dorothy. The verses build up to breath-taking choruses. Amazing lyrics too.

I WON'T LEAVE MY WOODEN WIFE FOR YOU, SUGAR: What a title! These guys show us that they had a sense of humor too. Basically a satire on the concept of sex and adultery. Ever heard a country song with tripped-out sound effects? Look no further.

WHERE IS YESTERDAY: Another defining moment in psychedelia. Now this one can really put you in a trance. The Latin chanting at the beginning may throw you off, but keep listening. This song is so dreary and somber that it practically sounds like a funeral lament. And check out the way Dorothy sings one step behind Byrd, which results in a fascinating effect.

COMING DOWN: Another stunning violin intro, this time done like a hoe-down. Awesome psychedelic rocker, and the title is pretty self-explanatory.

LOVE SONG FOR THE DEAD CHE: Written for Che Guevera, the Cuban freedom fighter. Doroth gives another celestial vocal performance here. And more beautiful violin work and fantastic lyrics.

STRANDED IN TIME: Perhaps the most unusual number on this album, which says a lot. It incorporates a large amount of classical, as shown by the violin parts. But the middle part absolutely ROCKS. It goes from classical avant-garde weirdness to all-out rocking fury in just a matter of seconds.

THE AMERICAN WAY OF LOVE: A multi-part suite of acid-drenched delights, this is the perfect album closer. The first part is a cool, grooving rocker with tricky time changes and oddball lyrics. The second part is a hilarious parody of 'rag time' music, I guess. But the final part is the real treat - the greatest simulation of an acid trip ever caught on record. Little excerpts of all the previous songs keep popping up, amongst numerous crazy sounds. This is really something that you must experience for yourself - I can't explain it. But it's incredible. And enormously creative. Pink Floyd - eat your heart out.

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Close Encounter of the Synth Kind, February 24, 2004
By A Customer
It was a warm summer night in Rustic Canyon Park, Santa Monica, CA. around 1969. I was 15 years old and had just started smoking grass. I had just lit up in a secluded area of the park near a fence that bordered someone's back yard.

I took a drag and heard this sound like a flying saucer landing right behind me! It scared me silly! Was I going nuts? Was the grass that strong?

I peeped through the fence and saw a wall of flashing red lights like the mothership in "Close Encounters of the 3rd Kind" ! (But this was many years before that movie was filmed.) Omigod! I thought the Martians had landed!

Then I heard a voice! "Smells good can I have a toke?"
Turns out the voice (and the house) belonged to Joseph Byrd! And the flashing red lights and space noises were coming from his wall of synthesizers! (This was back in the day when synths were huge sci-fi devices with patch cords running everywhere.)

Joseph Byrd was so nice, he invited me over and let me play with them! Thus began a wonderful friendship with a generous and great man. He taught me much about music and encouraged me to start my first band.

Joe Byrd was a master of electronic music, but he also loved old instruments like this pedal harmonium that he ended up making a gift to me.

"United States of America" and "Joe Byrd and the Field Hippies" are two great lps, decades ahead of their time. If you can find them, get them both.

Last I heard Joe Byrd was giving "rehabilitation therapy" accordion concerts to old folks homes in Northern California.
Sure would be nice to have a U.S. of A. reunion someday soon!

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars space 'n' time, March 28, 2000
By 
Mr. Joe Haverty (Mount Holly, NC, USA) - See all my reviews
My introduction to this album was through television. Back when the album was released in '68, I just happened to tune to a syndicated late night talk show - The Les Crane Show - and there was Joseph Byrd, Lalo Schifrin and Frank Zappa discussing their respective musical directions...Without hearing a note from the album, I bought it the next day based on the Byrd interview. It blends spacey avant-garde music with intelligently funny and savvy lyrics plus great vocals by Dorothy Moskowitz. It was advanced for its time then and still holds up well today. Those of you that bought a first pressing will remember it came in a brown paper bag with The United States of America stamped across the front. If you are a fan of the psychedelic movement, you will want this record.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Easily Redefines "Alternative", May 10, 2001
By 
dev1 (Baltimore) - See all my reviews
After searching for some thirty-three years (God, am I that old !), I finally found it: the most bewitching freaked-out psychedelic album of the sixties. The United States of America. And the United States of America's view of the United States is quite perverted. Not as perverted as the Vietnam War or the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, but still on par with that of the Velvet Underground. "The American Metaphysical Circus" is a carnival of unsavory sadomasochist delights, and "I Won't Leave My Wooden Wife For You, Sugar" could easily be mistaken for a good-time jug band tune if it wasn't for the masochist references. Add the list of perversions described in "The American Way of Love," and no one could possibly mistake the United States of America for, say, the Jefferson Airplane.

Most interesting about the album is the eclectic mix of heavy-handed guitar freak-outs (The Garden of Earthly Delights, Coming Down) with compositions featuring Dorothy Moskowitz's unearthly voice floating on a soft and gentle cloud of azure (Cloud Song, Love Song For the Dead Che).

Each of the ten selections experiments with electric instruments (including the harpsichord and violin) and the newly discovered ring modulator. "Hard Coming Love" opens like a Nancy Sinatra go-go dance number, them breaks into Dorothy belting a seductive torch song. And "Where Is Yesterday" is as heavenly as anything sung by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

For about the past decade (Cool, I'm old enough to talk in "decades"), much "alternative" music has been terribly benign. The United States of America's CD release could easily redefine "alternative."

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A true electronic nugget from the first psychedelic era, June 9, 1998
An utterly unique electronic album from the first psychedelic era. For me, this album creates a tremendous mood of the past (the 60's) and the future (from the heavy electronic instrumentation). Of my over 1000 albums and CDs, this is surely one of my top 10...one of my "desert island discs." If you have never heard this (pretty likely), it's hard to explain. Beautiful female vocals with some hard rocking tunes, and soft tone poems. The instrumentation is occasionally jarring, along the line of a cross between early Velvet Underground and latter King Crimson. I believe it was conceived in '67 and distributed in '68. It is one of the grandfathers of the electronic scene that eventually was such a big part of the late 60's and 70's. As I said, this one is unique. The closest comparison I've ever come across is a San Francisco group called 50-Foot Hose (their Cauldron album). I would kill for another album by USA, but they made only one. Their leader, Joe Byrd, resurfaced a few years later with another album (Joseph Byrd and the Field Hippies), but it wasn't as densely satisfying. Should you get this? It's tough to say. If your idea of psychedelic is pretty tame (is there a Muzak version of your favorite tunes?), then you'd best stay away. But if you can appreciate different sounds, and keep an open mind, you'll be rewarded with a phenomenal CD that you will treasure. Good luck. I hope you like it as much as I do!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Transformational Music, April 30, 2002
There are rare recordings in the lives of many music fans that serve as transformation points, moments when the music changes or informs us in ways that let us know that things will never--can never--be the same again. For me as a teen in the '60s, there comes to mind Hendrix's Purple Haze, the Door's Strange Days, Zappa's Freak Out, and not least of these, USA's debut album.

USA's mysterious little gem served me as essential, defining music for a somewhat-hazy but life-altering couple of years in Berkeley/Oakland, CA, in 1968-69. I will never forget quietly listening to the Cloud Song, in a ramshackle walk-up on Telegraph in Oakland, in early morning after a long, long night of, well, interesting thoughts.

That was long ago and I have moved on to other thoughts and other musics. But I never got this album out of my head and, finding it released on CD, astonishingly, purchase it now. To the artists, you were part of an era I can't say I miss but reflect on fondly. Dorothy, your youthful artistry and ring modulated voice were then and are today, like, music to my ears. Thanks and best wishes.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wowie zowie!, February 20, 2001
I am so jazzed that this album is available on CD. I was given a copy of the original LP (brown paper bag dust jacket and all) back in the late '60's when I was in high school, and I still have it packed away with my old LP's. This is one I'd never give away even if there were no turntables left on earth to play it on.

Now, I can finally hear it again, even though the songs are so familiar after the thousands of times I listened to them, all I needed to see were the song titles in the previous reviews, and I could hear those songs playing in my head.

More than just psychedelic nostalgia, this is a great album.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is one that will blow you away.., November 11, 2000
By 
I bought this album new at the record department of a Woolworth's store in Philadelphia for the then princely sum of $2.98. It came in an unusual brown paper envelope with the band's logo on it. Very strange for 1967. I was 14 and deeply into the then-new electronic-psychedelic sounds. My friends thought I was nuts - until they heard it. They were amazed - none of us had ever heard anything like this album. Now - some 33 years later - the world is finally catching up. I still have my old scratched album, but I now listen to the CD, and it STILL never fails to blow anyone who listens away. Just a great and unique album by an incredibly talented group. One of the great tragedies of 60's music is that the band only did this one album. By the way--it is great to read the note from Dorothy Moskowitz above. She had a tremendous voice that fit the band perfectly - I always compared her to Grace Slick - and I also thought she was gorgeous! This is one CD you MUST add to your collection!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Some Really Amazing Tunes Here!, March 16, 2005
By 
S. Henkels (Devon, Pa United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
Yes, we all know many of the big name late 60's West Coast Rock bands, many which rarely got much above mediocrity. This group, hardly known then and less so today, recorded some of the finest, most interesting, and original songs right here on this, their only (I think) album!.What we have here is a mixture of really original melodies, poetic lyrics, fine arrangements. and singing/ harmonies that still hold up well! Listen to the quasi-spiritual WHERE IS YESTERDAY, and you'll know exactly what I mean!.Same with CLOUD SONG, EARTHLY DELIGHTS, and most of the others, including a circus like/vaudevillian number as well! Even with 2 or 3 duds, the rest is as good anything from that era, including the similar sounding Jeff Airplane, and the 1960's summit, the Beatles!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars USofA /The brilliance of Joseph Byrd & Dorothy Moskowitz, April 23, 2002
This review is from: United States of America (Audio CD)
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA`s self titled album is most certainly at the pinnacle of `60s psychedelia. *Much* better than say, Sgt. Pepper, & every bit as good as "Magical Mystery Tour". I first heard it at a friend`s house in `68 or `69, & was instantly stunned. Everything wonderful that`s already been stated here by others is completely *true*!!! If you enjoy psych music & haven`t heard this album, there is a hole in your your life.........(and collection!)It fits nicely beside others of it`s kind... The Silver Apples, Fifty Foot Hose, & Spoils of War (all of which were superlative, ground-breaking American psych/electronic groups from the `60s).

It always amazes me that people descibe the great fuzzed
guitar on this recording,... when there is none, NO guitar at all! I guess that they think is guitar is actually Gordon Marron`s incredible violin w/ effects.

It`s nice to see that vocalist Dorothy Moskowitz has left a post... (Now if only leader Joseph Byrd would do the same)... He has, however, left some revealing info at salon.com
GET THIS ALBUM!!! QUICKLY!!! It couldn`t be more essential!

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