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Showing posts with label UNITED STATES OF AMERICA - "The United States Of America: The Columbia Recordings" (June 2014 Esoteric Recordings CD Reissue – Ben Wiseman Remasters). Show all posts
Showing posts with label UNITED STATES OF AMERICA - "The United States Of America: The Columbia Recordings" (June 2014 Esoteric Recordings CD Reissue – Ben Wiseman Remasters). Show all posts

Thursday, 21 November 2019

"The United States Of America" by THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA – Debut Album from 1968 in Stereo (June 2014 Esoteric Recordings 'The Columbia Recordings' CD Reissue – Ben Wiseman Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry....



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"...The Price Of Admission Is Your Mind..."

Non-Traditional, Psychedelic Adventure, Inspired Hippy Idealism, Fay Nonsense – I happen to think The United States Of America's lone album released in the American spring of 1968 is all of these things – and more. Very much of its experimental time – in fact you doubt such an album could even get a mainstream label like Columbia Records to go anywhere near it with a multicultural bargepole nowadays.

And yet Mad Dogs and Englishmen working in Esoteric Recordings of the UK (part of Cherry Red) have bravely stepped up to the mushroomed gates of right-on college campus types and produced a worthy reminder of its string-laden melodies and political beauty. There is a lot to love on this unique and adventurous record that still stands up – a lot. Here are the metaphysical details (baby)...

UK released June 2014 – "The United States Of America: The Columbia Recordings" by THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA is an Expanded 20-Track CD Reissue on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 2449 (Barcode 5013929454941) and breaks down as follows (66:58 minutes):

1. The American Metaphysical Circus
2. Hard Coming Love
3. Cloud Song
4. The Garden Of Earthly Delights
5. I Won't Leave My Wooden Wife For You, Sugar
6. Where Is Yesterday [Side 2]
7. Coming Down
8. Love Song For The Dead Che
9. Stranded In Time
10. The American Way Of Love
[Part I] Metaphor For An Older Man
[Part II] California Good Time Music
[Part III] Love Is All
Tracks 1 to 10 are their debut "The United States Of America" - released March 1968 in the USA on Columbia CL 2814 (mono) and CS 9614 (Stereo) and July 1968 in the UK on CBS Records 63340 (Mono) and S 63340 (Stereo). The Stereo mix is used and DAVID RUBISON Produced. The USOA disbanded in July 1968 and never made another record.

BONUS TRACKS:
11. Osamu's Birthday (Recorded 15 Dec 1967)
12. No Love To Give (Recorded 13 Dec 1967)
13. I Won't Leave My Wooden Wife For You, Sugar (First Version, Recorded 11 Dec 1967)
14. You Can Never Come Down (Recorded 9 May 1968)
15. Perry Pier
16. Tailor Man
17. Do You Follow Me (Tracks 15 to 17 recorded 30 July 1968)
18. The American Metaphysical Circus (Alternate Version)
19. Mouse (The Garden Of Earthly Delights)
20. Heresy (Coming Down) (Tracks 19 and 20 recorded 1 Sep 1967)
NOTES: Tracks 11 and 12 first appeared on the 1992 Sony CD Remaster while Tracks 13 to 20 first appeared on the Sundazed Reissue/Remaster in 2004. This CD effectively apes the Sundazed 20-track Reissue.

ALBUM LINE-UP:
DOROTHY MOSKOWITZ - Lead Vocals on Tracks 1 to 4, 7 and 8 - shared with Joseph Byrd on Tracks 5 and 10 and shared with Gordon Marron (Lead) and Joseph Byrd on Track 6
JOSEPH BYRD - Electronic Music, Electric Harpsichord, Organ, Calliope, Piano, Lead Vocals on Tracks 5 and 10 (shared with Dorothy Moskowitz) and Shared Lead Vocals on Track 6 with Gordon Marron and Dorothy Moskowitz
GORDON MARRON - Electric Violin, Ring Modulator
ED BOGUS – Occasional Organ, Piano and Calliope
RAND FORBES – Electric Bass
CRAIG WOODSON – Electric Drums, Percussion

BONUS TRACKS LINE-UP:
DOROTHY MOSKOWITZ – Lead Vocals
JEFF MARSHALL – Lead Guitar
RICHARD GRAYSON – Keyboards
CARMIE SIMON – Bass
DENNIS WOOD – Drums
Above line-up for "Perry Pier", "Tailor Man" and "Do You Follow Me"

DOROTHY MOSKOWITZ – Lead Vocals
JOSEPH BYRD - Electronic Music, Electric Harpsichord, Organ, Calliope, Piano
MIKE AGNELLO – Organ
STU BROTMAN – Bass
CRAIG WOODSON – Electric Drums and Percussion
Above line-up for "The American Metaphysical Circus (Alternate Version)", "Mouse (The Garden Of Earthly Delights)" and "Heresy (Coming Down)"

Co-ordinated by Esoteric head-honchos Mark and Vicky Powell - the compilation and 16-page booklet is very tastefully put together. There are in-studio photos of the group amidst their array of keyboards including the DURRETT Electronic Music Synthesiser and Ring Modulator – an incisive and affectionate look at the album, band and their internal hassles by noted writer SID SMITH – as well as lyrics and period photos of Joseph Byrd at a UCLA rally in April 1967, Dorothy Moskowitz performing with Jazz pianist Dick Fregulia, the rare British 7" Single Demo for "The Garden Of Earthly Delights" and even a colour publicity shot of the original six in happier times. Licensed from Sony – long-standing Audio Engineer BEN WISEMAN carried out the 24-bit Digital Remasters and they sound fabulous – full of swirling keyboard soundscapes and those Beatlesque String passages.

The albums opens with a mash-up of different types of music that builds into a cacophony - until in a very Jefferson Airplane like way – Dorothy Moskowitz's lead vocal fades in and a dreamy keyboard/lyric soundscape takes over. It's so Sixties. The lyrics are yummy - "...At precisely eight o-five Doctor Frederick Von Meier will attempt his famous dive through a solid sheet of luminescent fire..." It gets even harder-hitting with the grungy guitars of "Hard Coming Love" where you're reminded of Blue Cheer and "Electric Music For The Mind And Body" by Country Joe & The Fish (see separate review). We then go full on flower-power hippy with "Cloud Song" which were reliably informed was inspired by Pooh (amongst other things in his fertile garden). Although Columbia oddly never even tried a 45 in the USA – CBS Records UK gave "The Garden Of Earthly Delights" a 7" single chance in July 1968 on CBS 3745 with "Love Song For The Dead Che" as its flipside. Both tracks are superb and although it's a listed rarity at a relatively paltry £20 – I’ve seen it go for three times that amount should it ever turn up for sale.

Many will affectionately remember the witty and acidic infidelity song "I Won't Leave My Wooden Wife For You, Sugar" because it turned up on the CBS Records LP Sampler "The Rock Machine Turns You On" in 1968. It's also the first track on the LP where Joseph Byrd takes over on Lead Vocals from Dorothy Moskowitz. Side 1 ends on one of the albums undoubted masterpieces – the almost monastic churchy vocals of "Where Is Yesterday". The layers hit you immediately as the three vocalists harmonize against eerie strings and keyboard flourishes (Gordon Marron on Lead). It's trippy-psychedelic and utterly brilliant in its clever vocal arrangements. Side 2 opens with another potential single "Coming Down" with Dorothy once again giving it some Julie Driscoll vocals while the drums and guitars remind you of a great Jefferson Airplane single. Despite its slightly suspect title "Love Song For The Dead Che" isn't aggressive at all nor preachy but incredibly tender – a third party observation where a lover aches for her man in the morning - but knows that his embrace will never be there again. We go "Sgt. Peppers" string quartet on the whimsical "Stranded In Time" – a very Zombies vocal by Gordon Marron running alongside great keyboard passages from Byrd. It ends on the seven-minutes of "The American Way Of Love" – a three-part ambitious chunk of Psychedelic ruminations on "...the secret sins of nymphomaniacs unveiled..." Lovely stuff...

The 10 bonus tracks (as you can imagine) are a mixed bunch - but they open strongly with "Osamu's Birthday" which sounds like some Japanese curio – like weird incidental music from John Barry's "You Only Live Twice" left off the 007 soundtrack because it was too Captain Beefheart for the masses – it’s striking and cool at the same time. Wilder by far is "No Love To Give" which is closer to "Hard Coming Love" than anything else (the audio is amazing). It's a genuine shock after all these years to hear Dorothy Moskowitz sing on the 'First Version' of "I Won't Leave My Wooden Wife For You, Sugar" – she's great - but you can so hear why they went for Joseph Byrd's sneering male vocal instead. "You Can Never Come Down" sounds like demo Jefferson Airplane – good but not quite convincing enough to make the album. For me the best on here is strange keyboard/jungle drums of "Mouse" – an early version of "The Garden Of Earthly Delights". The band is clearly working out how to arrange the tune – but it stills great even in this early incarnation. "Heresy" is another Psych gem alternate – a great take of Side 1's "Coming Down"...

So there you have it. "The United States Of America: The Columbia Recordings" is a superb reissue (with a nod to Sundazed for doing the groundwork) and one that deserves your ear in all its glorious and hopeful visions...

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