Latest Release
- 20 APR 2024
- 20 Songs
- America · 1971
- Hearts · 1975
- View from the Ground · 1982
- The Best of America · 1996
- Holiday · 1974
- Homecoming · 1972
- Homecoming · 1972
- Holiday · 1974
- America · 1971
- America · 1971
Essential Albums
- Electric guitars and a Wrecking Crew rhythm section help make this young trio's second album a tighter, brighter slice of folk-rock greatness. "Ventura Highway", "California Revisited" and "Saturn Nights" capture the wide-eyed magic of America's relocation to Southern California in 1972. While backward vocals and guitars lend acid-rock cred to "Moon Song" and "Only in Your Heart", John Martyn's "Head and Heart" was a smart borrow from England's best contemporary folk artist.
- Two of these three Air Force brats abroad were still teenagers when they recorded this 1971 folk-rock classic. Close vocal harmonies, intimate production and inspired melodies characterise the cinematic "A Horse with No Name" and catchingly corny "I Need You”. There's room for snazzy guitar soloing amid the existential questioning of "Here", while Dan Peek's "Donkey Jaw" foreshadows both his future Christian-rock career and America's more electric work to come.
- 2019
- 2011
Music Videos
Artist Playlists
- 70s pop craftsmen so tuneful they bagged The Beatles' producer.
Singles & EPs
Live Albums
Appears On
About America
A huge hitmaking force in the ’70s, America filtered folk-rock harmonies and country-rock twang through some major pop songwriting smarts to create a long string of enduring Top 40 tunes. Ironically, the band who came to define a subset of American pop began here in the UK. Dewey Bunnell, Gerry Beckley and Dan Peek were Air Force kids who met and started a band together in London in 1970. After scoring big with their 1972 debut single, “A Horse With No Name”, the three moved to L.A. and continued their takeover of the American charts with a classic run of hits including “Ventura Highway”, “Tin Man” and “Sister Golden Hair”, embodying the breezy West Coast pop sound of the era. Beatles producer George Martin even helped them conjure their pop magic for a couple of albums. Things cooled down in the decade’s second half, but America (minus Peek) had a resurgence with 1982’s “You Can Do Magic”.
- FROM
- London, England
- FORMED
- 1970
- GENRE
- Rock