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A Horse With No Name




  Cover America albumjpg
  Artist America
  From Album America
  B-side "Sandman"
  Released 1972
  Format Vinyl Record
  Recorded 1971
  Genre Soft Rock
  Length 4:08
  Label Warner Brothers
  Writer Dewey Bunnell
  Producer Ian Samwell
  Chart Position <ul><li>1 ( USA )</li></ul> <ul><li>3 ( UK )</li></ul>
  "" class="copylinks" target="_blank">Reviews =
  Last Single <br>&mdash
  This Single "A Horse with No Name" <br />(1972)
  Next Single "I Need You" <br />(1972)


"A Horse with No Name" is a song by the band America and their first single.


DEVELOPMENT

America's self-titled debut album was initially released in Europe with only moderate success and without the song "A Horse with No Name." Looking for a song that would be popular in both the United States and Europe, producer Ian Samwell helped the group to record the song and persuaded the Warner Brothers label to re-release the album with "Horse ..." included.

Originally entitled "Desert Song," the song was renamed at Samwell's suggestion. It was written on a rainy day in England and was intended to capture the feel of the hot, dry desert Bunnell remembered from his childhood at Vandenberg Air Force Base .1


COMPOSITION

"A Horse with No Name" is played in the key of E minor with an acoustic guitar, bass guitar, and bongo drums. The only other chord is a
D with added 6th and 9th notes. The 9th is usually the open top E string, the 6th the low E fretted on the second fret. This makes it a popular song for those who prefer 2 chord songs.


RECEPTION

Despite — or perhaps because of — its being banned in some locales including Kansas City because of supposed drug references2
("horse" is a common slang term for Heroin ), the song rose to number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and the album quickly went Platinum .

The most common criticism of the song, even addressed in the liner notes of America's box set, was its similarity to Neil Young in sound and style.3 In fact, "Horse" unseated Young's " Heart Of Gold " from the number one spot. In the liner notes, Bunnell says, "I know that virtually everyone, on first hearing, assumed it was Neil. I never fully shied away from the fact that I was inspired by him. I think it's in the structure of the song as much as in the tone of my voice. It did hurt a little, because we got some pretty bad backlash." To this day it remains a common misconception that "Horse" is a Neil Young song, but its success opened the door for other hits from the album, including "I Need You," "Sandman," and "Riverside."

This song has also been ridiculed for the banal lyric, "The heat was hot", and another lyric "And there were birds, and trees, and rocks, and things.". Randy Newman once described it as a song "about a kid who thinks he's taken acid". The late comedian Richard Jeni mocked the song's title. "You're in the desert," he said. "You got nothing else to do. ''Name the freakin' horse!''"

The song has been covered by Larrikin Love with somewhat Celtic -sounding instrumentation and style for Q Magazine in 2006.

  Before " Heart Of Gold " by Neil Young
  Title Billboard Hot 100 Number-one Single
  Years March 25 1972
  After " The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face " by Roberta Flack



REFERENCES