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  1. Link for extra album tracks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HG3OdsLoTKYThe record company put ads on this video! Please use adblock!0:00 - The American Meta...

  2. Experience the breathtaking beauty of Elberon, New Jersey's beachfront as the sun casts its golden glow on the iconic mansions lining the shore. Join us on t...

    • 19 min
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    • Jersey Shore Memories
  3. One band who never really made it big (but have constantly maintained a cult following) are The United States Of America. This, their eponymous debut album, still manages to sound relevant over 40 years after release. Things start off oddly. What sounds like a music box pipes up, then a honky tonk piano, then a full military band. All at once.

  4. The United States of America was reissued on compact disc by Columbia in 1992 with two bonus tracks. In 1997, the album was reissued in the United Kingdom by Edsel Records . [ 27 ] On June 29, 2004, Sundazed Records reissued the album on vinyl and CD with a new album cover differing from the cover used for the original UK and Europe releases, and with the CD version containing 10 bonus tracks.

  5. The United States of America is the only studio album by American rock band the United States of America. Produced by David Rubinson, it was released in 1968 by Columbia Records. The album combined rock and psychedelia with then-uncommon electronic instrumentation and experimental composition, along with an approach reflecting an anti-establishment, leftist political stance. The United States ...

  6. 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.

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  8. Jul 13, 2017 · At the turn of the 20th century, one of the most high-profile summer destinations for wealthy New Yorkers—one which has a lasting fame today—was Newport, on the coast of Rhode Island. But just a generation before, in the 1870s, there was another location central to conversations about where to go when temperatures rose: Elberon, New Jersey.

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