A Horse with No Name - Wikipedia " A Horse with No Name " is a song by American folk rock trio America Written by Dewey Bunnell, it was released on the Warner Bros label in late 1971 in Europe and early 1972 in the United States
America – A Horse With No Name Lyrics - Genius Written by Dewey Bunnell, this song was the band America’s first and most successful single, released in 1972 Originally titled “Desert Song,” then changed to the catchier current name
America’s A Horse With No Name: the story behind the song | Louder The trio decided to call themselves America, and got a deal with Warner Brothers after a gig at London’s Roundhouse and some radio exposure from Bob Harris Enlisting hot session men Joe Osbourne and Hal Blaine on bass and drums, they recorded their debut album at London’s Trident Studios
America - A Horse with No Name Lyrics - Lyrics On Demand A Horse with No Name Lyrics by America On the first part of the journey I was looking at all the life There were plants and birds and rocks and things There was sand and hills and rings
America – A Horse With No Name Lyrics Meaning What Does “A Horse With No Name” by America Mean? A Horse With No Name tells the story of a solitary desert journey that becomes a meditation on escape, solitude, and environmental transformation
A Horse With No Name by America - Songfacts "A Horse With No Name" broke more than the rules of English--it broke America as a major recording act in Britain, the U S , and Europe After reaching #3 in the U K , it was released in the States, where it topped the Pop chart for three weeks in March April 1972
A Horse With No Name by America: The making of the folk-rock classic America's 'A Horse With No Name' is as instantly recognisable as it is evocative – but how much do you know about the folk-rock masterpiece? Did you know that the frontman of America was actually born in Yorkshire? Or how experimental artists Salvador Dalí and MC Escher inspired the song?
The Curious Meaning of America’s ‘A Horse with No Name’ To go from America’s ‘A Horse with No Name’ to the early twentieth-century British poet Charlotte Mew may seem like a surprising shift in direction, but a poem by Mew, titled ‘ Fame ’, chimes well with the main theme of America’s signature hit