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Buy, buy miss American pie: Singer reveals meaning behind iconic hit
Express (UK) ^ | 10:39, Sat, Apr 4, 2015 | CLIVE DAVIS

Posted on 04/06/2015 4:37:53 PM PDT by 9thLife

A long, long time ago - to borrow the words of the song - Don McLean sat down to write the first lines of an epic. First released in 1971, American Pie is a classic that an entire generation memorised line by line, verse by verse.

Fans around the world have argued over the true meaning of one of the most enigmatic songs in pop history. Faced with all the speculation, McLean's own response is defiantly down-to-earth: when people ask him what it means, he likes to reply, "It means I never have to work again."

American Pie, famously covered by Madonna in 2000, remains a highlight of McLean's shows and his admirers will have a chance to hear it again when he starts a new UK tour next month. This Tuesday, meanwhile, sees a new chapter in the song's history when the original manuscript goes up for auction at Christie's in New York. Experts believe it could fetch as much as £1million.

Already a wealthy man thanks to the royalties, McLean seems matterof-fact about the prospect of his most famous work going under the hammer. In his own mind, at least, it has already passed out of his own hands to become public property.

Hidden away in a box in his home, the lyrics had lain almost forgotten for years. The soft-spoken singer finally decided to put them up for sale after he was contacted about the possibility of selling other memorabilia. After decades of touring and recording, it was time to take stock.

As he explains: "It occurred to me that there was some interest in the scratch work for a lot of the songs I had written. You know, I am going to be 70-years old this year, and my wife and children do not seem to have the knack of knowing when to sell something and when not to, so I said I had better do it for them.

It came out in pieces. It wasn't something I was figuring out Don McLean "Probably a year or two from now I will also sell a lot of my guitars and the clothes I wore on album covers."

Referring to the endless debate about the song's underlying meaning - its starting point was the singer's teenage memories of the death of Buddy Holly - McLean thinks anyone looking for revelations about "the day the music died" is likely to end up being disappointed.

"When the chance comes to get hold of the catalogue and look at some of the pages, you will see that it didn't come out that way," he explains.

"It came out in pieces. It wasn't something where I was figuring out who was going to be this and what was going to be that. I never did get involved in talking about it that way because that's not how it was written. People will see a song that's not a parlour game, but a song that went in a lot of different directions as I was trying to capture a dream. That's what I was trying to do."

We may like to think that all great tunes are written in a sudden eureka moment of inspiration, but McLean describes a very different process: "The first part - the "long, long time ago" part - came immediately. And then a little later I had the chorus, and I wanted it to be a fast song.

"Then I stopped thinking about it for a couple of months, because I couldn't figure out what to do, whether to go in an entirely different direction. A lot of that is reflected in the manuscript."

McLean's own journey into the music business was not exactly straightforward either. Raised in a conventional middle-class home in a well-to-do part of New York state, he knew that his father hoped that he would follow him down the safe and respectable path of office administration. Passionate about folk music - singing had originally helped him cope with childhood asthma - McLean hankered after a career as a performer instead.

When his first sorties seemed to lead nowhere he opted to study for a business degree at night school.

"I basically did it for my father, who had passed away a couple of years before," he recalls. "After I finished I thought 'Well I did it, Dad. Now I'm going to do what I wanna do'. I found I had a bit of an aptitude.

"A lot of the McLeans ran offices. My father did, my uncle did. I didn't want any part of working in an office, but I guess it was in my blood. After I finished studying I never looked back, but I did find it a lot of use for reading a contract."

Later, he was even offered a business scholarship at Columbia University in New York, but chose to stick to singing in the city's coffee houses. Rejected by countless labels, his first album was released in 1970. One year later American Pie changed everything.

McLean is far from a one-hit wonder - aside from Vincent, his melancholy portrait of Van Gogh, he also wrote And I Love You So, a ballad covered by crooner Perry Como. But it is American Pie that has defined his career. For some artists, the song might easily have become a millstone.

Don McLean in 1971 and the lyrics from the hit song he's sellingALAMY/CHRISTIES Don McLean in 1971 and the lyrics from the hit song he's selling McLean insists that was not the case: "There was never a time when I didn't sing it," he says. "I don't go to the theatre with the idea of disappointing the audience."

After what he tersely describes as "a bad marriage" early in his career and a long spell of footloose bachelorhood, he found domestic contentment relatively late in life. Since 1987 he has been married to Patrisha, a photographer, writer and mother of his two grown-up children, daughter Jackie and son Wyatt. Home is a spectacular lakeside estate in Maine where the couple focus much of their energy on growing roses. "It's 175 acres. Compared to places in Ireland and England it's not much," he says modestly. "I have quite a lot of fun fixing these places up."

THAT element of domestic tranquillity is reflected in the title of his forthcoming album Botanical Gardens. If he still seems resentful that some of the critics who championed him early on turned against him after the success of American Pie, he has come to terms with the fact that the song represented the high-water mark of his career. Throughout it all, he has remained busy, writing and recording. He even played Glastonbury in 2011.

Inevitably, though, the spotlight shifted away over time. After all, who could ever top that hit? "I had about as much fame around the world as I could handle," he says. "And I still have about as much fame as I can handle. I really was not a person who was seeking enormous popularity, so I wasn't heartbroken that my career might have been limited. I was already much more wealthy than my father had been. I had a fortune. As the years went on, more things happened and people realised, you know, that I was here to stay.

"What is it now, 46, 48 years that I've been around, selling out theatres and festivals and so on? I wasn't equipped to sustain that kind of popularity over a long period. I wasn't very comfortable with it."

• Don McLean's tour starts in York on May 15. For more information visit don-mclean.com


TOPICS: Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: americanpie; music
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To: Squawk 8888

Got to open for him once (backing Tiny Tim as well as playing with an oldies act). Nice guy.


101 posted on 04/07/2015 6:22:49 AM PDT by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca, deport all illegal aliens, abolish the IRS, DEA and ATF.)
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To: Moonman62
Webb and Horton remained friends, even after her marriage to another man. The breakup was also the primary influence for “By the Time I Get to Phoenix,” another selection of Webb’s authorship and composition

In "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," the singer doesn't say where the journey to Oklahoma starts. I figure that it's Buckeye, Ariz. To get from there to Texhoma, the nearest town in Oklahoma, in a day in 1967, when the song came out would have taken some determination on the driver's part, as the 800-mile distance would have mostly been over two-lane highways.

Had the singer started farther to the west or southwest, he would have been singing, "by the time I get to Flagstaff" or "by the time I get to Casa Grande."

102 posted on 04/07/2015 6:32:32 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Tigerized; Political Junkie Too
“Brand New Key stands out in my memory.”

When I heard that, I thought it was about marijuana, "key" being doper slang for kilogram.

103 posted on 04/07/2015 6:37:22 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Tigerized; Political Junkie Too
“Brand New Key stands out in my memory.”

When I heard that, I thought it was about marijuana, "key" being doper slang for kilogram.

104 posted on 04/07/2015 6:37:22 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: 9thLife

Puhleeze ... I am old enough to remember “Ebb Tide” when it was strictly instrumental, then Al Hibler’s hit with lyrics. Song’s been covered and covered and covered.

I think the reason the RIghteous Broz version is so popular is their incredible voice range (and “Ghosts”). IIRC, it wasn’t really till the movie that their song, then years old, became a hit.


105 posted on 04/07/2015 7:02:56 AM PDT by EDINVA
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To: Fiji Hill

I’ve got a brand new pair of roller skates,
You’ve got a brand new key,
I think that we should get together,
And try them on to see...

Although it’s been decades since I’ve had skates that used a skate key to... uh... mount them onto my shoes, I do remember the tight fit.

Hmmm. And the overwrought, banging piano chords leaves little to the imagination...


106 posted on 04/07/2015 7:03:06 AM PDT by Tigerized (Your Personal Safety is Yours, and Yours Alone. Aim Small, Miss Small.)
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To: 9thLife

My favorite Don Mclean song was always “Vincent”.....


107 posted on 04/07/2015 7:13:30 AM PDT by Hot Tabasco (Uncle Sy: "Beavers are like Ninjas, they only come out at night and they're hard to find")
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To: ROCKLOBSTER
but they cranked out a ton of noteworthy

Yep, I had a memory reawakening the other day of Steppenwolf and checked out "The Pusher" on Youtube......

What I didn't know was that Steppenwolf put out three top quality albums in just 15 months......

108 posted on 04/07/2015 7:17:07 AM PDT by Hot Tabasco (Uncle Sy: "Beavers are like Ninjas, they only come out at night and they're hard to find")
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To: going hot; Karl Spooner

Mercy. There are probably a lot of Jim Morrison fans here, too.


Karl,

I wanna tell you ‘bout Texas Radio and the Big Beat
Comes out of the Virginia swamps
Cool and slow with plenty of precision
With a back beat narrow and hard to master

Some call it heavenly in it’s brilliance
Others, mean and rueful of the Western dream

snip

Listen to this and I’ll tell you ‘bout the heartache
I’ll tell you ‘bout the heartache and the loss of God
I’ll tell you ‘bout the hopeless night
The meager food for souls forgot
I’ll tell you ‘bout the maiden with raw iron soul

I’ll tell you this
No eternal reward will forgive us now for wasting the dawn

snip

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePxeGDnZpKQ

When I listen to Morrison, I hear a brutal sarcastic attack directed at the culture and his own audience of useful idiots.

American Pie is certainly more direct.


109 posted on 04/07/2015 11:36:52 AM PDT by Zeneta (Thoughts in time and out of season.)
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To: 9thLife
Just heard on Canadian T/V.

$1.200,000 manuscript was sold for this sum. Yes, one point two million dollars.

Hope this makes Don happy.

110 posted on 04/07/2015 8:29:49 PM PDT by Peter Libra
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To: Peter Libra

It would make me happy if I were Don.


111 posted on 04/08/2015 3:07:23 AM PDT by 9thLife ("Life is a military endeavor..." -- Pope Francis)
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To: a fool in paradise

Lol!


112 posted on 04/08/2015 9:28:28 PM PDT by Weirdad (Orthodox Americanism: It's what's good for the world! (Not communofascism!))
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To: TalBlack

In my freshman year of high school, the year that American Pie came out, my way-cool first-year English teacher took us through the lyrics. Every phrase has a meaning. I’ll get a copy of the lyrics and post that later on today.


113 posted on 04/09/2015 4:50:30 PM PDT by bootless ("If we lose freedom here, there is no place to escape to. This is the last stand on Earth."~RWR)
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