American Pie

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  • Artist: Don McLean
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1971
  • Total Time: 36:20
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Don McLean's second album, American Pie, which was his first to gain recognition after the negligible initial sales of 1970's Tapestry, is necessarily dominated by its title track, a lengthy, allegorical history of rock & roll, because it became an unlikely hit, topping the singles chart and putting the LP at number one as well. "American Pie" has remained as much a cultural touchstone as a song, sung by everyone from Garth Brooks to Madonna, its title borrowed for a pair of smutty teen comedies, while the record itself has earned a registered three-million plays on U.S. radio stations. There may not be much more to note about it, then, except perhaps that even without a crib sheet to identify who's who, the song can still be enjoyed for its engaging melody and singable chorus, which may have more to do with its success than anything else. Of course, the album also included "Vincent," McLean's paean to Van Gogh, which has been played two-million times. Nothing else on the album is as effective as the hits, but the other eight original songs range from sensitive fare like "Till Tomorrow" to the sarcastic, uptempo "Everybody Loves Me, Baby." American Pie -- the album -- is very much a record of its time; it is imbued with the vague depression of the early '70s that infected the population and found expression in the works of singer/songwriters. "American Pie" -- the song -- is really a criticism of what happened in popular music in the '60s, and "Vincent" sympathizes with Van Gogh's suicide as a sane comment on an insane world. "Crossroads" and "Empty Chairs" are personal reflections full of regret and despondency, with the love song "Winterwood" providing the only respite. In the album's second half, the songs get more portentous, tracing society's ills into war and spiritual troubles in "The Grave" and "Sister Fatima." The songs are made all the more poignant by the stately folk-pop arrangements and McLean's clear, direct tenor. It was that voice, equally effective on remakes of pop oldies, that was his salvation when he proved unable to match the songwriting standard set on Tapestry and this collection. But then, the album has an overall elegiac quality that makes it sound like a final statement. After all, if the music has died, what else is there to say? ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi

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American Pie (album)

Top
American Pie
Studio album by Don McLean
Released 24 October 1971
Recorded May 1971 - June 1971
Genre Folk, folk rock
Length 36:24
Label United Artists Records UAS-5535 (original)
Liberty Records (1980 reissue)
Capitol Records (2003 reissue)
Producer Ed Freeman
Don McLean chronology
Tapestry
(1970)
American Pie
(1971)
Don McLean
(1972)
Singles from American Pie
  1. "American Pie"
    Released: 15 January 1972
  2. "Vincent"
    Released: 17 June 1972
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars[1]

American Pie is the second studio album by Don McLean, released on 24 October 1971. The album reached number one on the Billboard 200, containing the chart-topping singles "American Pie" and "Vincent".

The original 1971 LP is dedicated to Buddy Holly,[2] and was reissued in 1980 minus the track "Sister Fatima".[3] The original United Artists Records inner sleeve featured a free verse poem written by McLean about the late William Boyd, also known as Hopalong Cassidy, along with a picture of Boyd in full Hopalong regalia. This sleeve was removed within a year of the album's release. The words to this poem appear on a plaque at the hospital where Boyd died. The Boyd poem and picture tribute do appear on a special remastered 2003 CD.[4]

The album was released to much acclaim, later being included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die[5].

Contents

Background

The title track contains references to the death of Buddy Holly (McLean being a 13-year-old paper-boy at the time[5]). The phrase "The Day the Music Died" was coined by McLean on this song, and has now become an unofficial name for the event.

The third track and second single "Vincent" concerns the Dutch post-impressionist artist Vincent Van Gogh, who struggled for fame while he was alive and eventually killed himself.

The track "Empty Chairs" from the album is the song which inspired Lori Lieberman to write the poem upon which the song "Killing Me Softly" is based.

"The Grave", originally a protest song against the Vietnam War, was covered by Wham! member George Michael in protest against the Iraq War in 2003.

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Don McLean except where noted[6]

No. Title Length
1. "American Pie"   8:27
2. "Till Tomorrow"   2:11
3. "Vincent"   3:55
4. "Crossroads"   3:34
5. "Winterwood"   3:09
6. "Empty Chairs"   3:24
7. "Everybody Loves Me, Baby"   3:37
8. "Sister Fatima"   2:31
9. "The Grave"   3:08
10. "Babylon" (Trad., arr. Hays and McLean) 1:40
Notes
  • The 1980 reissue on Liberty Records originally excluded the eighth track "Sister Fatima"
  • "Babylon" is based on the canon By the Waters of Babylon by Philip Hayes[7].
  • "Vincent" is sometimes given the alternative title of "Starry, Starry Night".

Personnel

  • Don McLean - vocals, guitar, banjo
  • Warren Bernhardt - piano ("Crossroads")
  • Ray Colcord - electric piano
  • Tom Flye - drums ("The Grave"), engineering
  • Ed Freeman - string arrangements
  • Paul Griffin - piano ("American Pie")
  • Lee Hays - arranger
  • Mike Mainieri - marimba, vibraphone
  • Roy Markowitz - drums, percussion
  • Gene Orloff - concert master
  • Bob Rothstein - bass, vocals
  • David Spinozza - electric guitar ("American Pie")
  • West Forty Fourth Street Rhythm and Noise Choir - chorus

Chart positions

Chart (1972) Peak
position
Billboard 200 1
Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart 1

References

  1. ^ Allmusic review
  2. ^ Back cover of the 1971 United Artists LP (UAS-5535)
  3. ^ Back cover of the 1980, Liberty Records re-issue (LN-10037).
  4. ^ inner sleeve, 2003 Capitol Records CD remaster (72435-84729-2-9)
  5. ^ a b Dimery, Robert (2008). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, p. 239. Octopus Books, London. ISBN-13:9781844036240
  6. ^ http://www.discogs.com/Don-McLean-American-Pie/master/84646 Track listing
  7. ^ The Muses Delight: Catches, Glees, Canzonets and Canons by Philip Hayes (London, 1786)
Preceded by
Music by Carole King
Billboard 200 number-one album
January 22, 1972 – March 10, 1972
Succeeded by
Harvest by Neil Young
Preceded by
Imagine by John Lennon
Australian Kent Music Report number-one album
April 3, 1972 – June 18, 1972
Succeeded by
Harvest by Neil Young

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