Cynon Valley

I intend to die on stage. I have nothing better to do

With a stage show, documentar­y special and tour in the works, ALEX GREEN talks to Don McLean about 50 years creating music hits

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FIVE decades after its release, Don McLean’s American Pie remains inescapabl­e. The sweeping epic about politics, youth and rock and roll across the Atlantic has, in the last few years alone, soundtrack­ed important moments in TV series Stranger Things and Hollywood blockbuste­r Black Widow, and is boxer Tyson Fury’s victory tune.

“It’s used in a million different ways because it is non-specific – because it is eternal in that way,” the New York State-born singersong­writer says over the phone of the 1971 song.

“I did not write something about a specific time. Bob Dylan wrote The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll. That’s a wonderful story. It’s a beautiful biographic­al piece.

“He wrote about Rubin ‘Hurricane’ Carter, the boxer, and so on and so forth.

“And I’ve written about Van Gogh and George Reeves. But this is a different thing. It’s the soul of the country. And the soul has never changed.”

Don, known to fans as the American Troubadour or King of the Trail, is marking the song and accompanyi­ng album’s 50th anniversar­y with a world tour (including a clutch of UK dates) and a retrospect­ive documentar­y. A stage show is also in the works.

Since the turn of the millennium, the 76-year-old has remained largely out of the spotlight, despite playing regularly to faithful fans.

But the milestone has prompted many to look again at his legacy, leading in August to Don being given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

He says the day was especially poignant given his life-long obsession with cowboy Western movie stars such as Ken Maynard, Buck Jones and William Boyd, many of who have their own stars on the trail.

“That was certainly a high point in my career,” he recalls excitedly.

“And I’ve had a few nice things happen to me in my life – lots of them actually – but this is something particular­ly wonderful for me because I’m a music and film aficionado.

“So there were all sorts of names of obscure actors and directors and singers too on that Walk of Fame that I was very proud to be a part of.”

In conversati­on, Don is prone to grand, sweeping statements about music and art and this extends to tales of his youth in New Rochelle, New York State.

“My mother always said to me: ‘Donnie, I didn’t raise you, you raised yourself’.

“I had my own way of doing everything. And I was by myself most of the time.

“I realised the one thing that mattered to me more than singing, more than writing songs, more than being Don McLean – anything – was making records and albums.

“So I developed that very young and it was really independen­t of everybody I knew. Nobody was in my world at all.

“Everybody else was basically white kids who were going to grow up to be working stiffs and good pillars of the community and church-goers and all that stuff.

“I wasn’t any of that. I didn’t want any of that.”

That yearning eventually led to his second studio album, American Pie, being released in October 1971.

It was a huge success but the title track – inspired by the plane crash death of rock and roll great Buddy Holly – went stratosphe­ric, reaching number one in the US and many other countries around the world including Australia, Canada and New Zealand.

“If you write about specific things in a universal way then you have created something that’s universal and can last forever,” he offers.

“If you write about things in a topical way, in a way that is particular­ly pointing out a specific time then that is going to fade.”

He compares American Pie to Gone With The Wind, the enduringly popular 1939 romance set against the backdrop of the American Civil War.

“It’s really not about the Civil War,” he says. “It’s about Rhett Butler and Scarlett O’Hara, about their love affair and inability to connect.

“How much he loved her and she loves him, but they could never really let each other know that they really loved each other. There was always disconnect, ships passing in the night, this kind of thing. That’s the story.”

Don says a song is simply a vehicle. “I’m telling an epic tale of rock and roll and politics and people’s rights – people’s demands,” he declares. “People in the street wanting things.”

After 18 months without live performanc­e, Don is back on the road playing the occasional show and his forthcomin­g world tour can not come quick enough.

“It’s not the same as travelling and singing, which I have done since 1968,” he says. “It’s part of my DNA, I guess you might say, and I definitely feel it physically.”

“As I get older, I can sing well and I have a lot of songs that people know and love.

“I’m from another time and I like to go out there and show those young people how it’s done – show them how it sounds when it’s right.

“I’m sure that is what Paul McCartney does. It is certainly what The Rolling Stones still do.

“We still hold a torch of some sort, which is valuable to people and they love it. They really do.”

After a dramatic pause, he adds: “I intend to die on stage. I have nothing else better to do.”

Tickets for Don McLean’s 50th Anniversar­y of American Pie 2022 UK Tour are available online. More informatio­n at donmclean.com

Nobody was in my world. Everybody else was going to grow up to be working stiffs

 ?? ?? Don plays to an 85,000-strong crowd in Hyde Park in 1975. Inset, his iconic American Pie album
Don plays to an 85,000-strong crowd in Hyde Park in 1975. Inset, his iconic American Pie album
 ?? ?? Don McLean is looking forward to a world tour 50 years on from his smash hit American Pie
Don McLean is looking forward to a world tour 50 years on from his smash hit American Pie

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