BYE BYE MISS AMERICAN PIE....
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NEW YORK, July 8, 2007
'American Pie' Was A Long, Long Time Ago
Don McLean Lives With The Song's Enduring
Popularity, But He's Done Much More

SOURCE:
(CBS) When Don McLean wrote this song, "Castles in
the Air," more than 35 years ago, he had no way of
knowing that one day he would find himself a castle
of sorts.
Today he's living in what he describes as "an old
estate, the kind they used to have at the turn of
the century in what you would call the Gilded Age."
Actually, "A Castle in the Air" is a pretty good
description of his home, which is set on 175
mountaintop acres along the coast of Maine. For
McLean, it's the culmination of a journey that
began, "a long, long time ago."
In 1971 Don McLean was a struggling 25-year-old folk
singer when he picked up his guitar to write a song
for his second album.
"I was up in a— in a — in a little bedroom of a
little house that I had, and I started singing, 'A
long, long time ago,'" he told Early Show co-anchor
Russ Mitchell. "And I started writing it down. 'Oh,
that sounds good. I like that,' you know. And then I
— I started going with it and started — the — the —
the memory of the death of Buddy Holly came — came
along, and I — you know, but I didn't want to say
that. So I — you know, I said, 'February made me
shiver.' I just really went back in time to when I
was a paperboy."
He was a 13-year-old paperboy on February 3, 1959,
when he delivered the news that three pioneers of
rock 'n' roll — Ritchie Valens, the Big Bopper and
Buddy Holly — had died in a plane crash.
"I was always interested in the — in — in the
American experience. And I suddenly, in my little
head, I realized that I could use rock 'n' roll and
the story of rock 'n' roll and forward-moving
lyrics, starting with the death of Buddy Holly, to
tell the story of America," he said.
"American Pie" quickly became a number-one hit, and
it's been a hit ever since. The song has been played
on the radio more than 3 million times in the United
States alone — an average of 274 times a day, 11
times an hour for the past 35 years. And still, to
this day, wherever he goes, people continue to ask
him: "What does it all mean?"
There are Web sites, college courses and books
dedicated to deciphering "American Pie," but McLean
says it was meant to be vague.
"Because it's meant to be a dream," he said. "It's a
cautionary tale about — written to America about
what happens when the spirit goes out of — of
something and when you start to put commercial
things ahead of beauty and poetry and literature."
Beautiful things are what McLean believes life is
all about, so he and his wife Patricia have spent
the past 11 years surrounding themselves and their
two children with flowers.
"'I like the flowers because they're poetry," he
said. "You know, they're very much like music. Music
is beauty and poetry, and — and — and that's what —
that's what gardens are. This is our expression of —
of everything, really."
Art begets art, the McLeans believe, so Patricia
uses the flowers to complement her other passion:
photography.
"The Casablanca lily is so huge, so I — I grew those
on purpose, so that I could use those for the — my
models," she said, showing Mitchell examples of her
work.
McLean's house and land didn't come from just one
song. There were other hits, like "Vincent," about
painter Vincent van Gogh. McLean's rendition of Roy
Orbison's "Crying" was a number-one hit. Elvis
Presley recorded a song McLean wrote called "And I
Love You So," but it took Perry Como to make it into
a hit.
He has released more than 20 albums in the last 20
years, and has just completed another one, but
"American Pie" is always front and center.
The original single was almost nine minutes long.
McLean said half was on one side of the 8-track and
half was on the other.
"See, everything about that song was double, so if
you went to the jukebox, you had to pay twice to
hear it," McLean said.
A finance major in college, McLean was able to avoid
the mistakes other musicians made and, from the
beginning, kept firm control over the rights to all
his work. For example, if someone wants to make his
own brand of pies and call them American Pies, he
would have to check in with McLean first. The phrase
is trademarked.
And after decades of saying no to advertisers eager
to capitalize on the song's popularity, McLean
finally said yes. In 1999 there was "American Pie"
the movie, a smash hit teen comedy that had nothing
to do with Chevys or levees. Beginning in 2003 there
was a series of car commercials for Chevrolet.
"I said no all through the years, and then I decided
that it would be a good thing for the song to do
this, and I was right," he said. "They did a — they
did the right job with it. It made the song more
popular."
It hardly seems possible for the song to be any more
popular. He's about to begin a world tour and at his
concerts people are still dancing in the aisles.
As years go by, some people wonder when, or if,
McLean's next big hit will come, but at age 61 his
priorities have changed.
"What I try to do is make the best music I possibly
can and do the best performance that I can do and
try to take care of my health and be a good husband
and a good father," he said. "That's my — those are
my goals right now, really."
And while some might think being so closely linked
with one song may seem like a curse, McLean doesn't
see it that way.
"Although I'm known for many songs, I will always be
known for this song, and I would want it that way,"
McLean said. "I would want it that way because I
would want to leave behind this sort of tale about
my country."
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BYE BYE MISS AMERICAN PIE....
http://www.apfn.net/pogo13/L003I070708-american-pie.MP3