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- From: rsk@gynko.circ.upenn.edu (Rich Kulawiec)
- Newsgroups: rec.music.misc,rec.music.makers,rec.music.folk,rec.music.makers.guitar.tablature
- Subject: The Annotated "American Pie"
- Summary: Lyrics, chords, and notes on the song
- Keywords: American Pie, Don McLean, The Day the Music Died
- Message-ID: <103572@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Date: 3 Jan 93 21:13:38 GMT
- Sender: news@netnews.upenn.edu
- Reply-To: rsk@ecn.purdue.edu
- Followup-To: poster
- Organization: Go Big or Go Home
- Lines: 749
- Nntp-Posting-Host: gynko.circ.upenn.edu
-
- This particularly enigmatic song has been discussed at least once a year
- since Usenet had a newsgroup for discussing music. These discussions
- frequently repeat themselves, but occasionally introduce new information
- and new interpretations. Having tired of watching the same process repeat
- itself for ten years, I've created this, the annotated "American Pie".
-
- This posting consists of: the lyrics to the song (left-justified) with
- comments (indented); the chords, for those who'd like to tackle it;
- some miscellaneous notes; and references. Comments are most welcome;
- comments backed up with references are *very* welcome. I have attempted
- to note where the interpretation is questionable.
-
- Credits, in rough chronological order:
- wombat@ccvaxa.uucp
- ihuxr!steck
- steiny@idsvax.uuucp
- ihldt!bnp
- sbcs!murray
- fortune!grw
- iws@rayssdb.ray.com (Ihor W. Slabicky)
- tugs@csri.toronto.edu (Stephen Hull)
- dko@calmasd.ge.com (Dan O'Neill)
- ssm@calmasd.ge.com (Sharon McBroom)
- mfterman@phoenix.princeton.edu (Martin Terman)
- rsk@gynko.circ.upenn.edu (Rich Kulawiec)
- tim@tcom.stc.co.uk (Tim Kennedy)
- rns@tortuga.sandiego.ncr.com (Rick Schubert)
- paul@moore.com (Paul Maclauchlan)
- rvloon@cv.ruu.nl (Ronald van Loon)
- wirth@sdsc.edu (Colleen Wirth)
- nelson@berlioz.nsc.com (Taed Nelson)
- bschlesinger@nssdca.gsfc.nasa.gov (Barry Schlesinger)
- Thomas.Sullivan@cs.cmu.edu (Tom Sullivan)
- H.Edwards@massey.ac.nz (Howard Edwards)
- gerry@macadam.mpce.mq.edu.au (Gerry Myerson)
- rice@mcz.harvard.edu
- dave@jato.jpl.nasa.gov (Dave Hayes)
- rlwilliams@gallua.bitnet (Robert L. Williams)
- bee@ms.uky.edu (Elizabeth Gilliam)
- chris@gandalf.ca (Chris Sullivan)
- dtpilkey@mailbox.syr.edu (David T. Pilkey)
- Dan Stanley at Fitchburg State College (courtesy of
- Timothy J. Stanley, tjs@z.eecs.umich.edu)
- lgold@cadence.com (Lynn Gold)
- ajw@cbnews.cb.att.com (Andrew J. Whitman)
-
- The roots of this posting are in the "Great American Pie" Usenet discussion
- of 1983; much of it comes from wombat's (the original wombat, not me)
- posting in net.music on June 16, 1985. As Robert Williams has pointed
- out to me, the entire song can be viewed as one big projective test, so
- interpretations vary quite a bit. I've tried to be inclusive while
- also indicating which ones I buy into and which I don't; your mileage
- may vary.
-
- ---Rsk 1/3/93
-
- Revision history:
-
- 1/20/92 Constructed from various old postings
- 1/27/92 Added comments from Usenetters on first draft
- 2/3/92 More comments folded in; reposted today, the
- anniversary of The Day the Music Died
- 8/18/92 Added comments generated by the Februrary posting.
- 1/3/93 Caught up on lots of updates that have been languishing
- in my inbound mail queue for months.
-
- AMERICAN PIE by Don McLean
-
- The entire song is a tribute to Buddy Holly and
- a commentary on how rock and roll changed in
- the years since his death. McLean seems to be
- lamenting the lack of "danceable" music in
- rock and roll and (in part) attributing that
- lack to the absence of Buddy Holly et. al.
-
- (Verse 1)
- A long, long time ago...
-
- "American Pie" reached #1 in the US in 1972, but
- the album containing it was released in 1971.
- Buddy Holly died in 1959.
-
- I can still remember how
- That music used to make me smile.
- And I knew if I had my chance,
- That I could make those people dance,
- And maybe they'd be happy for a while.
-
- One of early rock and roll's functions was to
- provide dance music for various social events.
- McLean recalls his desire to become a musician
- playing that sort of music.
-
-
- But February made me shiver,
-
- Buddy Holly died on February 3, 1959 in a plane
- crash in Iowa during a snowstorm.
-
- With every paper I'd deliver,
-
- Don McLean's only job besides being a full-time
- singer-songwriter was being a paperboy.
-
- Bad news on the doorstep...
- I couldn't take one more step.
- I can't remember if I cried
- When I read about his widowed bride
-
- Holly's recent bride was pregnant when the crash took
- place; she had a miscarriage shortly afterward.
-
- But something touched me deep inside,
- The day the music died.
-
- The same plane crash that killed Buddy Holly also
- took the lives of Richie Valens ("La Bamba") and
- The Big Bopper ("Chantilly Lace"). Since all three
- were so prominent at the time, February 3, 1959
- became known as "The Day The Music Died".
- So...
-
- (Refrain)
-
- Bye bye Miss American Pie,
-
- Don McLean dated a Miss America candidate
- during the pageant. (unconfirmed)
-
- Drove my Chevy to the levee but the levee was dry
- Them good ol' boys were drinkin whiskey and rye
- Singing "This'll be the day that I die,
- This'll be the day that I die."
-
- One of Holly's hits was "That'll be the Day"; the
- chorus contains the line "That'll be the day <pause>
- that I die".
-
- (Verse 2)
- Did you write the book of love,
-
- "The Book of Love" by the Monotones; hit in 1958.
-
- And do you have faith in God above,
- If the Bible tells you so?
-
- In 1955, Don Cornell did a song entitled
- "The Bible Tells Me So". Rick Schubert
- pointed this out, and mentioned that he
- hadn't heard the song, so it was kinda
- difficult to tell if it was what McLean
- was referencing. Anyone know for sure?
-
- There's also an old Sunday School song which goes:
- "Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so"
-
- Now do you believe in rock 'n roll?
-
- The Lovin' Spoonful had a hit in 1965 with John
- Sebastian's "Do you Believe in Magic?". The song
- has the lines:
- "Do you believe in magic/it's like trying to tell
- a stranger 'bout rock and roll."
-
- Can music save your mortal soul?
- And can you teach me how to dance real slow?
-
- Dancing slow was an important part of early rock
- and roll dance events -- but declined in importance
- through the 60's as things like psychedelia and
- the 10-minute guitar solo gained prominence.
-
- Well I know you're in love with him
- 'Cause I saw you dancing in the gym
-
- Back then, dancing was an expression of love, and
- carried a connotation of committment. Dance partners
- were not so readily exchanged as they would be later.
-
- You both kicked off your shoes
-
- A reference to the beloved "sock hop". (Street
- shoes tear up wooden basketball floors, so dancers
- had to take off their shoes.)
-
- Man, I dig those rhythm 'n' blues
- Some history. Before the popularity of rock and
- roll, music, like much else in the U. S., was
- highly segregated. The popular music of black
- performers for largely black audiences was
- called, first, "race music", later softened to
- rhythm and blues. In the early 50s, as they were
- exposed to it through radio personalities such as
- Allan Freed, white teenagers began listening,
- too. Starting around 1954, a number of songs
- from the rhythm and blues charts began appearing
- on the overall popular charts as well, but
- usually in cover versions by established white
- artists, (e. g. "Shake Rattle and Roll", Joe
- Turner, covered by Bill Haley; "Sh-Boom", the
- Chords, covered by the Crew-Cuts; "Sincerely",
- the Moonglows, covered by the Mc Guire Sisters;
- Tweedle Dee, LaVerne Baker, covered by Georgia
- Gibbs). By 1955, some of the rhythm and blues
- artists, like Fats Domino and Little Richard were
- able to get records on the overall pop charts.
- In 1956 Sun records added elements of country and
- western to produce the kind of rock and roll
- tradition that produced Buddy Holly.
- (Thanks to Barry Schlesinger for this historical
- note. ---Rsk)
-
- I was a lonely teenage broncin' buck
- With a pink carnation and a pickup truck
-
- "A White Sport Coat (And a Pink Carnation)", was a hit
- for Marty Robbins in 1957.
-
- But I knew that I was out of luck
- The day the music died
- I started singing...
-
- Refrain
-
- (Verse 3)
- Now for ten years we've been on our own
-
- McLean was writing this song in the
- late 60's, about ten years after the crash.
-
- And moss grows fat on a rolling stone
-
- It's unclear who the "rolling stone" is
- supposed to be. It could be Dylan, since
- "Like a Rolling Stone" (1965) was his first
- major hit; and since he was busy writing
- songs extolling the virtues of simple love,
- family and contentment while staying at home
- (he didn't tour from '66 to '74) and raking
- in the royalties. This was quite a change
- from the earlier, angrier Dylan.
-
- The "rolling stone" could also be Elvis, although
- I don't think he'd started to pork out by the
- late sixties.
-
- It could refer to rock and rollers in general,
- and the changes that had taken place in the business
- in the 60's, especially the huge amounts of cash
- some of them were beginning to make, and the
- relative stagnation that entered the music at
- the same time.
-
- Or, perhaps it's a reference to the stagnation
- in rock and roll.
-
- But that's not how it used to be
- When the jester sang for the King and Queen
-
- The jester is Bob Dylan, as will become clear later.
- There are several interpretations of king and queen:
- some think that Elvis Presley is the king, which seems
- pretty obvious. The queen is said to be either Connie
- Francis or Little Richard. But see the next note.
-
- An alternate interpretation is that this refers to
- the Kennedys -- the king and queen of "Camelot" --
- who were present at a Washington DC civil rights
- rally featuring Martin Luther King. (There's
- a recording of Dylan performing at this rally.)
-
- In a coat he borrowed from James Dean
-
- In the movie "Rebel Without a Cause", James Dean has
- a red windbreaker that holds symbolic meaning
- throughout the film (see note at end). In one
- particularly intense scene, Dean lends his coat
- to a guy who is shot and killed; Dean's father
- arrives, sees the coat on the dead man, thinks
- it's Dean, and loses it.
-
- On the cover of "The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan",
- Dylan is wearing just such as red windbreaker,
- and is posed in a street scene similar to one
- shown in a well-known picture of James Dean.
-
- Bob Dylan played a command performance for
- the Queen and Prince Consort of England.
- He was *not* properly attired, so perhaps
- this is a reference to his apparel.
-
-
- And a voice that came from you and me
-
- Bob Dylan's roots are in American folk music,
- with people like Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie.
- Folk music is by definition the music of the
- masses, hence the "...came from you and me".
-
- Oh, and while the King was looking down
- The jester stole his thorny crown
-
- This could be a reference to Elvis's decline and
- Dylan's ascendance. (i.e. Presley is looking down
- from a height as Dylan takes his place.) The thorny
- crown might be a reference to the price of fame.
- Dylan has said that he wanted to be as famous as
- Elvis, one of his early idols.
-
- The courtroom was adjourned,
- No verdict was returned.
-
- This could be the trial of the Chicago Seven.
-
- And while Lennon read a book on Marx,
-
- Literally, John Lennon reading about Karl Marx;
- figuratively, the introduction of radical politics
- into the music of the Beatles. (Of course, he
- could be referring to Groucho Marx, but that doesn't
- seem quite consistent with McLean's overall tone.
- On the other hand, some of the wordplay in Lennon's
- lyrics and books is reminiscint of Groucho.)
-
- The quartet practiced in the park
-
- There are two schools of thought about this; the
- obvious one is the Beatles playing in Shea Stadium,
- but note that the previous line has John Lennon
- *doing something else at the same time*. This
- tends to support the theory that this is a reference
- to the Weavers, who were blacklisted during the
- McCarthy era. McLean had become friends with Lee Hays
- of the Weavers in the early 60's while performing
- in coffeehouses and clubs in upstate New York and
- New York City. He was also well-acquainted
- with Pete Seeger; in fact, McLean, Seeger, and others
- took a trip on the Hudson river singing
- anti-pollution songs at one point. Seeger's LP
- "God Bless the Grass" contains many of these songs.
-
- And we sang dirges in the dark
-
- A "dirge" is a funeral or mourning song, so perhaps
- this is meant literally...or, perhaps, this is a
- reference to some of the new "art rock" groups which
- played long pieces not meant for dancing.
-
- The day the music died.
- We were singing...
-
- Refrain
-
- (Verse 4)
- Helter Skelter in a summer swelter
-
- "Helter Skelter" is a Beatles song which appears
- on the "white" album. Charles Manson, claiming
- to have been "inspired" by the song (through which
- he thought God and/or the devil were taking to him)
- led his followers in the Tate-LaBianca murders.
-
- Is "summer swelter" a reference to the "Summer of
- Love" or perhaps to the "long hot summer" of Watts?
-
- The birds flew off with the fallout shelter
- Eight miles high and falling fast
-
- The Byrd's "Eight Miles High" was on their
- late 1966 release "Fifth Dimension". It was
- one of the first records to be widely banned because of supposedly drug-oriented lyrics.
-
- It landed foul on the grass
-
- One of the Byrds was busted for possesion of marijuana.
-
- The players tried for a forward pass
-
- Obviously a football metaphor, but about what?
- It could be the Rolling Stones, i.e. they were
- waiting for an opening which really didn't happen
- until the Beatles broke up.
-
- With the jester on the sidelines in a cast
-
- On July 29, 1966, Dylan crashed his Triumph 55
- motorcycle while riding near his home in Woodstock,
- New York. He spent nine months in seclusion while
- recuperating from the accident.
-
- Now the halftime air was sweet perfume
-
- Drugs, man.
-
- While sergeants played a marching tune
-
- Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band".
-
- Or, perhaps McLean refers to the Beatles' music
- as "marching" because it's not music for dancing.
-
- Alternatively, the "marching tune" could refer
- to the draft. (See below)
-
- We all got up to dance
- Oh, but we never got the chance
-
- The Beatles' 1966 Candlestick Park concert only
- lasted 35 minutes.
-
- Or, following on from the previous comment, perhaps
- he meant that there wasn't any music to dance to.
-
- 'Cause the players tried to take the field,
- The marching band refused to yield.
-
- This could be a reference to the dominance of
- the Beatles on the rock and roll scene. For instance,
- the Beach Boys released "Pet Sounds" in 1966,
- an album which featured some of the same sort of studio
- and electronic experimentation as "Sgt. Pepper",
- but the album sold poorly because the Beatles'
- release got most of the press.
-
- Some folks think this refers to either the 1968
- Deomcratic Convention or Kent State.
-
- This might also be a comment about how the
- dominance of the Beatles in the rock world
- led to more "pop art" music, leading in turn
- to a dearth of traditional rock and roll.
-
- Or finally, this might be a comment which follows
- up on the earlier reference to the draft: the
- government/military-industrial-complex establishment
- refused to accede to the demands of the peace movement.
-
- Do you recall what was revealed,
- The day the music died?
- We started singing
-
- Refrain
-
- (Verse 5)
- And there we were all in one place
-
- Woodstock.
-
- A generation lost in space
-
- Some people think this is a reference to
- the US space program, which it might be;
- but that seems a bit too literal. Perhaps this
- is a reference to "hippies", who were sometimes
- known as the "lost generation", partially because
- of their particularly acute alientation from
- their parents, and partially because of their
- presumed preoccupation with drugs.
-
- It could also be a reference to the awful TV
- show, "Lost in Space", whose title was sometimes
- used as a synonym for someone who was rather high...
- but I keep hoping that McLean had better taste. :-)
-
- With no time left to start again
-
- The "lost generation" spent too much time being
- stoned, and had wasted their lives? Or, perhaps,
- their preference for psychedelia had pushed rock
- and roll so far from Holly's music that it couldn't
- be retrieved.
-
- So come on Jack be nimble Jack be quick
-
- Probably a reference to Mick Jagger of the
- Rolling Stones; "Jumpin' Jack Flash" was
- released in May, 1968.
-
- Jack Flash sat on a candlestick
-
- The Stones' Candlestick park concert?
- (unconfirmed)
-
- 'Cause fire is the devil's only friend
-
- It's possible that this is a reference to
- the Grateful Dead's "Friend of the Devil".
-
- An alternative interpretation of the last four
- lines is that they may refer to Jack Kennedy
- and his quick decisions during the Cubam Missile
- Crisis; the candlesticks/fire refer to ICBMs
- and nuclear war.
-
- And as I watched him on the stage
- My hands were clenched in fists of rage
- No angel born in hell
- Could break that satan's spell
-
- While playing a concert at the Altamont
- Speedway in 1968, the Stones appointed
- members of the Hell's Angels to work security
- (on the advice of the Grateful Dead). In the
- darkness near the front of the stage, a young
- man named Meredith Hunter was beaten and stabbed to
- death -- by the Angels. Public outcry that
- the song "Sympathy for the Devil" had somehow
- incited the violence caused the Stones to
- drop the song from their show for the next
- six years. This incident is chronicled in
- the documentary film "Gimme Shelter".
-
- It's also possible that McLean views the Stones
- as being negatively inspired (remember, he had
- an extensive religious background) by virtue
- of "Sympathy for the Devil", "Their Satanic
- Majesties' Request" and so on. I find this a bit
- puzzling, since the early Stones recorded a lot
- of "roots" rock and roll, including Buddy Holly's
- "Not Fade Away".
-
- And as the flames climbed high into the night
- To light the sacrificial rite
- This could be a reference to Jimi Hendrix
- burning his Stratocaster at the Monterey
- Pop Festival.
-
- It's possible that this refers to the burial
- of Kennedy, but I'm not sure I buy this.
- For one thing, it doesn't fit chronologically,
- and for another, McLean seems more interested
- in music than politics.
-
- I saw satan laughing with delight
- The day the music died
- He was singing...
-
- Refrain
-
- (Verse 6)
- I met a girl who sang the blues
-
- Janis Joplin.
-
- And I asked her for some happy news
- But she just smiled and turned away
-
- Janis died of an accidental heroin overdose
- on October 4, 1970.
-
- I went down to the sacred store
- Where I'd heard the music years before
-
- There are two interpretations of this:
- The "sacred store" was Bill Graham's Fillmore East,
- one of the great rock and roll venues of all time.
- Alternatively, this refers to record stores,
- and their longtime (then discontinued)
- practice of allowing customers to preview
- records in the store.
- It could also refer to record stores as "sacred"
- because this is where one goes to get "saved".
- (See above lyric "Can music save your mortal soul?")
-
- But the man there said the music wouldn't play
-
- Perhaps he means that nobody is interested in
- hearing Buddy Holly et.al.'s music? Or, as above,
- the discontinuation of the in-store listening booths.
-
- And in the streets the children screamed
-
- "Flower children" being beaten by police
- and National Guard troops?
-
- The lovers cried and the poets dreamed
-
- The trend towards psychedelic music in the 60's?
-
- But not a word was spoken
- The church bells all were broken
-
- It could be that the broken bells are the dead
- musicians: neither can produce any more music.
-
- And the three men I admire most
- The Father Son and Holy Ghost
-
- Holly, The Big Bopper, and Valens
- -- or --
- Hank Williams, Presley and Holly
- -- or --
- JFK, Martin Luther King, and Bobby Kennedy
- -- or --
- the Catholic aspects of the deity.
- McLean had attended several Catholic schools.
-
- They caught the last train for the coast
-
- Could be a reference to wacky California religions,
- or could just be a way of saying that they've left.
- Or, perhaps this is a reference to the famous
- "God is Dead" headline in the New York Times.
-
- The day the music died
-
- This tends to support the conjecture that the "three
- men" were Holly/Bopper/Valens, since this says that
- they left on the day the music died.
-
- And they were singing...
-
-
- Refrain (2x)
-
-
-
- Chords to the song:
-
- The song appears to be in G; the chords are:
-
- Intro: G Bm/F# Em . Am . C .
- Em . D . . .
- G Bm/F# Em . Am . C .
- Em . A . D . . .
- Em . Am . Em . Am .
- C G/B Am . C . D .
- G Bm/F# Em . Am . C .
- G Bm/F# Em . Am . D .
- G . C . G . D .
-
- Chorus: G . C . G . D .
- G . C . G . D .
- G . C . G . D .
-
- Em . . . A . . . (all but
- Em . . . D . . . last chorus)
-
- C . D . G C G . (last chorus)
-
-
- Other notes:
-
- "Killing Me Softly With His Song", Roberta Flack's Grammy Award-winning
- single of 1973, was written by Charles Gimble and Norman Fox about McLean.
-
- The Big Bopper's real name was J.P. Richardson. He was a DJ for a
- Texas radio station who had one very big novelty hit, the very well
- known "Chantilly Lace". There was a fourth person who was going to
- ride the plane. There was room for three, ahd the fourth person lost
- the toss -- or should I say won the toss. His name is Waylon
- Jennings...and to this day he refuses to talk about the crash.
-
- About the "coat he borrowed from James Dean": James Dean's red
- windbreaker is important throughout the film, not just at the end.
- When he put it on, it meant that it was time to face the world, time to
- do what he thought had to be done, and other melodramatic but
- thoroughly enjoyable stuff like that. The week after the movie came
- out, virtually every clothing store in the U.S. was sold out
- of red windbreakers. Remember that Dean's impact was similar
- to Dylan's: both were a symbol for the youth of their time, a reminder
- that they had something to say and demanded to be listened to.
-
- American Pie is supposed to be the name of the plane that crashed,
- containing the three guys that died. (Reported by Ronald van Loon
- from the discussion on American Pie, autumn 1991, on rec.music.folk)
-
- Dan Stanley mentioned an interesting theory involving all of this;
- roughly put, he figures that if Holly hadn't died, then we would not
- have suffered through the Fabian/Pat Boone/et.al. era...and as a consequence,
- we wouldn't have *needed* the Beatles -- Holly was moving pop music away
- from the stereotypical boy/girl love lost/found lyrical ideas, and was
- recording with unique instrumentation and techniques...things that Beatles
- wouldn't try until about 1965. Perhaps Dylan would have stuck with the
- rock and roll he played in high school, and the Byrds never would have
- created an amalgam of Dylan songs and Beatle arrangements.
-
- Lynn Gold tells me that "Life" magazine carried an annotated version
- of American Pie when the song came out; does anybody have a copy?
-
- Andrew Whitman brings a sense of perspective to all of this by noting:
-
- >As to what they threw off the bridge, Bobbie Gentry once went on record with
- >the statement that it was the mystery that made the song, and that the mystery
- >would remain unsolved. Don McLean later used the same device to even greater
- >success with "American Pie," which triggered a national obsession on figuring
- >out the "real meaning" of the song.
-
- Well, probably not a national obsession, but certainly the life's work
- of many talented scholars. According to the latest edition of the
- "American Pie Historical Interpretive Digest" (APHID), noted McLean
- historian Vincent Vandeman has postulated that cheezy country
- songs may have played a much more prominent role in the epic
- composition than had originally been thought. In particular, the
- "widowed bride," usually supposed to be either Ella Holly or
- Joan Rivers, may in fact be Billie Jo. According to this radical
- exegesis, the "pink carnation" of McLean's song is probably what
- was thrown off the Tallahatchie Bridge, and was later found by
- the lonely, teenaged McLean as he wandered drunkenly on the levee.
-
- Of course, such a view poses problems. McLean vehemently denies any
- knowledge of Choctaw Ridge, and any theory linking the two songs
- must surely address this mysterious meeting place of Billie Jo and
- her husband Billy Joe. Vandeman speculates that Choctaw Ridge may
- have been the place McLean drove his Chevy after drinking whiskey
- and rye, and that McLean may have been unaware of the name because
- of his foggy mental state. Still, there appear to be many tenuous
- connections in Vandeman's interpretation - Tammy Wynette as the
- girl who sang the blues, the proposed affair between Wynette and
- Billie Joe which later led to d-i-v-o-r-c-e and Billy Joe's
- suicide, the mysterious whereabouts of George Jones, and why
- McLean insisted on driving a Chevy to the levee instead of a more
- economical Japanese car.
-
- My own view is that none of it makes much sense. Vandeman's theory
- is intriguing, but it seems far more logical to hold to the traditional
- interpretation of "American Pie" as an eschatological parable of
- nuclear destruction and the rebirth of civilization on Alpha Centauri.
-
- Thanks, Andrew. I'll take it under advisement. ;-)
-
- References:
-
- Billboard Book of Number One Hits, by Fred Bronson, Billboard, 1985.
-
- Encyclopedia of Pop, Rock and Soul, revised edition, by Irwin Stambler,
- St. Martin's Press, 1989.
-
- Rock Chronicle, by Dan Formento, Delilah/Putnam, 1982.
-
- Rock Day by Day, by Steve Smith and the Diagram Group, Guiness Books, 1987.
-
- Rock Topicon, by Dave Marsh, Sandra Choron and Debbie Geller,
- Contemporary Books, 1984.
-
- Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, ed. by Jon Pareles and
- Patricia Romanowski, Rolling Stone Press/Summit Books, 1983.
-
- Rolling Stone Record Guide, ed. by Dave Marsh with John Swenson, Random
- House/Rolling Stone Press, 1979.
-
- The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage, by Todd Gitlin, Bantam Book, 1987.
-
- Smiling Through the Apocalypse: Esquire's History of the Sixties, ed. by
- Harold Hayes, Esquire Press, 1987.
-
- It was Twenty Years ago Today: An Anniversary Celebration of 1967, by
- Derek Taylor, Fireside, 1987.
-
-