American
Pie - Meaning
Don McLean has not and will not provide an explanation of
the 'meaning' of 'American Pie'. This has added to the songs mystery. Many
sites exist that attempt to provide an interpretation. Over the years the
interpretation included here has been built up with contributions from many
people. Its appearance here, on a site approved of by Don McLean certainly DOES
NOT mean that this is an official interpretation or that Don McLean approves of
it. He almost certainly doesn't.
This interpretation suggests that the entire song is a
tribute to Buddy Holly and a commentary on how rock and roll music changed in
the years since his death. McLean is lamenting the lack of
"danceable" good time party 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 U.S. in 1972;
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 before becoming 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.
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 that I die".
(Verse 2)
Did you write
the book of love,
"The Book of Love" by the Monotones was a hit in
1958.
And do you have
faith in God above, If the Bible tells you so?
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" and "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 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.
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. The pickup truck has endured as a symbol of
sexual independence and potency, especially in a Texas context.
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
Dylan's "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.
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. Elvis
Presley is the king, which seems pretty obvious. The queen is either Connie
Francis or Little Richard.
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. 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 a similar red windbreaker, and is
posed in a street scene similar to one shown in a well-known picture of James
Dean.
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
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 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.
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. The "Marx-Lennon" wordplay has also been used by others,
most notably the Firesign Theatre on the cover of their album How Can You Be In Two Places At Once When
You're Not Anywhere At All?
The quartet
practiced in the park
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 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. "Summer swelter" a reference 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 about 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 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
This line and the next few refer to the 1968 Democratic National
Convention. The "sweet perfume" is tear gas.
While sergeants
played a marching tune
The Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club
Band" music in general as "marching" because it's not music for
dancing. But music with a message to which we march.
We all got up to
dance Oh, but we never got the chance
The Beatles' 1966 Candlestick Park concert only lasted 35
minutes and there wasn't any music to dance to.
'Cause the
players tried to take the field, The marching band refused to yield.
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" (1967) -- but the album sold poorly.
It's 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.
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
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.
With no time
left to start again
The "lost generation" spent too much time being
stoned, and had wasted their lives.
So come on Jack
be nimble Jack be quick
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.
'Cause fire is
the devil's only friend
The Stones were playing with fire . . .
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 1969,
the Stones appointed members of the Hell's Angels to work security. 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.
And as the
flames climbed high into the night To light the sacrificial rite
About Altamont, and in particular Mick Jagger's prancing
and posing while it was happening. The sacrifice is Meredith Hunter, and the
bonfires around the area provide the flames.
I saw satan laughing
with delight
Satan would be Jagger.
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
The "sacred store" was Bill Graham's Fillmore
West, one of the great rock and roll venues of all time.
But the man
there said the music wouldn't play
Nobody is interested in hearing Buddy Holly et.al.'s music.
And in the
streets the children screamed
"Flower children" being beaten by police and
National Guard troops; in particular, perhaps, the People's Park riots in
Berkeley in 1969 and 1970.
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
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
Buddy Holly, The Big Bopper, and Richie Valens.
They caught the
last train for the coast
A way of saying that they had left the scene (or died --
"went west" as a synonym for dying).
Information taken from the web site: http://www.americanpie2000.com/americanpie/