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The Position of Don MacClean

11 Feb 12 - 06:00 AM (#3305844)
Subject: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Big Al Whittle

Good old Don! He leaves his guitar out of tune for one song and the whole folk world has worked themselves up into a tiz. My God! I know folksingers who've spent their entire playing careers out of tune - and scorn the use of digital tuners to boot! (I don't need one of them! I prefer my own ears! I trust them better than that thing!- you can write the script.)

I've always been a fan of Don. I even like his voice. Derek Brimstone once said to me - I like what he does, but I can't stand that bloody voice.

The thing is I'm grateful to guys like Don and John Denver - i love their songs - you can sing them in a pub and the whole room just joins in. Along with You made me Love You and By Bye Blackbird -they are far more deeply embedded in the English tongue and psyche than the Dowie Dens of Yarrow, or some such. those songs have helped me earn a living as a musician.

On the flipside - don't we all head for the toilet when some arsehole turns up at the folkclub, puts American Pie on a music stand and commits (I won't say performs) the full version - complete with hesitations to see where his fingers should be on the guitar.

What do other people think?   Isn't there a strata of songs - perhaps not folksongs in the strict sense - but the English public have taken to them now for forty years, sixty years and seventy years in the case of jazz and wartime songs. And these songs have such a place of affection in English hearts.

Don has an honoured place in that pantheon of songwriters? Who wouldn't want to be there beside him..... and Ewan for writing The First Time Ever?


11 Feb 12 - 06:08 AM (#3305848)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: George Papavgeris

Let's put it this way: I would gladly trade ten times Don's embarassment to write songs like "Vincent" and "American Pie".

Great songwriter, and I also love his voice.


11 Feb 12 - 06:22 AM (#3305853)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Silas

He has still 'got it' unlike last years embarresment. It was very unfortunate about his guitar in the first number - but thats live TV for you.


11 Feb 12 - 06:36 AM (#3305862)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Steve Shaw

Come off it. Being on live TV doesn't mean you can't carry out an elementary check on you guitar before you come on. I cheerfully echo all the sentiments about his songs and his place in the pantheon, etc., but that was just diabolically unprofessional and profoundly disappointing. Painful even. And totally unnecessary.


11 Feb 12 - 07:31 AM (#3305887)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Bonzo3legs

Martin Simpson was very particular about his guitar tuning on BBC Radio 3 "In Tune" yesterday!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


11 Feb 12 - 07:37 AM (#3305894)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,Ian Mather sans cookie

Don went downhill since he was axed from Crackerjack.


11 Feb 12 - 07:39 AM (#3305896)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Mr Red

The song is different from the rendition.

BUT..............

we (well I do) take from the performance what we take, not what is given (always).

Homeless Brother is Folk and the message is louder than the guitar!
IMNSHO.

And who can argue with his lyrics for Andrew MacCrew? The wordsmith is supreme. Maybe I am applauding just that but let anyone argue and, well, just let them.


11 Feb 12 - 07:40 AM (#3305897)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: George Papavgeris

Stop and think. The guy is not deaf, he clearly knew the guitar was out of tune. Why then did ho not retune? I offer one explanation, similar (though on a grander scale) to what happened to me Monday night - I was told "you're on, two quick ones, please, we're short of time" as I came into the room, no chance to tune up. I obliged and managed to go through Emptyhanded with 2 strings out of tune somehow - and a third string went seriously out of kilter by the end of the song. I retuned after that, for the second song.

We know that the Folk Awards were live and on a tight schedule - indeed, Ralph McTell later on indicated precisely that when he said "I have been given two and a half minutes to do this introduction". I imagine everyone, Don included, was on promise to be as quick about it as they could. So he goes on, guitar is off. Dilemma - retune, or make do? He opted for the latter, just as I did on Monday (I hasten to add that this is the sum total of any similarities between us!). I can't say I blame him, you play as you find sometimes.


11 Feb 12 - 07:52 AM (#3305904)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Mr Red

FWIW Ponchatrain, as rendered by Martin Simpson, was distinctly C&W oriented. And different from all other renditions I heard up to now.

I wasn't wrong, but it was equally as "strange" as a guitar out of tune. Actually not as satisfying, here in Rouge Towers.

And he had plenty of musos to cover any problems from one source!


11 Feb 12 - 09:56 AM (#3305964)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Steve Shaw

George, I'm certain that the venue had a place called "backstage," or even "dressing rooms," where yer man could have just tweaked his axe before he went on!


11 Feb 12 - 11:02 AM (#3305991)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: George Papavgeris

The guitar was handed to him - tuned, supposedly - and he must have banged it on the way. It happens.


11 Feb 12 - 11:14 AM (#3305996)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Big Al Whittle

The word on the street is that he was a bit an arsehole - bigstaritis! Don't anyone touch that guitar! (and if someone had done they might have noticed it was out of tune) AND apparently he didn't want to provide the climax of the show - needed to get away so he didn't have to mix with the plebs.

How much truth one can attach to these rumours is anyone's guess.

Still a great man, and well worthy of his status down the urinal wall, where all the big nobs hang out - so to speak.


11 Feb 12 - 11:34 AM (#3306009)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,AEOLA

Let's face it   he's one of the best! However that particular performance was a little unexpected from a professional.


11 Feb 12 - 11:39 AM (#3306012)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Nick

Who is Don Maclean?

The bloke playing at the folk awards was Don McLean


If you are going to criticise then be right

Don Maclean was on Crackerjack (pencil cabbage)


11 Feb 12 - 11:44 AM (#3306016)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Nick

On the bright side

No Autotune -


Do you believe in love after love...

Oo wee oowee ooweee ooo


11 Feb 12 - 12:10 PM (#3306025)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,DonMeixner

What are you talking about?

Don


11 Feb 12 - 12:10 PM (#3306027)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,DonMeixner

Never mind


11 Feb 12 - 12:52 PM (#3306052)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: tonyteach1

I wonder if someone has decided that DM deserved teaching a lesson and has had a bit of a fiddle with the strings in revenge for say attitude problems

Just my cynical thought here


11 Feb 12 - 02:06 PM (#3306101)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Dave Hanson

Get real Al, it sounded bloody awful, and you know it.

Dave H


11 Feb 12 - 04:36 PM (#3306186)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,Roderick Warner

Didn't see Mr Mac C on tv - don't have one. (Refuse to pay a tax for the banalities of the BBC). But learned and busked 'American Pie' when it came out in the early seventies because people on the West End cinema queues and elsewhere loved it and it made me a lot of money at the time, until I got bored with it. An odd buskers song because of its length... 'Vincent' I always thought was dreadful and have suffered the covers by the sensitive and clumsy down the years in folk clubs and elsewhere in the places where these things are allowed. Freedom of expression and all that and only my opinion... I doubt that any of the singer songwriter Ewan McColl's stuff would have made the cut on the streets although 'Dirty Old Town' had a certain skiffly swing to it - 'First time' was a great pop song but too slow to play on the streets/cinema queues. The point being maybe that McLean and McColl shared mass interest (and royalties) because of their hits... Good luck to both, living and gone... Re the out of tune guitar, perhaps this was some attempt at giving the radio audience a taste of a 'singer's night?'


11 Feb 12 - 05:08 PM (#3306200)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Arthur_itus

Even my missus cringed listening to Don McLean. We both thought he was bloody aweful and so old fashioned.


11 Feb 12 - 05:31 PM (#3306212)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,ClareM

It was pretty terrible. I usually have the opposite problem. The guitar is in tune. I'm not.


11 Feb 12 - 05:32 PM (#3306214)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,roderick warner

Arthur - could have been worse - someone shipped ovver that old fashioned scoutmaster Saint P. Seeger droning his pieties... music that has not worn well at all... in my opinion, of course. Although heard the only version of 'Kumbaya' that ever made it for me yesterday on an album I forgot I had: 'King Tubby Meets the Upsetter.' Some righteous dub...


11 Feb 12 - 09:57 PM (#3306515)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST

They have to have one MOR singer songwriter the R2 audience will have heard of. You can't just have these obscure folkies! He was rubbish. Even if the guitar had been in tune he would still have been rubbish. The second song was passable, but the first was pure cack.


12 Feb 12 - 09:54 AM (#3306902)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: melodeonboy

It was certainly cheesy!


12 Feb 12 - 10:08 AM (#3306912)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: PHJim

Rodrick, why would you choose a thread on Don McLean to take a jab at Pete Seeger. Granted, Pete is not a pop singer, his repertoire is mostly folk, but at over 90, he still puts on an entertaining show and even got the David Letterman audience, not a folk club crowd, clapping and singing along. To each his own.


12 Feb 12 - 09:16 PM (#3307223)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Suegorgeous

Gosh, how many threads does it take to really teach the guy a lesson for his heinous crime?!


13 Feb 12 - 04:26 AM (#3307284)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,Howard Jones

Well, I think there is some surprise, not that his guitar was out of tune (that happens) but that he dealt with the situation so badly, not what you'd expect from an experienced professional.

Some no doubt see it as a vindication of the view that he was there in order to attract publicity for the awards, when there are many other contenders arguably more deserving for a British lifetime achievement award. No doubt he is completely unware of this aspect, but I'm sure it plays a part in the response.

Quite simply, his performance was dire. His website says it "drew a major reaction and for a while Don was 'trending' on Twitter!" - he doesn't explain what the reaction was for!


13 Feb 12 - 04:24 PM (#3307925)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: The Sandman

old fashioned?what the fk is that?
is folk music about being fashionable? if it is I despair, we will have Blair and Cameron , kissing babies and singing shite, with in tune guitars, smiling nicely, all form and no substance, but singning forgettable cliches


14 Feb 12 - 01:47 AM (#3308143)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Ernest

MacClean????

So McDonalds is selling cleaning supplies now?

And D.M. has taken over the job of Ronald McDonald?


14 Feb 12 - 10:58 AM (#3308367)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: GUEST,Tatterfoal

I am a liflong fan of McLean but he was awful on the Folk presentations night.   I thought he sang terrible never mind the guitar.   I will live with the concerts I saw him in up to Prime Time and try to remember him at his best.


14 Feb 12 - 12:45 PM (#3308407)
Subject: RE: The Position of Don MacClean
From: Lonesome EJ

I should have tuned you, Martin
This crowd was never made for one as dissonant as you