News and Updates Page Offers the Up-to-Date Information on “American Pie”
In order to keep offering other interpretations of Don McLean’s “American Pie,” I’ve started a News and Updates Page to keep the forum open.
The first update includes research that offers a strong connection between Bob Dylan’s “Down in the Flood” and McLean’s “American Pie” … and possibly what might be the definitive interpretation of the line “When the Jester sang for the king and queen” from Verse Three. There is also a new connection to a Buddy Holly song, “Early in the Morning.”
To view this page, click HERE or the News and Updates link at right.
Buddy Holly
August 8, 2007
Dylan’s “Down in the Flood” and McLean’s “American Pie”
Posted by bluboo under American Pie, Basement Tapes, Bob Dylan, Buddy Holly, Crash on the Levee, Don McLean, Down in the Flood, Dylan's Greatest Hits, Early in the Morning, Joan Baez, King and Queen Pub, Last train for the Coast, Lyrics, Miss American Pie, Newport Folk Festival, Oldies, Rock and Roll, When the Jester sang for the king and queen, Williams Point, news, radioLeave a Comment
July 19, 2007
Miss American Pie Lives
Posted by bluboo under 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, Altamont, American Pie, Beatles, Big Bopper, Bob Dylan, Buddy Holly, Byrds, Crosby Stills Nash Young, Day the music died, Don McLean, Elvis Presley, February 3 1959, Hell's Angels, Iona College, Iona Prep, J P Richardson, Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, Kent State, Life, Lyrics, Marty Robbins, Miss American Pie, Music, New Rochelle, Newport Folk Festival, Oldies, Ritchie Valens, Rock and Roll, Rolling Stones, Sergeant Pepper, Surrealistic Pillow, Sympathy for the Devil, The Doors, clear lake, news, radio[2] Comments

Announcing the launch of my new American Pie web blog
I am pleased to announce the initial launch of my new blog, Miss American Pie, an analysis of the lyrics of the song “American Pie” by Don McLean. This site was inspired by my trip to Clear Lake, IA, and a longstanding desire to help people understand the magical imagery in McLean’s fabulous work.
While there have been many interpretations of the song, Don McLean has not answered any questions about the “meanings” contained in the song. An artist or poet does not explain their work. If it truly as an artisitic masterpiece, such a work is open to many interpretations. That allows a broader audience to develop their own meanings, their own understandings.
My intent is not to force an interpretation. In some cases, I was able to provide clues because of my familiarity with McLean’s home town and because we attended the same high school. For example, I hope that I have offered a probable solution to the riddle of “the sacred store.”
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