The line in the song that I could not get out of my mind was: “The three men I admired most the Father, Son and the Holy Ghost.” A very Catholic phrase, I said to myself. The other day I mysteriously heard the song twice in two very different locations. Driving in the car with the top down was always a special way we shared the song together. My daughter and I share great memories listening to this song in our car, in our home, and on vacation.
The code according to most critics has never been fully cracked.Īmerican Pie has always been one of my favorite songs. There is no argument on that point.īut the song goes on and on offering the listener twists and turns and hidden messages. Most people familiar with the famous tune understand that the song’s powerful line, “The day the music died,” pertains to the day Buddy Holly died at 22 years of age in a plane crash. In a Washington Post interview Don McLean said this about his song: “It was an indescribable photograph of America that I tried to capture in words and music.” Shortly after the sale, McLean made a round of interviews with music journalists who once again sought to unravel the meaning behind the cryptic words to one of the most famous songs in rock and roll history. The original manuscript with the lyrics to Don McLean’s iconic tune America Pie were sold last year for $1.2 million.