The producer, Ed Freeman, decided to use accomplished musicians who were not "studio musicians who could act like a metronome" because he wanted to capture the feel of a "band that was really cooking," so he rented a rehearsal studio and they rehearsed the title song for two weeks before they recorded it. The album was recorded in Studio A at The Record Plant on West 44th street in New York City. At the time of the writing McLean’s first marriage was failing and the optimism and hopefulness of the 1960s was giving way to the nihilism and hedonism of the 1970s. It has a melancholy feel and rather sparse arrangements. McLean dedicated the album to Buddy Holly, one of his childhood icons, and it was released in 1971. Believing that an artist's work should stand by itself, McLean generally did not offer explanations for his work's themes or meaning, though he did describe the title song as involving "a sense of loss". The album American Pie was intended as a unified work, as McLean has said that he was influenced by the Beatles' Sgt Pepper album and envisioned American Pie to be a similar album. McLean was a protégé of Pete Seeger, having played with him in the 1960s. American Pie is McLean’s second album his first, Tapestry, having been released to only moderate commercial success and acclaim in 1970.
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