Michael McDonald (musician)
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Michael McDonald | |
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McDonald performing live in 2019
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Background information | |
Born | St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. |
February 12, 1952
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Years active | 1974–present |
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Website | michaelmcdonald |
Michael McDonald (born February 12, 1952) is an American singer, keyboardist and songwriter known for his distinctive, soulful voice and as a member of the bands the Doobie Brothers (1975–1982, 1987, 2019–present) and Steely Dan (1974). McDonald wrote and sang several hit singles with the Doobie Brothers, including "What a Fool Believes", "Minute by Minute", and "Takin' It to the Streets." McDonald has also performed as a prominent backing vocalist on numerous recordings by artists including Steely Dan, Christopher Cross, and Kenny Loggins.
McDonald's solo career consists of nine studio albums and a number of singles, including the 1982 hit "I Keep Forgettin' (Every Time You're Near)". During his career, McDonald has collaborated with a number of other artists, including James Ingram, David Cassidy, Van Halen, Patti LaBelle, Lee Ritenour, the Winans, Aretha Franklin, the rock band Toto,[2] Grizzly Bear,[3] Joni Mitchell, and Thundercat. He has also recorded for television and film soundtracks. McDonald is the recipient of five Grammy Awards, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Doobie Brothers in 2020.[4]
Contents
Early years
Michael McDonald was born on February 12, 1952, into a Catholic Irish American family in Ferguson, Missouri,[5] a suburb of St. Louis. McDonald attended McCluer High School,[6] where he played in local bands, including Mike and the Majestics, Jerry Jay and the Sheratons, the Reeb-Toors/Younger Brothers, and the Guild. He was discovered[by whom?] while playing with a band called Blue and moved to Los Angeles, California, in 1970 to pursue a career in music.
Steely Dan
In 1974, McDonald became a member of Steely Dan's touring band, singing lead and backing vocals. He also became one of the many in-studio adjunct members of the band, providing backing vocals on tracks for 1975's Katy Lied.[7] He appeared on subsequent Steely Dan recordings, including 1976's The Royal Scam[8] and 1977's Aja.[9] He also played keyboards on some Steely Dan tracks.[10]
McDonald continued to provide backing vocals for Steely Dan through their 1980 release, Gaucho.[11] In 2006, he joined Steely Dan on the band's summer tour, both as the opening act and as part of the band.[12]
The Doobie Brothers
McDonald was recruited by the rock band the Doobie Brothers in April 1975, initially as a temporary replacement for their lead vocalist Tom Johnston after he had become ill during a national tour, but McDonald's work with the band proved so successful that they decided to retain him as a full-time member.
As a member of the Doobie Brothers, McDonald sang the lead vocals on some of the band's best-known songs, such as "Real Love", "Takin' It to the Streets", "Little Darling (I Need You)", "It Keeps You Runnin'", "Minute by Minute", and "What a Fool Believes" (which became a number-one single in the U.S. and earned him a 1980 Grammy Award for Song of the Year along with co-writer Kenny Loggins).
At the same time, McDonald appeared as a session vocalist and keyboardist for various artists, including Christopher Cross, Stephen Bishop, Jack Jones, Bonnie Raitt, the rock band Toto, and Kenny Loggins. McDonald co-wrote "You Belong to Me" with Carly Simon, which appeared on the album Livin' on the Fault Line.[13]
McDonald has reunited as a guest performer with the Doobie Brothers several times since the band's initial dissolution in 1982.[12] He reteamed with the Doobie Brothers for the track "Don't Say Goodbye" on the band's 13th studio album, World Gone Crazy (2010).[14] In March 2014, he reunited with the Doobie Brothers to record a new album featuring the greatest hits of the Doobies' 40-plus-year career. This project was completed in conjunction with Sony Music Nashville. On the album, McDonald shares lead vocals with Sara Evans for "What a Fool Believes", the duo Love and Theft for "Takin' It to the Streets", and Amanda Sudano-Ramirez for "You Belong to Me." The album titled Southbound was released on November 4, 2014, as the Doobie Brothers' 14th studio album.
On November 5, 2014, McDonald and the Doobie Brothers were featured musical guests on the 47th annual Country Music Association Awards to celebrate the release of Southbound. They were joined by Hunter Hayes, Jennifer Nettles, and Hillary Scott in their performance of "Listen to the Music". At the end of the awards ceremony, they were also joined by host Brad Paisley for "Takin' It to the Streets".
Solo career
After the Doobie Brothers' first farewell tour, McDonald released his first solo studio album, If That's What It Takes, in 1982 on the Warner Bros. label.[15] The album featured the hit singles "I Keep Forgettin' (Every Time You're Near)" and "I Gotta Try", the latter co-written with Kenny Loggins, who also recorded it that same year for his fourth album High Adventure.
He continued to collaborate with other artists during this period. McDonald co-wrote Van Halen's top-20 hit "I'll Wait", from their biggest-selling album 1984. "Yah Mo B There", a duet with James Ingram, won the 27th Annual Grammy for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals.[16] In 1985, he released his second studio album No Lookin' Back, his first time coproducing an album. He also wrote or cowrote all of the tracks and featured a minor hit with the title track, cowritten by Kenny Loggins. By June 1986, the album had met little success, but McDonald then had a huge boost with the release of the single "Sweet Freedom", which appeared on the soundtrack to the Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines film Running Scared, and was McDonald's last top-10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The No Lookin' Back album was then re-released in some markets with the new hit single included, as well as a few songs remixed. The single "On My Own", a duet with Patti LaBelle, reached number one on the U.S. charts in 1986. Mid that year, he performed as a backing vocalist on the rock band Toto's album Fahrenheit, appearing on the hit single "I'll Be Over You" and its accompanying video. On August 22, 1986, McDonald appeared in an episode of The Young and the Restless.[17][18] Later that year, he provided backing vocals on the Wang Chung song "A Fool and His Money" from their album Mosaic. In 1987, McDonald did a featured collaboration, titled "Love Has No Color", with gospel quartet The Winans from their Decisions album.
In 1990, McDonald released his third studio album, Take It to Heart, which featured a minor hit with the title track, cowritten by Diane Warren. The following year, he joined the New York Rock and Soul Revue,[19] put together by Steely Dan's lead vocalist Donald Fagen and featuring other artists such as Boz Scaggs and Phoebe Snow. In 1991, he released the single "Ever Changing Times", a duet with Aretha Franklin.
In 1999, McDonald recorded the song "Eyes of a Child", a comedic ballad written by Trey Parker, for the South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut soundtrack. It was also used at the ending credits for the movie. The same year, he sang backing vocals on The Warren Brothers' single "Better Man", from their album Beautiful Day in the Cold Cruel World.[20] He also provided lead vocals for one of three studio tracks on Chicago XXVI: Live in Concert.
2000–present
In 2003, McDonald earned two Grammy nominations for his album Motown, a tribute to the Motown sound. A year later, Motown Two was released. Music critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine stated, "The album follows the same blueprint as the first record, offering highly polished, professionally produced, expertly performed interpretations of gems from the Motown vaults."[21]
In 2008, McDonald released his album Soul Speak, which includes three new songs penned by McDonald, and covers of songs originally made famous by Dionne Warwick ("Walk On By"), Stevie Wonder ("Living for the City"), Van Morrison ("Into the Mystic"), Tyrone Davis ("Baby Can I Change My Mind"), and others.[22]
In 2000, McDonald, along with partners Chris Pelonis and actor Jeff Bridges, founded the independent recording label Rampe St. Louis Walk of Fame.[23] McDonald recorded a duet with Ray Charles on Charles' 2004 album Genius Loves Company. In 2007, McDonald helped judge the sixth annual Independent Music Awards.[24] In 2006, McDonald sang as a guest singer in the jazz quartet Fourplay from the album X, in a cover of Steve Winwood's song "My Love's Leavin'".[25]
In 2009, McDonald, along with the West Angeles COGIC Mass Choir, released the song "Storm Before the Calm" on the compilation album Oh Happy Day.[26] McDonald also contributed an alternate lead vocal track for the 7-inch single "While You Wait for the Others", by the indie rock band Grizzly Bear.[27]
In December 2009, McDonald donated his performance to Keep the Beat in Santa Barbara, California, where he played to a capacity crowd at the newly renovated Granada Theater. Harry Rabin, producer and head of Keep the Beat, an initiative of the Santa Barbara Education Foundation, produced the show, including two video productions, and worked with student choral groups from primary and secondary schools as well as a brass section so they could perform in the show with McDonald and his band.[28]
In 2009, McDonald appeared on the satirical television sitcom 30 Rock as one of the benefit singers in the season finale episode "Kidney Now!".[29] McDonald performed the national anthem before the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl between the Boise State Broncos and TCU Horned Frogs at the University of Phoenix Stadium on January 4, 2010, in Glendale, Arizona.[30] McDonald sang "Takin' It to the Streets" on the American Idol season nine finale, in 2010.[31]
In 2010, McDonald teamed up again with Donald Fagen and Boz Scaggs, to form The Dukes of September. In June 2012, the supergroup performed on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon to promote their tour. The group also played at Lincoln Center, a performance which was then broadcast as a PBS special and later released on DVD.
In 2013, McDonald settled a $500,000 breach-of-contract suit (out of court) with Warner Music over underpayment of royalties of online sales.[32] In the summer of 2014, he co-headlined a U.S. tour with the rock band Toto.[33]
In 2017, McDonald was featured together with Kenny Loggins on Thundercat's single "Show You the Way", included on the latter's album Drunk.[34] In June 2017, McDonald, Loggins and Thundercat performed the song together on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.[35]
In 2018, he appeared as a guest vocalist on the song "What the World Needs Now" on Barbra Streisand's Walls.[citation needed]
In 2021, McDonald was featured on "The Best Of Me", from Toad the Wet Sprocket's seventh studio album, Starting Now.[36]
Personal life
McDonald has been married to singer Amy Holland since 1983. They have two children. He moved with his family to Santa Barbara, California, in the late 1990s, and has subsequently lived in Nashville, Tennessee.[37]
Discography
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Touring band members
- Michael McDonald – lead vocals, piano, rhythm guitar
- Bernie Chiaravalle – lead and rhythm guitars, backing vocals
- Pat Coil – keyboards
- Mark Douthit – saxophone, keyboards
- Jacob Lowery – bass guitar, harmonica, backing vocals
- Dan Needham – drums
- Drea Rheneé – backing and co-lead vocals, tambourine
- Amy Holland – vocals
Awards and honors
Grammy Awards | |||
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Year | Category | Nominated work | Result |
1979 | Record of the Year | "What a Fool Believes" (The Doobie Brothers) | Won |
1979 | Song of the Year | "What a Fool Believes" (co-written with Kenny Loggins) | Won |
1979 | "Minute by Minute" (co-written with Lester Abrams) | Nominated | |
1979 | Album of the Year | Minute by Minute (The Doobie Brothers) | Nominated |
1979 | Best Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo, Group or Chorus | "Minute by Minute" (The Doobie Brothers) | Won |
1979 | Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocals | "What a Fool Believes" | Won |
1982 | Best Pop Vocal Performance – Male | "I Keep Forgettin' (Every Time You're Near)" | Nominated |
1984 | Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal | "Yah Mo B There" (with James Ingram) | Won |
1984 | Best R&B Song | "Yah Mo B There" (with James Ingram, Rod Temperton, and Quincy Jones) | Nominated |
1986 | Best Pop Vocal Performance – Male | "Sweet Freedom" | Nominated |
1986 | Best Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group | "On My Own" (with Patti Labelle) | Nominated |
2003 | Best Pop Vocal Performance – Male | "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" | Nominated |
2003 | Best Pop Vocal Album | Motown | Nominated |
In May 2011, Michael McDonald was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music from Berklee College of Music.[38]
References
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External links
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- Official website
- St. Louis Walk of Fame
- Michael McDonald discography at Discogs
- Michael McDonald at the Internet Movie Database
- Michael McDonald Sings on New Grizzly Bear Single
- June 20, 2011 Inside MusiCast interview
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- ↑ St. Louis Walk of Fame – Michael McDonald[permanent dead link]. Retrieved August 16, 2008.[dead link]
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