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Composer, guitarist, producer, recording engineer and vocalist
who co-founded the power-pop group Shooting Star in the 1970s and has been
performing and recording with them off and on ever since. McLain and co-founder Ron Verlin were childhood chums who were inspired by The
Beatles' legendary appearance on The
Ed Sullivan Show in 1964 and promptly learned how to play guitar and
started their own band. McLain
and his family moved to a different school district, however, and Shooting
Star might never have been had the two of them not been re-united in high
school, where The Shooting Stars were unofficially born, with dancing girls
The Galaxys in tow. The Shooting Stars were a cover band
who hopped on the '50s nostalgia bandwagon and didn't hop off
until 1974 when singer-songwriters were in vogue, and McLain hunkered down
and started seriously crafting pop songs. In the interim, McLain played guitar
on Gary Apple's 1973 LP The
First One's Free. Shooting
Star did not actually record their eponymous debut until 1979, with
producer Gus Dudgeon, no less.
They were the first American band signed by Virgin Records. They recorded an album a year until
1983 and broke up a couple of years later. In addition to playing guitar and singing
background vocals and sometimes lead vocals, McLain also wrote or co-wrote
most of the band's repertoire.
In 1984, the band was asked to contribute a couple of songs to the
goofball comedy Up the Creek. Their music also appears in 1985's
Thunder Alley and 1990's I Come in Peace. A best-of package was released in
1989. Its success in concert
with popular demand encouraged McLain and Verlin
to get the old band together and the result was 1991's ironically
titled It's Not Over. In the '90s, McLain was
diagnosed with esophageal cancer which he gamely battled and in 1998 he
appeared at a cancer benefit which re-ignited his desire to perform and the
band re-united yet again for 2000's Leap of Faith. They
also offered support on 2001's Winston
Apple Sessions. The same
year saw McLain and Verlin opening for Zebra at a
concert in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
The band has continued to perform sporadically throughout the first
decade of the new millennium, and recently released a CD entitled Circles. McLain's production has drawn
mixed reviews, although he produces for other bands, including Cruise
Control and Ricochet. He also
mastered Big Metal Rooster's self-titled album in 2004. A couple of confusing bits: His birthday is listed as 3rd
May 1953 or 1955, depending on where you look, and Van McLain is sometimes
listed as Van McElvain, although he appears as
Van McLain on the recordings below.
Shooting
Star recordings
Preview
(Instrumental)/Straight Ahead (Van McLain/Gary West)
Straight Ahead
(Van McLain/Gary West)
Sources:
- http://www.shootingstarmaniacs.com/node/4
- http://www.brainyhistory.com/events/1953/may_3_1953_114524.html
- http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/contributor/1809089605
- http://www.xtrememusician.com/info/artists/profiles/2364.html
- http://www.nehrecords.com/shop/ShootingCircles.htm
- http://rateyourmusic.com/artist/shooting_star
- http://www.thelyricarchive.com/album/237179/It's-Not-Over
- http://www.smhtp.com/artist/Van-McLain/?key=P000104437
- http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088333/soundtrack
- http://www.metal-rules.com/zine/index2.php?option=content&task=view&id=647&pop=1&page=0
- http://www.thelyricarchive.com/album/237175/Hang-on-for-Your-Life
- http://www.geocities.com/sunsetstrip/alley/3800/main.htm
- http://www.mininova.org/tor/356208
- http://www.answers.com/topic/the-live-album-2004-album-by-ricochet?cat=entertainment
- http://www.strutter.8m.com/SHOOTINGSTARINTERVIEW.htm
- http://www.electricscotland.com/history/today/0503.htm
- http://www.indie-music.com/bands/bands/2009/
- http://cdbaby.com/cd/winstonapple3
- http://www.thedoor.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=8986&page=4
- http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/store/artist/album/0,,44493,00.html
- http://www.answers.com/topic/big-metal-rooster-2004-album-by-big-metal-rooster?cat=entertainment
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