Denise McCann
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Denise McCann (Bachman) | |
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Birth name | Denise Eliane Helene McCann |
Also known as | Denise Bachman |
Born | December 16, 1948 |
Origin | USA |
Genres | Rock, Disco, Celtic |
Occupation(s) | Singer/Songwriter |
Instruments | guitar, mandolin, hurdy-gurdy, percussion, piano, bass |
Years active | 1977-present |
Labels | Polydor Canada, Ltd., Butterfly/EMI Records USA, RCA Canada, |
Denise McCann (born December 16, 1948, in Clinton, Iowa) is an American-Canadian singer/songwriter.
Biography
Growing up in a musical family, (her grandfather Albert Hews McCann, Sr. was a professional cornet player and singer in Shreveport, Louisiana), part of the McCann Family Orchestra that accompanied traveling vaudeville acts at the Shreveport theatre.
McCann's family moved to Castro Valley, California during her teen years. After graduating from high school in 1967, she moved to San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury region.
McCann became part of the hippie movement when she worked at the Magic Mountain Festival on Mount Tamalpais and then at the Monterey Pop Festival, where she was befriended by a nervous Jimi Hendrix just before his seminal performance. She appears in the D.A. Pennebaker documentary "Monterey Pop!"
She went on to become a folk singer and songwriter, appearing many times at famed San Francisco folk clubs, such as The Holy City Zoo, The Drinking Gourd, and The Coffee Gallery, where she would play her distinctive Gibson J-50 guitar and sing her self-penned songs.
She joined with Bob Smith and Roy Michaels of "Cat Mother & the All Night Newsboys" to form a new group called "Rich and Famous (and Denise)". The group only played a few gigs before going their separate ways.
McCann traveled to British Columbia to Vancouver's Kitsilano neighborhood, where she became a fixture performing at local clubs such as "Rohan's Rockpile" (see music of Vancouver) and The Commodore Ballroom.
There McCann teamed up with Guy Sobell, who produced her first single, the country-tinged "It Still Hurts" and its proposed B side "Tattoo Man". But her record label, Polydor Records in Montreal, decided the second song was too rock and roll oriented to serve as the B side to this country song, and they asked Sobell to extend it by adding a 2-minute percussion break in the middle so they could market it in the new clubs that were springing up all over Montreal. These clubs were playing a new genre of music that was called "Disco" for the discotheques where the beat-heavy dance music was popular and they wanted long, extended pieces that could be mixed by the club DJs to make them seamlessly meld into one another. Sobell complied with the request and "Tattoo Man" was released as a five-minute extended play LP that became a hit on the disco charts across North America. http://www.discogs.com/Denise-McCann-Tattoo-Man/release/149566
McCann's follow-up record was "I Don't Wanna Forget You", a song that featured a four-octave vocal improvisation. This second release received more commercial radio exposure than "Tattoo Man".
McCann was signed to the ill-fated and short-lived Disco specialty label "Butterfly Records" in Hollywood, and was thereafter dogged by having her record label go out of business twice just as her albums ("Midnight Madness" and "I Have A Destiny") were released.
She continued to work professionally in Canada in many bands, including the Basil Watson Revue, Mad Ivan and the Hornets, Denise McCann Band, Denise McCann and the Dead Marines, Headpins, and The Night Train Revue. She also appeared as a featured performer on many Canadian TV shows, including The Alan Hamel Show and its replacement The Alan Thicke Show, the Wolfman Jack Show, The Paul Anka Show, and the Rene Simard Show.
McCann met Randy Bachman of The Guess Who and Bachman–Turner Overdrive at a Christmas fundraiser concert and they married in 1982. She became a Canadian citizen in 1989.
Bachman and McCann separated in 2011.
External links
* https://www.facebook.com/denise.mccannbachman
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