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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 31 December 2024. American musician, singer, and keyboardist (born 1952) For other people named Michael McDonald, see Michael McDonald (disambiguation). Michael McDonald McDonald performing live in 2019 Background information Born (1952-02-12) February 12, 1952 (age 72) St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. Genres ...
Album Chart positions Certifications Record label US [1] UK [6] 1982 That Was Then – The Early Recordings of Michael McDonald * — — Arista: 1986 Sweet Freedom — 6 BPI: Platinum [8] Warner Bros. 2000 The Voice of Michael McDonald — — BPI: Silver [8] Warner Bros. / Rhino: 2001 The Very Best of Michael McDonald — 21 RIAA: Gold [7 ...
It should only contain pages that are Michael McDonald (musician) albums or lists of Michael McDonald (musician) albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Michael McDonald (musician) albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
When Steely Dan stopped touring, McDonald jumped to another '70s icon, The Doobie Brothers. In 1975 — on the eve of the release of their fifth album — their original lead singer, Tom Johnston, was hospitalized and unable to tour. The band drafted McDonald into the line-up to replace him, giving him 48- hours to learn their entire set.
Michael McDonald recorded it with his sister Maureen McDonald providing background vocals. It was featured on If That's What It Takes, his first solo album away from The Doobie Brothers. Greg Phillinganes, Steve Lukather and Jeff Porcaro played the clavinet, guitar and drums respectively.
The documentary pays tribute to the retroactively named late '70s and early '80s blend of soft rock, jazz and R&B that made acts like Kenny Loggins, Toto and McDonald superstars. Soul Train/Getty ...
The album includes singles and album tracks from McDonald's first two solo albums, If That's What It Takes (1982) and No Lookin' Back (1985), along with duets with James Ingram ("Yah Mo B There"), Patti LaBelle ("On My Own") and one song from when McDonald was lead singer of the rock band The Doobie Brothers ("What a Fool Believes").
Something stopped Michael McDonald from telling his story publicly — him. “I was afraid that, ‘Well, how much of a story is here, really?' My experience is pretty much me living vicariously ...