Don McLean has been arrested on a charge of domestic violence assault, it has been reported.
The American Pie singer is said to have been released from Knox County Jail in Tennessee after posting $10,000 bail.
Don McLean, who lives in Camden, Maine, had a 1971 hit with American Pie, about the deaths of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper in a plane crash.
Photo Knox County Jail
It was reported that Don McLean, 70, was held after police were called to a property at 02:00 local time on January 18.
The Wiscasset Newspaper published what it said was a mug shot of Don McLean.
He is reportedly set to appear at the Knox County Unified Court, Rockland, on February 22.
Don McLean has amassed more than 40 gold and platinum records worldwide during his career. He is understood to have last performed at a local lobster festival in August.
Don McLean has announced he will reveal the meaning of the lyrics to his hit song American Pie when the original manuscript goes under the hammer in New York in April.
American Pie is considered Don McLean’s magnum opus and his signature song.
The lyrics are scheduled to be auctioned off on April 7th.
The singer has previously acknowledged that the beginning of the song is about the death of Buddy Holly, but has remained elusive about the rest of the track.
“The writing and the lyrics will divulge everything there is to divulge,” Don McLean told Reuters.
The 16-page manuscript could fetch up to $1.5 million at auction.
The 1971 song, which is Don McLean’s best-known work, was named a Song of the Century by the Recording Industry Association of America in 2001.
The six verses are understood to reflect the social upheavals of the 1960s and ’70s.
“I wanted to capture, probably before it was ever formulated, a rock and roll American dream,” Don McLean, 69, told Reuters.
Don McLean’s famous chorus features memorable lines like: “Bye-bye, Miss American Pie/Drove my Chevy to the levee, but the levee was dry.”
Elsewhere, his wide-reaching rhymes talk of how “the jester sang for the king and queen/In a coat he borrowed from James Dean” and “while Lennon read a book on Marx/The quartet practiced in the park”.
Don McLean said he decided to sell the manuscript, which includes multiple drafts with handwritten notes and deletions, on a whim.
Francis Wahlgren of auction house Christie’s said: “The fact that the drafts, the working process of it, are all being offered as this lot makes it a remarkable insight into the mind of Don McLean and into this incredible song that has touched so many people.
“There is something about this song that captures the era of that period and there is a kind of innocence to it, a loss of innocence in America.”
Bob Dylan’s lyrics for Like A Rolling Stone set the auction record for a handwritten manuscript, when they sold for $2 million last year.
Don McLean has amassed more than 40 gold and platinum records worldwide during his career.
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