With age and sobriety, Michael McDonald is ready to get personal (2024)

Michael McDonald, 72, describes his voice as a "malleable" instrument: "Especially with age, it's like you're constantly renegotiating with it." Timothy White/Sacks & Co. hide caption

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Timothy White/Sacks & Co.

With age and sobriety, Michael McDonald is ready to get personal (2)

Michael McDonald, 72, describes his voice as a "malleable" instrument: "Especially with age, it's like you're constantly renegotiating with it."

Timothy White/Sacks & Co.

Even Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter Michael McDonald says he feels like an imposter sometimes.

"I don't mean to be self-deprecating when I say this, but I never really understood why people gave me so much credit as a musician," McDonald says. "I really am just, more or less, a songwriter who plays a little bit of piano."

It's an understatement. McDonald's singular sound that has captivated audiences for generations and has given life to remixes, remakes and thousands of impressions from Tonight Show skits to The Voice.

His new memoir, What A Fool Believes, which he co-wrote with comedian Paul Reiser, chronicles McDonald's childhood in Ferguson, MO., his early years as a session musician and his decades-long career as a member of Steely Dan and The Doobie Brothers and as a solo artist.

Tiny Desk

Michael McDonald: Tiny Desk (Home) Concert

Throughout his career, McDonald was known for crossover hits. His 1982 single, "I Keep Forgettin'," cracked the top 10 of Billboard's Pop, R&B and Adult Contemporary charts, and was later sampled by hip-hop artists Warren G and Nate Dogg in their 1994 hit, "Regulate."

McDonald says that earlier in his career, he tended to avoid writing about himself directly in songs. But looking back now, he's noticed a shift in his music, which he attributes, in part, to becoming sober in the mid 1980s.

"More than anything, I think what people who suffer from addiction share universally is that we're kind of hiding from ourselves. We're kind of hiding from our feelings," he says. "I've learned in sobriety to slowly peel back different layers."

Interview highlights

Jim Shea/Brian Moore/Sacks & Co.

With age and sobriety, Michael McDonald is ready to get personal (5)

Jim Shea/Brian Moore/Sacks & Co.

On his first band, Mike and the Majestics

It was Mike and the Majestics, and I soon got demoted, and it was just the Majestics. We started when we were all around 12. I think our first gigs happened more like when I was 13. And the other guys were a year and two older than me.

Back then, we were playing basement parties, birthday parties for girls we knew in the eighth grade. And then we graduated to fraternity parties, at a very tender age, which my mother was not happy about. And so she enlisted my father to come on as our manager — not before we were exposed to some of the rites of passage that we were probably too young to witness. ... We thought we'd died and gone to heaven. Because the girls were all really cute, and the frat guys were out of their minds and they would pass the hat. ... But then we had a curfew because we were all like 12 and 13 years old. And in the course of all this, we learned all the filthy lyrics to "Louie Louie" and songs like that were college staples.

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On writing the Doobie Brothers' song, "Takin' It To The Streets," which was inspired by gospel

The intro of the song just kind of popped in my head, and I couldn't wait to get to the gig and set my piano up and pick the chords out on the piano. ... It just felt like an opening to a gospel song and I loved gospel music at the time. ... What better motif for that very idea of people falling through the cracks of our society and ... and how do we do better by each other than a gospel song. ... It took me a minute to come up with "Takin' to the Streets" because that came from the idea that ... we've got to do better by each other or this is what it's going to come to. It's going to be settled one way or the other. These kinds of progressive ideas and reforms don't come easily, and they come by necessity. ... We're going to meet on the same plane one way or the other, maybe we can do it out of love for each other and consideration and empathy before we have to do it out of frustration.

On the realization that white artists were covering Black musicians' songs and being praised for it

World Cafe Words and Music from WXPN

Though It May Seem Like It, Michael McDonald Can't Predict The Future

I think that was pretty much the experience of a lot of people in my generation growing up. White kids who thought that Pat Boone wrote, "Tutti Frutti." We didn't know any better, you know, because radio was so segregated, as was everything, in the United States at the time. It was a sad division in what really was such a strong part of our culture, you know, but it was always kind of isolated away from and giving credit to the people who really brought those art forms to America and, really gave America its own true artistic art form: Jazz and R&B music and gospel. ...

For instance, the English invasion bands, we thought that they wrote those songs like, "It's All Over Now" by The Rolling Stones was Bobby Womack and his brothers and had a group called The Valentinos, and that song was a No. 1 hit on Black radio when the Stones released it. ... I never cease to be surprised by the roots of some music that I thought was more of a pop record, but that really has its roots in the blues tradition and was written by American artists who didn't really enjoy the success of the song that other artists did.

On being big in the Black community

Whenever that was brought to my attention, by friends of mine who liked our music, I was really flattered by that. And I continue to be flattered because, to me, that's really the test of anything I ever really desired to do was to represent, in my own way, what I truly believe is American music. To have that privilege of being able to do that and have it accepted by the audience who I believe created it, who invented it and brought it to all of us.

On how his voice has aged

The voice is a malleable instrument, at best, and especially with age, it's like you're constantly renegotiating with it. I find that at my age now, I'm just trying to figure out what my strengths are and what I can use to put the song across. I wish in some ways I could sing with the range or the sense of pitch or whatever it is I had when I was younger. But unfortunately, those things change over the years. ...

I've been less reluctant to lower keys and stuff, and especially if it brings a better performance out of me, but I found that a lot of things have changed. ... I have to kind of learn what still works for me when I'm singing, because I don't want to be trying to sound like I used to sound and have that be obvious. I want to just be able to do what I do best now.

Sam Briger and Susan Nyakundi produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Meghan Sullivan adapted it for the web.

With age and sobriety, Michael McDonald is ready to get personal (2024)

FAQs

Did Michael McDonald go solo? ›

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.

When did Michael McDonald leave the Doobie Brothers? ›

The initial sessions for 1977's Livin' on the Fault Line featured Johnston's contributions, but soon after, Johnston decided to leave The Doobie Brothers. McDonald would continue with the band until their 1982 farewell tour, after which he left to pursue a solo career.

What religion is Michael McDonald? ›

McDonald grew up Irish Catholic, bracketed by two sisters in a suburb of St. Louis.

Who was Michael McDonald's first band? ›

He formed his first band, Mike and the Majestics, while he was in high school and later developed his singing and keyboard skills while working in St. Louis nightclubs.

Are The Doobie Brothers religious? ›

So, why would a rock 'n roll band with no interest in Christ or the Christian faith record such a song? The group said plainly, “We liked the tune.” They admitted they had no problem with The Jesus Movement though they themselves were totally unmoved by Jesus in any spiritual or religious way.

Is Michael McDonald touring with The Doobie Brothers in 2024? ›

The 2024 Tour follows The Doobie Brothers 50th Anniversary Tour which had Tom Johnston, Michael Mcdonald, Pat Simmons and John Mcfee back on the road together for the first time in over 25 years.

Did Michael McDonald ever sing with Steely Dan? ›

Soon enough, McDonald, known for his potent singing voice, was recruited by Steely Dan to perform backing vocals, beginning in 1974 as a touring member. The following year, he appeared on the band's fourth studio album, Katy Lied, continuing to work with Steely Dan until 1980.

Is Michael McDonald still married to Amy Holland? ›

Holland has been married to musician Michael McDonald since 1983. The couple lives in Santa Barbara, California, and they have two children. In 1995, Holland was diagnosed with cancer, and after many years of therapy, she is now in good health.

Who sang most of The Doobie Brothers' songs? ›

Tom Johnston sang lead on most of the Doobie Brothers early hits such as China Grove and Listen To The Music. Patrick Simmons sang lead on Black Water. After Johnston started having health issues they brought in Michael McDonald.

What songs did Michael McDonald sing as a backup singer? ›

It was like a federal law that Michael McDonald had to sing on one song per album. Aside from The Doobie Brothers he's credited on a couple of hundred songs including backup vocals on Christopher Cross's “Ride like the wind,” James Ingram's “Yah mo be there,” Toto's “I'll be over you,” and Kenny Loggins' “This is it.”

What voice type is Michael McDonald? ›

He is known for a soulful baritone singing style. He began his career singing back-up vocals with Steely Dan. He became a member of The Doobie Brothers from 1976 to 1982.

Who was Michael McDonald married to? ›

Did the McDonald Brothers ever get their 1? ›

The brothers astonishingly agreed to a “handshake” deal whereby they would receive royalties of 1% of the revenues Kroc would make, in perpetuity. Unsurprisingly, this handshake deal was never honoured and the brothers were not able to prove it.

Why did Michael go solo? ›

But Jackson wanted more than just stardom. He thirsted for superstardom, and on his own terms at that. Toward his goal of shedding his teenybopper image, Jackson teamed with legendary producer Quincy Jones to record a make-or-break solo album, his first as an adult, titled Off the Wall.

When did Michael become solo? ›

He started his solo artist career in 1971, but it wasn't until 1979 when he teamed up with Quincy Jones to record his solo album “Off the Wall” that he earned entry into the level of influential R&B singer/songwriters.

When did Michael McDonald become sober? ›

Michael McDonald: Tiny Desk (Home) Concert

But looking back now, he's noticed a shift in his music, which he attributes, in part, to becoming sober in the mid 1980s.

Who went solo from the Doobie Brothers? ›

Michael McDonald (The Doobie Brothers)

McDonald netted a few other solo entries on his own (to say nothing of his abilities as a duet partner), but he found surprising late-era success with his run of Motown cover albums. He still records and performs to this day, so if you book him, he will "Yah Mo B There."

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