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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Pat McCaskey by Pat McCaskey
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fave it Modern Folk | Gentle
12 tracks | 37 minutes
Released Jul 2004
on Pat McCaskey
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- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:05 The Jackfish lyrics FREE 03:05 The Jackfish lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:05 The Jackfish
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:35 Ebb lyrics BUY MP3 02:35 Ebb lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:35 Ebb
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:44 Brown Baby lyrics BUY MP3 02:44 Brown Baby lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:44 Brown Baby
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 01:47 Blow the Candles Out lyrics BUY MP3 01:47 Blow the Candles Out lyrics "GIFT MP3" 01:47 Blow the Candles Out
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:13 Little Bird lyrics BUY MP3 04:13 Little Bird lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:13 Little Bird
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:38 Crazy Mary lyrics BUY MP3 02:38 Crazy Mary lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:38 Crazy Mary
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:00 Until It's Time for You to Go lyrics BUY MP3 04:00 Until It's Time for You to Go lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:00 Until It's Time for You to Go
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:23 My Beloved lyrics BUY MP3 02:23 My Beloved lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:23 My Beloved
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 01:44 Hey Zhankoye lyrics BUY MP3 01:44 Hey Zhankoye lyrics "GIFT MP3" 01:44 Hey Zhankoye
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:58 Lass from the Low Country lyrics BUY MP3 04:58 Lass from the Low Country lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:58 Lass from the Low Country
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:00 Hushabye lyrics BUY MP3 03:00 Hushabye lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:00 Hushabye
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:41 Civil War Medley lyrics BUY MP3 04:41 Civil War Medley lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:41 Civil War Medley
A mellow voice with a comfortable interpretation of love songs, songs of protest, and songs of the human condition
Bio / Background
Pat McCaskey is a folk singer of the old school. He sings traditional tunes, love songs, ballads, and just about anything else that he likes and thinks others will like as well. Music and singing have been a part of Pat McCaskey's life since his earliest memories. Pat's father was one of the world's foremost professional harmonica players (working under the stage name of Stagg McMann). His early folk music influences were those acts his father worked with while the house emcee at the "Hungry i" in San Francisco. Pat grew up listening to, and trying to emulate, the "Limelighters", "Peter, Paul & Mary", "The Kingston Trio", "Stan Wilson" and many, many, others. It was an interesting and stimulating environment.
Pat's first professional show came as a surprise. He was a junior in high school and had been singing around school with a couple of seniors (Terry Ross and Gary Cartwright). One day Terry told him that they had a job at a local club, the "Monkey Room" in Hayward.
↓ more ↓It paid $75.00! That was a lot of money for 1961. The group called themselves the "Weekenders". It should have been spelled weakenders. They were just horrible with their covers of then popular groups. The good outcome, however, was that Pat and Terry continued to work on their newfound craft, and "Pat & Terry" was born.
For the next eight months the duo improved and sang wherever anybody would lend them an ear. If they got paid, it was even better. These efforts included small coffee houses and various house concerts throughout the San Francisco bay area. Terry, however, left for the University of Washington. The initial plans were for Pat to follow the next year. It didn't happen. Pat was now a solo act.
During the years from 1964 through 1967 Pat sang at every coffee house and every hootenanny in the south central Pennsylvania area that he could find. Audiences ranged from about ten, at a show at Immaculata College, to about three thousand at Longs Park in Lancaster. He sang in contests, at birthday parties, at restaurants, and yes even at a Moose Hall in Danbury, PA, (through a local booking agent). His last show during this period was at a church coffee house in San Antonio, Texas, while stationed at Fort Sam Houston. He returned to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in the late fall of 1967 and took up his professional life as a bank management trainee. Singing was just not compatible with being a banker.
In 1979, after returning to graduate school to earn his masters and Ph.D. degrees Pat relocated to the Boston area. As a professor he could once again sing in front of people without jeopardizing his career. After about six months of practice, he started out small, singing at the "Sword & Stone" on Beacon Hill, and then the "Nameless Coffeehouse" in Cambridge. Things were going well until a serious accident stopped it all. Two surgeries and 101 stitches followed, but after six months of recovery he found that, due to nerve damage, he could no longer play the guitar.
Flash forward to the summer of 2002. Pat's back in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, teaching at Millersville University and an old friend from college days says, "Why don't you start singing again?" After years of use his fingers had developed new nerve pathways and it was possible to "relearn" how to play the guitar. It took about a year, but it ends up that he plays much better now than he ever did. A new guitar (steel strings for the first time) was purchased and Pat McCaskey was back on stage again. However, it is the new, improved version! This time he plans on moving forward with his singing until he drops. Still singing after all these years...
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