Old Mac (song) explained

Old Mac
Cover:Tlot tlot old mac.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Tlot Tlot
Album:The Live Set - Volume 1
Released:8 December 1992
Recorded:1992, AVC Records, Melbourne
Genre:Alternative rock, hard rock
Length:4:04
Label:Anubis
Producer:Tlot Tlot
Prev Title:Rain
Prev Year:1989
Next Title:The Girlfriend Song
Next Year:1995

"Old Mac" is a song released as the first non-album single by the Australian alternative rock band Tlot Tlot. It was released on 8 December 1992.

Composition

Musically, the song can be considered either hard rock or alternative rock. It uses a xylophone intro followed by heavy guitar riffs which play in the choruses. The riffs' chord progression is a constant D#-F, using two guitars for a thicker sound. The verses have the same drum and bass backing as the chorus, but instead of guitars, a keyboard is used. A different guitar phrase, the notes C-F-F#-A#-F-C-F#-A#-C-A#-C-A#, is used between the verses. The breakdown has stomping on the bass pedal followed by the xylophone intro followed by the between-verses bit, but without the guitars. The chorus then begins again. There is a minor pause before the outro (which is just the chorus repeated four to five times) begins. The end of the song consists of a final strum of the guitar followed by Paulzen bending one of the strings as the song fades out.

Lyrically, the song is about McDonald's and is sung from the point of view of Ronald McDonald (who is only referred to as a "big yellow clown" in the first verse and is not explicitly named until the end).

When Tlot Tlot played the song live, the between-verses bit was played in the intro in place of the heavy guitars, which were placed behind the verses instead of bare keyboards. The chorus was also sung by Paulzen instead of Dixon. In the studio version, Dixon sang "Will anybody be there?", but Paulzen replaced it with "Will Elvis Presley be there?" in the first chorus and "Will Buddy Holly be there?" in the second. With the "No, I don't think so" backing vocal in the chorus, Paulzen sang it in the studio version, but Bolwell would sing it when playing live.

Track listing

Track 4 previously appeared on Pistolbuttsa'twinkle. A song called "Hearse" was also written and recorded during these sessions, but it went unused and was later released on Ruck Rover's self-titled EP in 1999. Track 5 previously appeared on A Day at the Bay.

The title track would later be released on the album The Live Set - Volume 1 in 1993, however the recording on the album is not the recording featured on this single. It is instead based on the tape used to back Tlot Tlot in live performance, which was recorded in 1990.

Personnel

External links