Linda McLean
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Linda McLean (born in 1957) is a Canadian musician, singer and songwriter.
[edit] Childhood and Early Career
She is the youngest child of Norwegian immigrants. She was born in Belleville, Ontario, Canada. Her formative years were spent in Belleville where at age 9 she picked up her first guitar, and age 12 formed an acoustic quartet. Her first public performance was in a local church basement. She sites her main musical influences from this time as Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, and the musicals of Rogers and Hammerstein. She attended Centennial Secondary School where she was introduced to Canadian singer songwriters Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and Bruce Cockburn among others. Her primary focus became acting for theatre, and led to her being asked to join the Belleville Theatre Guild. Her co-creation and performance in the original docu-drama, “Around About 1983-84” brought her local media attention and interest from the newly formed Theatre Passe Muraille in Toronto. McLean moved to Toronto in 1976 and soon married and had 2 children. After her first marriage dissolved in 1984, McLean attained a Bachelor of Arts from York University and worked professionally in the theatre and film community for more than a decade. She taught acting and developed Artist in the Schools programs through the Ontario Arts Council. During this period, McLean studied music theory, voice, piano, dance and the Alexander Technique. She opened a studio in her home called The Body Works in 1990 where she offered instruction in body awareness and postural realignment. Her future husband, Andy McLean, who at the time was a recording artist (Tenants/Doubledare) became one of her students. 1999 McLean completed a Masters of Arts Degree at OISE/University of Toronto, specializing in Arts Education and Holistic Learning. While completing her degree she recorded 4 songs and entered the Toronto music scene, performing solo and with various musicians. In 2000, McLean moved to Huntsville, Ontario and moved into the full time occupation of songwriting.
[edit] Singer Songwriter
McLean’s first international performance was at the 2001 Rockrgrl Festival in Seattle. Her first full length album, Betty’s Room, co-written with partner Andy McLean, and produced by music veteran and friend John Whynot, featured drummer Gary Craig and Blue Rodeo sideman Bob Egan. Its independent release in 2002 established McLean as a noteworthy Canadian songwriter, achieving critical acclaim and airplay across Canada on CBC and Galaxie, a publishing deal with Feldman & Assc, and a Songwriter of the Year award at the first annual Northern Ontario Music and Film Awards for the song “Mandolin”. IN September 2003, Rounder/Europe picked up the license for “Betty’s Room” and released it across Europe under the “Me and My Records” label banner where it became top pick of the UK Distributors, achieved universal 4 star reviews, tour spots and radio interviews, especially in Holland, where the now famous Dutch music journalist Leo Blokhuis dubbed the CD “a rare pearl” and “masterpiece” describing McLean as “a singer songwriter in the best tradition of fellow Canadian Joni Mitchell’s 70’s work”. Critical acclaim did not translate into mass commercial success. In 2004 McLean returned to the studio with partner Andy and producer John Whynot to record 12 new songs in a the collection titled “No Language”. The CD was picked up for licensing and international distribution by the Canadian indie label, Bongo Beat, headed by industry veteran Ralph Alfonso. McLean was added to a roster with an eclectic assortment of artists including Johnny Dowd, Paul Hyde, Jeb Loy Nicols among many others; artists hand selected by Alfonso to suit his personal attraction to strong lyrics and innovative musical arrangments. “No Language” attracted a wider audience in Canada with continued critical acclaim, and in 2005 Linda McLean was chosen by CBC radio as one of the three top Canadian singer songwriters, along with Kathleen Edwards and Sarah Harmer. No Language was championed by the BBC’s “Whispering” Bob Harris who featured songs on both of his evening BBC Radio 2 programs. Following a succession of affirmative reviews in Norway, Spain, Holland and the UK McLean independently supported the release with tours, interviews and industry showcases. She was interviewed on BBC Liverpool by the noted musicologist Spencer Leigh.
In June 2007, McLean performed live to BBC Radio 2 from Toronto’s CBC station.
McLean’s first 2 CDs have been met with critical acclaim but have not sold in substantial numbers to attain break through status.
McLean continues to write songs and pre-produce them in her home studio in Muskoka near Mary Lake. A new CD is slotted to be released on the Bongo Beat Label in early 2009.
[edit] Arts Advocate/Educator
Linda McLean is married to Andy McLean, managing director of North by Northeast (NXNE) Music and Film Festival and Conference. NXNE is an annual four-day live event held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada the second weekend of June. NXNE’s directors, Michael Hollet (Editor of Now Magazine) Andy McLean and Yvonne Matsell, along with the directors of SXSW created an ethos of support to music and musicians first, predicting and supporting the rise and influence of independent music in Canada. In the early years of NXNE (1993 to 96) Linda McLean was directly involved as the office and conference coordinator, helping establish the event as the primary music industry event in Canada. McLean has been a showcasing artist at SXSW 2003 in Austin TX at the Hideout, and at NXNE 2006 in Toronto ON at the Drake.
Linda McLean is an original Faculty member of the Independent Music Production at Seneca College in Toronto where she taught from 2004 to 2007 and was consulted as an independent artist and educator to create and develop the programs and curriculum for Artist Development, Songwriting, Industry Overview and Music Theory.