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The Doobie Brothers have a new album with Michael McDonald, a summer tour and songwriting honors on the docket. The band talks to us about all of it.
While sitting next to his friend and fellow yacht rock legend Christopher Cross in the film, McDonald remembers the first time he saw the SCTV skit starring Moranis as McDonald.
Place this item in the category of unique and weird collectibles. A gallon of barbeque sauce from McDonald’s 1992 McJordan ...
Michael McDonald confesses he didn't understand 'yacht rock' Michael McDonald's distinctive, soulful voice, often described as smooth and soothing, became a hallmark of yacht rock. However, the ...
Michael McDonald’s voice became a defining sound of the 1970s and 1980s, bridging genres like rock, pop, soul, and R&B. In this video, we dive into the prolific career of the man behind ...
Michael McDonald walks us through key songs in his career, from the Doobie Brothers' "What a Fool Believes" to "Yah Mo B There" with James Ingram.
The Doobie Brothers talk new album 'Walk This Road,' reunion tour, and the return of Michael McDonald to the recording studio.
In 'Yacht Rock: A Dockumentary', Doobie Brothers singer Michael McDonald says he was "a little too high" and "thought I was hallucinating" the first time he saw Rick Moranis' parody of him on SCTV ...
Michael McDonald sounds both surprised and relieved to be back with the Doobie Brothers, this time not just as a nostalgia act but with Walk This Road, their first studio album together in over ...
Entertaining 'Yacht Rock' doc makes a case for respecting those smooth easy-listening sounds Michael McDonald, Christopher Cross, Kenny Loggins and other masters gamely explain the genre in breezy ...