Home » Fleetwood Mac evolves, matures on mammoth Tusk

Fleetwood Mac evolves, matures on mammoth Tusk

The rumors about all those Fleetwood Mac splits were true, and now their comment is Tusk, Tusk

It’s not because saving the elephant is one of their causes or that they identify with the magnificent if extinct mammoth that Fleetwood Mac called their current double LP Tusk. Explains the group’s drummer/manager, Mick Fleetwood: “The title itself has no bearing on anything. We just liked the sound of the word, in the abstract.”

But financially, Mick and Co. might as well have titled it Risk. Along with Led Zeppelin and the Eagles, Mac was the fall’s Great Vinyl Hope to resurrect the lagging music industry. Yet Tusk defiantly lists at $15.98 when, as Mick admits, “record sales are taking a complete dump.” Further, the group invested more than $1 million to create a jarring, audacious new sound. So why depart from the hit-cranking pop-rock formula responsible for some 20 million sales of their last two LPs? As lead guitarist Lindsey Buckingham points out invidiously, the Eagles’ new work “is just more of the same of the last five years. I mean, why bother?” “Our ideas and lives progressed, moved on,” seconds keyboardist Christine McVie. “Tusk is years more mature. If you’re complacent, you stagnate.”

Complacency has never been a vice of Fleetwood Mac since the group settled into its present composition in 1974 with Mick and two other Britons, bassist John McVie and his then wife Christine, plus two Californians, Buckingham and his then lover, singer Stevie Nicks. In the two years since their provocatively autobiographical last LP, Rumours, three of them have changed partners. John has found a new wife. Christine is riding the perfect wave with Beach Boy Dennis Wilson. Fleetwood, after remarrying his divorced wife, split again and lives with a model. Nicks is now unattached since busting up with a record executive. Buckingham is still with his model.

Under those circumstances, much of Tusk was put together piecemeal on what Christine says was a “noncommunal rotation system”; the five members were often not in the studio together. The involvement this time was less emotional than aesthetic and, to hear Lindsey, not even commercial. “If Tusk becomes an influential work over the next decade,” says Buckingham (who dominates the LP with nine of the 20 tunes), “then that’s the measure of success. Whether it sells three million or five million,” he adds ever-so-blithely, “is neither here nor there.” “People may not have expected Tusk,” says Mick, “and noses may be slightly out of joint. But we did this for us. It was a healthy challenge to pull it off.”

Now, obviously, they have. The Tusk LP and single are both Top Ten, and as Mick reports from the road, where they are on the 22-city first leg of a nine-month worldwide tour, “the energy is really poppin’.”

For Fleetwood, 31, it hasn’t been easy. His second split from his wife of 12 years, Jenny Boyd, now “seems permanent. But, luckily,” he adds, “we get on well.” She has custody of their two children and has taken them back to England. Mick, like the rest of the group, lives in the L.A. area and sees the kids during vacations. “I quite miss the fact that I can’t be a father,” he admits. “I happen to be one of those men who adores that thing of `alright, kids, let’s go.'”

Then, if his marital breakup weren’t trouble enough, last year while working on Tusk Mick discovered he was suffering from diabetes. “I had been feeling burned-out,” he recalls. “My eyes were going wild, I started drinking like a fish, I’d hyperventilate while talking.” One doctor suggested he see a shrink. “My ego couldn’t accept the fact that I was going around the twist. Manic-depressive one minute, eating a bowl of ice cream, quite happy, the next. I thought it was a brain tumor. I was afraid I was going to die. It was 18 months of hell.” But once the ailment was diagnosed (it’s a mild case), Mick adjusted his habits. “Bless her,” he says of Sara Recor, his companion of the past year. “She was there to hold my hand and look after me.” Though he concedes, “I have overworked and overplayed,” Mick says he now “feels like I did 10 years ago.”

Perhaps the least changed Mac member of all, says Fleetwood, is his co-founder John McVie, 34. McVie and second wife Julie Rubens live both in Beverly Hills and on his 63-foot sloop. The casual “rotation” recording system allowed McVie to leave his bass tracks behind and sail out to Maui while the group did the last month of polishing Tusk. And no less an expert than his first wife, Christine, finds John has “mellowed since marrying Julie. He’s become a gentle person.”

The Mac member who has changed most, according to Fleetwood, is Buckingham, 30. “He was volatile and intense in the beginning,” says Mick, “and afraid he was trapped into doing things a certain way.” But with almost half of Tusk under his name, he’s been freed. “My contribution was not that visible before,” says Lindsey. “Things that had been swimming around in my head for years finally got exorcised on Tusk.”

Doing some of his own cuts on his 24-track in Hancock Park, Buckingham bravely usurped some drumming parts from Mick. “We’ve broken down barriers that existed for five years,” says Lindsey.

The liberated Lindsey has even forsaken the furry curls, scraggy beard and skintight satins of his old lead guitar sex-idol image. He now displays a clean look and casually modish Gentlemen’s Quarterly couture. His retreat from classic rock macho has come home too. His girlfriend of three years, Carol Harris, will be along for only half the tour dates. “I want to give Carol the chance to express herself in her modeling without tearing too much from our relationship.” Meanwhile, Lindsey reports that without her on the road, “Getting crazy on a few drinks at the bar means nothing to me. I’m happier having time to myself in my room, doing my tunes, than looking for action.”

But if Lindsey ever needs some post-concert commiserating, he can probably call on Christine McVie. Her squeeze, Beach Boy enfant terrible Dennis Wilson, 34, will not be steady during the tour either. “It doesn’t suit Dennis’ personality,” says Christine, “to be a guest, to have to say, `Oh, I’m with the piano player.'” On her own, Christine is clearly less shy and more self-assured since they met a year ago. “He is a multifaceted jewel,” she exults. “Dennis has awakened things in me I’d have been scared to experience and made me feel the extremes of every emotion.” Specifically, says Christine, he has turned her onto speedboating and water-skiing. “Dennis has thrown me into the deep end, literally and figuratively.”

They commute between Dennis’ 68-foot ketch in Marina del Rey and her “very English” home in Coldwater Canyon. They “definitely” plan to marry in February, but Christine has ruled out kids. “I’m 36,” she says, “and my life-style is pretty much settled as far as sacrificing and accommodating myself to children.”

“She used to call me the Mad Songwriter,” says Stevie Nicks, 31, nothing that in Tusk Christine composed six tracks to her five. “Chris sits up all night and writes, she’s so inspired,” says Nicks. Stevie is prolific herself, in love or out, but for two years she has been mostly out. One problem: Male rockers, she finds, are “pretty chauvinistic. I strive to be taken seriously as a writer, and be as good as they are. So they resent my success. I see it in their eyes: `How did this dingbat manage to get everything she wants?'”

Another problem is her immersion in Mac’s work ethic. “How many men, even the nicest, most patient, can understand that for months you will come home at 7 a.m., dead tired and in a bad mood?” For now, she says resignedly, “the band is all there is room for in my life.” Just as well. On the road, she says, security is so tight that “no man can get within 10 feet. I hardly ever meet any new men.”

Nicks’ large Tudor home above Sunset Boulevard is now on the market because it attracted hangers-on who overstayed their welcome. “Any man I ever went out with called the place Fantasyland. I’m 31. I won’t always be in a rock band, and I don’t want to come out of this absolutely helpless.” So she is moving into a modest beachfront condo. “Some people thrive on being a rock star. I hate it. I don’t like being waited on all the time, people following me around saying, `Let me do this, let me do that.'”

Stevie has signed on with former boyfriend Paul Fishkin’s Modern Records to act in and do the solo sound track LP of Rhiannon, an upcoming movie based on her 1976 Mac hit. She has also written a children’s story and hopes to turn it into an animated film. “It’s a love story about a goldfish and a ladybug. A friend told me it would be the Doctor Zhivago of children’s cartoons.”

Though she is still the band’s sexily whirling, wailing focus onstage, Stevie claims, “The last thing the world needs is another sex symbol.” And what does Stevie need? “I don’t need doctors, nurses and babysitters. I need love.”

But even Nicks, who seems bent on going her own way, knows that this “is still the best rock band in the world.”

And one of the most durable. “The band’s been breaking up for five years,” says Fleetwood, sardonically, of all the reports. The group has two more years left on its record contract and the road stretches ahead until August. “If the members really felt suffocated,” Mick says, “then there’d be an obvious danger. Things do get a little crazy at all times. But this doesn’t feel like a band that’s breaking up.”

Jim Jerome / People (Vol. 12 Issue 22, p91. 3p.) / November 26, 1979

stevienicks

LIVE IN CONCERT (2024)

Stevie Nicks

MAY 3, 2024 – MAY 5, 2024
Lovin’ Life Fest
Charlotte, NC
TICKETS

MAY 7, 2024
Enterprise Center
St Louis, MO
TICKETS

MAY 10, 2024
WinStar World Casino & Resort
Thackerville, OK
TICKETS

MAY 14, 2024
Bridgestone Arena
Nashville, TN
TICKETS

MAY 18, 2024
Frost Bank Center
San Antonio, TX
TICKETS

MAY 21, 2024
Yaamava’ Resort & Casino – Yaamava’ Theater
Highland, CA
TICKETS

MAY 24, 2024
BottleRock Napa Valley
Napa, CA
TICKETS

MAY 27, 2024
Delta Center
Salt Lake City, UT
TICKETS

MAY 30, 2024
Ball Arena
Denver, CO
TICKETS

JUN 4
Gainbridge Fieldhouse
Indianapolis, IN
TICKETS

JUN 9 
Mohegan Sun Casino
Uncasville, CT
TICKETS

JUN 12
MVP Arena
Albany, NY
TICKETS

JUN 15
Hersheypark Stadium
Hershey, PA
TICKETS

JUN 18
Van Andel Arena
Grand Rapids, MI
TICKETS

JUN 21, 2024 (with Billy Joel)
Soldier Field
Chicago, IL
TICKETS

JUL 12, 2024
BST Hyde Park
London, England
TICKETS

^ Non-Live Nation show


Previous 2023 dates

March 10, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Los Angeles, CA
SoFi Stadium

March 15, 2023
Seattle, WA
Climate Pledge Arena

March 18, 2023
Las Vegas, NV
T-Mobile Arena

May 12, 2023
Raleigh, NC
PNC Arena

May 16, 2023
Knoxville, TN
Thompson-Boling Arena

May 19, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Nashville, TN
Nissan Stadium

May 22, 2023
Atlanta, GA
State Farm Arena

May 25, 2023
Orlando, FL
Amway Center

June 16, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Philadelphia, PA
Lincoln Financial Field

June 20, 2023
Toronto, ON (Canada)
Scotiabank Arena

June 23, 2023
Chicago, IL
United Center

June 27, 2023
Louisville, KY
KFC Yum! Center

August 5, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Columbus, OH
Ohio Stadium

August 8, 2023
Milwaukee, WI
Fiserv Forum

August 12, 2023
Houston, TX
Toyota Center

August 15, 2023
Austin, TX
Moody Center

August 19, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Kansas City, MO
Arrowhead Stadium

September 23, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Foxborough, MA
Gillette Stadium

September 27, 2023
Pittsburgh, PA
PPG Paints Arena

October 1, 2023
New York, NY
Madison Square Garden

October 4, 2023
Buffalo, NY
KeyBank Center

October 7, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Baltimore, MD 
M&T Bank Stadium

October 28, 2023
Memphis, TN
FedEx Forum

November 1, 2023
Savannah, GA
Enmarket Arena

November 4, 2023
Allentown, PA
PPL Center

November 7, 2023
Detroit, MI
Little Caesars Arena

November 10, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Minneapolis, MN
U.S. Bank Stadium

November 29, 2023
San Diego, CA
Viejas Arena

December 2, 2023
Inglewood, CA
The Kia Forum

December 5, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Acisure Arena

December  8, 2023 – BILLY JOEL
Phoenix, AZ
Chase Field

December 12, 2023
Sacramento, CA
Golden 1 Center

December 15, 2023
San Francisco, CA
Chase Center

FEB 10, 2024
Mark G Etess Arena
Atlantic City, NJ

FEB 14, 2024
UBS Arena
Belmont Park, NY

FEB 17, 2024
CFG Bank Arena
Baltimore, MD

FEB 21, 2024
Bon Secours Wellness Arena
Greenville, SC

FEB 24, 2024
Hard Rock Live
Hollywood, FL

FEB 28, 2024
Smoothie King Center
New Orleans, LA

MAR 3, 2024
CHI Health Center
Omaha, NE

MAR 6, 2024
Simmons Bank Arena
North Little Rock, AR

MAR 9, 2024
AT&T Stadium
Arlington, TX
Billy Joel

 



2022 Tour

Stevie Nicks

Jazz Aspen Snowmass
Snowmass, CO
Labor Day 2022

Ravinia Festival
Highland Park, IL
September 8, 2022
September 10, 2022

Pine Knob Music Theatre
Clarkston, MI
September 13, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Sea Hear Now Festival
Asbury, NJ
September 17, 2022

Xfinity Center
Mansfield, MA
September 19, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Maine Savings Amphitheatre
Bangor, ME
September 22, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Sound on Sound Festival
Bridgeport, CT
September 24-25, 2022

Ohana Festival
Dana Point, CA
September 30, 2022

Hollywood Bowl
Los Angeles, CA
October 3, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

POSTPONED
Ak-Chin Pavilion

Phoenix, AZ
October 6, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

POSTPONED
Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion

The Woodlands, TX
October 9, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
Alpharetta, GA
October 12, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Ascend Amphitheater
Nashville, TN
October 16, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Credit One Stadium
Charleston, SC
October 19, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

PNC Music Pavilion
Charlotte, NC
October 22, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
Tampa, FL
October 25, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre
West Palm Beach, FL
October 28, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Orion Amphitheatre
Huntsville, AL
October 31, 2022

RESCHEDULED SHOWS

Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
The Woodlands, TX
November 2, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton

Ak-Chin Pavilion
Phoenix, AZ
November 5, 2022
w/ Vanessa Carlton