Christine McVie (Photo: Matt Mindlin)
Home » Christine McVie rejoins Fleetwood Mac for fall tour

Christine McVie rejoins Fleetwood Mac for fall tour

Christine McVie is back with Fleetwood Mac (Photo: Matt Mindlin)
Christine McVie is back with Fleetwood Mac (Photo: Matt Mindlin)

Drummer Mick Fleetwood, 66, says McVie’s muse and skill required a simple kick-start.

“In the past, Chris would get into the creative mood when we were actually going to do something,” he says. “It hasn’t gone away. It was waiting to be accessed and just needed to be switched on.

STORY: McVie missed Fleetwood Mac’s ‘tight chemistry’

“Chris has been in a very different world for years, but things that were daunting for her are going away,” Fleetwood says. “We’re recording at The Village (in Los Angeles), where we made Tusk, and it’s like nothing ever changed.”

The band has remained a formidable draw during McVie’s absence, ranking 10th last year in Billboard’s moneymakers tally with earnings of $19.1 million. Her homecoming is stoking Mac fever.

“I know it’s huge and people are thrilled,” Fleetwood says. “There’s a whole litany of songs we haven’t done live in 20 years. If I were a fan, which I am, I’d have a lot to look forward to.”

That includes the return of bassist John McVie, whose cancer​ diagnosis in October forced the band to scrap dates on last year’s world tour.

“He’s threatening to come into the studio any day,” says ex-wife Christine.

Fleetwood adds, “His prognosis is good. He’s such a dude, so not like me, not a drama queen. ‘I’m ready,’ he says. So much grace and no huff and puff.”

The timetable for new singles and an album depends in part on when Stevie Nicks rejoins her bandmates in the studio, Buckingham says.

“Stevie’s been not sure how she wants to approach recording or when,” he says. “Mick, John and I have cut great stuff with (producer) Mitchell Froom and now I’m producing Christine’s stuff.

“The next album will be a mix of things. We’ve done some strange things with one of Christine’s songs already. It’s going to sound like Fleetwood Mac but not overly retro. It’s not that we’re making any bold effort to sound like somebody else. Some of what we’ve done in the past has reference points that have come back, and what might have seemed retro is more relevant in today’s market.”

Edna Gundersen / USA Today / Thursday, March 27, 2014

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