Category: 2013 Rumours Tour

  • CONCERT REVIEW: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival sees performances from Fleetwood Mac, Little Big Town

    (Douglas Mason)
    (Douglas Mason)

    By Chevel Johnson / Associated Press
    Saturday, May 4, 2013

    NEW ORLEANS — Little Big Town says that some networking they did is paying off with a chance to cross a couple of items off their “bucket list.”

    After playing Bayou Country SuperFest in Baton Rouge last year, group member Karen Fairchild said they talked to festival producer Quint Davis about other things they hoped to accomplish. They mentioned that they’d one day like to perform at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.

    Davis was in a position to help since he also produces Jazz Fest.

    Known for its trademark four-part harmonies, Little Big Town performed in New Orleans on Saturday.

    “Can you believe we’re opening for Fleetwood Mac?” said Kimberly Schlapman, another group member. “We’ve been wanting to play Jazz Fest forever and now we’re opening for Fleetwood Mac and can mark off two big things from our list.”

    Schlapman said early in their career they had the chance to meet Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac, which she described as an “amazing harmony band.”

    “Being able to share a stage with them is one of our greatest wishes,” she said.

    Fairchild said they’ve watched Jazz Fest from afar for years. “The who’s who of music shows up year after year at the festival. Who wouldn’t want to play there?”

    Flags flying amid a cool breeze, music fans packed the festival grounds by the stage where Little Big Town and Fleetwood Mac performed. Some put down tarps over the muddy infield. Others sat in chairs, wore rubber boots or stood barefoot to hear the bands.

    “Once you’re in it, it kind of feels good,” said Mary Kathryn Gatlin, of Greenville, S.C., who danced shoeless in the mud, the muck covering her feet past the ankles. Gatlin was taking in her first Jazz Fest with her sister, Frances Gatlin.

    The pair had been at the stage since noon, about an hour after the gates opened.

    “We love country, bluegrass, just easy-listening music that’s fun to dance to,” Gatlin said.

    Many danced as Fleetwood Mac performed such hits as “Dreams,” “Rhiannon,” “Gypsy,” “Tusk” and “Landslide,” which drew huge roars from the crowd when Stevie Nicks introduced it.

    Nicks also delivered her tribute to the host city, singing a portion of her song, “New Orleans,” which she said she wrote after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “I wanna get a room in New Orleans, I wanna sing in the streets of the French Quarter,” she sang.

    The band also performed a new song, “Sad Angel,” testing it out with the crowd. Toward the end of their set, they played an old favorite, “Go Your Own Way” at the end of which Buckingham shouted to the crowd, “New Orleans, we love you!”

    They left the stage briefly before returning for an encore performance of “The World Keep On Turning,” a song from their self-titled first album released in 1968 and “Don’t Stop.”

    Other Saturday headliners included Phoenix, Frank Ocean, Los Lobos, Terence Blanchard, Davell Crawford and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.

    Sunshine and blue skies were welcomed by fans of the outdoor festival, which had been drenched by rain in previous days. Despite the mud, the field in front of the festival’s largest stage was packed hours before Fleetwood Mac’s performance.

    Little Big Town’s Fairchild said she hoped their festival appearance would help boost their fan base.

    “This is a great chance for longtime fans to come out and see our set and a chance for us to discover and be introduced to new fans,” she said.

    Phillip Sweet and Jimi Westbrook make up the rest of Little Big Town, which recently won two Academy of Country Music awards for their latest album “Tornado.” They go on tour with Keith Urban in July.

    “I like them,” said Monique Powell, of Lafayette. “They’ve got three big hits out right now, `Tornado,’ `Pontoon,’ and `Little White Church.’ We came in to hear Maroon 5 yesterday. This is just a bonus.”

    Powell and her friend, Matt Chaisson, also of Lafayette, said Saturday’s sunny weather made the trip worthwhile.

    “Even though it’s nasty out here with all the mud, we’re making the best of it,” she said, adding that she should have packed her rain boots.

    “I should know better,” she said, laughing. “I’m from here!”

    The festival ends Sunday, with closing performances by Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, Aaron Neville, Maze featuring Frankie Beverly, and Irvin Mayfield and the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra with special guest Dee Dee Bridgewater.

  • Clintons rock out to Fleetwood Mac at North Little Rock concert (videos)

    (courtesy of culinaryherb)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiFjYNOyqUw]

    See more videos from the show, including Fleetwood Mac’s performance of “Don’t Stop,” below.

    Bill and Hillary Clinton attended Friday night's Fleetwood Mac concert in North Little Rock. Fellow concert revelers spotted the power couple, conspicuously seated in section 121 of Verizon Arena. (Paige LaFleur)
    Bill and Hillary Clinton attended Friday night’s Fleetwood Mac concert in North Little Rock. Fellow concert revelers rushed to take pictures of the power couple, conspicuously seated in section 121 of Verizon Arena. (Paige LaFleur)
    Bill Clinton gives one of many standing ovations. (Cyrilla Owle)
    Bill Clinton gives one of many standing ovations at Friday night’s Fleetwood Mac concert. Hillary Clinton is seated to the left of him. (Cyrilla Owle)
    Verizon Arena welcomes the Clintons with a commemorative poster at the Fleetwood Mac concert.
    Verizon Arena welcomes the Clintons with a commemorative poster at the Fleetwood Mac concert. (Verizon Arena)

    16th SHOW: Fleetwood Mac, Verizon Arena, North Little Rock AR, May 3, 2013

    Fleetwood Mac peformed in concert at the Verizon Center in North Little Rock, Arkansas, on Friday night. With no opening act, the band played for two-and-a-half hours, performing all 23 songs on the current set list. The band also had the honor of performing for surprise guests former President Clinton and first lady Hillary Clinton, who were seated in an arena box in section 121. The Clintons appeared to be having a great time, applauding often and giving the band many standing ovations, one of which appropriately occurred when they played Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential election campaign song “Don’t Stop.” Mick Fleetwood dedicated the song to “these two lovely people.”

    Earlier in the day, the Clintons attended the dedication of Little Rock’s Bill and Hillary Clinton Airport, the first major airport in the country to be named after a president and first lady.

    Fleetwood Mac’s next stop is New Orleans, where they will headline the Acura Stage at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival on Saturday afternoon. The band is scheduled to take the stage at 4:40 p.m. After the festival show, Fleetwood Mac will take a short break as they prepare for a one-week tour of central and western Canada, which starts in Winnipeg, Manitoba on May 12 and ends in Vancouver, British Columbia on May 19. One last Canadian show is scheduled for June 18 in Montréal, Quebec.

    Fan photos

    Fan reaction (via Twitter)

    @jennifertnoel
    I can literally see #stevienicks this is soooo awesome!! #FleetwoodMac #northlittlerock

    @SharpTusk
    AWESOME the whole crowd singing to The Chain!

    @jalexjones1992
    Stevie’s still got it!! #fleetwoodmac #littlerock

    @CliftonAirdHyde
    Lindsey Buckingham is F*CKING AWESOME #fleetwoodmac

    @ashrich01
    One word #inspiration #fleetwoodmac #stevienicks . Enough said !!!!!!!!

    @hilarydemillo
    Lindsey Buckingham still has it. Pretty incredible solo on Big Love. #FleetwoodMac

    @DylanBarnett4
    Just heard Stevie Nicks play Landslide live. I think I’m okay with dieing now #born30yearstoolate #fleetwoodmac

    ‏@jlynn527
    Well. I may have just sobbed. #fleetwoodmac

    @JustinLewisKATV
    #FleetwoodMac playing song to President Bill Clinton & Hillary who are here in attendance. #dontstopthinkingabouttomorrow

    @killahipps
    Just saw the legendary @fleetwoodmac & special guest @billclinton!

    @paigelafleur
    Bill and Hillary Clinton are here…nbd #FleetwoodMac

    @jimharris360
    Wow Clinton and Hillary are here. And of course #FleetwoodMac plays “Don’t Stop”

    @jonesbaby
    As I suspected, Bill & Hilary were at the Fleetwood Mac concert. They were in town for the @LITAirport dedication today

    @imuhmanduh
    Oh hey, Bill & Hilary Clinton. #guestappearances #fleetwoodmac

    @melindacoxhall
    @xrvolume They brought the house down!! Awesome concert! Bill Clinton is here! #LittleRock #fleetwoodmac @fleetwoodmac #music #RockOn

    @brittneyyy_lane
    The best concert of my entire life. Stevie is an angel, Lindsay is a rock god, Mick is the best and John is still going strong #fleetwoodmac

    @golddust27
    Bill& Hillary were at Fleetwood Mac. Not shocking, he loves them. What’s shocking? How SHITTY their seats were.

    North Little Rock set list (unchanged since 4/26/13)

    1. Second Hand News
    2. The Chain
    3. Dreams
    4. Sad Angel (new song)
    5. Rhiannon
    6. Not That Funny
    7. Tusk
    8. Sisters of the Moon
    9. Sara
    10. Big Love
    11. Landslide
    12. Never Going Back Again
    13. Without You (new song)
    14. Gypsy
    15. Eyes of the World
    16. Gold Dust Woman
    17. I’m So Afraid
    18. Stand Back
    19. Go Your Own Way
    20. World Turning (first encore)
    21. Don’t Stop
    22. Silver Springs (second encore)
    23. Say Goodbye

    Videos

    3. Dreams (courtesy of tvanland56)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lYY3P_L4WUU]

    5. Rhiannon (courtesy of schuyller)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hquU-QPtRjA]

    11. Landslide (courtesy of tvanland56)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGo-Cv52sIw]

    11. Landslide (courtesy indufan)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dF9ucAWqLs]

    16. Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of indufan)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcEIdzcZ4iU]

    20. Don’t Stop (courtesy of Dan Cassidy)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uAUv0x3wpQ]

    22. Silver Springs (courtesy of neaots)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGLuJj9zxME]

    Special thanks to Dan Cassidy, culinaryherb, indufan, neaots, and tvanland56 for making these clips available.

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac rocks Little Rock

    Band on 48-city anniversary tour

    (Kathryn Miles)
    (Kathryn Miles)

    By Joe Miles / Baxter Bulletin
    Monday, May 6, 2013

    NORTH LITTLE ROCK — Fleetwood Mac brought their iconic sound to central Arkansas Friday night as part of a 48-city North American tour celebrating the 35th anniversary of the band’s prolific album Rumours, which was the best-selling album of all time the year of its release.

    The group played to a sold-out crowd of 14,613 jubilant fans at North Little Rock’s Verizon Arena. This tour brings the band members back together for the first time in three years.

    They opened the show with three songs from Rumours, beginning with “Second Hand News” featuring a rambunctious drumming introduction by band leader Mick Fleetwood and the vocals of lead guitarist Lindsey Buckingham.

    The rousing opening was followed by “The Chain” and “Dreams,” with Stevie Nicks bringing her unique vocals and mystical stage presence to the forefront.

    Bassist John McVie was a quiet master of rhythm throughout the 23-song set that included two encores.

    Buckingham stole the show with several guitar improvisations, especially during an acoustical set that included songs “Big Love” and “Landslide.” The group also performed “Sad Angel” and “Without You” from their recently released EP — aptly entitled Extended Play — that contains the band’s first newly released material in 10 years.

    The first encore featured a rousing rendition of “World Turning” and “Don’t Stop (Thinkin’ About Tomorrow),” a song closely associated with the 1992 campaign of President Bill Clinton.

    Band leader Fleetwood introduced band members and background vocalists, concluding with accolades for the former president and wife, Hillary Clinton, the nation’s former Secretary of State, who were in the audience.

    The band returned to the stage for a second encore, ending the evening with the ballad “Say Goodbye.”

    Buckingham’s guitar work, Nicks’ vocals and the band’s interaction with the crowd stirred up one of the most memorable rock and roll shows Arkansas has seen.

    “The Mac is back!” Fleetwood yelled as he left the stage.

  • Stevie Nicks makes no apologies for delaying start of Fleetwood Mac reunion: ‘I’ve done all I can’

    Stevie Nicks makes no apologies for delaying start of Fleetwood Mac reunion: ‘I’ve done all I can’

    In Your DreamsSomething Else! Reviews
    Friday, May 3, 2013

    This time last year, Mick Fleetwood was openly grousing in the press, saying Fleetwood Mac was ready to reunite — but they were waiting on Stevie Nicks. Now that they’re back together, she makes no apologies.

    Nicks, in fact, decided to give a second year of touring 2011′s solo effort In Your Dreams, a Dave Stewart-produced disc that arrived 30 years after her solo debut. The work paid off, as the album eventually sold nearly half a million copies worldwide.

    “I did not walk away from In Your Dreams until I felt good about walking away from it,” Nick says in the attached video, “until I felt like, ‘you know what? I’ve done all I can.’ Now, I can put it in its little magical box, up on my library shelf where I can look at it every time I walk past. Now, I can move on. Now, I can go back to Fleetwood Mac. Now, I can do what we need to do.”

    Nicks has since returned to Fleetwood Mac, which just released an EP with its first new music as a group in a decade. Extended Play, available via iTunes, includes a track originally left aside in the sessions for Buckingham-Nicks, the duo record with Lindsey Buckingham that preceded their joining Fleetwood Mac.

    Apparently all is forgiven, after Fleetwood and Co. had to cool their heels waiting for Nicks. She wouldn’t have it any other way, however.

    “That’s how I’m going to live my life, from here on out,” Nicks adds. “I’m not going to worry about record sales anymore, and I’m not going to worry about what people think — because, really, what really matters is what I think. If I’m thinking good, and I’m thinking happy, then what I do is going to turn around and make you feel good and happy. We just bounce off of each other. I throw the dreams out there, and you throw them back at me.”

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXg2kZV8-6s]
  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac in concert at the BOK — are they better live now than ever before?

    Drummer Mick Fleetwood and guitarist Lindsey Buckingham perform during a Fleetwood Mac concert at Madison Square Garden, Monday, April 8, 2013, in New York. (AP)
    Drummer Mick Fleetwood and guitarist Lindsey Buckingham perform during a Fleetwood Mac concert at Madison Square Garden, Monday, April 8, 2013, in New York. (AP)

    By George Lang / News OK
    Thursday, May 2, 2013

    There is a great argument to be made, one completely supported by Fleetwood Mac’s immensely skilled and generous Wednesday performance at Tulsa’s BOK Center, that Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood are better live performers now than when they were the biggest band in the world.

    Listen to 1980’s Fleetwood Mac Live and it sounds like a talented, enormously successful band exhausted by its circumstances and frayed at the edges. But 33 years later, in front of 20,000 fans, Buckingham and Nicks sounded completely engaged with both the audience and the music they’ve made together for more than four decades.

    Undoubtedly, the reasons for Fleetwood Mac’s current excellence have as much to do with history markers as they do with their present. Earlier this year, singer-guitarist Buckingham oversaw the remastering and release of an expanded version of the album that made them superstars, 1977’s Rumours, and they started their BOK Center show with three huge songs from that album: “Second Hand News,” “The Chain” and “Dreams.” Nicks sounded great — no key changes were needed to accommodate aging vocal cords — and her enthusiasm for taking her first lead of the evening on “Dreams” was made clear when she told the crowd, “This party starts now!”

    Buckingham seemed similarly proud on the next song, “Sad Angel.” The lead track on Extended Play, the four-song EP released Tuesday on iTunes, “Sad Angel” might be a song about Buckingham’s difficulty in persuading Nicks to record new material, but the uptempo song felt celebratory and meshed well with the classic songs that preceded it, and Buckingham seemed energized by the performance and the audience’s response.

    Nicks returned to her storied classics with 1975’s “Rhiannon,” then the band dipped heavily into the masterfully ramshackle 1979 album Tusk, and Buckingham was in his zone. He ripped through “Not That Funny” and “Tusk,” then ceded the spotlight to Nicks for “Sisters of the Moon” and a lovely version of “Sara.”

    Granted, the retired Christine McVie will always be missed — she was a top-notch balladeer with a soulful, rounded voice, the creamy center between two singers with sharp vocal edges. It will always hurt that her repertoire is mostly missing, although Nicks now takes her vocal parts on “Don’t Stop.” But Nicks and Buckingham always were the stars of this drama, and their trove of great songs and residual tension continues to make a Fleetwood Mac concert an exciting proposition.

    When McVie, Fleetwood and their backup singers and players left the stage to the ex-lovers for “Landslide” and “Never Going Back Again,” Buckingham and Nicks bolstered one another’s strengths. Their voices blended beautifully on “Without You,” a lost pre-Fleetwood Mac song they re-recorded for Extended Play, and the band all joined together for a strong version of 1982’s “Gypsy.”

    But for several memorable minutes, Buckingham stole the show. “I’m So Afraid” is not one of the biggest songs in Fleetwood Mac’s repertoire, but the closing track from the band’s 1975 self-titled album is, in many ways, the quintessential Buckingham song — paranoia, throaty wailing and thunderous guitar work. Buckingham completely killed on the ending solo, earning a standing ovation that was repeated with Nicks’ solo single “Stand Back” and the main set closer, “Go Your Own Way.”

    Fleetwood Mac returned for two encores, playing “World Turning,” “Don’t Stop,” “Silver Springs” and “Say Goodbye” before finally saying goodbye after a two-and-half hour show. They were in fine voice and spirits, and the feeling they brought to both old and new material was kind of miraculous for a band that has been through it all.

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac infallible in BOK Center performance

    (Tulsa World)
    Rock legend Stevie Nicks performs with Fleetwood Mac at Tulsa’s BOK Center on Wednesday night. (James Gibbard/Tulsa World)

    By Jennifer Chancellor
    Tulsa World
    Wednesday, May 1, 2013

    Fleetwood Mac would be nothing without Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks.

    Despite the band’s rocky history, their chemistry on stage is forged in steel.

    Wednesday night at a tour stop at the BOK Center, Mick Fleetwood fortified his namesake band with solid rhythm, and John McVie held it tight on bass.

    Strong out of the gate, Nicks and Buckingham harmonized to “Second Hand News,” fans on their feet, Fleetwood and McVie rumbling strong behind them.

    Fans pressed to the stage, hands raised, and sang along.

    Those fans who weren’t on their feet then were by the first few notes of “The Chain,” Buckingham’s finger-pick guitar style texturizing each note with rich emotion. Multiple fingers added voices — harmony — to the band’s own vocals, almost like a multi-track machine.

    With Buckingham head-to-toe in black, what stood out is his lightning fretwork, again and again through the nearly three-hour set. This version of Fleetwood Mac might as well have a “Lindsey Buckingham with …” in front of it.

    “We are indeed very pleased to be back here with you tonight,” said a chatty Buckingham. “Every time we part then come back together, it’s different. …

    “We’ve discovered that there are still a few new chapters left for this band,” he said as he launched into their new pop-rock juggernaut, the up-tempo “Sad Angel,” the first all-new song played by the band since 2003.

    A good portion of Wednesday’s BOK Center concert concentrated on the band’s 1977 album Rumours, which celebrates 35-plus years as Fleetwood Mac’s most successful album release. Songs included “Second Hand News,” “Dreams,” “Gold Dust Woman,” “Go Your Own Way,” “Don’t Stop,” “The Chain” and “Never Going Back Again.”

    “Dreams” at times wafted into dingy vocals for Nicks but was saved by the inchoate, otherworldly mix of backing harmony and instrumentation. As a whole, the performance was infallible, as it should be with a band that’s been together for so long.

    Nicks, as smoky voiced as ever, also edged in her solo hit “Stand Back,” draped in her trademark velvet and gauze, swaying, gypsy-like, entranced.

    Bigger-than-life timeless hits reverberated with action and an oft-ecstatic Buckingham, especially in “Rhiannon,” “Gypsy,” “Tusk,” and “Sara.” Nicks and Buckingham both hit vocal strides, howling with haunting, raw passion.

    Other songs included “Sisters of the Moon,” “Not That Funny,” “Eyes of the World,” “I’m So Afraid,” and “World Turning.” The stage set-up was fairly conservative, with side projections, overhead spotlights and a projection screen behind the band. The focus was intentionally kept on the musicianship.

    Buckingham blew up solo acoustic fireworks for “Big Love.” As the evening progressed, his stature as one of the best, if not most underrated, guitarists (and songwriters) in rock history was solidified.

    The Buckingham/Nicks pre-Fleetwood Mac duet of “Without You” was almost embarrassingly intimate, as far as true emotive sound goes. (The song was unearthed and recently released on a four-song Fleetwood Mac EP, Extended Play, available on iTunes.) The pair also ended “Landslide” with hands buckled together.

    Christine McVie retired from the lineup in 1998, along with most of her songs. One, “Don’t Stop,” still made Wednesday’s night’s live show.

    Guitar legend Lindsey Buckingham performs with Fleetwood Mac at Tulsa's BOK Center on Wednesday night. (James Gibbard/Tulsa World)
    Guitar legend Lindsey Buckingham performs with Fleetwood Mac at Tulsa’s BOK Center on Wednesday night. (James Gibbard/Tulsa World)
  • 15TH SHOW: Fleetwood Mac, BOK Center, Tulsa OK, May 1, 2013

    Fan photos

     

    Fleetwood Mac performed in concert at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Wednesday evening. The band performed for two and half hours, playing all 23 songs on the current set list.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to “all of you in Tulsa.” Lindsey continued to impress audiences with his sophisticated guitar solos, which received loud cheers and applause. Lindsey responded, “”TULSAAAAAA! You guys are the best!”

    Fleetwood Mac head to North Little Rock, Arkansas next for a show at the Verizon Center on Friday night.

    Fan reaction (via Twitter)

    @ZivaBranstetter
    Stevie sounds just as lovely as ever.

    @_PaigeAlyse_
    These bitches just sat through Tusk #ohhellno #fleetwoodmac

    @BOKCenter
    #nowplaying Tusk #FleetwoodMacLive #bokcenter The band sounds fantastic, and their visuals are stunning!

    @mtcvd
    Fleetwood Mac blowing the roof off the BOK center in Tulsa tonight

    @HoneyPieTunes
    O. M. G. – wish you all were here. @BOKCenter #fleetwoodmac

    @SassyLilBeetus
    This drunk guy is screaming the lyrics doh. #FleetwoodMac #Tulsa #NeverGoingBackAgain

    @ZivaBranstetter
    Fleetwood Mac played for more than two hours, including every hit. We worked our way to the front row.

    @kevlarX
    Fleetwood Mac hands down most amazing concert I’ve ever been to!

    @JoyHeuer
    The ‘witch’ and my girl, Stevie Nicks and Fleetwood Mac! Lindsey Buckingham ROCKED the dang house! #lovedit

    @ost8cpa
    @NinaBlackwood Just back from the Tulsa #fleetwoodmac concert. Awesome. Lindsey is as good as he ever has been. Stevie rocked.

    @kaSh_m0neyy
    That was definitely one amazing concert!!! #fleetwoodmac

    @AndyChrisman
    Lindsey Buckingham is officially my fav live musician I’ve ever seen! Worth the price of admission! #FleetwoodMac

    Set list (unchanged since 4/26/13)

    1. Second Hand News
    2. The Chain
    3. Dreams
    4. Sad Angel (new song)
    5. Rhiannon
    6. Not That Funny
    7. Tusk
    8. Sisters of the Moon
    9. Sara
    10. Big Love
    11. Landslide
    12. Never Going Back Again
    13. Without You (new song)
    14. Gypsy
    15. Eyes of the World
    16. Gold Dust Woman
    17. I’m So Afraid
    18. Stand Back
    19. Go Your Own Way
    20. World Turning (first encore)
    21. Don’t Stop
    22. Silver Springs (second encore)
    23. Say Goodbye

    Videos

    3. Dreams (courtesy of kelleys64801)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y4o9ayxo7I]

    7. Tusk (courtesy of Jrad0623)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=964g-U2T0r8]

    7. Tusk (courtesy of Theresa Ruch)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-9du5BGUS7c]

    11. Landslide (courtesy of Theresa Ruch)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2TvcuaKDek]

    12. Never Going Back Again (courtesy of kelleys64801)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96UIyVl2_QY]

    16. Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of kelleys64801)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E48QPtarOSs]

    16. Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of Sean Conner)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dz9i-hV4Hro]

    19. Go Your Own Way – partial (courtesy of kelleys64801)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yq8tNCYGsdg]

    20. World Turning (courtesy of Theresa Ruch)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0vITKd56Ss]

    21. Don’t Stop (courtesy of kelleys64801)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XFG-UeVe40]

    22. Silver Springs (courtesy of kelleys64801)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGTiQ-EEo-o]

    Special thanks to Sean Conner, Jrad0623, kelleys64801, and Theresa Ruch for making these clips available.

  • New Orleans Jazz Fest moves up Fleetwood Mac, changes other performance times

    (NOLA.com)
    (NOLA.com)

    By Keith Spera
    NOLA.com/The Times-Picayune
    Wednesday, May 1, 2013

    Producers of the New Orleans Jazz Fest have tweaked the timing of several shows this weekend. The most significant change? On Saturday, May 4, Fleetwood Mac’s headlining Acura Stage set will start 30 minutes earlier than previously scheduled, at 4:40 p.m. instead of 5:10.

    As a result, the band is now allotted two hours and 10 minutes of performance time, second only to Widespread Panic’s 2 1/2 hours on Thursday, May 2.

    The Fleetwood Mac change has slightly altered the rest of Saturday’s Acura Stage schedule. The opening act, Southern University of Baton Rouge Jazz Jags, will end 10 minutes earlier, at 11:45 a.m.

    Next up is J.D. & the Straight Shot, a New York-based blues-rock band fronted by businessman James Dolan, the CEO/president of Cablevision, the executive chairman of Madison Square Garden Company, and the executive charged with overseeing the New York Knicks, the New York Rangers and other professional teams.

    J.D. & the Straight Shot will start and end earlier than originally scheduled; so, too, will Cowboy Mouth and Little Big Town. Cowboy Mouth also had 10 minutes trimmed from its set time, down to 50 minutes.

    The Acura Stage schedule for Saturday, May 4, is now:

    11-11:45 a.m., Southern University of Baton Rouge Jazzy Jags

    12:05-12:55 p.m., J.D. & the Straight Shot

    1:15-2:05 p.m., Cowboy Mouth

    2:40-3:55 p.m., Little Big Town

    4:40-7 p.m., Fleetwood Mac

    The Acura Stage schedule on Sunday, May 5 also was altered slightly. It is now:

    11:15 a.m.-noon, OTRA

    12:25-1:15 p.m., Brass-A-Holics

    1:45-2:55 p.m., The Meter Men featuring Zigaboo Modeliste, Leo Nocentelli and George Porter Jr. plus Page McConnell

    3:40-5:05 p.m., The Black Keys

    5:35-7 p.m., Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

    Sunday’s Gentilly Stage schedule also is slightly different. As a result, Aaron Neville has 15 additional minutes for the Gentilly Stage debut of his solo band.

    11:15 a.m.-12:05 p.m., Creole String Beans

    12:25-1:40 p.m., New Orleans Classic R&B Recording Revue featuring Clarence “Frogman” Henry, Frankie Ford, Al “Carnival Time” Johnson and Robert “Barefootin’” Parker with the Blue-Eyed Soul Revue

    2-3:05 p.m., Irma Thomas

    3:45-5:15 p.m., Daryl Hall and John Oates

    5:45-7 p.m., Aaron Neville

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac gives big crowd reasons to look back, ahead at Sprint Center, Kansas City

    (Joe Ledford / http://www.kansascity.com)
    With her gypsy-spirit, Stevie Nicks is the soul of Fleetwood Mac. (Joe Ledford / http://www.kansascity.com)

    By Timothy Finn
    Kansas City Star
    Wednesday, May 1, 2013

    When this tour was announced, the initial reaction was dubious.

    Fleetwood Mac hadn’t been on the road in more than three years. Its previous appearance in Kansas City exceeded that: May 2009, and back then the band looked as if it might be delivering its unofficial swan song.

    Four years later, no one is younger than 63, and its oldest member, bassist John McVie, will turn 68 in November. Yes, the world is turning, and time makes you bolder and older, but Fleetwood Mac somehow manages to keep its chain intact.

    Tuesday night, more than 12,500 fans showed up to watch a group founded as a British blues band nearly 50 years ago reprise nearly two dozen songs from the past 38 years of its catalog, including several from the fabled Rumours album, which celebrated its 35th anniversary last year.

    Surprisingly, this show was more polished and energetic than the 2009 show. The setlist was significantly different, too. It included a brand-new song and one drawn from the days when Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham had not yet joined the band.

    As he was back in 2009, Buckingham was the focal point for much of the show, as much for some of his guitar-god pyrotechnics (electric and acoustic) as anything. He was the only one on stage, as drummer Mick Fleetwood pointed out, who didn’t leave the stage for a minute of the two and a half hour show. (The four were backed by two singers, a guitarist, a keyboardist and a percussionist.)

    Despite that, he was nearly overshadowed by Nicks, 64, who is the gypsy-spirit, if not the soul, of this band. Women of several generations still adore her; at least two who looked no more than one-third her age showed up Tuesday night in Rhiannon costume. And she gave them reason to cheer. She has pretty much given up all the dancing and twirling, and her voice has lost range, but she still sings with plenty of heft in her lead vocals and her harmonies with Buckingham.

    From the outset, it was evident this is the Buckingham-Nicks band. They are exes, but in concert that estrangement disappears, like Richard and Linda Thompson or George Jones and Tammy Wynette. Or Sonny and Cher. They took the stage last, together, like a couple. That dynamic resonates through the show. More than once there were displays of affection, during and between songs. Halfway through, they sang “Without You,” a song from their Buckingham-Nicks days, back when they were more innocent and naive, Buckingham said.

    The rest of the show was pretty much a greatest-hits rundown. Its 23 songs featured more than half of Rumours, several from Tusk, a peppy new song called “Sad Angel” that was neither sad nor angelic and one of Nicks’ better-known solo hits, “Stand Back.” They altered the arrangements of a few songs, like “Tusk,” which was slowed a bit and included some surf-guitar in its intro. Otherwise, songs were played like everyone remembers them.

    There were several explosive moments, none bigger than “Go Your Own Way,” which included Buckingham’s second-most volcanic guitar solo (the one during “I’m So Afraid” was first) and ignited a voracious and immediate sing-along. “Don’t Stop” was another. Some of the quieter moments were stellar, too, like “Landslide” and “Never Going Back Again,” which was given a bluesier treatment.

    The sound was a mixed-bag. I listened from the floor for about five songs, and it was fine. Then I took a spot at the top of the lower-level, where, during the more percussive songs, a noticeable (and distracting) echo was apparent from off the back wall. Otherwise I thought the sound was OK, but others expressed otherwise.

    They wrapped up the night with “Silver Springs,” a song from the Rumours session, and then “Say Goodbye,” a song Buckingham told the crowd he wrote about 10 years ago to put into some perspective his relationship with Nicks, which now exceeds 40 years.

    It was a fitting valediction to a night filled with nostalgia, but in a larger context it seemed like “Don’t Stop” was a better closer. At least for this night, this band sounded like it has a lot more tomorrows to think about.

    More information

    SETLIST

    Second Hand News; The Chain; Dreams; Sad Angel; Rhiannon; Not That Funny; Tusk; Sisters of the Moon; Sara; Big Love; Landslide; Never Going Back Again; Without You; Gypsy; Eyes of the World; Gold Dust Woman; I’m So Afraid; Stand Back; Go Your Own Way. Encore: World Turning; Don’t Stop; Silver Springs; Say Goodbye.

    To reach Timothy Finn, call 816-234-4781 or send email to tf***@****ar.com.

  • Mick Fleetwood talks EP, new tour

    Mick Fleetwood talks EP, new tour

    Drummer Mick Fleetwood performs during a Fleetwood Mac concert at Madison Square Garden. (Jason DeCrow / Invision / AP)
    Drummer Mick Fleetwood performs during a Fleetwood Mac concert at Madison Square Garden. (Jason DeCrow / Invision / AP)

    Mick Fleetwood clearly gets the question all the time.

    And he completely gets the question.

    How can the majority of Fleetwood Mac’s most famous lineup — drummer Fleetwood, bassist John McVie, singer/songwriter/guitarist Lindsey Buckingham and singer/songwriter Stevie Nicks — still be making music together after all these famously tumultuous years?

    Well, he said with a laugh, it’s still a bit of a shock for him, too.

    “I think you have to concede that. … You know, (it) used to be years and years and years ago still quite painful, in many ways, and all the well-worn stories of survival — emotional survival — through all of that, I won’t say they’re boring because even to us, we look at that and go like ‘How the *** DID we get through all that?’” Fleetwood said in a phone interview from Los Angeles before the April 4 launch of the band’s North American tour.

    “You just have to really attribute it to a form of perverse devotion for sure to the music and what we were able to do. We were really lucky to be able to be doing it. I think we all realized that.”

    The Rock and Roll Hall of Famers are bringing their “Fleetwood Mac Live 2013” trek to the BOK Center on Wednesday night. The legendary band previously played the Tulsa venue the last time it hit the road together, on 2009’s sold-out “Unleashed Tour.”

    The longtime bandmates have reunited on the road to mark the 35th anniversary reissue of their most iconic album, Rumours, but they’re also celebrating the release of new music. On Tuesday, the band dropped on iTunes a four-track EP appropriately titled Extended Play.

    It’s practically impossible to think of Rumours without thinking of the interpersonal havoc that birthed it: McVie and his wife, Christine McVie, the band’s now-retired singer/songwriter/pianist, filed for divorce, while Buckingham and Nicks broke off their long-term romance. Fleetwood and his wife divorced, too, and he and Nicks had an affair.

    Despite the turmoil, Fleetwood said the band concentrated on making the album a “complete piece of work” rather than just a collection of random tracks. Because the turmoil informed the songwriting, Rumours became one of the most popular and acclaimed records in rock history, winning the Grammy for Album of the Year and selling more than 40 million copies worldwide since its 1977 debut.

    “I think the songs, the vocal delivery on the album and the approach with the harmonies and stuff was something for sure fresh and maybe somewhat ‘wow, not (another) band sounds like that.’ So we were blessed with all that stuff. And then I think the songs were great, and they were pop-driven songs, but they weren’t stupid and they weren’t corny. But they were really accessible,” Fleetwood said.

    “Then you had this bunch … that started telling their own story literally through those songs and then as that unfolded, it became part and parcel outside of the music, this mythological story of this impossible situation these people had found themselves in. I think the whole putting together of all those components became something that people identified with and in many ways were attracted to it, probably because they felt similar themselves very often, that they were just a bit of an emotional mess,” he added.

    “We’re all in our 60s now, and people still talk about this human condition calling card which was ‘Rumours.’”

    With the bustling solo careers Nicks and Buckingham have carved out, the native Englishman said creating new Fleetwood Mac music has been a challenge. Plus, the drummer, 65, who now lives on Maui, opened Fleetwood’s On Front Street restaurant last year and continues to make music with his Mick Fleetwood Blues Band, which recently played a special show featuring Christine McVie and Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler on the island he calls home.

    Tuesday’s EP release marked the band’s first new music debut in a decade. Fleetwood, John McVie and Buckingham assembled several months ago in L.A. and recorded about nine “really fresh and vibrant” songs they hoped would be the starting point for a new album from the group. Nicks was busy with her own tour and then her mother’s death, but before the quartet hit the road, she added her vocals to a few tracks and recorded “Without You,” a previously unreleased song from her pre-Fleetwood Mac days with Buckingham Nicks.

    Along with “Without You,” the digital EP features the poppy tracks “Sad Angel” and “Miss Fantasy” and the wistful piano ballad “It Takes Time.” Hopefully, the EP will herald the coming of a full-length follow-up to 2003’s Say You Will, Fleetwood said.

    “We’re musicians at work, and now we have the grace just to say ‘When this is right, we’ll do it.’ Stevie’s ready to do it and wants to do it, and off we go. And we’ll be wrapped around each other for the better part of probably 18 months, you know, working all over the world.”

    Despite the band’s turbulent history, Fleetwood said the quartet was instantly in harmony when they came together for rehearsals.

    “It’s just like it could have been like three days ago, and it’s actually maybe four years ago that we all were on the road,” he said.

    “It’s like opening up a time capsule that is very familiar, and then we literally just plug in and ‘let’s go’ and it’s all intact.”

    Brandy McDonnell / News OK  / Wednesday, May 1, 2013