Category: 2013 Rumours Tour

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac at Prudential Center is enjoyable, but…

    (Saed Hindash / Star-Ledger)
    Fleetwood Mac lead singer Stevie Nicks belts out a number during their concert Wednesday night, April 24, 2013 at the Prudential Center in Newark. (Saed Hindash/The Star-Ledger)

    By Tris McCall
    The Star-Ledger
    Thursday, April 25, 2013

    Last year, Hear Music — that’s the label run by Starbucks — released a tribute disc to Fleetwood Mac. There wasn’t a single cover of a Christine McVie song on the collection. Maybe she gave the okay for that, and maybe she didn’t want to negotiate with Hear; in any case, it felt like she’d been written of a story in which she’s a central character.

    Last night, the Mac held the stage at the Prudential Center for nearly two and a half hours. There was only a single Christine McVie song on the setlist — “Don’t Stop,” which is mostly sung by Lindsey Buckingham. McVie wasn’t present for the concert, which is nothing new: She hasn’t been performing with the group in more than a decade. Mick Fleetwood mentioned in an interview that the door is always open, and he’d love it if she’d walk through. Some fans have high hopes for the upcoming London gig; in Newark on Wednesday, she didn’t walk through.

    I love Lindsey Buckingham. He’s something of an onstage megalomaniac, and he’ll solo all night and day if you let him, but he’s endearing, he’s a magnetic frontman and a dexterous guitarist, and his restlessness and taste for experimentation was put to good use by the rest of the group. I love Stevie Nicks, too; her songs are smart, tough, and intoxicating, and get her going in an extended outro and she’s likely to guide you to places that few singers ever visit. John McVie and Mick Fleetwood are the rare rhythm players with indelible personalities; push play on a Fleetwood Mac recording and within seconds, you’ll know it’s them.There are days on which I am convinced that there has never been a greater British-born rock group than Fleetwood Mac — not the Beatles, not the Kinks, not Led Zeppelin, not the Attractions, nor any of the other boys’, boys’, boys’ bands who never seemed to want to let the girls get a word in.

    But that version of Fleetwood Mac is impossible without Christine McVie. She provided the serenity that made Buckingham’s frenetic approach palatable, the earthiness that kept Nicks grounded, and the trancelike electric piano parts that added mystic resonance to the thump and throb of the rhythm section. Most of all, she added terrific songs to the repertoire: songs of romance and warmth, stories that added to that distinctive Fleetwood Mac feeling of men and women in conversation. She did not demonstrate Buckingham’s imagination or Nicks’ urgency. But no songwriter in a band of great songwriters understood the architecture of pop melody better than she did.

    Years before Mick Fleetwood had the bright idea of enlisting Buckingham and Nicks, Christine McVie was writing and singing great songs for Fleetwood Mac. She was writing good songs when she was still Christine Perfect, singer and pianist for British blues act Chicken Shack. After Rumours became a smash hit, pre-Buckingham-Nicks material dropped out of setlists, and because of that, an unfair percentage of Christine McVie’s finest work has gotten lost in the Dark Ages of Mac history. She joined the group in 1971 (she’d drawn the children’s book-like cover for the Kiln House set the year before) and immediately became a major contributor. “Believe Me,” the leadoff cut from the 1973 album Mystery to Me, is first-rate Fleetwood Mac and as delicious as anything on Rumours. “Come a Little Bit Closer,” from 1974’s Heroes Are Hard to Find, anticipated the major-league pop moves the band would make a year later. Once the band hit the big time, she kept right on penning hits: “You Make Loving Fun,” “Think About Me,” “Hold Me,” “Say You Love Me.” (Her album cuts were just as good.)

    I’ll have my review of this show in Saturday’s paper, but I’ll give you the short version here: Fleetwood Mac is always something great to behold, but I missed Christine McVie like a jeweled ring I’d dropped down the drain. I want her back, badly, and I’ll bet her former bandmates do, too. The setlist is below, but before we even get to that, here’s a sensational version of the Mac performing “World Turning” in 1976. Notice there is no bandleader — just men and women standing shoulder to shoulder, singing in harmony and in dialogue.

    [youtube=http://youtu.be/rcsYa6jFRoY]

    FLEETWOOD MAC
    Second Hand News
    The Chain
    Dreams
    Sad Angel (new song)
    Rhiannon
    Not That Funny
    Tusk
    Sisters of the Moon
    Sara
    Big Love
    Landslide
    Never Going Back
    Without You
    Gypsy
    Eyes of the World
    Gold Dust Woman
    So Afraid
    Stand Back
    Go Your Own Way

    ENCORE
    World Turning
    Don’t Stop

    SECOND ENCORE
    Say Goodbye

    (Here is the full review that the author mentioned earlier.)

    Still restless, Fleetwood Mac goes deep at Prudential Center

    Guitar in hand, Lindsey Buckingham crouched as he walked, approaching the microphone like a cat on the prowl. Mick Fleetwood gave him a heavy downbeat on a tom and he pounced, barking out the verse to “Not That Funny,” an abrasive deep cut from Tusk, the 1979 experimental-pop double album on which he spent the capital Fleetwood Mac had earned with the blockbuster Rumours.

    Fleetwood Mac has frequently been a band of complementary voices without a clear leader. But Tusk was Buckingham’s baby, and the Mac set at the Prudential Center in Newark on Wednesday felt very much like Buckingham’s show.

    The band is famous for interplay between huge personalities. Christine McVie, the electric pianist and songwriter who acted as a serene counterbalance to Buckingham’s spastic energy, has spent the last decade in retirement from the group, and wasn’t present. Stevie Nicks remains a commanding onstage force, but her voice is diminished — she no longer tries to reach high notes that once seemed to come effortlessly to her. Bassist John McVie is dedicated to self-effacement; drummer Mick Fleetwood remains a powerhouse, but pointedly called Buckingham the band’s musical mentor. Funny, that: it was Fleetwood who, in 1974, invited Buckingham and Nicks to join a group half-named after him, and whose thunderous backbeat holds the group together.

    Fleetwood Mac is celebrating the 35th anniversary of Rumours with a reissue and a tour. The band played seven of its cuts, and each one drew an ecstatic response from the packed house. But the group seemed more energized by other material.

    Buckingham introduced four straight songs from Tusk with fighting words about artistic independence and the importance of creativity. Later, he held the stage alone for his flashy solo reading of the 1987 hit “Big Love,” and closed the evening with the quiet, acoustic “Say Goodbye.” He took some chances with the Rumours material, too, slowing down “Never Going Back Again” to a crawl, and punking up “Go Your Own Way.” “I’m So Afraid,” the brooding final cut on the band’s self-titled 1975 album, became a launching pad for a guitar solo that, while spectacular in its dexterity, flirted with self-indulgence.

    Buckingham and Nicks dissolved their romantic partnership more than 30 years ago — yet the concert kept reminding us of it. The stars emerged hand in hand, beaming like a presidential couple getting off Air Force One, for the encore set. Earlier in the show, Nicks concluded “Sara” with a turn at Buckingham’s microphone and a sweetly flirtatious dance with him. “Without You,” a love song from the pair’s early years as Buckingham Nicks, was presented as evidence of their initial romantic illusions.

    A cynic, or even a passionate fan, might reasonably ask why the two continue to poke the embers of a relationship that cooled ages ago, and if that is threatening to eclipse the manifold dimensions of one of rock’s most fascinating groups.

    In the late ’70s, Fleetwood Mac was singular. Here was a successful rock band where men and women engaged in musical and lyrical dialogue on equal footing; their stories of love and betrayal bore a stamp of authority that comes from lived experience and mutual respect between romantic partners. Christine McVie’s work was an indispensable part of that dialogue. It is a testament to the depth and quality of the Fleetwood Mac catalog that the band could play for nearly 2½ hours while swerving around McVie’s rapturous songwriting. Nevertheless, she was missed like a lost limb.

    The band did not lack energy. Stevie Nicks took a few songs to warm up, and her performances thereafter were often inexact, but when she lost herself in an outro, as she did during a strong reading of “Gypsy,” she rode the wind like a kite. “Stand Back,” a lively but mechanical Nicks solo hit from the ’80s, was made organic by McVie’s bass and Fleetwood’s fills.

    The drummer was a marvel throughout the show: His martial intro to “Eyes of the World,” steady stomp during “Tusk” and dramatic build-up before the climax of “Sisters of the Moon” added drama to songs that might otherwise have flatlined. He is the rapid, healthy pulse of a group that, 50 years into its run, remains restless.

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac at Prudential Center, Newark, 4/24

    (Saed Hindash / Star-Ledger)
    (Saed Hindash / Star-Ledger)

    By Brittany Spanos
    The Village Voice
    Thursday, April 25, 2013

    Better Than: The idea of the band not reuniting this year at all.

    It begins with “Second Hand News” — a song with a title and lyrics probably meant to be a self-deprecating nod to the reunion’s time and place. It’s an entire arena clutching their hearts along to songs that are older than I am and mumbling “angel” with every golden twirl of Stevie Nicks’ body.

    It’s a Fleetwood Mac concert in 2013, and it needs less explanation or apologies than one would think.

    “This is all your fault,” Nicks told the audience at the show’s end, joking but stern. She was referring to the collection of moments that led to the very one we were experiencing right then. The dreams the band had become and the dreams the band lived thanks to the audience seeing their own dreams in the band’s, or some magical through line similar to that one.

    Until that particular monologue, the concert had been a compilation of greatest hits ranging the varied career of varied sounds that Fleetwood Mac enjoys and is still able to revel in with the conviction of an artist celebrating a particularly intimate new release. With “Second Hand News” followed immediately by “The Chain” and “Dreams,” the opener could have easily been an encore with the feverish audience response they each elicited. New songs like “Sad Angel” and show closer “Say Goodbye” were just as welcome to the repertoire, especially after the band revealed the upcoming short EP they will be releasing next week with a grand total of four new songs on it. They were equally sweet musical moments that brought Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham’s incomparable stage chemistry to the forefront.

    This chemistry between the two — famous for many reasons — was a beautifully endearing element to the overall performance. Providing anecdotes to the histories of songs like oldie “Without You” and newbie “Say Goodbye,” each serving as an emotional antithesis to the other, were loving and intimate. They came back onstage for the encores holding hands and braided their voices together in a stunning, velvety manner. One front row fan handed them a vinyl album slip with a cover featuring a young, half-naked version of them. Nostalgia seemingly floated through their eyes.

    In a show that was meant to be nothing but highlights, and delivered as such, the moments that catapulted themselves to the forefront were truly surreal. “Big Love,” a Buckingham solo, was mesmerizing with the guitarist’s impassioned and hypnotic finger-picking. Nicks still has it, and sounded flawless during “Rhiannon” and “Gold Dust Woman” as she wailed away with her signature raspy-but-smooth voice. During the latter, the singer came onstage with a shimmering gold shawl and created the illusion of golden wings as the song faded out.

    Mick Fleetwood and John McVie were exceptional, per usual. While McVie remained a silent presence on-stage, Fleetwood joked around, made funny faces to the crowd, and played a heart-stopping extended drum solo during “World Turning.” The individual talents that each member brought did, however, make it hard not to notice the absence of Christine McVie, who’s soft but smoky voice would have provided another rich layer to an already grand performance.

    “Landslide” featured a particularly poignant moment: With arms triumphantly outstretched, Nicks gave the most valiant delivery of the famous line “…and I’m getting older too.” Fleetwood Mac has experienced an aging that is less comical or just awkward to watch be performed onstage; they’ve grown naturally in a way that feels wise and most certainly bold.

    Critical Bias: Stevie Nicks is an angel sent from Heaven, hallowed be her name.

    Overheard: “BEAUTIFUL!” – a very aggressively gruff man during the sweet, soft performance of new song “Say Goodbye.”

    Random Notebook Dump: A general rule should be: if you’re telling people to sit down at a concert then you should not have gone to the show in the first place. Major shout out to the people in front of us who held their own against some very confused and unnecessarily angry audience members telling them to stay seated.

    Setlist:

    1. Second Hand News
    2. The Chain
    3. Dreams
    4. Sad Angel**
    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**
    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 (encore)
    21. Don’t Stop (encore)
    22. Say Goodbye (encore)

    **New song

  • 11TH SHOW: Fleetwood Mac, Prudential Center, Newark NJ, April 24, 2013 (videos)

    (To see videos and more photos from the show, scroll to the gallery at the bottom of this page)

    Highlights

    • Fleetwood Mac performed in concert at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. When the lights dimmed at 8:20 p.m., the crowd roared as the band took to the stage to start its set. “Second Hand News” and “The Chain” opened the show.
    • Stevie greeted the crowd warmly before continuing with “Dreams.” “We’re thrilled that you’re here. That being said, this party starts now!”
    • Lindsey continued to wow audiences with his impressive guitar solos, with fans tweeting their praises all throughout the concert.
    • Lindsey confirmed that the new Fleetwood Mac EP would be released next week. It will contain four songs.
    • Fleetwood Mac did not perform “Silver Springs” tonight. Though adored by fans, the vocally-complex song has been a challenge for Stevie to sing consistently on tour.
    • When Stevie and Lindsey returned to the stage for one of the encores, Stevie spotted a fan in the front row with a vinyl copy of the Buckingham Nicks album. Clearly amused, Stevie and Lindsey posed with the album and autographed it for the fan (see video of this interaction below).

    Fan reaction (via Twitter)

    @Lalalula
    Tick it off the bucket list! (@ Prudential Center – @prucenter for Fleetwood Mac Live 2013 w/ 165 others)

    @GoneRischin14
    Fleetwood Mac is killing it right now #lovinlife #greatconcert

    @baskinthemusic
    new songs to be released next week – look out for “sad angel”. legit. #fleetwoodmac

    @ckhesq
    This building is relatively full & stunningly quiet even during the big numbers. Wtf? #fleetwoodmac

    @ccynthialynn
    stevie nicks is a goddess. she’s completely timeless. LOVE HER. @fleetwoodmac

    @jppromotionsnyc
    Love love love sad angel #fleetwoodmac

    @poweranimalsbk
    Rhiannon was epic…space scene playing behind the stage. Pretty sure that a message that they’re thinking of me. <3

    @CallMeAlfi
    Fleetwood Mac actually kicks ass live. They really like bass on them drums, Daaaaaayyyyuuuummm!

    @jppromotionsnyc
    Love the guy who is taping the whole #fleetwoodmac show with his iPad – you just spent $200+ to watch it thru technology

    @lizzydeclement
    Nobody knows how to rock a tambourine like Stevie.

    @poweranimalsbk
    Lindsay and Stevie just nuzzled!! Omgggg crowd goes wild.

    @raFrech
    Old man orgasming on stage #fleetwoodmac

    @JettCantwell
    Nobody – no band – does it like #FleetwoodMac !!! Still bringing the people to their feet for every song. #concert #RockinTheHouse

    @baskinthemusic
    my brain just exploded. #guitarsolo #lindsaybuckingham #fleetwoodmac

    @bennettjackson
    Stevie wearing top hat during “Go Your Own Way.” #stevienicks #fleetwoodmac #lifecomplete

    @poweranimalsbk
    Encore!! Stevie and Lindsay come out holding hands. I bet Stevie gives the best hugs. #Fleetwoodmac

    @Brianne_Grace
    @fleetwoodmac is #amazing. fantastic concert at the #prudentialcenter. I think I can die happy now 🙂 #fleetwoodmac #fleetwoodmaclive

    @HadleyDKeller
    Stevie and Lindsey singing Say Goodbye to each other was likely the most beautiful thing I’ve ever witnessed @fleetwoodmac

    @scharpling
    Fleetwood Mac were AMAZING tonite. Buckingham might be the most underrated person in rock history – George Harrison & Brian Wilson combined.

    To read fan reviews of the tour, visit The Nicks Fix 2013 Fan Reviews page.

    Newark set list (Silver Springs was not performed this evening.)

    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. Say Goodbye

    Fan photos

    Videos

    Lindsey and Stevie signing a fan’s copy of Buckingham Nicks (courtesy of Amlyn75)
    [youtube=http://youtu.be/_eC9KP-shOU]

    1. “Second Hand News” – partial (courtesy of salty721)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZzAxG7sT4A]

    4. “Sad Angel” (courtesy of granitedog)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jfjg1fZbYo4]

    7. “Tusk” (courtesy of jtallen11)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HnyOmkzBfHI]

    8. “Sisters of the Moon” (courtesy of granitedog)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfJScuuqkHA]

    9. “Sara” (courtesy of cooolhand62)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTq7kEq7rUA]

    9. “Sara” (courtesy of jtallen11)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjkT137EURM]

    10. “Big Love” – partial (courtesy of catalystmaker)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCQpkde_zbo]

    13. “Without You” (courtesy of granitedog)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ic__BTC01io]

    15. “Eyes of the World” (courtesy of granitedog)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxkkFq61dD0]

    16. “Gold Dust Woman” (courtesy of granitedog)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_uprU-5WT0]

    16. “Gold Dust Woman” (courtesy of Chantel Velez)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzOIuh9P-aE]

    17. “I’m So Afraid” – partial (courtesy of dennsue)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rH8VHgKE5WM]

    18. “Stand Back” (courtesy of cooolhand62)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBYK11yw61Y]

    20. “World Turning” (courtesy of catalystmaker)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ki-VgiuUxY0]

    20. “World Turning” (courtesy of Bhavana Pahwa)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQ1LxVnJQnk]

    21. “Don’t Stop” & introductions (courtesy of catalystmaker)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aqu6VE20rUk]

    21. “Don’t Stop” (courtesy of TheEFinley)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4yULMLWAuM]

    21. “Don’t Stop” – partial (courtesy of greeneggznsam)
    [youtube=http://youtu.be/-R-E69imQ1k]

    22. “Say Goodbye” (courtesy of granitedog)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hexQp53bzoE]

    Closing remarks (courtesy of catalystmaker)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybyDn3UQJik]

    Special thanks to catalystmaker, cooolhand62, dennsue, granitedog, greeneggznsam, jtallen11, Bhavana Pahwa, and TheEFinley for making these clips available.

  • Fleetwood Mac, at Consol this week, connects to fans with ‘Dreams,' more

    Fleetwood MacBy Alan Sculley
    The Tribune-Review
    Wednesday, April 24, 2013, 9:00 p.m.

    Fleetwood Mac fans won’t have to worry about the band phoning things in on its 2013 tour.

    The band became arguably the biggest act in rock in the late 1970s after guitarist-singer Lindsey Buckingham and singer Stevie Nicks joined three holdovers from earlier editions of Fleetwood Mac — drummer Mick Fleetwood, bassist John McVie and keyboardist-singer Christine McVie (the bassist’s former wife) in 1975 and released three straight blockbuster albums, Fleetwood Mac (1975), Rumours (1977) and Tusk (1979).

    But in talking to Fleetwood, it’s obvious that today’s four core members (Christine McVie retired from the band in 1998) are very much invested in the band and not complacent about its live show. In fact, the band spent six full weeks rehearsing for this year’s tour, trying to be as ready as possible to be in peak form from opening night forward. They perform April 26 at Consol Energy Center, Uptown.

    “We know the nuts and bolts are all in place (for the show) and we have confidence in that,” Mick Fleetwood says. “But we also have like a garage band-like mentality. … And (that nervousness) doesn’t really go away, which is a nice thing. We’re not all jaded and so showbizzed-out that we’re all super-slick and go ‘Ah, piece of cake.’ We’re not like that at all.”

    Fleetwood says the tour will, of course, feature the band’s signature hits.

    “We know that we have sort of a body of songs that, in truth, if we didn’t do them, we’d probably be all lined up and shot,” he says. “If we walked on the stage and didn’t play ‘Dreams,’ I think people would be shocked. So we don’t go there. So what we do is we take the prime songs, ‘Go Your Own Way,’ ‘Dreams,’ songs like that, and then build a new show around the fact that we, of course, are going to be doing those songs.”

    This will be Fleetwood Mac’s first tour since its 2009 outing, dubbed the “Unleashed” tour. The band doesn’t regroup that often, in part because Buckingham and Nicks both want time for their ongoing solo careers. Following the “Unleashed” tour, Buckingham released the studio album “Seeds We Sow,” while Nicks released her CD, “In Your Dreams.” Both artists toured extensively to support the albums.

    The personal history and inter-band dynamics within Fleetwood Mac also create challenges — and, according to Fleetwood, are another indication of why the four band members are all in when they reunite.

    “When we do do it, we work really hard at it and we’re committed to it,” he says. “We fundamentally have to be happy to be doing this, because we’re all ex-lovers and all the stuff that is well-worn news out there.”

    As has been well-documented, Buckingham and Nicks were a couple (and were recording as Buckingham-Nicks) when they joined Fleetwood Mac. The McVies were married at that time. But the relationships soon frayed, and the “Rumours” album was written in the midst of those breakups.

    Fleetwood and Nicks later became a couple for a time, while Buckingham married and started a family. Nicks is now the godmother of Fleetwood’s children. But the personal history makes every Fleetwood Mac reunion a significant undertaking.

    “(This is) a bunch of people who aren’t just connected by the music, but connected by spending huge amounts of time (together),” Fleetwood says.

    This year’s reunion could turn out to be even more eventful than the one in 2009, because it could include a new Fleetwood Mac album.

    A batch of new songs was recorded last year when Buckingham, Fleetwood and McVie got together for a writing and rehearsal session. Nicks has since added her vocals to several of the songs, a few of which, Fleetwood said, are being released on iTunes to coincide with the tour.

    “I truly hope by the end of the year or the beginning of next year that these tracks that are coming out now will fold over into a completed piece of work, which will be a new Fleetwood Mac album, which would be fantastic,” Fleetwood said.

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac take 12,000 on trip back in time at Scotiabank Place

    By Aedan Helmer
    Ottawa Sun
    Tuesday, April 23, 2013

    There’s really no mystery behind the astronomical success of Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours, with the supergroup celebrating 35 years since the landmark album’s 1977 release.

    Right from its iconic cover art, with the dapper Mick Fleetwood and the sprightly Stevie Nicks on his arm, it was the perfect marriage of lean British blues-breaking rhythm with sunny soft rock, all polished in an alcoholic California sheen.

    It was anything but a perfect marriage that spawned the album’s material, of course, but judging by the mid-set slow dance shared by former lovers Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham onstage at Scotiabank Place on Tuesday night, the sixty-somethings have left lovers’ quarrels far behind.

    Nicks later turned to the band’s namesake drummer and thanked Fleetwood for allowing her and her musical (and otherwise) partner to join his “blues band” all those years ago, when the transformation would simply make them one of the biggest-selling bands on the planet and lay the blueprint for all that AOR would come to be.

    And the album’s appeal is still going strong, judging by the sales, the rock rotation staying power and the multi-generational crowd of 12,000 that swayed along as Fleetwood Mac rolled out Rumours opener “Second Hand News,” followed by “The Chain” and megahit “Dreams” to open the festivities.

    “There’s an axiom that exists in the music business: If it works, run it into the ground and then move on,” Buckingham said. “In other words, when you find a formula that works, use it up until there’s nothing left and move along to something else. It may be a good idea in business, but not necessarily if you’re aspiring to be an artist.”

    Uncomfortable within the industry trappings that instant fame would bring, Buckingham explained the band decided “to subvert that particular axiom” when it followed up the Rumours megalith with the dense and weird Tusk.

    “When they first put it on in a Warner Bros. board room, it was not what they expected and I’m sure not what they wanted,” Buckingham acknowledged, while reviving Tusk’s tribal title track, the metallic “Not That Funny” and the spacey “Sisters of the Moon.”

    That was about all the subversion Fleetwood Mac would muster on this night, though, serving up 1975 hit “Rhiannon,” and the new, but very familiar-sounding tune “Sad Angel,” which is set to be released as part of an online EP within the week.

    “Every time we take a break and come back it’s hard to believe there are still chapters to be written in this band, but there are,” said Buckingham, announcing the latest studio effort and pledging, “We’ll see what happens after that.”

    After a low-key acoustic set — highlighted by Buckingham speaking of the “power of change” on the solo “Big Love,” which only gained in ferocity since he performed it seven short months ago at Folkfest — the band returned to the formula that made them what they are.

    “Gypsy” and “Eyes of the World” followed — both from the synth-drenched ’80s Mirage album — but the remainder of the two-hour-plus set stuck firmly in the mid-70s, with I’m So Afraid, featuring a ripping guitar solo from Buckingham, “Gold Dust Woman” and the anthemic “Go Your Own Way,” sounding just as it did when it breezed its way onto the AM airwaves.

    By the time the band busted out “Don’t Stop,” the crowd was right along there with them, reliving those glory days.

  • 10TH SHOW: Fleetwood Mac, Scotiabank Place, Ottawa Ontario, April 23, 2013

    (To see videos and more photos from the show, scroll to the gallery at the bottom of this page)

    Fleetwood Mac returned to Ontario on Tuesday night, performing in concert at Scotiabank Place in Ottawa. The band came on stage at around 8:20 p.m., kicking off the show with a trio of songs from Rumours — “Second Hand News,” “The Chain,” and “Dreams.” Just before starting “Dreams,” Stevie greeted the audience with praise of Canada’s many rivers and castles, which received an enthusiastic response. “We’re happy to be here and the party starts now!

    With 10 shows completed, the band has settled into a comfortable set list and stage dialogue. The band played for two and a half hours, performing 23 songs mainly from Fleetwood Mac, Rumours, and Tusk, but also performed a few selections from the band’s less-publicized albums Mirage, Tango in the Night, and Say You Will. Like on previous nights of the tour, Lindsey told the crowd that “there are still chapters to be written” in the Fleetwood Mac story.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to Lindsay and Jerry, a special couple in the audience that were getting married. According to Stevie, Mick “fell in love with the couple” before the show.

    Fan reaction (via Twitter)

    @Iannetti04Ant
    Fleetwood Mac .. The Chain .. Can literally now die happy #stevie

    @chez106
    Great start to Fleetwood at the bank tonight- Ottawa is loving it!

    @mandy_utton
    @fleetwoodmac new stuff sounds amazing!!!!!!!!

    @briankauk
    New material from @fleetwoodmac at the concert in #ottawa tonight – they still got it!

    @beavenhauser
    #fleetwoodmac #ottawa amazing!

    @Ducttape19
    The background of the @fleetwoodmac concert reminds me of a Windows 95 screensaver #storychecksout

    @gfallswinsor
    @fleetwoodmac are amazing right now #mindblown

    @jilladams__
    Rumours classics, a handful of new songs and rhiannon @fleetwoodmac: couldn’t get any better!

    @StellaBunny27
    @fleetwoodmac concert in Ottawa. Never thought I’d be here. Absolutely amazing!! Way to rock out guys!!

    @briankauk
    “Landslide” highlight of the night so far; I could listen to this forever

    @topskateshop
    So stoked to see legends Fleetwood Mac live tonight! Back to our hippy roots. @topchico #ottawaevents

    @champ_champagne
    Never before have I enjoyed a concert as much as this ! (Said everyone here) Fleetwood Mac #ScotiabankPlace

    @ersaik
    Amazing concert! Fleetwood Mac is one of my favorite bands of all time! So surreal!

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac forges ahead

    (Bruno Schlumberger / Ottawa Citizen)
    Stevie Nicks and John McVie are shown Tuesday night as Fleetwood Mac performed for about 12,400 fans at Scotiabank Place. (Bruno Schlumberger / Ottawa Citizen)

    Classic rock band in transition

    By Lynn Saxberg
    Ottawa Citizen
    Tuesday, April 23, 2013

    Fleetwood Mac
    Scotiabank Place
    Tuesday night

    OTTAWA — The Fleetwood Mac that touched down at Scotiabank Place on Tuesday appeared to be a band in transition, turning in a slightly uneven performance for a crowd of about 12,400.

    The 2013 version of the 1970s hitmakers still counts guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, drummer Mick Fleetwood, bassist John McVie and singer Stevie Nicks in its lineup, but no longer includes singer-keyboardist Christine McVie, who has refused all invitations to join her old bandmates.

    Of course, that’s nothing new, and the band has been soldiering on without her for years. On this tour, a keyboardist, extra guitarist and two backing vocalists help fill in the sound, leaving Nicks and Buckingham co-fronting the classic rock outfit.

    With their voices in sync, the former sweethearts presented a united front during the first song, knocking out a terrific version of “Second Hand News.”

    The lovely twang of Buckingham’s guitar led into a muscular version of another old favourite, “The Chain,” to the delight of the audience.

    It was Nicks who greeted the crowd first, remarking on how beautiful Ottawa was, with its “rivers and castles.” But after issuing a call to get the party started, the 64-year-old, who still wears her hair long and blond, seemed to struggle to find her groove on “Dreams.” Maybe it was an off night, but in it, and her signature song, “Rhiannon,” her voice had a harsh edge, lacking much of the fluidity of the early days.

    When Buckingham, who’s 63, took his turn at the microphone, he shared the news that the band had been working on new material, and an EP is being released soon. One of those new songs, the upbeat “Sad Angel,” was played early in the show, indicating a crisper form of melodic rock to come from the soft-rock survivors, a style perhaps better suited to Nicks’ not-so-lush voice.

    Buckingham, who played a solo show at the Ottawa Folk Festival last summer, also talked about the 1979 album, Tusk, describing it as a line in the sand between him and the record company, who would have preferred another blockbuster like 1977’s Rumours. Digging into a couple of tracks from the album, he showed how well the music has held up.

    Leave it to Buckingham to forge ahead creatively back then, and to push the band in new directions now. Looking fit and tanned in jeans and leather jacket, the guitarist was the band’s guiding light throughout the show, while Nicks, draped in something fringed and sparkly, had to work to match his energy and recreate her old magic.

    But everything clicked during the encore. With Buckingham as the guitar hero, Nicks as the rock goddess and Fleetwood bashing out a thunderous drum solo, the band finally sounded reunited as they tore through “World Turning” and “Don’t Stop.”

  • 2013 WORLD TOUR: 2nd Amsterdam show added, tickets on sale April 26

    Fleetwood MacDue to overwhelming demand, Fleetwood Mac has added a second show at Ziggo Dome in Amsterdam on October 26. Tickets go on sale Friday, April 26 at 10:00 a.m., local venue time.

    The first Amsterdam show, also at Ziggo Dome, is on October 7. To see all tour dates, click here.

    The band is currently in the Canada’s capital city of Ottawa for a concert at Scotiabank Place on Tuesday, April 23.

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac still great after all those years

    (Jason E. Abrams)
    (Jason E. Abrams)

    By MJ Hanley-Goff
    Women Around Around
    Monday, April 22, 2013

    Whatever the players of Fleetwood Mac are having, I want some of that. The enduring rock and roll/pop band played to an appreciative full house (pun intended) at the Mohegan Sun Casino Arena in Montville, Connecticut on Saturday night. Between them, the four 60-something players, Stevie Nicks, John McVie, Lindsey Buckingham, and Mick Fleetwood, total 250-plus years… young. And “young” is most certainly the optimum word here.

    For close to 2½ hours, without an intermission (just a few quick disappearances during another member’s solo), the band played a remarkable set of their best of the best. Stevie began the night with a welcome to the fans who erupted in approval at her promise to “let you forget your troubles” for the next few hours. And from then on, there was no stopping them. I can’t think of one song of their repertoire of hits, (there was only one new song tossed into the mix, the rocker, “Sad Angel”), that they omitted, and each one was played with vitality and enthusiasm, a feat when you think of the thousands of times they’ve played them. Lindsey owned the stage with his quick-finger, guitar picking, and jumped and hollered, and panted when the song was done. The album Tusk, Lindsey explained, bewildered the music executives at the time, and continues as a reminder for Lindsey to not keep doing the same thing, that change is good.

    Remembering that Stevie and Lindsey were a couple during the early years of the band, it was endearing to see them play off each other, glancing at one another when they each performed songs written for the other. Stevie sang an oldie, almost-forgotten song, “Without You” (she said the band truly had forgotten it, but it turned up on YouTube), and Lindsey, in return, replied with “Say Goodbye.” When Stevie was explaining the genesis of her song, she went on and on a bit, and then glanced at Lindsey and said, “Oh, I know, I’m rambling.” Still in grand gypsy form, Stevie danced, swayed and waved her capes and scarves around, at times playing air guitar and air piano. At one point, she led the audience along with her and Lindsey during the big favorite, “Silver Springs.”

    Without a doubt, the highlight of the night came during Mick Fleetwood’s sweaty, non-stopping, pounding solo, and with the movie screen above him, he was bigger than life; eyes closed, he beat the drums and shouted, “Are you with me?” Of course we were. At one point Stevie addressed that fact, commenting that it was the audience who made the songs come alive. “We throw it out to you and then you throw it back to us. That’s the magic.”

    Introduced as the “backbone of Fleetwood Mac,” a big nod goes to John McVie, the oldest of the bunch, most noticeably the least flamboyant, who wore his trademark vest and beret, and is still adding the back bass notes that take on a life of their own. (Give a listen to Tusk and you’ll see what I mean.) After three encores, it was easy to see that the audience wasn’t ready to let them go, and Fleetwood Mac didn’t want to leave, but finally, Stevie came to the mike and sent us off with a reminder to “always listen to music — it’s good for the soul.”

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac rises to occasion at TD Garden

    (Caroline Lunny)
    (Caroline Lunny)

    By Dan O’Leary
    Tufts Daily
    Monday, April 22, 2013

    Fleetwood Mac held its first concert in Boston since 2009 last Thursday at TD Garden, and effects from Monday’s events could still be felt as concertgoers entered the building. Attendees faced increased security checks and ushers waved flyers printed with the suspects’ faces as they scanned tickets. It all led to the question: Is there a place for music in all of this? The band’s answer to this was a defiant “yes,” as Fleetwood Mac rose to the occasion and put on a powerful concert that was highly appreciated by the nearly sold-out crowd.

    Lead singer Stevie Nicks summed it up best in her early remarks to the crowd: “When I used to run into hard times I’d ask my mom, ‘What do I do?’ And she’d say ‘You can sing for them, you can give them music.’ So that’s what we’re going to do for you tonight.”

    And sing they did. Fleetwood Mac’s commitment to delivering that night for Boston was evident from the concert’s opening one-two punch of “Second Hand News” into “The Chain.” Drummer Mick Fleetwood kicked off the evening playing the song’s drum intro with a manic energy, leading into a jubilant rendition of the opener from the band’s classic Rumours (1977). The energy level remained high with the band firing on all cylinders for “The Chain,” displaying all the impressive aspects about Thursday’s concert, with harmonizing between Buckingham and Nicks, impressive guitar-work by Buckingham and a rock-solid rhythm section — John McVie’s iconic bass riff on the track rumbled and shook the building.

    As to be expected, with no recent album to promote, though the band played two new tracks from an upcoming EP, the set list was quite heavy on material from Rumours. One of the most pleasant surprises of the evening, however, was a mini-set devoted to Tusk (1979), the band’s underrated Rumours follow-up. Buckingham kicked off this portion of the concert with energetic takes on “Not That Funny” and the title track, which allowed for an impressive display of his trademark fingerpicking guitar style.

    But what was easily the highlight of the Tusk mini-set was Stevie Nicks’ haunting take on the gem “Sisters of the Moon,” a song that hasn’t been performed by Fleetwood Mac in over 30 years. While Nicks’ voice has lost some of its range due to age, she knew her limits and played it to her advantage, giving “Sisters” a brooding quality.

    Nicks was spot on in many of her signature songs throughout the night, with highlights including a beautiful version of “Dreams” and a powerful take on “Gold Dust Woman.”

    The other MVP of the night was Buckingham on guitar, who had as many show-stopping moments as Nicks. The peak of Buckingham’s performance came in an incendiary 10-minute performance of “I’m So Afraid,” with Buckingham letting loose a passionate guitar solo that brought on a standing ovation once the song was finished. Buckingham performed with this passion throughout the night, coloring many of the concert’s songs with inventive playing, such as his impressive solo acoustic take on “Big Love.”

    Regarding Buckingham and Nicks, many in attendance were there to see the chemistry between the former partners. The history between the two has been a theme throughout Fleetwood Mac’s career, and Thursday’s concert offered a glimpse at a pair that finally seemed to be getting along. This relationship was best reflected in the evening’s final encore, where a beautiful rendition by Nicks of “Silver Springs” led into “Say Goodbye,” leaving the two alone on stage and giving a sense of closure to the evening.

    Despite any reservations about holding a concert so soon after the Boston Marathon, Fleetwood Mac delivered in spades and provided those in the crowd a brief respite from the tension that had filled the week, with a concert marked by many emotional moments. While dedicating a song to a wounded Iraq veteran in the crowd who Nicks had met many years ago, she became visibly teary and choked up as she said the final words of her intro.

    “And that’s what your city does, they called him back [to life]. I would want to be in this city. I love this city.”

    And with that Nicks went on to perform a perfect rendition of “Landslide,” leaving many members of the audience in tears as they sang along. This moment showed why Thursday night was more than just a concert; it showed the power of music to uplift, even in the face of something as horrific as Monday’s events. And based on their wildly enthusiastic reaction to a triumphant version of “Don’t Stop,” dedicated to Boston, it seemed like the crowd agreed.