Category: 2013 Rumours Tour

  • Stevie Nicks talks addiction, Botox, and the burying of hatchets

    Stevie Nicks talks addiction, Botox, and the burying of hatchets

    Fleetwood Mac’s Stevie Nicks is 65 and back on tour with Fleetwood Mac. The iconic rock star talks to Craig McLean.

    It’s a Thursday evening at Stevie Nicks’ oceanside condo in Santa Monica, Los Angeles, and the talk has turned to Botox, dragons and snakes. She’s only frightened of one of them.

    “Oh my God, it’s getting worse!” the Fleetwood Mac singer exclaims of the ever-increasing popularity of the cosmetic procedure. Nicks, who is 65, tried it herself some years ago. Her conclusion?

    “Botox makes everybody look like Satan’s children. You’d have to tie me down to get me to do it again.”

    “Now we’re getting used to seeing people with eyebrows that start up here,” she snorts, jabbing at her hairline, the famous long and still-lustrous blonde locks flowing.

    Nicks turns her gaze away from the Pacific sunset we’ve been enjoying from our reclining chairs.

    “You have an 18-year-old daughter, right?” She raises a finger in my direction. “You tell your daughter: if she ever even thinks about Botox, you get me on the phone and I’ll talk to her.”

    Nicks is as warm and empathetic in person as her endless hit songs (Dreams, Rhiannon, Edge of Seventeen) suggest. She is relaxed in black, drapey lounge-wear and dark, tinted glasses.

    Her manner is a combination of floaty New Agey-ness and quick-witted humour.


    Nicks with Fleetwood Mac in 1975 (second from right)

    It is late July and Fleetwood Mac’s 2013 world tour is on a short summer break before hitting Britain. Nicks and her assistant, Karen, have duly retreated to the beach.

    From her panoramic windows she can watch the cars twinkling down the Pacific Coast Highway at night. “I call it the diamond snake when it’s coming toward you, and when the traffic’s going away it’s the ruby snake.”

    Nicks also owns a 1930s “English-style” mansion in the nearby hills, where she lets her nearest and dearest retreat. Three years ago she recorded a solo album there, “In Your Dreams”, with the producer and former Eurythmic Dave Stewart.

    But this apartment, with its 180-degree views up and down Santa Monica Beach, is where Nicks comes to recharge.

    Fleetwood Mac have sold upwards of 100 million albums. When 1976’s “Rumours” (which has sold 40 million copies) was re-released this year, it went back into the album charts at number three.

    Forty years at the top have made the band very rich – rich enough for Mick Fleetwood reportedly to have blown $8 million on cocaine over the years, and for Nicks to own multiple properties.

    This apartment used to be somebody’s bachelor pad, and the high-tech entertainment system that the previous owner installed has been a bit of a problem. Nicks, a self-confessed luddite, only recently bought her first mobile phone.

    “I had to escape a fire in Malibu a couple of years ago. That’s when I realised I had to have one. Now I do have a cellphone. It’s not charged, but it’s over there somewhere. I did say to Karen, ‘Shouldn’t we plug this thing in, just in case?’”

    Nicks is even contemplating going online. “Just ’cause I don’t like the internet doesn’t mean that everybody’s gonna stop using it.” She pouts with a self-mocking air.

    “So I’m starting to think: ‘You know what? Am I just punishing myself? I might as well know how to do it.’”

    Fleetwood Mac – Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham on guitar, John McVie on bass and Mick Fleetwood on drums (all but Christine McVie from the “classic” line-up) – have been on the road since spring.

    “Two hours and 40 minutes, every night – for 47 nights!” says Nicks with a gasp. Such is the ongoing love for the Anglo-American group that 15 extra shows were added to the tour.


    Nicks in 1975

    Nicks is enjoying it now. “But in the beginning, before the shows, truly, I’d look at Lindsey as we were going up to the stage in the lift and go, ‘This is too much for me.’ And he’d go, ‘What do you want me to say?’”

    “And I’d go, ‘Well, I don’t know, some sympathy would be good. Something like, “I know you’re an old woman and this is hard on you – but you’ll get through it!”’

    Of course, Nicks knows Buckingham better than that. They met as teenagers in northern California in 1965. He was the high-school swimming champ and a prodigal guitarist; she was the girl from Arizona, relocated to the San Francisco area thanks to her father’s corporate executive job.

    They became friends, then bandmates, then, finally, a couple.

    As part of a four-piece band called Fritz, they opened for acts including Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix, whom she remembers looking in her direction before announcing: “I’m dedicating a song to that girl over there.”

    “That was a moment of greatness,” she sighs. “I give him and Janis Joplin and Grace Slick [of Jefferson Airplane] the three nods. From Grace, I got her kinda slinkiness.

    “Janis was just little with a big attitude with big hair and feathers, and a drop-dead amazing voice. She was really tough but sang like a bird and could really hold that audience in her hand.

    “And Jimi Hendrix, on the other side of that, was completely and utterly humble… So from those three people I got slinky, attitude and humility.”

    Throw in the most directional deployment of scarves and chiffon in music history, “and that was kinda my stage performance,” she says with a shrug. A rock’n’roll icon was born.

    Having moved to Los Angeles, in 1974 Nicks and Buckingham joined the British blues band Fleetwood Mac, who were then living in the city. Famously, three long-term relationships ended during the making of “Rumours”, including Nicks and Buckingham’s.


    Nicks with Lindsey Buckingham, 1975

    But the band soldiered on through the heartache, the romantic turbulence helping to create some of the most emotional yet melodic and uplifting music ever.

    Stevie went on to have relationships with, among others, two members of The Eagles (Don Henley and Joe Walsh) and even had a fling with Mick Fleetwood.

    Buckingham is now married with three young children, but the spark between him and Nicks never went away, in ways good and bad. During the making of Fleetwood Mac’s 2003 album “Say You Will” they had a falling-out from which they’d never fully recovered.

    So, prior to this year’s tour, Nicks decided they needed to clear the air. She duly invited her first love over for a pre-tour summit.

    “We had a lot talk to about, he and I,” she says. “And I said to him: ‘I believe that you and I need to remember who we were when we were 16 and 17 years old. We need to remember that we were really good friends before we ever had a date.

    “We need to remember how much we respected each other, how much fun we had – and how much fun we can have when we’re both in good spirits. And we need to take that power couple on to the stage. Or we need to not go on tour.’”

    Did Buckingham agree with that?

    “He listened to me, and I’m just sorry we didn’t have this conversation 10 or even 20 years ago.”

    The heart-to-heart did its job. “We are having fun,” she says, clearly delighted at the late-flowering harmony in this legendarily dysfunctional band.

    As Buckingham recently put it, describing the American leg of the tour, “It’s a little bit of a love-fest up there.”

    Nicks has legendary status as one of the first female rock stars. She sang with Taylor Swift at the 2010 Grammy Awards, an experience a besotted Swift described as “a fairytale”.

    Nicks also appeared in the video for Bootylicious by Destiny’s Child, a song that samples her own 1981 composition Edge Of Seventeen.

    “Beyoncé’s great. She’s got her alter ego [her stage persona, Sasha Fierce], but Beyoncé the girl, the woman, is very sweet and nice and polite. She’s a good role model. She’s not skanky. I’m glad we have her.”


    Singing with Taylor Swift at the 2010 Grammys

    The appeal of Fleetwood Mac’s music to a younger generation was underscored by the 2011 Glee episode devoted to “Rumours”.

    Nicks visited the television show’s Los Angeles set during filming, and grew close to the cast. After Cory Monteith, who played Finn Hudson, died of a heroin overdose in July, Nicks wrote the cast a letter.

    “I said, ‘Forgive me if I’m stepping into your personal space. I lost my godson to an overdose last year – he died at a fraternity party – so I do understand how shocking that is.’

    “When what happened to Cory happened, I just was sick for days. Honestly, just sick. It’s just so prevalent. It’s everywhere. It’s worse than when we were young.”

    That’s certainly saying something, given how notoriously hard-partying Fleetwood Mac were throughout most of the 1970s and 1980s. Nicks recalls that they were warned of the dangers of heroin.

    “But I wish people had told us the same thing about cocaine. But in our day everybody was going, ‘It’s not addictive, it’s just recreational fun, blah blah blah.’”

    The band’s cocaine habit led to Nicks becoming addicted to the drug for 10 years. Then, in 1986, after being prescribed the sedative clonazepam to wean her off it, she became addicted to that. Nicks says that its effects were even more ruinous. Her weight ballooned, her skin peeled, her hair fell out, she became a quasi-recluse.

    She lost eight years to clonazepam, and often wonders if she might have met someone and started a family in that time if she hadn’t been so zonked out. “That was stolen,” she says of the chance to find happiness in that period. “And that’s not forgivable, ever.”

    Yet for all her enmity towards the health professionals who prescribed clonazepam to her, Nicks is content to be single now – and blessed with “lots of little fairy goddaughters”. And, as she points out, “I didn’t die.”

    Nicks managed to come back from her addictions. “I think that I’m stronger than a lot of people,” she adds. “And I knew then, as I know now, that I still have so much to do.”

    As well as completing the second half of the Fleetwood Mac world tour (which runs until the end of this year), Nicks is working on plans to release a long-lost pre-Mac album that she and Buckingham made as Buckingham Nicks, the duo they’d formed after Fritz.


    Taking a bow with Fleetwood Mac in Philadelphia in April this year

    She’s also an enthusiastic painter (of angels, mainly), a poet and a reader, and is hoping to realise a long-cherished dream: to turn The Mabinogion Tetralogy, four obscure books based on Welsh myths, into a mini-series.

    She’s owned the rights to the novels for over 30 years and is hopeful that the makers of her favourite television show, Game of Thrones, will be interested in turning them into a screenplay.

    “I lived in the Twilight world for, gosh, four or five years. But Game Of Thrones is just… heavier,” she says, eyes a-flutter. “And season three – the brutality is over the top!” she hoots, delighted.

    “The dragons are growing, and the characters are all brilliant. I mean,” she whispers, “I think of them like they’re real people.”

    Nicks has duly done what she’s always done and put pen to paper. “I’ve written a bunch of poetry for each of the characters in Game Of Thrones. I’m always looking for that kind of inspiration.”

    Fleetwood Mac are touring Britain from Saturday


    Craig McLean / The Telegraph (UK) / Sunday, September 15, 2013

  • Stevie lets loose on UK talk show

    Stevie lets loose on UK talk show

    “I had a talk with Lindsey, the everything I wanted to say to you for 35 years talk.”

    2013-0912 Loose Women UK

    Stevie spent about ten minutes with the ladies of Loose Women to talk about her relationship with Lindsey Buckingham as it stands today and her recent documentary In Your Dreams. She also gave some candid advice to the current crop of singers singing about nothing but partying: “That’s what everybody’s singing about, but it’s going to get very, very boring very, very fast to everybody, so you better start thinking about something else to write about. You tell ’em Stevie!

    The UK-based Loose Women is similar to US-based The View.

    (Clip courtesy of FleetwoodMac-UK.com)

  • AUDIO: Stevie talks to BBC London's Robert Elms

    AUDIO: Stevie talks to BBC London's Robert Elms

    2013-0912-bbc-london-949fm-robert-elmsStevie spoke to BBC London 94.9 FM correspondent Robert Elms to promote the London premiere of her documentary In Your Dreams, which screens at the Curzon Mayfair Cinema on Monday. The interview was taped on Wednesday morning and aired a day later. Stevie talked enthusiastically about the In Your Dreams album recording process, which involved album co-producer Dave Stewart.

    Listen to the full interview

  • Don't Stop!

    Uncut (UK) has featured Fleetwood Mac for its October 2013 issue. The feature contains a new interview with drummer Mick Fleetwood. To subscribe to Uncut, click here.

  • Fleetwood Mac among 'Hottest Live Photos," according to Rolling Stone

    (Ethan Miller)
    (Ethan Miller)

    Rolling Stone included Fleetwood Mac among its “Hottest Live Photos of 2013” gallery feature. The photo, taken by Ethan Miller for Getty Images, is of drummer Mick Fleetwood from Fleetwood Mac’s May 26 concert at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas (photo number 59 in the sequence). You can view the other photos in the gallery here.

  • EXCLUSIVE: Excess all areas

    2013-0818-sunday-times

    Mick Fleetwood has survived nearly 50 years in rock’s most dysfunctional band, Fleetwood Mac. Now they’re back on the road

    Mick Fleetwood looks like a bohemian Santa with his bushy white beard, pastel shirt, black waistcoat and flat cap. Not all his tales from the rock’n’roll frontline are as jolly as his appearance, though. At one point he has to choke back tears of regret. He has lived a life of such abandon that he admits he is lucky to still be here. “I’ve inherited some good genes,” he explains.

    It is often reported that Fleetwood put $8m of cocaine up his nose, and though this is an exaggeration, he says, if he hadn’t stopped consuming the drug so vigorously “the next stop would have been a wooden box”. His former bandmate in Fleetwood Mac, Christine McVie, had earlier told me that the men in the band used to rack out lines of coke like “blooming great rails” – whereas she and Stevie Nicks, the female contingent, would restrict themselves to “ladylike” portions, carried around their necks in jeweled buckles that had dainty silver spoons inside. “It was the 1970s,” she shrugged. “There was a lot going around.”

    “I’m not advocating cocaine at all, but the truth is, I had a good time,” says Fleetwood. “But then, without realising it, you’re getting too out of it. You’re sleeping for three days, or you’re up for nine days or whatever. And eventually you don’t feel good at any time.”

    He quit taking coke “a long time ago,” but the booze has been harder to let go. “I haven’t been drunk for five months now,” he announces. With a 46-date tour of America about to begin soon after we meet, followed by European dates including four in Britain in September, he has had to shape up. “I knew I was drinking too much,” he says. “And the more I don’t drink, the more I realise I was really drinking too much.”

    ‘I was still behaving like I was 32 years old, and you can’t be doing that shit. I suppose I was late getting off the bus’

    Why still so excessive? Fleetwood is 66 — aren’t these meant to be the golden years, where living is easy? “We’re all still learning to take care of ourselves,” he says, “because Fleetwood Mac have worked really hard at pushing some envelopes. And of course you’ve got to change your behaviours, but I’ve had moments — really not that long ago — where I wasn’t getting it. I was still behaving like I was 32 years old, and you can’t be doing that shit. I suppose I was late getting off the bus.”

    Perhaps it has also been the process of writing his autobiography, Play On, due to be published by Little, Brown next year, that has helped Fleetwood to take stock and start implementing some changes. Toning down his lifestyle has not been easy — playing rock’n’roll is practically all he has ever done (aside from dabbling as a restaurateur, with rather mixed results).

    He was born in 1947 in Redruth, Cornwall, to a military family. His grandfather, John, had been killed at Gallipoli in the Great War, and his father, Mike, had served in the RAF in the Second World War. Like many army brats, Mick was sent to boarding school, but hated it because he was an undiagnosed dyslexic, and as a result “didn’t learn shit”.

    This gave him a lifelong fear of structured learning. “To this day, I don’t know what I’m doing,” he confesses. “I actually don’t know what a verse is, or a chorus. You can sing a song and show me, but don’t give me a bit of paper and say, ‘Oh, you know that bit there…’ ”

    He says he is nervous about the tour, and still suffers from severe stage fright. “I’m just hoping I don’t forget all my parts.”

    It seems extraordinary that he still feels so shaky — despite having spent the last 47 years performing in one of the most commercially successful British rock bands since the Beatles.

    “It goes way back,” he says. “So this is going to be interesting. I’ll have a glass of wine beforehand, but I don’t want to drink myself into a stupor just so I don’t get frightened. If I have four glasses of wine during a show, that’s cool — so long as I don’t get on the plane and finish off two more bottles.”

    It is also surprising how raw he seems. I suspect he may be playing up to his own mythology a little — he is a self-confessed drama queen — but the disquiet seems real. I ask if his fear of not feeling is ultimately the fear of losing his creativity. “It’s more a fear of losing my life,” he says, dramatically.

    Fleetwood left school as soon as he could, at 16, and moved to London to join the thriving blues scene. In this milieu he would meet bass guitarist John McVie, son of a west London sheet-metal worker, and they formed a band in 1967 with the guitarist Peter Green, who was a big star back then, but also a troubled soul who hated the limelight. So Green named the group after its rhythm section — Fleetwood Mac.

    Success would follow, as did numerous line-up changes. Peter Green dropped too much acid and developed schizophrenia, and a series of other guitarists each had their own failings. One, Danny Kirwan, was highly strung and wept while he played; another, Bob Weston, was sacked after an affair with Fleetwood’s first wife, Jenny; and a third, Jeremy Spencer, popped out of a hotel in Los Angeles to buy a newspaper, joined a religious cult and never returned.

    When things fell apart it was often Mick who rallied the troops and kept things going — he even became the band’s manager for a spell. “Mick would never let it end,” says Christine McVie. “Fleetwood Mac is his baby.”

    Having moved to America with the band in the early 1970s after a career lull, Fleetwood met two penniless musicians in LA, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, then a couple, and invited them to join.

    ‘We’re totally driven by drama. I think we’re calming down a bit, but we’re terrified of not feeling. It’s sort of an addiction, really’

    The first record they did together in 1975, Fleetwood Mac, was a hit that sold 5m copies. But their career zenith arrived a year later with the release of the follow-up, Rumours. To date, the album has sold more than 40m copies and is the ninth bestseller of all time. And it is still winning them new fans: it was reissued in Britain in January this year and went straight into the album chart at No 3.

    What made rumours such a powerful piece of work was an almost perfect storm of dysfunction that engulfed its creators — and which still affects the band now. As they recorded the album in Sausalito, California, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks’s 10-year relationship was ending; the eight-year marriage of the other couple in the band, Christine and John McVie, had just imploded; and Fleetwood’s marriage to the model Jenny Boyd, with whom he has two daughters, had also recently collapsed.

    To make matters even more intense, their failed relationships became the subject of the bitter breakup lyrics, which were artfully juxtaposed with sweet soft-rock melodies. But despite the shared heartbreak (and mutual loathing, depending on who was in the room together), all could hear the music’s potential. Songs such as “Dreams” and “Go Your Own Way” would take them to the top of the charts in record-breaking style — “Michael Jackson territory” is how Lindsey Buckingham describes it. So they famously anaesthetised themselves with cocaine from an ever-present velvet bag to endure the recording. Keep numb and carry on.

    “Imagine your relationship fell apart, but you had children, and you both have to put your shit away to some extent and make sure the children aren’t damaged,” Fleetwood says. “The band was our child. We got through it, and not without some damage emotionally. Plus, it was the only thing we knew.”

    2013-0818 The Sunday TimesWell, almost. Fleetwood also knew how to party. The bandmate he is most similar to in this regard, he says, is Stevie Nicks — the witchy blonde rock goddess whose long, and ultimately successful, struggle with cocaine and tranquillisers is well documented. “We’re totally driven by drama,” says Fleetwood. “I think we’re calming down a bit, but we’re terrified of not feeling. So if nothing’s happening you’ll worry yourself into creating a drama — just so you’ve got something to react to. It’s sort of an addiction, really.”

    And a highly lucrative addiction it has been, thanks to Fleetwood Mac’s ability to convert personal tragedy into musical alchemy. Rumours made the five members of Fleetwood Mac — the “classic” line-up — extremely rich. Estimates of the net worth of Lindsey Buckingham (guitar, vocals, production), Stevie Nicks (vocals, tambourine), Christine McVie (keyboard, vocals) and John McVie (bass) range from $45m up to $65m.

    Estimates for Mick Fleetwood’s haul are markedly more moderate: around $9m. This is partly because he has not been as prolific a songwriter as other members: he’s the drummer, so earns more from touring than from royalties. He has also lost a fortune on bad property deals and failed restaurants, though this hasn’t deterred him from opening another, Fleetwood’s on Front St, on the Hawaiian island of Maui, where he lives (he recently separated from his third wife, Lynn). A “Mick’s Margarita” from the cocktail menu includes tequila, elderflower liqueur, fresh-pressed lime juice, agave nectar and is “capped with Mick’s Pinot Noir.”

    For years after Rumours, the private-jet lifestyle kept running into turbulence. The band were papering over the cracks, which must surely have widened when Fleetwood and Nicks had a fling, although Buckingham, her ex, denies it caused a problem. “It was a reflection of the times we were living in,” he told me. “You can’t separate individual acts from the times. Stevie was prolific in that way, shall we say, and so was Mick — and so was I. So it never really bothered me at all. I had dealt with the hurt of losing Stevie long before that.”

    But at least Mick was gentleman enough to tell Buckingham about the affair in person before the latter heard any, um, rumours. “He came over to my house and sat me down at my kitchen table and said, ‘Me and Stevie are an item,’ ” says Buckingham. “And I said, ‘Oh, OK.’ Because, really, should I have been surprised?”

    The bubble was always going to burst. Christine McVie went on to date the Beach Boy Dennis Wilson — another renowned sybarite — before eventually burning out in the late 1990s, selling her LA mansion and moving to a Kent farmhouse to lead a “solitary life.” This, she told me, has recently become “rather lonely — apart from my brother and sister-in-law I still don’t know anyone down here.” She keeps in touch with the band, but insists she has no plans to rejoin and won’t be performing on this tour (she hasn’t ruled out a cameo appearance for the British dates, however). Buckingham, meanwhile, left Fleetwood Mac for nine years, before returning in 1996.

    “We were Bonnie and Clyde, me and Stevie, and Lindsey got fed up with it,” Fleetwood says. “But he left out of fear — he didn’t want to be around us, because we were too stoned. Only recently, he admitted that he was really frightened that Stevie was going to die, and he didn’t want to be around it. That’s a really deep-rooted regard for someone. And that’s, ah…” his voice is suddenly trembling and his eyes are moist, but the British stiff upper lip fast reasserts itself. “That’s part of our whole thing.”

    ‘We were Bonnie and Clyde, me and Stevie, and Lindsey got fed up with it,’ Fleetwood says

    Predictably, this isn’t quite the way Buckingham recalls it. “Frightened may not be the right word,” he says evenly. “It was more frustrated. Or maybe I was frightened, but for myself. Everyone in that subculture thought that drugs were what you had to do; that turned out to be a load of crap. You can be just as creative when you’re sober. There was this idea that we were somehow rejecting values we didn’t believe in. And the irony was that we ended up becoming just as decadent as the things we were railing against.”

    As the Fleetwood Mac tour got underway, news broke that Fleetwood’s third marriage had crumbled — it was reported that he had filed for joint custody of his twin 11-year-old daughters. I wondered whether he would find succor among his bandmates, and whether he would conquer his demons on the road.

    Months later, I spoke to Stevie Nicks and asked how things were going. “I don’t know what’s come over Mick, but he’s on fire,” she said. “He’s playing better than he’s ever played. He’s rocking on that stage.”

    According to Nicks, Fleetwood had been venting everything during the shows — but not in the bar afterwards. The party animal had remained in his cage. “I’m up there onstage looking at everybody and thinking this is amazing, because we’re all sober up here,” Nicks intoned in a husky voice full of warmth and melancholy. “Nobody’s drunk. And we’re all having an incredible time.”

    Nicks also revealed that she and Buckingham had only recently made their peace, after falling out in 2003 over creative differences (neither will elaborate). Oh, the drama — when will it ever end? Anyway, Nicks had promised Fleetwood that she would try to repair the relationship before the tour.

    “I said to Lindsey, ‘We have got to change this. We cannot be enemies for one more day,’ ” Nicks recalled. “Because you never know — things happen. You don’t know if you’ll ever tour again. So we have to walk on stage hand in hand, and we have to mean it.”

    And, against all odds, that’s what they appear to have done. Peace has finally broken out among the ranks of Fleetwood Mac. God only knows whether it will last. There is even talk of a new album — the band brought out a four-track EP, Extended Play, in April, their first new material for 10 years, and it has been warmly received by fans and critics. Naturally it’s full of elegiac songs about dysfunctional relationships and aching hearts.

    “This might sound corny,” Fleetwood had said to me, just before we said goodbye, “but the biggest rumour about Fleetwood Mac is that we don’t really like each other. I understand why people would think that, after everything we’ve said and done. But the reality is, we love each other. We just push the wrong buttons.”

    Fleetwood Mac tour the UK and Ireland this autumn; Rumours (Deluxe Reissue) is out now

    The Sunday Times (UK) / Matt Munday / Sunday, August 18, 2013

  • Return of the Mac

    [quicktime]https://stevienicks.info/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/2013-0811-sunday-night-au-rahni-sadler.mp4[/quicktime]

    Correspondent Rahni Sadler speaks to legendary rock icons Fleetwood Mac on Australian program Sunday Night. In the new feature, Stevie Nicks talks about her relationships with fellow bandmates Mick Fleetwood and Lindsey Buckingham and her late mom Barbara Nicks. The clip includes archival material and concert footage from Fleetwood Mac’s final show of the North American tour in Sacramento, California, on July 6, 2013.

     

    2013-0811 Sunday Night Australia

  • Vegas show tickets on sale Saturday

    (Neal Preston)
    (Neal Preston)

    Tickets for Fleetwood Mac’s concert at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on Monday, December 30, go on sale this Saturday at 10:00 a.m. Ticketmaster has published the ticket link to purchase tickets online. Tickets are priced at $99.50, $149.50 and $224.50, excluding applicable service charges.

  • Fleetwood Mac doesn’t stop

    Fleetwood Mac doesn’t stop

    At a November 1979 New York press conference, attended by this reporter, to promote the release of Fleetwood Mac’s then new album, Tusk, bassist John McVie refuted a rumor that the band was on the verge of breaking up: “We’re doing all right, but I don’t see Fleetwood Mac in wheelchairs playing ‘Rhiannon.’”

    They’re not getting carted around yet, but over 30 years later, Fleetwood Mac remains a major league concert draw for Baby Boomers, and as such, the band had so much gear that the 49-city U.S. leg, which began in April and ended in July, required a dozen 53-foot trailers to carry equipment for every stop, including the June 22 show at the Jones Beach Amphitheatre in Wantagh, NY. As it has for decades, Clair [Lititz, PA] provided audio for the band’s journey.

    The 2013 tour’s FOH engineer was Dave Kob, who was a system engineer on Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours tour in 1978. The main monitor engineer was Dave Coyle, who found invaluable having at his disposal Kob’s deep-rooted knowledge of the band’s live sound tastes. Coyle mixed on stage for “the girls,” meaning Stevie Nicks, but also backup singers Sharon Celani and Lori Nicks. He says Nicks directed him to “listen to the band’s studio albums” to hear what it should sound like. Coyle worked one Fleetwood Mac show in 2009 as a fill-in monitor engineer, and then was asked to work a Nicks solo tour. He’s been on the 2013 Fleetwood Mac tour from its start.

    The other monitor engineer, Ed Dracoules, handled the band’s main “guys,” including Buckingham, Fleetwood, and McVie, while Coyle also mixed the band’s two also male backline musicians: keyboardist Brett Tuggle and second guitarist Neale Heywood. The twin monitor boards were both DiGiCo SD10s.

    The monitor set-up used a combination of in-ear monitors and wedges. Nicks has been using Future Sonics’ MG5Pros for a little over a year. “Stevie likes how the Future Sonics have a real driver, a real speaker, while Mick and Lindsey like loud wedges,” Coyle explained, adding that the lead vocalist also pays a lot of attention to the FOH mix. He characterized the effects as being pretty simple. “Luckily in the 1970s, they didn’t have a lot of effects,” Coyle quipped. “They’re a straight-forward rock band.”

    The Jones Beach show was one of three outdoor shows on the 49-date tour, the others being Comcast Arena in Mansfield, MA, and the Hollywood Bowl. The change, however, was welcomed by Kob at the FOH position.

    “Everything changes for an outdoor show,” said Kob. “Indoors shows are way more reverberant. I use my effects a lot more when I’m outside.” Still, he said the end goal was the same: “Translate out here what they’re playing on stage. This is such a different band than what recorded Rumours 35 years ago. There’s no comparison. They were basically folk-rock then and a little left-over blues from the old Fleetwood Mac/Peter Green days. Now it’s louder, a different feel. It rocks more now than in 1978. That’s what it evolved into.”

    Kob explained his involvement with the band when it was at its record-selling peak. “Richard Dashut, who was the engineer on Rumours, mixed their first two tours [with the Buckingham/Nicks lineup], and I was a system engineer. It was a very long tour. My first tour mixing for them was Mirage (1982). Then I had a long hiatus with them, and I was doing other stuff [including touring with Madonna, The Eagles, The Who, and Page & Plant, among other notables]. I didn’t work with Fleetwood Mac again until The Dance in 1997. I didn’t hear from them again until ’09, when I did the tour with them four years ago. And here we are again. So it’s only been four tours, but spanning over 32 years.”

    Did all that historical knowledge help with anything that might come up in 2013? “You know what you’re getting into in advance,” Kob laughed. “I know them all individually, so that always helps — familiar face and all that. I do most of Stevie’s solo stuff and have done so for years,” including Nicks’s Jones Beach show last year in the rain.

    Crew chief Dave Moncrieffe commented, “Working with Dave Kob is always a pleasure, not only for his ‘Old School’ view on system alignment and equalization, but also for his ability to mix his artists true to their sound. Plus Dave is a blast to be around and a very accomplished fisherman.”

    In the 32 years that Kob has worked with Fleetwood Mac, have both the FOH engineer and the band kept up with technological advancements in live sound? Kobs laughed again, noting that while he had a digital Avid Venue Profile sidecar, his focus was the Yamaha PM5000 desk. “I’m using an analog board; I’m an endangered species out here, but I much prefer analog. Digital takes the fun out of mixing; it’s more like operating a lighting desk. It’s a disconnect that prefer not to do if I can help it, but I can mix shows on digital boards.”

    The vocalists were not using wireless mics, which Kob noted was “a rarity these days.” Nicks and the backup vocalists used Beyerdynamic TGX-80 handhelds, while Buckingham’s voice was captured via an Audio-Technica AE6100. “It came from his solo tours, and I didn’t change it; changing things with Stevie takes a while, too. It took me a year and a half to get her to try the TGX-80 and like it.”

    The 16-speaker full PA system, based around Clair i-5 line array boxes and supplemented by side hangs, didn’t require any ground subs. “The one thing I really like about i-5 is the low-end cabinet that hangs right with the array,” said Kob, who added that he likes to tune the PA to Roxy Music’s Avalon. “Those Bob Clearmountain [mixed] tracks are absolute classics.”

    Preparing for the tour involved a month of band rehearsals, including two weeks of full production rehearsals in LA at a Sony soundstage in Culver City. Generally, the tour had been “going quite smoothly. It’s a much better vibe than it was four years ago for lots of reasons,” said the engineer. “They’re selling more tickets, they’re playing better, they’re getting along better. It comes down to everybody else.”

    Moncrieffe points out that after the final U.S. date on July 6 in Sacramento, the tour takes off some time before hitting Europe and then Australia; the first European date is Sept. 20 in Dublin. It’s all a long way from the rambling, 7-minutes-plus tale Nicks told the audience that evening (and indeed, every night of the tour) about how she and Buckingham joined Fleetwood Mac. At Jones Beach, Nicks ended by asking the guitarist if she got the story right, and he pointed out she’d omitted a key element to the story: Fleetwood called Buckingham to join them, and it was Buckingham who said the two of them were a package deal.

    Nicks offered a belated thank you to her former boyfriend for insisting that they “take your hippie girlfriend too,” but not wanting John McVie to be the forgotten man, added the bass player suggested back in ’75 gruffly that they “keep the girl.” And the rest is history, as they say.

    Clair

    clairglobal.com

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    Fleetwood Mac

    Clair (atitz, pa)

    FOH Engineer: Dave Kob

    Monitor Engineer: Ed Dracoules, Dave Coyle

    Crew Chief: Dave Moncrieffe

    Systems Engineer: Donavan Friedman

    Techs: Ricky Avilia, Meg Tempio, Hope Stuemke

    FOH Console: Yamaha PM5000; Avid Venue Profile

    Monitor Console: DiGiCo SD10; Avid Venue Profile

    House Speakers: Clair i-5, i-5b, BT-218 subs, iMicro front fill, i-DL

    Monitor Speakers: Clair 12AM, ML-18, R-4III sidefill

    Personal Monitors: Shure PSM 1000

    House Amplifiers: Crown MA3600VZ

    Monitor Amplifiers: Crown MA3600VZ

    FOH Equipment/Plug-Ins: Summit TLA-100A; Yamaha SPX2000; Lexicon 480L; Bricasti M7; Eventide Eclipse; Aphex 612; Tube Tech CL-2A

    Monitor Equipment/PlugIns: Crane Song Phoenix; TC Electronic 6000; Yamaha SPX990, SPX1000; Summit TLA-100A

    Microphones: AKG 414, 451; Audix D4, SCX25A; Audio-Technica AE6100; Shure SM58, SM57, Beta 91A, Beta 98AMP, KSM313/NE, UR Series; Beyerdynamic TG-X 80, TG D52d; Countryman DI

    Caption: On the recent Fleetwood Mac tour, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham sang into Beyerdynamic TGX-80 and Audio-Technica AE6100 vocal mics, respectively.

    Caption: Dave Kob, FOH engineer on the recent Fleetwood Mac tour, first toured with the band as its system engineer on the Rumours tour in 1978.

    Caption: Caption 3: On the Fleetwood Mac audio crew were (l-r): Ricky Avila (PA tech), Hope Stuemke (PA tech), Donovan Friedman (systems engineer), Meg Tempio (monitor tech), Dave Coyle (monitor engineer) and Dave Moncrieffe (crew chief).

    Larry Jaffee / Pro Sound News / August 2013 (p44)

  • Fleetwood Mac to perform year-end show at Las Vegas MGM Grand, Dec 30

    Fleetwood Mac to perform year-end show at Las Vegas MGM Grand, Dec 30

    (Neal Preston)
    (Neal Preston)

    Fleetwood Mac to wrap 2013 with concert at MGM Grand Garden Arena, 12/30

    Fleetwood Mac, one of rock’s most enduring, beloved and successful bands, will close out 2013 with a special, end-of-the-year concert at the MGM Grand Garden Arena Monday, Dec. 30. The show is scheduled to start at 8 p.m.

    Tickets priced at $99.50, $149.50 and $224.50, not including applicable service charges, go on sale Saturday, Aug. 3 at 10 a.m. and are available at all Las Vegas Ticketmaster locations (select Smith’s Food and Drug Centers and Ritmo Latino). Ticket sales are limited to eight (8) per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000. Tickets also are available for purchase at www.mgmgrand.com or www.ticketmaster.com.

    For fans anxious to purchase seats to highly anticipated concerts and events, M life – MGM Resorts International’s loyalty program – provides members exclusive access to pre-sales for sporting events and concerts. The program also features rewards, benefits and once-in-a-lifetime experiences at the incomparable collection of MGM Resorts’ world-renowned destinations. To join, or for more information, visit www.mlife.com.

    The current Fleetwood Mac lineup includes Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham and original members Mick Fleetwood and John McVie. The band recently completed the Fleetwood Mac Live 2013 arena tour, its first time touring since 2009. The tour marked the 35th anniversary of the release of the classic album Rumours, one of the most successful albums in history with sales exceeding 40 million copies. It remained at the top of the pop charts for more than 31 weeks and produced four Top 10 singles.

    Formed in 1967, Fleetwood Mac has released more than 15 albums and sold more than 100 million albums worldwide. The multi-GRAMMY Award-winning band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998. Popular singles include “Go Your Own Way,” “Landslide,” “Dreams,” “You Make Loving Fun” and “Don’t Stop,” among others.

    For more information, visit www.fleetwoodmac.com.

    BWW Music / Wednesday, July 31, 2013