Category: 2015 On With The Show Tour – Europe

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac at Manchester Arena

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac at Manchester Arena

    Fleetwood Mac fans finally got to see the classic Rumours-era line-up reunited last night as Christine McVie joined ex-husband John McVie and bandmates Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham on stage at Manchester Arena.

    The singer – who is the songwriter and voice behind some of the band’s most enduring hits, including “Don’t Stop,” “Little Lies” and “You Make Loving Fun” – is back on the road with the band for the first time in 16 years for their On With The Show tour.

    Fans were delighted to see her return – as was Stevie Nicks, who echoed the audience’s excitement as she squealed: “Our girl is BACK!”

    None of the group showed any sign of the mystery illness that forced them to cancel their first show in Manchester last month as they played an unrelenting two and a half hour set.

    Now all in their mid to late 60s except Christine, who is 71, they worked the stage with the energy of a group half their age, particularly Lindsey, whose virtuoso guitar playing stole the show.

    There was no sign either of the turbulence that nearly tore the band apart during the making of Rumours, with ex-lovers Stevie and Lindsey sweetly clasping hands before dueting on a gorgeous stripped-back version of “Landslide” (we think we even saw Stevie wipe away a tear), while Christine and John appeared just as happy to be sharing a stage again.

    “Our Songbird, you might say, has returned,” as Mick put it fondly – and there could only be one way to close the show as Christine sat down alone at a piano to sing her beautiful ballad.

    The finale was the highlight of the show for many fans who had waited for years to hear her sing it again, but it was by no means the only standout moment.

    From opener “The Chain” to the rousing singalong that accompanied “Go Your Own Way” and Mick’s manic drum solo, it was a five-star performance from start to finish. Even the weather seemed to agree, with fans leaving the arena to a “Dreams”-worthy chorus of thunder and rain outside.

    Here is what fans thought about last night’s show:

    https://twitter.com/ste_routledge/status/616377313253552128

    https://twitter.com/MrIanEllison/status/616526526968950784

    https://twitter.com/jade_hamilton91/status/616568611046559744

    Emily Heward / Manchester Evening News / Thursday, July 2, 2015

  • Review: Fleetwood Mac @First Direct Arena, Leeds

    Review: Fleetwood Mac @First Direct Arena, Leeds

    A wild-eyed genius named Mick Fleetwood says it better than I ever could as Fleetwood Mac exit the stage – “The Mac is BACK!”

    A blistering two hour and 20 minute set from the classic (yes, that word is ENTIRELY appropriate) Rumours-era line-up elicits one of the most passionate responses I have seen from an audience in my life.

    A four-song opening shot from said record that made them famous the world over was always going to put us on the right foot.

    “The Chain,” all close harmonies and blues guitar gives way to one of the most memorable of bass lines and Leeds is all theirs. “You Make Loving Fun,” “Dreams” and “Second Hand News” are all delivered as they should be, note perfect and intense.

    The rock solid, bomb-proof rhythm section of Mr Fleetwood and his self-professed dearest friend John McVie form the bedrock of tonight’s show.

    Highlights come from their front people throughout however.

    Returning from a 17 year hiatus from music, Christine McVie still has the voice of an angel, as evidenced by set-closer “Songbird” and “Everywhere.”

    Lindsay Buckingham storms around the stage like a man a quarter of his age, his distinctive finger-picking guitar style as ferocious and precise and it ever was. His solo-rendition of “Big Love” was a thing of majesty,

    Best of all is centre-stage throughout. Stevie Nicks, 67, still mops the floor with any other front woman out there. During “Gold Dust Woman” she does not just command the stage but dominate it,

    The highlight for this humble reviewer is “Landslide,” performed by the couple Buckingham and Nicks, whose well-documented fallings-out inspired so much of their greatest art, is tear-jerking. Stevie owns the spotlight, a magisterial performance.

    Despite Mick’s bullish claim we will most-likely never see these five together again. But tonight’s gig capped a truly unique and inspirational career and cemented their legacy as one of the most special and unique rock n roll bands of all time.

    The Mac is back? The Mac never left us and never will.

    Mark Casci / Yorkshire Evening Post (UK) / Thursday, July 1, 2015

    See more videos from this show!

  • VIDEOS 6/30: First Direct Arena, Leeds

    VIDEOS 6/30: First Direct Arena, Leeds

    Fleetwood Mac performed at First Direct Arena in Leeds, West Yorkshire, on Wednesday night. With a population just over 750,000, Leeds is the third largest city in the United Kingdom. The band will return to First Direct Arena on Sunday for their 100th show of the tour!

    Lindsey dedicated “Big Love” to Fleetwood Mac’s longtime tour manager John Courage.

    SHOW NUMBER

    DATE

    LOCATION

    VENUE

    97 Wednesday, June 30, 2015 Leeds, UK First Direct Arena

     

    Loz Beaumont
    Loz Beaumont
    Loz Beaumont
    Loz Beaumont
    Loz Beaumont
    Loz Beaumont
    Phil Russell
    Phil Russell
    Phil Russell
    Phil Russell
    Phil Russell
    Phil Russell

     

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    nomisslade
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    nomisslade

    Review

    Fleetwood Mac @First Direct Arena, Leeds (Yorkshire Evening Post)

    Videos

    Thanks to Loz Beaumont, Andrew Harry Briggs, Geraint Johnes, Steven Lister, gerry lockwood, markcasci, nomisslade, and Phil Russell for sharing these videos!

    The Chain (Steven Lister)

    The Chain / You Make Loving Fun (Andrew Harry Briggs)

    Rhiannon (Geraint Johnes)

    Big Love with dedication (markcasci)

    Landslide – partial (gerry lockwood)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sF4gNdnRDzo

    Never Going Back Again – partial (Loz Beaumont)

    Gypsy (Phil Russell)

    Gypsy (Geraint Johnes)

    Little Lies (nomisslade)

    I’m So Afraid – partial (Loz Beaumont)

    Don’t Stop (Geraint Johnes)

    Set List

    1. The Chain 13. Landslide
    2. You Make Loving Fun 14. Never Going Back Again
    3. Dreams 15. Over My Head
    4. Second Hand News 16. Gypsy
    5. Rhiannon 17. Little Lies
    6. Everywhere 18. Gold Dust Woman
    7. I Know I’m Not Wrong 19. I’m So Afraid
    8. Tusk 20. Go Your Own Way
    9. Sisters of the Moon 21. World Turning
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird

     

  • Fleetwood Mac among Forbes’ ‘World’s Highest-Paid Celebrities’

    Fleetwood Mac among Forbes’ ‘World’s Highest-Paid Celebrities’

    Fleetwood Mac ranks Number 24 on Forbes’ 2015 World’s Highest-Paid Celebrities. Stevie Nicks and Christine McVie (as a part of Fleetwood Mac) are two of 18 women that made the list, of which only two made the Top 10 (Katy Perry, Number 3, and Taylor Swift, Number 8).

    2015-0630-forbes-list

    See the full list Forbes List of World’s Highest-Paid Celebrities.

  • The return of Fleetwood Mac

    The return of Fleetwood Mac

    Fleetwood Mac, complete with returning member Christine McVie, are on tour and head to Leeds next week. Andy Threlfall reports

    It’s been 15 years since Cumbrian-born Christine McVie retired from Fleetwood Mac, but now she is back, completing the classic Rumours-era line-up of the band on the current tour.

    “I didn’t really know exactly what Christine McVie was up to in those missing years,” says a sprightly 65-year-old Lindsey Buckingham. “She pretty much took permanent leave of the performing world and moved back to England and lived somewhere out in the country.”

    But now she’s back and that has meant the band’s live show is receiving unparalleled critical plaudits reinvigorated as it is by classics like You Make Loving Fun, Everywhere and Songbird (which closed the London 02 show I witnessed) penned and sung by Christine who turns 72 next month.

    For a band famed for its musical chemistry and fabled failed relationships, to close it’s homecoming show with just one (the returning) member at the piano was startling. Art at its most naked. Stripped bare. The song. The voice.

    Whichever way you want to decipher this moment after two and a half hours, the sheer brilliance remains intact of this band who can select a 25-song setlist matched only in gargantuan sales figures and magnificence by fellow Brits who still dominate American radio the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin & The Beatles.

    If the return of McVie had been one cause for celebration, that of ex-husband John to the current tour is even more poignant. He very nearly didn’t make it.

    As Stevie Nicks told me during our meeting near her Malibu home last year: “John was very ill so we had to come off the road. But he did what he had to do. He went back to his home in Hawaii and he dealt with it. He is an incredible man.”

    So the circle is complete again. The battles are never completely resolved in Fleetwood Mac, the scars are deep and often on the surface, but the result is a catalogue of songs so magnificent there is an insatiable appetite to hear them live by this incarnation, the five who made the 40 million seller Rumours.

    The world tour has sold out in record time. When Adele met Nicks an hour before they took to the stage at the 02, she proclaimed it, without any sense of hyperbole “THE best night of my life. I love you Stevie Nicks!! The queen of melodies! Thanks for everything.”

    Beyonce and Taylor Swift namecheck her as the greatest influence on their singing and songwriting. Leeds is getting a double helping with the band playing two dates at Leeds Arena. Pinch yourself Yorkshire.

    Stevie is sanguine when we discuss life, love, Lindsey, near-death and music. “My Dad became the chairman of Canadian Labatts beer, so it was always like there was was alcohol around!”

    She laughs at the thought. And what of Lindsey? Who was her then boyfriend in 1975 when he insisted to Mick Fleetwood “If I join your band, my girlfriend must join as well,” the masterstroke that resulted in this seminal rock band.

    “I live just 10 minutes from Lindsey now. It is what it is between Lindsey and I – a love affair, not reciprocated as it once was of course – but yes it still happens for us whenever we meet. It still feels a little like the undying love affair, although he’s now a family man of course. He has three teenage kids.

    “We talk on the phone, but we don’t hang out like I do especially with Mick and his family who are exactly like ‘Meet The Fockers’ except it’s ‘Meet The Fleetwoods’. I always go to his and we watch the Grammys together or The Oscars. I was sure we would always get back together every few years to play these amazing songs again.”

    But is she sometimes amazed that she survived the drugs? “I can’t believe that I’m actually alive it’s true. A plastic surgeon told me that if I took one more line of cocaine I would soon have a brain haemorrhage. Actually he told me that I could really drop dead someday.

    “So I stopped. I feel healthier than I’ve felt in 30 years because I’m sober, I don’t really drink any more and I don’t do drugs. I was not in good shape for many, many years. I am very, very blessed to still be here.

    “Prescription drug abuse nearly killed me as much as the cocaine. I’m pretty sure that after eight years on that stuff that if I’d not checked myself in to hospital for 47 days I would be dead. Absolutely. I would not be here today. I knew that I was on my way out.”

    Do you feel like the poster girl for surviving the 70s and 80s rock and roll excesses I ask her. “Yes, a little. Do I feel like 
the godmother to Britney, Lindsay Lohan, etc? Yes. But when I look at Britney Spears or a Lindsay Lohan I do think they should have learnt from my generation of rock stars… 
but nobody ever does. I should have learnt myself from people like Hendrix and Joplin but I didn’t. I don’t think anyone can tell a drug addict to stop.”

    “It’s ironic,” I say, “You sing “Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow…”

    “I know.” She stops. A tear? Maybe.

    Buckingham has stated this tour could well be it. The last one with such a line-up in its current incarnation. But new songs are now written, and an album might follow.

    However, as the penultimate English date on the world tour, followed by Scotland, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, the Leeds Arena show in July might well be the last time one of the five or six biggest bands of the last 40 years plays in the North of England. Keep your ticket stub and frame it.

    Fleetwood Mac are currently on a world tour. They will be playing at Leeds Arena on June 30 and July 5. www.ticketmaster.co.uk

    Andy Threlfall / Yorkshire Post / Monday, June 29, 2015

  • VIDEOS 6/27: The O2, London (Night 6)

    VIDEOS 6/27: The O2, London (Night 6)

    On Saturday, Fleetwood Mac performed their sixth and final show at The O2 in London.

    Both Lindsey and Stevie dedicated songs (“Big Love,” “Landslide”) to founding Fleetwood Mac member Peter Green, who attended Saturday night’s show.

    SHOW NUMBER

    DATE

    LOCATION

    VENUE

    96 Saturday, June 26, 2015 London, England The O2
    Gary Barnett
    Gary Barnett
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King
    Paul King

    Videos

    Thanks to for Gary Barnett, blue3rock, daverkl, Paul King, lepaprg, Phil Humphries, Kristie McCarthy, and ZeuS for sharing these videos!

    COMPILATION: The Chain / You Make Loving Fun / Dreams / Second Hand News / Rhiannon / Everywhere / Tusk / Say You Love Me / Big Love / Rhiannon / Never Going Back Again / Over My Head / Gypsy / Little Lies / Gold Dust Woman / I’m So Afraid / Go Your Own Way / Don’t Stop (Paul King)

    The Chain (ZeuS)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jy3di_X0etg

    You Make Loving Fun (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bV9HtQBvB1I

    Dreams (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AclbM4zck3k

    Rhiannon (Phil Humphries)

    Everywhere (ZeuS)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCdIW_7sPIE

    Everywhere (Mark Stevens)

    Tusk (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04FYcurkPtE

    Say You Love Me (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1wew5GxfyM

    Big Love – dedication (Kristie McCarthy)

    Big Love (Kristie McCarthy)

    Gypsy – partial (ZeuS)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYUQJHppfG8

    Little Lies (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_qGWNB3jNI

    Gold Dust Woman (Gary Barnett)

    World Turning – Part 1 (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAbG2L186qs

    World Turning – Part 2 (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fRBosqPLz4

    Band introductions (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NovkL0zBGFs

    Don’t Stop (daverkl)

    Go Your Own Way (lepaprg)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4J1-ytlpa8

    Silver Springs (Kristie McCarthy)

    Songbird (bluerock)

    Set List

    1. The Chain 13. Landslide
    2. You Make Loving Fun 14. Never Going Back Again
    3. Dreams 15. Over My Head
    4. Second Hand News 16. Gypsy
    5. Rhiannon 17. Little Lies
    6. Everywhere 18. Gold Dust Woman
    7. I Know I’m Not Wrong 19. I’m So Afraid
    8. Tusk 20. Go Your Own Way
    9. Sisters of the Moon 21. World Turning
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird
  • VIDEOS 6/26: The O2, London (Night 5)

    VIDEOS 6/26: The O2, London (Night 5)

    On Friday, Fleetwood Mac performed their fifth show at The O2 in London.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to Cory Buckingham (Lindsey’s niece) and Steve Rinkov.

    SHOW NUMBER

    DATE

    LOCATION

    VENUE

    95 Friday, June 26, 2015 London, England The O2

    Videos

    Thanks to Nicole Barker, Evan Davis, and Darren Mallet for sharing these videos!

    The Chain – short clip (Darren Mallett)

    You Make Loving Fun (Darren Mallett)

    Second Hand News (Darren Mallett)

    Rhiannon (Evan Davis)

    Rhiannon (Darren Mallett)

    Everywhere (Evan Davis)

    Tusk (Evan Davis)

    Big Love (Evan Davis)

    Landslide dedication (Nicole Barker)

    Landslide (Darren Mallett)

    Gypsy – partial (Darren Mallett)

    Little Lies (Darren Mallett)

    I’m So Afraid (Darren Mallett)

    Go Your Own Way (Darren Mallett)

    World Turning – drum solo (Darren Mallett)

    Don’t Stop (Evan Davis)

    Go Your Own Way (Evan Davis)

    Mick’s Final Words (Darren Mallett)

    Set List

    1. The Chain 13. Landslide
    2. You Make Loving Fun 14. Never Going Back Again
    3. Dreams 15. Over My Head
    4. Second Hand News 16. Gypsy
    5. Rhiannon 17. Little Lies
    6. Everywhere 18. Gold Dust Woman
    7. I Know I’m Not Wrong 19. I’m So Afraid
    8. Tusk 20. Go Your Own Way
    9. Sisters of the Moon 21. World Turning
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird
  • VIDEOS 6/24: The O2, London (Night 4)

    VIDEOS 6/24: The O2, London (Night 4)

    On Wednesday, Fleetwood Mac performed their fourth show at The O2 in London.

    SHOW NUMBER

    DATE

    LOCATION

    VENUE

    94 Wednesday, June 24, 2015 London, England The O2
    RAX1Music
    RAX1Music
    RAX1Music
    RAX1Music
    RAX1Music
    RAX1Music

    Videos

    Thanks to nicknackered, RAX1Music, T-Mak World, and Will Wiseman for sharing these videos!

    The Chain (nicknackered)

    The Chain (T-Mak World)

    You Make Loving Fun (Will Wiseman)

    Dreams (nicknackered)

    Rhiannon (nicknackered)

    Everywhere (nicknackered)

    I Know I’m Not Wrong (T-Mak World)

    Landslide (RAX1Music)

     

    Landslide (T-Mak World)

    Landslide (nicknackered)

    Over My Head (nicknackered)

    Little Lies (nicknackered)

    Don’t Stop (nicknackered)

    Don’t Stop (T-Mak World)

    Go Your Own Way (RAX1Music)

    Songbird (nicknackered)

    Set List

    1. The Chain 13. Landslide
    2. You Make Loving Fun 14. Never Going Back Again
    3. Dreams 15. Over My Head
    4. Second Hand News 16. Gypsy
    5. Rhiannon 17. Little Lies
    6. Everywhere 18. Gold Dust Woman
    7. I Know I’m Not Wrong 19. I’m So Afraid
    8. Tusk 20. Go Your Own Way
    9. Sisters of the Moon 21. World Turning
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird
  • REVIEW: A man who hates gigs reviews Fleetwood Mac at the O2

    REVIEW: A man who hates gigs reviews Fleetwood Mac at the O2

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    Someone has got me a ticket to see Fleetwood Mac, you say? I love Fleetwood Mac. But hang on, I hate gigs. Love Fleetwood Mac. Hate gigs. Love Fleetwood Mac. Hate gigs. Oh well, let’s just get on with it then.

    The O2 would be a sterile venue to host a conference of anti-bacterial spray manufacturers, let alone a concert of one of the world’s great rock bands, and the clientele were suitably hard to pin down. It was strange to go to a gig with no discernable tribes, unless fans of a carvery on a Sunday constitutes a tribe. It was like being on a Ryanair flight with 20,000 people.

    Why do I hate gigs? Even when I was a teenager and went to a gig a week, I hated gigs. For starters, I experience enochlophobia (look it up). More importantly, I have always been so precious about music that it always seemed a particular perverse cruelty to have my experiences ruined by inevitable meatheads, who would always (and I mean, always) end up standing or sitting next to, behind, or in front of me. Since I refuse to enjoy myself, God punishes me by surrounding me with people who do.

    And lo, George the meathead magnet strikes again. Behind me were five friends, who informed me that they had come all the way from Bristol to see their favourite band – and then talked through every song. It was all going exactly as I had expected. It was a shame that the sound at the O2 is so muffled and rough. It really is a music venue for people who don’t like music. I would have preferred a bit more volume and clarity, not only to drown out my paralytic-clown neighbours, but because I really wanted to listen to the band.

    Fleetwood Mac are both brilliant and loveable, which is some combination. I overheard one woman saying, “I’m going to cry when they come on, I can feel it.” They opened with “The Chain”, a surefire way to get everyone on board, and its finale still resonates with intricate vocal layering that evokes the choir of an Orthodox church. From here they ran through their greatest hits, which was just fine by everyone, including me. It is worth noting that this is a band with three distinct but complementary songwriters of the highest calibre. There are very few other bands who can boast of such a musical arsenal and their songbook reflects this strength, rotating from the enthralling, edgy neurosis of Lindsey Buckingham to the dark femininity of Stevie Nicks followed by the pure light of Christine McVie’s perfect pop.

    They have been buoyed by the return of Christine McVie, who restores the band to its classic Seventies and Eighties lineup (yes, I know it’s not the original lineup). Stevie Nicks appeared to be genuinely delighted to have McVie back and this love was echoed in the reaction of the audience to McVie’s songs, which got the loudest and warmest applause. McVie is an extraordinary woman. She looks like your mum’s best friend – Auntie Christine who works on the lingerie counter at M&S – but she has written some titanic songs: “You Make Loving Fun”, “Say That You Love Me”, “Little Lies”. She is consistently underappreciated.
    Getty Images

    Buckingham’s highlight (his guitar playing borders on superhuman at times) was his solo acoustic version of “Big Love”, a song which gets more unsettling, mysterious and enjoyable as it ages. He was clearly the hero of the one of my new friends, who was so drunk that in between informing those around him Buckingham was “a f***ing legend”, he forgot the legend’s name and began shouting “Lesley! Lesley!”

    My enjoyment of the subtle, emotionally wrought harmonies of “Rhiannon” was impaired somewhat by the girl in the seat behind me yelling “Sit the f*** down” at her friends over and over and over again. She trumped this during Lesley, sorry Lindsey, Buckingham’s slowed-down version of “Never Going Back Again”, during which she loudly conceded, “I’m so drunk I can’t see,” as she kicked the back of chair like a toddler in economy class.

    Buckingham made a speech about the band’s well-documented “ups and downs” and proclaimed a new “profound and prolific” era for the band. That was the herald for the dead hand of a new song, which, since no one knew or wanted to hear, meant hundreds of punters headed for the toilets and the bars. It was as if Fleetwood Mac had become their own support band nobody cared about. But I don’t think they noticed and it didn’t matter as the hits soon started rolling again.

    Buckingham and Nicks sang “Happy Birthday” to Mick Fleetwood, whose enjoyment and drumming chops are clearly undimmed. He and John McVie – recovering from cancer – remain reassuringly indomitable and tight. As John McVie said of his musical spouse of 50 years to Mojo, “Mick will go on until they put him up against the wall and shoot him.”

    And so, after most of Rumours, half of Tango In The Night  and the title song from Tusk (one of the highlights and the only occasion the visuals really helped the show – with a trippy rehash of the original “Tusk” video at Dodger Stadium in LA), we got to the money shot: “Go Your Own Way” and “Don’t Stop”. Nicks returned for the finale wearing a black top hat that reminded me a bit of the hitcher from The Mighty Boosh (which would have pleased Mac fan Noel Fielding) and the band proceeded to give the crowd what they wanted.

    About a third of the audience stood up to dance. More still jiggled in their seats. I doubt if there have been that many people with so little natural rhythm gathered in one place since the world championship bowls final at Potters Leisure Resort in Hopton-on-Sea. McVie capped her triumphant evening with a grand piano and “Songbird”. My new chums were suitably moved. But it was hard not to be.

    As I said before: Love Fleetwood Mac. Hate gigs. Deep down I knew the uncomfortable truth of this enterprise, which was that the meatheads were the unfortunate ones for having to sit behind me, rather than the other way round. “This has got to be one of the top three nights of my life, easy,” slurred one of them. God had spoken and it was my fault if I didn’t listen. Long live Fleetwood Mac and their fans.

    George Chesterton / GQ UK / Thursday, June 25, 2015

  • After 40 years, Fleetwood Mac remains relevant, potent

    After 40 years, Fleetwood Mac remains relevant, potent

    At one time, they were the biggest band in the world. They totally dominated the charts, and much like the Beatles, releases of their new albums were heralded as “events.” They have crafted a thick catalogue of timeless, chart-topping songs that spans four decades. After all this time competing in the world of pop music where youth is worshipped, and growing old is an unpardonable crime, there still remains an allure and lasting mystique to the iconic British-American band, Fleetwood Mac.

    Looking at them through the reality lens, their longevity and eternal star power have been built and nurtured as much on the long-running soap opera that has always been the sordid private lives of the band members as it has been on their enormous musical talents.

    Back in the day, virtually all of them drifted in and out of disastrous affairs with each other that ended in bitter breakups and very public battles in divorce court. All along their journey, members have left the band, only to return again. Living in this swirling maelstrom of sex, drugs and confusion, their careers soared into the pop music stratosphere. The trials and tribulations of their personal lives always seemed to add a rather compelling barbed edge to their music that fans found irresistible.

    What chronicled the depth of this dysfunctional music family with the most accuracy has to be their collective songwriting contributions that went into their classic 1977 album Rumours. Nearly every song on that monster-selling collection illuminated an intimate part of their personal stories. Fleetwood Mac is a legendary pop-rock band of warring lovers, spouses and friends, who reigned supreme among the hip and the cool set of the L.A. scene during the ’70s and ’80s.

    There are those rare moments when I’m free to kick back, shift my mind into neutral, let the here and now slip through my fingers for a little while, and drift back to yesterday, where I can rekindle some of the long-ago memories that reside in the deep shadows of my mind. When I pull those memories up again, what comes back is my feeling that there were three incredible bands that seemed to define that decade: The Eagles, Queen and Fleetwood Mac.

    With Mac, the talent of rock’s senior citizens is still off the charts today. Their current world tour, “On with the Show,” is selling out across the globe and garnering rave reviews. This tour also whistles in on the gentle winds of nostalgia, to be sure. Be that as it may, their talent can’t be denied. I have always felt that Christine McVie – who up and walked away, leaving the band 16 years ago, only to return to the fold late last year – is, without question, one of the most talented women in music. Her songwriting is pristine, and at 71, her voice has not lost any of its original range and vocal quality.

    Likewise, Lindsey Buckingham, 65, is perhaps the most underappreciated and underrated guitarists in the music industry. His intricate guitar playing has always anchored the band and remains an essential element in their success. At 67, Mick Fleetwood remains a robust and steady drummer. Surviving a recent bout with cancer, 69-year-old bass guitarist and founding member, John McVie, is still playing with a practiced proficiency that looks effortless.

    Perhaps the one casualty of the passing years is 66-year-old Stevie Nicks. Once the charismatic “Gold Dust Woman,” her good looks have faded, and her sexy allure now belongs to a time that has long passed by. Her once smooth and silky voice has been replaced by a rough and husky tone that can’t quite hit the high notes as easily as she once did, and yet she still remains as much a mystical presence as she did so many years ago, when she captivated young guys like me.

    Four decades have come and gone, and I have to tell you that, even today, each time I take out my time-worn copy of Rumours and give it just one more listen, I still get lost in it. The songs drift and float through my head like shadows in the dark, parting the curtain to past and lifting the mists that hang over yesterday. Each time I rediscover this album, my appreciation for how they all bared their souls in the process of making Rumours comes back to me again. For in these amazing songs, the vivid and indelible images of their breakups, their storybook-like romantic entanglements with each other, their drug-induced lifestyles, and their estrangements from one another are captured forever in such a unique and compelling way.

    What stands head and shoulders above all of these things in my mind, is the enormous and lasting artistic talent of Fleetwood Mac. After four decades, they are still an extraordinary and iconic pop-rock band. Yes, they are now growing older, but the musical gifts they have given to us remain eternally young. To me, they are still as fresh and new as the first flowers of spring.

    Paul Collins is a Freelance Writer from Southborough, Mass.

    Paul Collins / The Telegraph / Wednesday, June 24, 2015