Fleetwood Mac returned to Toronto’s Air Canada Centre on Tuesday night. The band performed a sold-out show at the ACC back in October.
Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to the Toronto audience.
“And so tonight I want thank you all from all of us in Fleetwood Mac for coming back a second night to see us. We appreciate it so much. Thank you for suppporting us for all these many, many years. So this is ‘Landslide,’” and it is for you.”
Thanks to Canozger69, concertaholic, DBE Media Group, padaviya, steve gallow, Sean B, T-Mak World, TheConcertGoddess, tube9024, and wyldebirdie for sharing these videos!
The Chain (TheConcertGoddess)
The Chain (T-Mak World)
You Make Loving Fun (TheConcertGoddess)
Welcome Back, Chris (DBE Media Group)
Dreams (TheConcertGoddess)
Second Hand News (TheConcertGoddess)
Second Hand News (steve gallow)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbyrEvwrs9Q
Fleetwood Mac performed at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, New York, on Saturday night, the band’s 9th show of Leg 2 and 49th show overall of the On With the Show Tour.
During “Landslide,” Stevie shared a story of the time when she, Christine, and John went antique shopping in Buffalo, while on tour with Fleetwood Mac during the Rumours tour. She revealed that it was in Buffalo where she purchased her first top hat.
“This is very, very important because the tophat became, as you know, a huge part of my life. That little Buffalo tophat is now in a special box, and nobody’s allowed to touch it. But he’s very precious to me, and it came from your city. So I’d like to dedicate this song to you from me and my tophat. It’s called ‘Landslide’”
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Fleetwood Mac’s On With the Show reunion tour has topped Pollstar’s list of Top 20 Global Concert Tours.
The Top 20 Global Concert Tours ranks artists by average box office gross per city and includes the average ticket price for shows worldwide. The list is based on data provided to the trade publication Pollstar by concert promoters and venue managers.
Fleetwood Mac performs at the Verizon Center in Washington, DC (Melissa Frazee)
Some bands know how to make music that evolves and stays current, and sometimes old guys can rock. Fleetwood Mac does both.
The “On With The Show” Tour celebrates the return of their Songbird, singer and keyboard player Christine McVie, who is back with the band after a 16-year absence. She may not have the gypsy-like appeal of Stevie Nicks or be the guitar legend of Lindsey Buckingham, but her presence strongly solidifies the band.
A group like Fleetwood Mac doesn’t need an opener, as the show went a never-stopping 3 hours. Every member of the band had his or her own solo songs, even Mick Fleetwood who played an incredible drum solo while chanting in an energetic craze. Amazingly after all these years the loss of strength behind everyone’s vocals was barely perceptible.
The night opened with one of my personal favorites, “The Chain,” and started with back-to-back hits and singles like “Dreams” and “Rhiannon.” Nearly everything off their multi-platinum album, Rumours, was played. There was a bit of a lull in the middle, with just Buckingham on stage showing off his awing guitar skills and strong voice, but that was likely designed to give the rest of the band a break. It wasn’t long before they were back at it with tracks like “Go Your Own Way,” “Little Lies” and “Seven Wonders.” The encore included, to nobody’s surprise, “Don’t Stop,” but the show didn’t stop there. The night finished on a calmer note with one last tribute to Christine McVie, who played “Songbird”, her well-known solo track.
It’s hard to predict whether another tour will happen with a band that’s been together for so long, but if they do you should certainly catch it while you can. It was an extraordinary to hear the band that influenced so many of my favorite artists in a sold out arena. Friday night made it obvious to me that there’s a reason everybody knows the name Fleetwood Mac.
Fleetwood Mac returned to the nation’s capital for another show at the Verizon Center in Washington DC, the band’s eighth show of Leg 2 and 48th show overall of the On With The Show Tour.
Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to Mick Fleetwood’s sister-in-law Wendy, the woman who assisted Stevie and her team while visiting injured soldiers at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
“She accompanied me and my assistant and my makeup artist to Bethesda and Walter Reed many, many, many times over a five year period. And so Wendy, for all that support and love that you gave to those soldiers when we went there, and the support that you gave me to support them, thank you. The evening is yours. This is Landslide.”
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The Chain (Sharon Bos)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UQf9T1Vmqw
The Chain (ellellew)
Rhiannon (SandyMac)
Rhiannon (negative80)
I Know I’m Not Wrong (ellellew)
Tusk (ellellew)
Sisters of the Moon (ellellew)
Sisters of the Moon (SandyMac)
Sisters of the Moon (HeatherSchwabeland)
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Say You Love Me (ellellew)
Seven Wonders (SandyMac)
Big Love – short clip (ellellew)
Big Love (beckaboo0112)
Landslide with Introduction (Amlyn75)
Landslide (Debbie Jones)
Landslide (JMUSW)
Gypsy (SandyMac)
Gypsy (negative80)
Gold Dust Woman (SandyMac)
I’m So Afraid (johnson8889)
Go Your Own Way (Ruben Gamarra)
Go Your Own Way (Patrice Whelan)
Encore (ellellew)
Encore (Amlyn75)
Band Introductions (HeatherSchwabeland)
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Christine McVie returns to Fleetwood Mac for ‘On With the Show’ tour
British-American pop rock band Fleetwood Mac performed before a sold-out crowd Friday night at the Verizon Center on the latest leg of its “On With the Show” tour.
The group, which came into its current incarnation in 1975, was in a celebratory mood, not only for reaching a four-decade milestone but also for the return of keyboardist/vocalist Christine McVie to the lineup for the first time since 1999.
“This is normally the moment when I would say, ‘Welcome, Christine,’” singer Stevie Nicks said during an early set break, “but I think it’s now safe to say, ‘She’s baaaaaack!’”
Miss McVie, 71, who for the past decade and a half enjoyed a quiet life at her home in Kent, England, was clearly joyous to be back with her old bandmates while finding her footing on a major tour. She excelled on vocals in long-dormant classics such as “Everywhere” and “Little Lies,” but the heights of “Say You LoveMe” seemed to challenge her upper register, with Miss McVie even quasi-apologizing afterward that her performance was “a bit dodgy.”
While Miss McVie’s return allowed for the dusting-off of some tunes from Fleetwood Mac’s catalog, the set list by and large featured few surprises or trips deep into the band’s oeuvre. Perennial favorites “The Chain,” “You Make Loving Fun,” “Rhiannon,” “Tusk” and “Second Hand News” were sprinkled in with lesser-known gems such as “I Know I’m Not Wrong” and “Sisters of the Moon.”
Band members frequently paused to share stories with the audience. Miss Nicks related an anecdote about being a young woman window shopping at a San Francisco boutique called Velvet Underground that was frequented by the likes of Janis Joplin and Grace Slick. This experience, she said, informed the lyrics of the song “Gypsy,” which includes the line “So I’m back to the velvet underground, back to the floor that I love.”
Miss Nicks, 66, later related how she had been vacationing in Italy when she received a call from “Chris” asking whether she might rejoin the band — this after some guest spots in England last year in which Miss McVie played keyboards and sang on a few songs. Even after so many years without Miss McVie, Miss Nicks maintained that there was never any question she should return to the group full time.
“She’s never allowed to leave again,” Miss Nicks said of her bandmate, which generated thunderous applause.
Friday’s high-energy, three-hour spectacle seemed overwrought at times, testing the crowd’s stamina and interest with overly long stories and somewhat somnambulant mini-sets by the band. However, this was more than counterbalanced by the carefully programmed overall set, with each of the members taking turns at center stage.
Lead guitarist and singer Lindsey Buckingham continues to shred and scream for the rafters with the energy of a teenager, never letting on that, at 65, he is officially a senior citizen.
In addition to his electric riffs, Mr. Buckingham also played solo acoustic guitar — with no less vocal gusto — on “Big Love” and “Never Going Back Again,” before being joined by Miss Nicks for the elegiac ballad “Landslide,” which she said was her late father’s favorite among her songs.
As is true of pretty much any Fleetwood Mac show, the spiritual climax was undoubtedly the late-set performance of “I’m Still Afraid,” a bluesy, at times mournful, impassioned tune that begins quietly, with Mr. Buckingham singing two verses, before the song evolves into a nearly 10-minute jam session, with Mr. Buckingham assaulting his instrument with ever-brisker finger work and rock ‘n’ roll showmanship accompanied by drummer Mick Fleetwood’s pounding percussion. The crowd roared to its feet at the song’s conclusion, appreciative of the sweating fervor of Mr. Buckingham’s musicianship, which has earned him a reputation as one of the best living rock guitarists.
The set closed with Fleetwood Mac’s arguably most popular tune, “Go Your Own Way,” a hit from the smash album “Rumours” that was written amid the divorce of Miss McVie and bassist John McVie and the simultaneous romantic breakup of Mr. Buckingham and Miss Nicks. The up-tempo song, laced with pain, brought the 20,000 fans to their feet — a testament to the band members’ talents and the universality of their themes.
The encore began with percussionist Mick Fleetwood rendering a spirited drum solo, then featured “World Turning” followed by “Don’t Stop” — famously used as the theme song to Bill Clinton’s 1992 Democratic presidential nomination convention — and Miss Nicks on vocals on “Silver Springs” (perhaps in nod to the D.C. suburb).
Surprisingly, Miss McVie and Mr. Buckingham returned for a second encore, this time performing the angelic and melodious “Songbird” from “Rumours,” with Miss McVie singing and playing a Steinway as Mr. Buckingham accompanied on guitar.
The goodnight was a lengthy affair, with somewhat long-winded thank-you speeches from Miss Nicks and Mr. Fleetwood, 67, one of the band’s original members along with fellow Briton Mr. McVie, 69.
“Love,” Mr. Fleetwood said as he took his final bow. “In this crazy world of ours, be kind to each other. And love.”
Despite inner strife, breakups, feuds and member leave-takings that threatened to derail one of rock’s greatest acts, Fleetwood Mac proves that the love of music, and of those with whom we make it, has the power to unite and heal.
Fleetwood Mac bewitches crowd at Buffalo’s First Niagara Center
There needs to come a point when you believe in the band. Otherwise, you’re watching a classic rock jukebox.
We look for that moment when we forget about the baby sitter, the $200 or so spent on the ticket, the fact that we’ve heard these tunes more than a million times.
On Saturday, during Fleetwood Mac’s close-to-sold-out performance in First Niagara Center, that moment came early. Guitarist Lindsey Buckingham strode to the edge of the stage after the lights had been dimmed, looked around, said a brief hello to the front rows, and then dug into the swampy and sultry deep blues riff that signifies the beginning of the Mac’s evergreen hit, “The Chain.”
Buckingham hunkered down, dug into it, and made it plain to all that he had come not merely to collect a paycheck, but to play.
From there on, it was smooth sailing.
Buckingham led the version of Fleetwood Mac that most of us know and love – the group responsible for “Rumours,” “Tusk,” and “Tango In the Night” – through a hits-heavy set that walked the tightrope between easygoing ’70s pop-rock and deep-cutting avant-garde pop.
Of course, Buckingham is not the most famous member of Fleetwood Mac. That would be Stevie Nicks, his ex, and forevermore his partner in pop. Nicks is an icon, but Buckingham is a musical genius. On Saturday, their sparring made for abundant entertainment.
Fleetwood Mac has made a habit of including Buffalo in its tours since re-forming in the late ’90s. But this particular tour stop boasted something more than simply a run-through of “Rumours” and associated hits. This was in fact the first time area audiences have seen keyboardist and vocalist Christine McVie perform with the band in more than 15 years. McVie’s tunes – her “You Make Loving Fun,” “Everywhere,” “Say You Love Me” and “Over My Head,” among others – offered soulful highlights. She seems to have lost nothing in the vocal department – she nailed every part she should have, and did so with soul.
This was a hits show, to be certain, but in Fleetwood Mac’s case, that needn’t be a negative. The group has scored platinum with some rather adventurous tunes, and a mid-set focus on the freak manifesto that is “Tusk” made this plain. Buckingham’s “I Know I’m Not Wrong” and “Tusk” led nicely into Nicks’ “Sisters of the Moon,” and earned the crowd’s respect, apparently. The place exploded.
Nicks doesn’t have the voice she once did, but then, who would? She’s in her later 60s now, and if she couldn’t hit the high notes during “Rhiannon” and “Dreams,” she wisely chose the low road, while three backing vocalists, joined by Buckingham and McVie, fleshed out the harmonies. None of it felt fake or forced – this was a band that seemed grateful to be playing for an appreciative audience.
Nicks told a particularly cool story that involved her trademark top hat, an accessory she was rarely seen without during Mac’s “Rumours” heyday. The singer told the assembled that it was during a tour stop in Buffalo – one assumes that it would have been the 1975 pre-”Rumours” stop that is recorded as having taken place at the old Century Theatre – that she purchased said hat. This brought a huge roar from the crowd, which was made up of a cross section of 50-, 40-, 30- and, surprisingly, 20-somethings.
Fleetwood Mac still has it, as Saturday’s show made plain. Everyone pulled their weight, especially the recently returned McVie, whose voice was pure gold.
But like every other Fleetwood Mac show since he joined the band in 1974, this one belonged to Lindsey Buckingham. He is one of the true pop geniuses to have emerged from the ’70s, and on Saturday, he proved it one more time.
REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac doesn’t disappoint at FNC show
Last Saturday, people poured into the First Niagara Center to see an act that last performed in Buffalo almost 30 years ago.
Fleetwood Mac played the 46th show of its “On With the Show” tour, and it went off with a bang.
I wasn’t sure what to expect, but the group did not disappoint.
The show was all about the music, the band stopping only a few times to tell a few brief anecdotes, and welcome back keyboardist Christine McVie.
There was no opening act. The band came out and immediately went into “The Chain.”
Stevie Nicks’ distinct voice seemed to put the audience in a trance, especially during “Rhiannon,” despite Nicks no longer being able to hit the high notes.
The set was simple, just the band’s instruments on stage with psychedelic backgrounds changing as the set list went on.
The group performed with passion and enthusiasm, especially Lindsey Buckingham’s performance of “Big Love.”
Fleetwood Mac, a band that started in 1967, has spanned generations and is finding a new following thanks to the hit FX show “American Horror Story.” In the show’s second season, Lily Rabe plays Misty Day, a witch obsessed with Stevie Nicks. Nicks also has appeared on the show.
During Saturday night’s performance, Nicks thanked the TV show, and told the audience “Keep watching, it’s crazy!”
Eight Fleetwood Mac songs have been featured on “American Horror Story.” In her TV appearance, Nicks performed “Seven Wonders” while wearing one of her signature top hats.
She told the First Niagara crowd that she purchased her first top hat in Buffalo, and that’s when the fad began.
She then went on to dedicate the song “Landslide” to Buffalo, saying “My top hat thanks you!”
The band performed two encores, and the audience stayed put for both of them.
Overall, Fleetwood Mac did not disappoint its fans who came out to support them after all these years.
Rebecca Brandel is a junior at Mount St. Mary Academy.
Rebecca Brandel / Buffalo News / Thursday, February 5, 2015
Despite a winter blizzard wreaking havoc in the New England area just days earlier, the weather let up to allow Fleetwood Mac to perform at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center, Providence, Rhode Island, on Wednesday evening.
Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to Vanessa Carlton and John McCauley’s new baby Sidney (born January 13), Stevie’s newest “fairy goddaughter.” Both Carlton and McCauley’s parents were in the Providence crowd on Wednesday night.
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The Chain / You Make Loving Fun (WelshWitchPMD)
Dreams (Rhiannon Spaziano)
Second Hand News (WelshWitchPMD)
Second Hand News / Rhiannon (Jim Langley)
Rhiannon (WelshWitchPMD)
Rhiannon (Rhiannon Spaziano)
Everywhere (Jim Langley)
Everywhere (Maggie Clarke)
Everywhere (WelshWitchPMD)
I Know I’m Not Wrong (WelshWitchPMD)
Tusk (WelshWitchPMD)
Tusk (Seven OfNine)
Sisters of the Moon (WelshWitchPMD)
Say You Love Me (Maggie Clarke)
Say You Love Me (WelshWitchPMD)
Seven Wonders (Maya Boivin)
Seven Wonders / Big Love (WelshWitchPMD)
Big Love (Tilly4988)
Big Love (Seven OfNine)
Big Love (Alan Bianchini)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6WLa_2mv2w Landslide dedication (WelshWitchPMD)
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — “She makes us all complete,” said Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood.
He was referring to singer and keyboard player Christine McVie, back with the band after a 16-year absence. Her return brings the band back to its most successful lineup, the one that sold a zillion copies of Rumours back in 1977.
McVie doesn’t have the mystic gypsy-witch appeal of Stevie Nicks, nor the guitar prowess of Lindsey Buckingham, but her presence solidifies the band — and she’s written some of the most appealing songs in their catalog.
Fans at the band’s show at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center Wednesday night looking for prime-time Fleetwood Mac got their wish, with a 2 1/2-hour show that included big chunks of Rumours and its predecessor, 1975′s Fleetwood Mac.
The three singers, McVie, Buckingham and Nicks, ranged across the front of the stage, with the rhythm section of Fleetwood and bassist John McVie just behind. At the back of the stage were some reinforcements — an additional guitarist, keyboard player and three backup singers.
As a wise man once said, we get by with a little help from our friends, and the augmented Fleetwood Mac mostly sounded good Wednesday. The exception was the drums, which were mixed too loud, particularly early in the show, and nearly drowned out the singing on numbers such as “Second Hand News.”
The show opened with a potent string of hits: “The Chain,” “You Make Loving Fun” “Dreams,” “Second Hand News,” and Nicks’ signature “Rhiannon.”
Band members were in a talkative mood, heaping praises upon McVie. They had come to Providence from New York, which has been spared the brunt of the snowstorm, but thanked the packed audience at the Dunk for coming out after the storm.
Buckingham took center stage on a rocking “I Know I’m Not Wrong,” “Tusk” and “Big Love,” the latter a showcase for his solo acoustic-guitar playing.
The band offered some interesting new takes on familiar songs.
For “Never Going Back Again,” Buckingham and Nicks sang very quietly, sometimes just above a whisper. There was an extended version of “Gold Dust Woman,” with Nicks donning a glittering gold shawl over her black outfit. The song faded to a ghostly echo as Nicks turned her back to the audience and stretched the shawl out like an angel’s wings.
Not that familiarity is a bad thing. “Go Your Own Way,” once it revved up, had the crowd dancing and singing along, while Nicks shook her tambourine festooned with streamers and Buckingham leaned his guitar over the front row.
For their encore, the band did “World Turning,” with a drum solo from Fleetwood while he exhorted the audience (“Give it up!) through his headset mike. I have a “Just Say No” policy towards drum solos, but many in the audience seemed to like it.
“Don’t Stop” might be overplayed by now, but it had the audience singing along anyway.
The last word — or at least the last song — fittingly went to McVie, who did “Songbird” solo until she was finally joined by Buckingham at the finish.
Fleetwood Mac performed at the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York, on Sunday night, the band’s 46th show since launching the On With The Show Tour last August.
Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to her dad and the Uniondale audience.
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Thanks to alk6195, Amlyn75, Riv Da, DiamondSearch, Mickie Esemplare, granitedog, JMEJJP, joefantastic, Swami Murphy, Keith Scholder, scruffman100, Justin Teller, XDrew574X, and xfooey for sharing these videos!
The Chain (Swami Murphy)
The Chain (alk61695)
The Chain (xfooey)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ufRhnj3t_xA