Category: Concert Reviews

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac forced to end Lincoln show early

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac forced to end Lincoln show early

    Fleetwood Mac had to call its set early.

    Drummer and founding member Mick Fleetwood came down with an unexplained illness, and the band played as much as it could before members called it a night.

    Mark Davis
    Mark Davis

    “Mick is really sick. We don’t know exactly what to do,” Stevie Nicks said, adding that he suddenly became ill and was throwing up.

    The band, set to play more than two hours, called off eight of its songs and finished the show with “Go Your Own Way” and “Songbird” almost an hour early.

    “We will come back,” Nicks said. You’ll get one and a half full-on shows. We will come back. We’re so sorry.”

    “It’s really unfortunate,” added Lindsey Buckingham. “We’re really sorry, guys.”

    Mark Davis
    Mark Davis

    Kevin Coffey / Omaha World-Herald / Saturday, January 17, 2015

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac more relaxed, in sync

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac more relaxed, in sync

    In Twin Cities encore, Fleetwood Mac is more relaxed, in sync

    The full “Rumours”-era lineup of Fleetwood Mac returned to the Twin Cities on Friday night for a triumphant, wildly entertaining performance at St. Paul’s Xcel Energy Center in front of a sold-out crowd of more than 15,000 grinning, cheering fans.

    Christine McVie, who retired in 1998 after the first “Rumours” reunion, rejoined the group last year. After spending time in the studio with Lindsey Buckingham for some songwriting and recording sessions (Stevie Nicks was busy promoting her solo album), the band hit the road for a tour that kicked off Sept. 30 at Minneapolis’ Target Center.

    How much has the show changed in 3 1/2 months? Not at all, judging by the set list. The group played the same two dozen songs and even indulged in some of the same stage banter.

    Beneath the surface, though, the evening radiated with a looser, more casual vibe. Back in September, the band played with nervous energy, flubbing some early numbers and echoing the same “I can’t believe I’m seeing this” vibe as the audience.

    But the 39 concerts that followed, and several weeks off for the holidays, left us with a more polished, in-sync version of the band.

    Pioneer Press: John Autey
    Pioneer Press: John Autey

    Now 71 and the oldest musician on stage, McVie impressed with her confident, strong vocals and the glow of a woman half her age. Her presence on stage has forced Nicks, 66, to step up her game in the vocals department. She’s chattier, too, and told Friday’s crowd “Landslide” was dedicated to her friend Prince.

    Buckingham, 65 and the baby of the group, spent his time shouting, scowling, gritting his teeth and ripping one fiery guitar solo after another.

    “Rumours” famously documents the destruction of three relationships: Buckingham and Nicks; Christine McVie and her bassist husband John; and drummer Mick Fleetwood and his wife Jenny Boyd. Why would, 38 years later, five of the six people involved share the stage and rehash decades-old issues. After all, they played nine of the 11 “Rumours” tracks Friday, along with “Silver Springs,” a b-side from the era.

    Well, money has something to do with it. The single Target Center show in September pulled in more than $1.8 million. Scalpers are getting rich, too, as Forbes reported the tour is the most expensive ticket on the secondary market right now, with an average price of $305, above Taylor Swift ($260) and U2 ($255).

    At the same time, artistry and mortality both figure in there as well. John McVie underwent cancer treatments in 2013. Buckingham and Nicks have both spent recent years focusing on well-received solo albums. And Buckingham’s grumpiness aside, there is a spark in the 2015 Fleetwood Mac that was missing during the ’00s tours.

    As fun as it’s been to see them back together, twice now, it’s exciting to see if they still have got any great new music left in them. They should never break the chain.

    Pioneer Press: John Autey
    Pioneer Press: John Autey

    Ross Raihala / TwinCities.com Pioneer Press / Friday, January 16, 2015

     

  • REVIEW: Familiar flair

    REVIEW: Familiar flair

    Review: Fleetwood Mac reprises familiar flair at Xcel Energy Center. Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham injected their usual emotional energy at Xcel Energy Center in opening the second leg of the band’s reunion tour.

    Stevie Nicks, left, and Lindsey Buckingham performed Friday night with Fleetwood Mac at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul.
    Stevie Nicks, left, and Lindsey Buckingham performed Friday night with Fleetwood Mac at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. (Photo: Courtney Perry)

    Fleetwood Mac
    Xcel Energy Center
    Saint Paul, Minnesota
    Friday, January 16, 2015

    Pink did it. So did Bruno Mars.

    Last year, they both came back to the Twin Cities for the second time on the same tour and they were noticeably better the second time around.

    Fleetwood Mac returned to the Twin Cities on Friday for a second time in four months and they didn’t do it. They weren’t better. But they were noticeably different even though they played the exact same set list at the Xcel Energy Center as they had at Target Center in September.

    (Photo: Courtney Perry)
    (Photo: Courtney Perry)

    The Minneapolis show was all about the return of singer/keyboardist Christine McVie after a 16-year retirement. That concert, the first on the On with the Show Tour, was about giddy excitement, a rush of adrenaline and a warm, fuzzy feeling that this fractured family was somehow whole again. It was an evening of the democratic, polite, respectful Fleetwood Mac.

    Since then, the Rock Hall of Fame fivesome played 39 more concerts, took a four-week break for the holidays and chose St. Paul as the kick-off for the second leg of the tour. But Friday’s performance had a changed vibe. This wasn’t about the joy of having McVie back on board. Or as Stevie Nicks put it early in the evening: on the last leg, she would say that Fleetwood Mac welcomed McVie back and now it’s simply “she’s back.”

    (Photo: Courtney Perry)
    (Photo: Courtney Perry)

    This gig felt like “we’re getting back to work.” Sure, McVie’s contributions were significant, apparent from the opening notes of the first song, “The Chain,” with her high vocal harmonies ringing through clearly. There were several songs, including “You Make Lovin’ Fun” and the closing “Songbird,” that have returned to the repertoire after a long absence to the delight of fans. But McVie wasn’t the spark plug on Friday.

    No, that duty fell once again to singer/guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, who frankly has carried this band by force of personality (and will) and an obsessive attention to detail, pretty much ever since he and Nicks joined in 1975.

    (Photo: Courtney Perry)
    (Photo: Courtney Perry)

    With the sell-out crowd of nearly 16,000 not acting as amped as the Target Center crowd, the band kind of cruised along Friday, sounding good but never great. A good hour into the 2½-hour set, Buckingham took over for a solo version of “Big Love” and the intensity and momentum began building.

    Next Nicks joined him for “Landslide,” which she dedicated to her old pal Prince even though he wasn’t in attendance, and the couple who’d turned around Fleetwood Mac in the mid-’70s turned around this show midway. Their romantic tension that has fueled the band propelled the song, which ended with her hitting a high note, then glancing at him for approval, him rolling his eyes playfully and them grasping hands as the lights faded.

    (Photo: Courtney Perry)
    (Photo: Courtney Perry)

    Then came arguably the night’s highlight, “Never Going Back Again,” with Buckingham on lead vocals, Nicks on harmonies and their blend sounding like a male-female Everly Brothers. Buckingham was so overjoyed with their performance that he walked over to Nicks afterward in the darkness and gave her a hug that screamed “hot damn.”

    (Photo: Courtney Perry)
    (Photo: Courtney Perry)

    For the rest of the night, this band of geezers, ages 65 to 71, was as good as they’re likely to get at this stage of their lives and career (drummer Mick Fleetwood started this band in 1967 in England). “Over My Head” was appealingly countrified. “Gypsy” found Nicks in all her Stevie Nicksness, with a mystical story to introduce it and trippy dancing to elevate it. Buckingham, an underrated guitarist who seizes solo opportunities aggressively, went insane on “So Afraid.” “Go Your Own Way” was the perfect combination of emotion and release.

    (Photo: Courtney Perry)
    (Photo: Courtney Perry)

    If Frank Sinatra sings that love is lovelier the second time around, then someone could conclude that Fleetwood Mac made loving more fun the second half of the second time around.

    Twitter: @JonBream • 612-673-1719

    Jon Bream / Star Tribune / Saturday, January 17, 2015

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac lands at Amalie Arena in Tampa

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac lands at Amalie Arena in Tampa

    The rumors are indeed true: with Christine McVie’s return, the Mac is back and better than ever.

    It’s often said that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. That age-old adage is particularly relevant in reference to rock bands that attempt to forge ahead and record or tour without a key member in tow; the results can be uneven or sub-standard at best. While Fleetwood Mac already had a lengthy catalog to their credit by the time they revamped their lineup and adopted more of a pop sound in the mid-1970’s, the UK-spawned blues/rock group’s greatest success came when the dynamics of all its different personalities meshed and translated into hit singles and million-selling albums. [Text by Gabe, photos by Tracy.]

    (Photo: Tracy May)
    (Photo: Tracy May)

    Fleetwood Mac reached unimaginable heights when breezy, laid-back Californians Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham were welcomed to the fold and the band debuted their new look, sound and feel to the world with a magnificent 1975 self-titled album. A major factor in the band’s newly attained success was the emergence of veteran songwriter and vocalist Christine McVie. With her cool vocal delivery and impressive keyboard work, McVie’s presence was as much a factor in the band’s dominance of sales charts as Buckingham and Nicks.

    (Photo: Tracy May)
    (Photo: Tracy May)

    Christine dropped out of Fleetwood Mac in the late 1990s to enjoy a quiet, reserved retirement in her rural English estate, but on this latest tour (following a highly successful jaunt around the globe in 2013), she returned to the lineup after 17 years away, apparently having missed the rush of onstage performance and the camaraderie of touring with her bandmates. The constant ovations she received all night long at this past Saturday night’s sold-out concert at Tampa’s Amalie Arena proved the fans are more than a little pleased she’s back.

    Opening the final night of the tour’s first leg (the band resumes their North American trek in mid-January), the familiar quintet (with some assistance from a trio of backup singers and some additional musicians) hit the stage just after 8 and without the aid of any warm-up act, got things off to a rollicking start with “The Chain,” a signature tune hat shows off the distinctive flavor each member brings to the table. Nicks’s all-too-familiar instantly recognizable vocal acrobatics, Buckingham’s exquisite guitar arrangements, John McVie’s booming bass lines, Mick Fleetwood’s solid drum work and Christine’s subtle keyboard fills and wonderfully deep, breathy, cooing voice.

    (Photo: Tracy May)
    (Photo: Tracy May)

    The massive stage was bathed in stark blue lights as Nicks, a dynamic performer as either a solo artist or lead muse of the group, rocked and swayed from side to side clad in one of her traditional black dresses replete with fringe and lace at her perch front and center. Her long blond locks flowing, Nicks looked and sounded better than she has in years. Her loyal legion of fans tend to dress in look-alike outfits when attending her shows and Saturday night was no exception; scores of blond ladies sporting top hats, black boots and flowing lacy garments were easy to spot in the packed crowd.

    If there was one low point about the band’s last visit to the area, it was the absence of all those great Christine McVie songs that were omitted from the set throughout their superb summer 2013 arena show. Welcome additions to Saturday’s setlist included “Dreams,” “Say You Love Me” and “Over My Head,” all integral to the Mac singles canon and all McVie-led numbers. Whether standing at her bank of keys stage left or shaking a pair of maracas center stage or sporting a mini accordion, McVie’s presence, comfort level and command of her gorgeous vocals seemed to come as naturally as ever. One would never know the striking 71-year old had been away from the stage for nearly two decades.

    (Photo: Tracy May)
    (Photo: Tracy May)

    Hits and lesser-known album cuts featured prominently throughout the lengthy 24-song setlist. Nicks had plenty of time to shine throughout her own fair share of mega-hits she’s contributed throughout the band’s tenure. There’s a lot more to Stevie Nicks than eccentric costumes, inimitable and instantly recognizable vocal style and whimsical poetic lyrics — Stevie is a storyteller and a purveyor of positivity. Almost as engaging as her heartfelt readings of “Rhiannon” and “Dreams” were her rich, descriptive between-song chit-chat and anecdotes. Whether describing how visiting a funky San Francisco clothing boutique in the 1960s served as the inspiration for her 1982 hit “Gypsy” or humbly asserting the belief that any single person in attendance is capable of making their dreams come true as long as they don’t let anyone stand in their way, it’s clear why Nicks draws such a rabid, dedicated legion of fans and has done so for the better part of 40 years.

    For all the depth and hit power that Nicks and McVie emanated from the stage, it is truly singer-songwriter-guitar wizard Lindsay Buckingham who draws the mightiest and most awe-inspiring responses when he takes command of the spotlight. Delivering razor-sharp takes on his compositions “Second Hand News” and “I Know I’m Not Wrong,” he sounded fantastic both vocally and through his incredibly unorthodox, unique guitar picking style. While he wowed the crowd plenty of times throughout the night, notably via his solo acoustic mind-melding and rather frantic take on “Big Love,” the raucous standing ovation he received after the jaw-dropping, extended guitar gymnastics he displayed as he stomped from side to side of the massive stage during “I’m Not Afraid” summed up the love and affection the mostly 50-plus-aged audience still hold in their hearts for Fleetwood Mac and its individual members.

    A massive screen at the rear of the stage sporting crystal-clear images was matched in clarity by the sweet, perfect, long-missed three-part harmonies Nicks, McVie and Buckingham shared all night. At no point were they more in sync, more beautifully layered or more impressive than in the band’s most recognizable hit, “Don’t Stop,” which featured prominently during one of the night’s encores. All three took turns alternating through their designated verses but the sound of them singing in unison on this joyous, inspiring tune really summed up the elation felt by their throng of long-time fans of having the most successful and treasured Mac lineup in history back together and on the road again.

    The nearly three-hour set (sans intermission) came to a poignant close with Christine McVie planted center stage, sitting behind a massive black grand piano and delicately delivering an absolutely gorgeous rendition of her tender ballad “Songbird,” originally from the band’s 1977 masterpiece Rumors, one of the best-selling albums of all time. How fitting that the woman whose return to the fold has been the main draw for this current tour closed the night and show off with the style and finesse that had long been missing.

    Wrapping up the night after the music had ended was Nicks and Mick Fleetwood each taking turns alone at the microphone conveying what it means to the band to have McVie back on board and delivering heartfelt words of thanks and appreciation to the fans who have attended the 40 shows leading up to this one, the final night of the current run.

    While it certainly would have been simple for a band as well-loved as Fleetwood Mac to deliver an abbreviated set of hits and not much else, they went out of their way to deliver a lengthy, exciting performance that seemed to please every single person who’d purchased a ticket. Casual fans and die-hards alike had to be pleased with the varied setlist and the individual contributions each and every band member brought to the nearly-three hour party.

    Set List:

    The Chain
    You Make Loving Fun
    Dreams
    Second Hand News
    Rhiannon
    Everywhere
    I Know I’m Not Wrong
    Tusk
    Sisters of the Moon
    Say You Love Me
    Seven Wonders
    Big Love
    Landslide
    Never Going Back Again
    Over My Head
    Gypsy
    Little Lies
    Gold Dust Woman
    I’m So Afraid
    Go Your Own Way

    Encore:

    World Turning
    Don’t Stop
    Silver Springs

    Second Encore:

    Songbird

    Gabe Echazabal and Tracy May / Creative Loafing Tampa Bay / Monday, December 22, 2014

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac better than ever

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac better than ever

    Fleetwood Mac was better than ever at BB&T Center on December 19, 2014

    Fleetwood Mac
    BB&T Center, Sunrise
    Friday, December 19, 2014

    Better than: Anyone had the right to expect.

    (Photo: Sayre Berman)
    (Photo: Sayre Berman)

    All those who packed into the BB&T Center at the penultimate show of the much-heralded Fleetwood Mac reunion tour truly felt they were attending a landmark event.

    After some 48 years of slinging hugely successful albums and holding down a reputation as rock’s most notorious traveling soap opera, the sold out performance was testimony to Fleetwood’s longevity and durability. But the fact that the band still sounds remarkable — some might say better than ever — ensured its three hour, awe-inspiring show was one for the ages.

    And much was made of the fact that Christine McVie’s return to the fold after an absence of 15 years was a remarkable feat in itself.

    “She’s back!” Stevie Nicks noted at the outset. It was a feeling of euphoria that Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood echoed at various points throughout the 24-song set, packed with hits, fan favorites, and even the occasional rarity. Indeed, it was well worth noting that at age 71, McVie looks at least twenty years younger, and her rich, riveting vocals showed no sign of diminishing whatsoever.

    (Photo: Sayre Berman)
    (Photo: Sayre Berman)

    In truth, the same could be said of each member of this tireless ensemble. Nicks retained her trademark quiver, her top hat, granny dresses, and a mystic fairy queen sensibility — not to mention the ability to literally spin in circles whenever the occasion called.

    Buckingham, at age 65, showed the dexterity of someone half his age, whether he was goose-stepping across the stage, adopting a reliable rock star posture, or proving, yet again, that despite the competition from predecessors like Peter Green or Jeremy Spencer, he remains one of the most nimble guitarists Mac has ever fronted.

    Fleetwood himself is far from a figure head, a remarkable time keeper whose tasteful flourishes, commanding rhythms and role as the band’s eternal cheerleader often puts him center stage. He offered a semi-unplugged interlude, a breathless drum solo, and heartfelt and humbling remarks as the concert came to a close.

    As for that other individual name-checked in the band’s handle, suffice it to say he played the role of the stoic bass player to a tee, yet his apparent lack of an onstage persona and reticence to join the others in sharing the kudos and commentary offered the impression he was basically along for the ride.

    It’s a remarkable thing that even now, the group’s voices and harmonies are as vibrant as they were back in the beginning.

    (Photo: Sayre Berman)
    (Photo: Sayre Berman)

    While many veteran bands need an army of support players to effectively convey their classic melodies, the Mac brings along a relatively sparse support team consisting of two extra musicians on guitar, occasional keyboards, and three subtle backing singers to, at times, flesh out the vocals. That leaves the main players to do the heavy lifting, a task they accomplish exceedingly well.

    Buckingham’s fretwork, as previously mentioned, is nothing short of astonishing, and on songs such as “World Turning,” “Never Going Back,” and the lovely “Landslide” — one of the concert’s most fragile interludes and one of its best — he demonstrated a remarkable dexterity that deserves all the kudos the critics have given. As Fleetwood noted during the band introductions, Buckingham is the one member of the group who literally never leaves the stage.

    As for the songs themselves, it’s the big band numbers that elicit the most enthusiastic response, and rightfully so. Opening number “The Chain,” perhaps an unintended homage to the group’s continuing trajectory, was greeted with a rapturous response, as was the well-heeled, more familiar fare like “Second Hand News,” “Rhiannon,” “Say You Love Me,” and natch, the irrepressible “Go Your Own Way.”

    It’s obvious that those who refer to them as the quintessential soft rock band are way off the mark. This group rocks hard, with a drive and determination that rivals any of its venerable contemporaries.

    Add to that already impressive presentation an amazing array of back projected images — ranging from magnified views of the band to scenes that look as if they were lifted from The Hobbit, to spectacular hallucinatory light displays — and the show was a total sensory experience.

    Still, it was another element that made it so special. There was the fact that the individual members — bassist McVie excluded — took time to expound on the band’s contentious history and complicated interpersonal relationships. Likewise, the band’s affection for the audience was clear.

    Noting a sign that said its holder had just had a stroke and that being at the concert was on his bucket list, Nicks not only dedicated a song to him but repeatedly assured him that he would be just fine. It was a kind gesture indeed. So too, Nicks’ and Fleetwood’s concluding homage to the fans and expressions of appreciation for their devotion throughout the years made that final send-off especially touching. While the song “Don’t Stop” implores its listeners, “Don’t you look back,” it’s all but impossible not to feel the love that makes that exhortation all but impossible to abide by.

    Critic’s Notebook

    Personal Bias: It was the first time I’d ever seen the Mac, and it was as fulfilling as it might have been back in the day. One of the best concerts this critic has ever seen.
    The Crowd: Totally enthused, wholly adoring, frequently standing, and smitten entirely.
    By the Way: With a band now well into its 60s and in Christine McVie’s case her 70s, there is definitive proof that age is all but meaningless as far as making music is concerned.

    Set List

    The Chain
    You Make Loving Fun
    Dreams
    Second Hand News
    Rhiannon
    Everywhere
    I Know I’m Not Wrong
    Tusk
    Sisters of the Moon
    Say You Love Me
    Seven Wonders
    Big Love
    Landslide
    Never Going Back Again
    Over My Head
    Gypsy
    Little Lies
    Gold Dust Woman
    I’m So Afraid
    Go Your Own Way

    Encore:
    World Turning
    Don’t Stop
    Silver Springs

    Encore 2:
    Songbird

    Lee Zimmerman / Broward Palm Beach New Times / Monday, December 22, 2014

  • REVIEW: Refreshed, revitalized Fleetwood Mac at Tampa show

    REVIEW: Refreshed, revitalized Fleetwood Mac at Tampa show

    With Christine McVie, Fleetwood Mac sound refreshed, revitalized at Tampa’s Amalie Arena.

    [slideshow_deploy id=’34200′]

    What does one member mean to a band?

    Depends on the band and the member, but if we’re talking Fleetwood Mac and Christine McVie, it’s worth breaking out some stats.

    A sold-out crowd of 17,620 packed Tampa’s Amalie Arena Saturday night to catch the Mac on their first tour with the songwriter, pianist and occasional lead singer since 1998. That’s up from 14,071 who came to see them last summer, up from 10,008 in 2009.

    Why does McVie hold that kind of sway over the Fleetwood Mac faithful, when the band is better known for its other singers, perpetually linked ex-lovers Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, who sing their most massive hits?

    Just as there are folks who call George their favorite Beatle, many say McVie is Fleetwood Mac’s strongest songsmith, and any version of the band that doesn’t include her just isn’t the same. A reunion with McVie was Fleetwood Mac’s ultimate trump card in their quest for continued relevance in this, their 47th year – a regrouping of their classic Rumours-era lineup, and a reopening of their songbook to classic tracks they haven’t played in years.

    On Saturday, Tampa got ‘em all – Say You Love Me, You Make Loving Fun, Little Lies, Everywhere, plus a McVie-led Don’t Stop and Songbird as parting gifts. It was the band’s 40th and final North American concert of 2014, and they must be hitting their stride, because they haven’t sounded this vital and copacetic in years.

    “They say what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger,” said Buckingham. “On this particular tour, and this particular moment now, with the return of the beautiful Christine, with her return, I believe that we begin a profound, a poetic and a prolific new chapter in the history of this band.”

    Indeed, with McVie back in the fold, Saturday’s show felt more inspired than either of Fleetwood Mac’s previous two trips to Tampa. There was a little less focus on the occasionally melodramatic interplay between Nicks and Buckingham, and a little more focus on the lively, mood-lightening material the pianist penned for the band.

    It wasn’t just McVie’s long-dormant ‘70s sing-alongs – 1987’s Tango in the Night, the band’s poppy and peppy final classic-lineup album, also got a welcome workout, with McVie handling lead vocals on the slick confections Everywhere and Little Lies; and Nicks propelling the equally upbeat Seven Wonders.

    The lightness and sweetness that McVie brought to the table counterbalanced – perhaps even enhanced – the rest of Fleetwood Mac’s hit-loaded set. Her presence brings out the best in all-world guitarist Buckingham, who got his six-string rocks off on the frenetically fingerpicked Big Love, punkish rave-up I Know I’m Not Wrong and epically barn-burning I’m So Afraid. And as is her wont, Nicks wailed and convulsed like a banshee during the cauldron-boiling Gold Dust Woman and drifted into her inimitable twirl on Gypsy.

    Buckingham and Nicks would pair off here and there for stripped-down numbers – Landslide, Never Going Back Again – but the night felt more complete, more celebratory, when all five members were out there together, rocking along like the last 16 years never happened.

    Take Tusk: You had Mick Fleetwood rumbling away on his drum kit; Nicks crooning backup and sashaying across the stage; McVie pumping an accordion and coercing her ex-husband, stoic bassist John McVie, into a little soft-shoe shuffle; and Buckingham snarling into a mic, “Don’t say that you love me! Just tell me that you want me!”

    As Buckingham kicked and shredded his way back and forth across the stage on Go Your Own Way, lingering for an extra half-measure by the grinning, bobbing McVie, it was clear that her return meant more to Fleetwood Mac than just a few thousand extra tickets sold. In a way, it meant new life.

    Jay Cridlin / Tampa Bay Times / Saturday, December 20, 2014

  • REVIEW: Rocking Rumours at Sunrise concert

    REVIEW: Rocking Rumours at Sunrise concert

    With Christine McVie’s return, Fleetwood Mac’s musical chain is together, as good as ever at Sunrise concert

    Finally, 16 years after playing her last gig with Fleetwood Mac, Christine McVie is back in the band.

    Hard to tell who seemed happier for her return, the fans or the band members. Drummer Mick Fleetwood said in a pre-concert interview with the Miami Herald that this enduring band’s autobiographical music has served as a soundtrack for its audience’s own similar experiences. Love, loss, joy, heartache.

    “It’s astoundingly powerful that for the vast majority of that audience their lives are unfolding in their own world and we’re triggering that.”

    These fans have made the superstar group’s On With the Show Tour one of the year’s top touring attractions. At Sunrise’s sold-out BB&T Center Friday night, a crowd of 16,000 or so lustily cheered reinvigorated classics like Rhiannon, Go Your Own Way and Landslide.

    Immediately after the standard Fleetwood Mac opener, The Chain, fans got their first taste of McVie’s burgundy warm, bluesy alto, which, reassuringly, sounds much as it did on Rumours 38 years ago. “Sweet, wonderful you/You make me happy with the things you do,” she sang in the opening line of You Make Loving Fun, the fourth Top 10 single from the landmark Rumours album. Back then, the song was about her lover, the band’s former lighting director, whom she briefly turned to as her marriage to bass player John McVie ended. Now, the lyric seems directed at her fellow musicians, including her ex, as well as the fans.

    “Usually I’d say, ‘Welcome back, Christine,’” a genuinely friendly, chatty Stevie Nicks said, referring to her previous stage patter early in the tour’s run. “But since this is the 39th show, we can safely say, ‘She’s back!’’’

    Guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, Nicks’ ex and the subject of many of her songs like Dreams and Silver Springs — much as she is the subject of his biting numbers, Go Your Own Way, Never Going Back Again and Second Hand News — has always had a particularly symbiotic musical relationship with McVie. The chemistry in the way their voices intertwine — McVie’s out of British blues, Buckingham’s inspired by ’50s folk — on the blues-rock stomp of World Turning and the rock shuffle, Don’t Stop, proved intact.

    A couple hours earlier, just after McVie’s power pop charmer, Everywhere, and his own edgy rocker, I Know I’m Not Wrong, Buckingham delivered Fleetwood Mac’s State of the Union. He singled out McVie for providing a reason to think about tomorrow.

    “With her return I believe we begin a profound, poetic and prolific new chapter in the life of this band,” Buckingham said. Encouraging, and inspiring, given he’s 65, McVie’s 71, Nicks is 66 and the rhythm section of Mick Fleetwood and John McVie are 67 and 69, respectively. Given how well these men and women performed, for nearly three hours, you fully believe Buckingham.

    Indeed, McVie’s contribution is the necessary sunlight amid Nicks’ and Buckingham’s darker ruminations. This additional voice made the harmonies on her Say You Love Me, Over My Head and Little Lies, the latter done with considerably more edge and kick than its stuck-in-the-’80s studio version, as well as Nicks’ Dreams and Rhiannon, ring with clarity. She also seemed to have inspired the others to deliver the best vocal performances we’ve heard from anyone in this outfit since the Reagan administration.

    Sure, Nicks has lost her top range on Dreams and Sisters of the Moon. Buckingham’s voice is deeper.

    But Nicks sang full-bodied and in-tune throughout, including on her showcase Gold Dust Woman and Seven Wonders, reintroduced thanks to its prominent use last season for Nicks’ witch character on FX’s American Horror Story: Coven. She dedicated Landslide to a fan who held a sign that said she’d had a stroke and that her bucket list wish was to see a Fleetwood Mac concert. Nicks responded, “I feel it in my heart. You’re going to be just fine.”

    Buckingham had a regained suppleness and adventure in his phrasing that gave fresh nuance to Never Going Back Again, Big Love and the anguished I’m So Afraid. His inventive lead guitar playing, Flamenco style on Big Love; blues on I’m So Afraid; or classic rock soloing on Go Your Own Way, all played without a pick, elevates him among the greatest to play the instrument.

    After an expertly paced 150-minute set, closed by McVie’s trademark promise of undying love, Songbird, a clearly grateful Fleetwood roared, “And remember, the Mac is most definitely back.”

    No doubt, at 100 percent.

    Fleetwood Mac returns March 21 at AmericanAirlines Arena in downtown Miami. Follow @HowardCohen on Twitter.

    FLEETWOOD MAC SET LIST

    The Chain

    You Make Loving Fun

    Dreams

    Second Hand News

    Rhiannon

    Everywhere

    I Know I’m Not Wrong

    Tusk

    Sisters of the Moon

    Say You Love Me

    Seven Wonders

    Big Love

    Landslide

    Never Going Back Again

    Over My Head

    Gypsy

    Little Lies

    Gold Dust Woman

    I’m So Afraid

    Go Your Own Way

    Encores:

    World Turning

    Don’t Stop

    Silver Springs

    Songbird

    Closing farewells from Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood.

    Howard Cohen / Miami Herald / Saturday, December 20, 2014

  • REVIEW: Fresh, fun Fleetwood Mac dazzles Atlanta

    Fleetwood Mac has never been considered a “fun” band.

    Between the tempestuous relationships among its members and the differing opinions about musical direction over the decades, the collective of Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, Stevie Nicks, Christine McVie and Lindsey Buckingham was never the cheeriest bunch.

    Christine McVie (Photo: Robb Cohen)
    Christine McVie (Photo: Robb Cohen)

    But wow, did that drama make for some amazing music.

    The band returned to the road in October after taking some off late last year for John McVie to combat cancer, and this time they had a secret weapon that has elevated Fleetwood Mac to a new level of vitality – Christine McVie.

    Back with the gang after a 16-year gap, McVie, an unbelievable-looking 71, injected a palpable energy into the band, both by allowing them to further open their songbook and by providing Nicks with her perfect female vocal foil.

    Lindsey Buckingham (Photo: Robb Cohen)
    Lindsey Buckingham (Photo: Robb Cohen)

    When was the last time you heard Nicks girlishly squeal, as she did when welcoming McVie with an enthusiastic, “She’s baaaaaack!”? For that matter, when was the last time Mac fans heard “You Make Loving Fun” and “Everywhere” played live (OK, it was 1997’s “The Dance” tour, but you get the point)?

    From the moment part-time artist Fleetwood ushered in the band’s standard opener “The Chain” with his heartbeat bass drum, to more than 2 ½-hours later when McVie closed the show with her tingly “Songbird,” the show felt fresh and alive and yes…fun.

    The sold-out crowd at Philips Arena Wednesday night erupted into cheers for McVie before the complete opening phrase of “You Make Loving Fun” – “Sweet wonderful you” – exited her mouth, setting the appreciative tone of the night.

    John McVie (Photo: Robb Cohen)
    John McVie (Photo: Robb Cohen)

    Of course, the other major benefit of McVie’s return is her contributions as a vocalist. She added another layer of harmony to the silky “Dreams,” steered the sunshiny “Everywhere” and helped “Rihannon” breathe as Nicks donned a black shawl to drape over her jagged-edge black dress as she sang an invigorated version of the song.

    While the female energy on stage resounded mightily, that isn’t to diminish the continued awesomeness of the band’s tortured musical genius, Buckingham.

    Whether bouncing on the balls of his feet during “Second Hand News” or unleashing primal yells during “Tusk” – the band’s most polarizing song that was balanced by Fleetwood’s unrelenting beat and Christine McVie on accordion – the Twizzler-thin Buckingham was a riveting presence who sounded robust after shaking off some initial hoarseness.

    Mick Fleetwood and Lindsey Buckingham (Photo: Robb Cohen)
    Mick Fleetwood and Lindsey Buckingham (Photo: Robb Cohen)

    And what a hoot that at 65, he still has groupies who basked in his aura at the front of the stage and even requested a couple of his onstage towels.

    By giving fans a well-paced, 24-song set, Fleetwood Mac was able to liberate its extensive catalog and demonstrate the differing tones each member brings to the forefront.

    McVie’s sweet pop tendencies soared on “Say You Love Me,” Buckingham tore off a finger-blistering solo during “Big Love” that almost sounded symphonic and Nicks twirled and grinned during her ethereal “Gypsy,” after sharing a lengthy – yet interesting – story about its origin.

    For a certain generation of Fleetwood Mac fans, the moments between Buckingham and Nicks prompt the greatest pangs of wistfulness. The twosome didn’t disappoint as they stood alone on stage for “Landslide,” with Nicks’ warble sounding poetically perfect and Buckingham’s gentle guitar strains lovely as always; the pair then stayed together for a hushed duet on “Never Going Back Again.”

    Stevie Nicks (Photo: Robb Cohen)
    Stevie Nicks (Photo: Robb Cohen)

    With the full band back onstage (not that Buckingham ever leaves it), the easy-going, hip-shaking “Little Lies” led to Nicks’ defining moment of the show. She absolutely smoldered with sensuality as she snaked through “Gold Dust Woman,” saturating the song with an intensity not heard from her in years (the band’s 2013 appearance at Philips featured some fantastic moments, but none compared to this).

    Eternal fan favorites “Go Your Own Way” – featuring Nicks in her traditional black top hat – and “Don’t Stop,” their anthem of cheerful optimism, provided the show with a final jolt, as did Fleetwood’s fluid drum solo in the middle of “World Turning.”

    It’s almost a relief to know that Fleetwood Mac will be back at Philips Arena in March, because who wouldn’t want to see one of – if not the – best concert of the year one more time?

    Yep, yesterday’s gone indeed and a new Mac has been born.

    Melissa Ruggieri / Atlanta Journal Constitution / Thursday, December 18, 2014

     

  • REVIEW: Refueled Fleetwood Mac truck delivers again

    Putting on a show to match the grandeur and longevity of Fleetwood Mac is a massive undertaking, but Stevie Nicks needed just a minute to personalize it for the crowd of mostly Coloradans in the sold-out Pepsi Center on Dec. 12, 2014.

    “I have like a whole tribe here because one side of my family is all from Colorado,” Nicks said to a roaring audience in Denver. It was about an hour into the 35th performance of this “On With The Show” tour that marks the return of songbird/keyboardist Christine McVie to the stage — and the band — for the first time in 16 years.

    Stevie Nicks sings”My great-great grandmother came across the Rocky Mountains in one of the last Indian massacres,” Nicks (left) added. “Seriously. And she crawled in the trunk (of a wagon train) and stayed there. And she was the only survivor. Strong woman.”

    Nicks, who dedicated her tender “Landslide” to the 100 or so friends and family members — “my entire tribe” — in attendance, thus making the Colorado connection feel even stronger, certainly shares the strength of her ancestors.

    McVie, Nicks and the male members of this lineup — frontman Lindsey Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood and John McVie (the pair for whom the band is named) — also possess those staunch survival instincts long after all coming together in 1975.

    This stunning show was a perfect example of that willingness to sustain a coexistence, finally blessed with the valuable missing piece of the puzzle that turns an already priceless picture into a beautiful work of pop art.

    The fact that a wild-eyed drummer and a couple of exes can keep that romantic spark an integral part of a crammed songbook long after the final flicker of hope in their relationships was extinguished makes such a transformative accomplishment even more endearing.

    Fleetwood Mac had toured and made one studio album — 2003’s Say You Will — since Christine McVie’s departure in 1998 (the year of their Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction), but had to feel a hole in their collective heart while passing the time trying to keep the band alive and staying involved with other projects.

    The McQuintet — bolstered on this tour by three female backing vocalists and two male musicians — made up for all that lost time by covering much of the material that shaped them into what they still are today — a supersonic supergroup.

    Once a formidable British blues project, the Buckingham-Nicks addition for the eponymous Fleetwood Mac album got the popularity ball rolling in 1975. And that record was well-represented on this set list by “Landslide,” “Rhiannon,” “Say You Love Me,” “Over My Head” and “I’m So Afraid,” followed by an energetic “World Turning” during the energetic first encore.

    The latter song was driven by Fleetwood’s five-minute drum solo with eye-bulging whoops and hollers — “Are you with me?” — and a few riveting samples that proves the band remains relevant in the 21st century.

    Even though the age of this fivesome totals 338 years, they acted nothing like old-timers during what these days is considered a marathon concert — more than two and a half hours — without an intermission.

    Sure, most of them took needed breaks, and consistently solid but subdued bassist John McVie (Fleetwood called him the “backbone of Fleetwood Mac”) looked somewhat drained the year after undergoing cancer treatments.

    But Buckingham’s manic vitality — and virtuosic, sleight-of-hand performance on acoustic and electric guitars — kept the showmanship and spirit at a high level. His work clothes this pleasant Friday evening were black leather jacket and blue jeans. They offset the exotic garb of a dressed-in-black Nicks, whose beguiling voice, bewitching glances and come-hiter hand gestures kept the audience under her spell.

    In a distinguished tone, Fleetwood praised each of his band mates while presenting the group that needs no introduction during the first encore, including backing vocalists Sharon Celani, Stevvi Alexander and Lori Nicks (who’s divorced from Stevie’s brother), along with guitarist Neale Heywood and Brett Tuggle (keyboards, guitars).

    The drummer who helped launch this band in 1967 with Peter Green also made sure his current axman — “one helluva guitar player” — got his due, saying of Buckingham, “I don’t know whether you, ladies and gents, have noticed that this gentleman on my left has not even left the stage if but for 30 seconds this evening.”
    Lindsey Buckingham was the only member onstage during the acoustic “Big Love,” which was one of several songs — including a rollicking “Tusk” (with Christine on accordion) and the marvelously rearranged “Never Going Back Again” — that ended with him raising his guitar and throwing kisses to the crowd.

    Of “Big Love,” the powerful number from 1987’s Tango in the Night that was a first-half highlight, he said, “I think it’s interesting because even though it’s not really one of the earliest songs, it represents a time, the making of the album was at a time when I was about ready to make a turn and make some changes, some adjustments in my life. … It began as kind of a contemplation on alienation, and I think it’s now, for me, become more of a meditation on the power and importance of change.”

    Nicks (dedicating “Seven Wonders” to the creators of American Horror Story “for taking that song and all of Fleetwood Mac’s music to 60 million people” during last season’s Coven episodes) and Christine McVie (“Everywhere” and “Little Lies”) also dove into Tango in the Night territory. But what kept most of the 18,000 or so spectators on their feet throughout the 24-song show were nine of the 11 selections from the 1977 landmark Rumours album, starting off with “The Chain.”

    That was followed in quick succession by “You Make Loving Fun” (with some hearty cheers for those so pleased to hear the woman whose birth name — Christine Anne Perfect — still seems appropriate), “Dreams” and “Second Hand News.” (Christine McVie performs at left.)

    Nicks brought out the gold shawl and the age-defying dance moves for an 11-minute version of “Gold Dust Woman,” while “Go Your Own Way” and “Don’t Stop” attracted the most group sing-along participants.

    Following “Go Your Own Way,” the fab five shared hugs and took a bow, Nicks holding a black top hat and the dapper Fleetwood a bright red one that matched the color of his stylish shoes. Returning for the first encore, Buckingham gave Nicks and Christine McVie soft, sweet kisses before he moved back into his rightful place as Guitar God.

    It was almost like 1997 — the year of The Dance tour — all over again, when these same core band members returned to the stage after a long absence to play most of these same songs and made a magical evening in Denver happen — only then it was at McNichols Sports Arena.

    How many bands can outlive arena-sized venues while — almost 40 years later — remaining basically intact and managing such masterful musicianship? Then dare to return to that same venue in another four months?

    Only a year ago, Nicks was uncertain about the band’s future, keeping her fingers crossed that John McVie (right) would get healthy and that Christine was tiring of a life of leisure after making a couple of cameo appearances in Dublin and London.

    “If Christine decides she wants to do it again, she will,” Nicks said during our interview on Dec. 3, 2013, for an article that appeared later that week. “If she looks deeply into it herself and says, ‘Oh my God, another five years with what I just saw them do, I can’t do it.’ You just don’t know. It’s totally up to her.”

    After the final notes were played on Dec. 12, 2014, the loquacious Nicks grabbed the mic one final time to tell the crowd they were responsible — along with all the other Fleetwood Mac fans in the world — for making Christine’s return to the fold last January a reality.

    “They say if you throw a wish like that up into the universe, that the universe conspires to make that happen; and honest to God … on that one day, the universe said OK, and sent a message down to Christine. …

    “And we got our girl back.”

    So count on McVie and the rest of Fleetwood Mac to come back in 2015, when they’ll perform throughout North America again — including an April 1 show in Denver (tickets went on sale Dec. 15) — before heading to Europe in May.

    How far can they go this time? Among the numerous testimonials for Christine McVie during one of the final shows of 2014 came a most passionate prediction by Buckingham:

    “In this particular moment now, in this particular moment, with the return of the beautiful Christine, with her return, I believe that we begin a profound, poetic and a prolific new chapter in the history of this band.”
    With that, he tore into “I Know I’m Not Wrong,” punctuated by a searing solo and an eardrum-splitting scream of joy.

    Loud and proud rang true, of course, but the lovely back-to-back Mac sentiments delivered by Nicks on “Silver Springs” and Christine McVie on “Songbird” (fittingly taking its place again as the show’s grand finale) are what ultimately will make them an everlasting symbol of endurance.

    “Time casts a spell on you, but you won’t forget me” and “the songbirds keep singing” have never sounded better.

    Set list: Dec. 12, 2014, at the Pepsi Center, Denver

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

    ENCORE

    21. “World Turning”
    22. “Don’t Stop”
    23. “Silver Springs”

    SECOND ENCORE

    24. “Songbird”

    All photos by Michael Bialas. Click here to see more photos of Fleetwood Mac at the Pepsi Center in Denver.

    Michael Bialas / Huffington Post / Tuesday, December 16, 2014

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac turns back time in nostalgic concert

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac turns back time in nostalgic concert

    With McVie in fine form, Fleetwood Mac turns back time in nostalgic concert.

    Fleetwood Mac played to a sold-out adoring crowd at the Toyota Center on Monday night. Many in the audience saw the band on their 2013 World Tour in June. Our reviewer gave the concert a big thumbs-up, with a footnote that “Fleetwood Mac is not Fleetwood Mac without keyboardist/vocalist Christine McVie.”

    This time around, a youthful looking 71-year-old McVie joined the band, and her energy and high spirits elevated the concert to another level.

    (Photo: Jane Howze)
    (Photo: Jane Howze)

    Every time McVie took the lead, the crowd roared — and the band itself seemed delighted to have their “beautiful Christine” back. With good reason. She soared in a powerful “Say That You Love Me” and “Over My Head” and provided spirited keyboards on “Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow.”

    Playing for nearly three hours to a mostly older yet energetic crowd (this was not your Eagles audience who meekly followed orders to stay seated), Stevie Nicks, Lindsay Buckingham and McVie shared lead vocals. Opening with “The Chain” written by all five band members from the classic album Rumours, McVie then launched into “You Make Loving Fun.” Her lyrical and earthy alto made it clear that while Fleetwood Mac has held up amazingly well given their ages, McVie adds a richer and more nuanced sound.

    (Photo: Jane Howze)
    (Photo: Jane Howze)

    Plus it allowed Nicks to harmonize and Buckingham to play his emotional guitar solos without having to be overly burdened with vocals.

    Hits and cheering

    With McVie back in the mix, the 24-song setlist shifted to songs recorded that they couldn’t perform without her in previous concerts. The hits and cheering never stopped.

    Nicks’ version of “Rhiannon” in a lower key with a slightly different arrangement didn’t suit my taste. I’m not sure if the arrangement was because of her difficulty in hitting the high notes or was a way to mix it up. As she did at the last Houston concert, Nicks dedicated “Landslide” to a woman in the audience named Rhiannon who had survived a seemingly insurmountable health challenge.

    (Photo: Jane Howze)
    (Photo: Jane Howze)

    After Nicks sang “Seven Wonders,” she gave a shout out to American Horror Story: Coven, in which she made a cameo and featured the song earlier this year.

    Buckingham, the youngster in the group at age 65, was the only band member who didn’t leave the stage. Before launching into “Big Love,” he joked with someone in the front row that “you were not born when we wrote this song.”

    Nicks was her usual hippie self with scarves, high heeled boots and flowing clothing reminiscent of the ’70s with a long (too long) anecdote about her early days of shopping in a store frequented by Grace Slick and Janice Joplin called The Velvet Underground. She urged young audience members to pursue their dreams and then launched into to an extended “Gypsy.” With “Gold Dust Woman” she donned a gold shawl and twirled as John McVie (Christine’s ex) and Buckingham showed their respective keyboard and guitar prowess. The song conjured up an almost psychedelic experience.

    (Photo: Jane Howze)
    (Photo: Jane Howze)

    Other highlights included Buckingham on “I’m So Afraid” which brought an extended standing ovation after his show-stopping guitar solo and an energized “Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow.”

    The best surprise of the night was the second encore when a baby grand piano was rolled out for Christine McVie’s vulnerable and delicate “Songbird,” with Buckingham quietly backing her on guitar.

    After the band took their final bow, Mick Fleetwood and Nicks returned (wearing a Christmas decoration on her head) to once again thank the fans, express happiness for having “young” Christine back in the band and wish everyone a Merry Christmas and, as Fleetwood said, “be kind to one another.”

    (Photo: Jane Howze)
    (Photo: Jane Howze)

    For those who “can’t stop thinking about tomorrow,” Fleetwood Mac will be back in Houston March 3, 2015 for another concert.

    Jane Howze / Culture Map / Tuesday, December 16, 2014