Tag: 2014-2015 On With the Show Tour

  • REVIEW: With Christine McVie back, Fleetwood Mac feels complete

    REVIEW: With Christine McVie back, Fleetwood Mac feels complete

    Fleetwood Mac played without an asterisk Monday during a sold-out show at Sacramento’s Sleep Train Arena.

    JUMP TO: Photos

    The superstar band offered all it hits and all its lead singers, with Christine McVie having returned to the road after a 16-year absence.

    McVie was elegant and unassuming Monday, just as she was during the band’s “Rumours” heyday. Chic in black jeans and a leather jacket, the 71-year-old singer/keyboard player seemed happy to be back, whether she was in the spotlight or assuming a utility role by playing accordion on “Tusk,” the still-wild-and-weird title single from Fleetwood Mac’s 1979 album.

    McVie was not so unassuming that you did not notice, when the band kicked into the McVie-led “You Make Loving Fun” as its second song of the night, that an intact Mac beats the four-fifths crew that toured in her absence.

    The band’s 1970s and ’80s success lay in its musical diversity. In how it made room for McVie’s graceful melodies, Stevie Nicks’ airy poetry and Lindsey Buckingham’s more coiled, intense songwriting, then joined those styles in a signature sound cemented by three-part harmonies.

    Mac minus McVie still entertained in concert, with Nicks tapping her distinctive, raspy vocals, witchy-woman vibe and giant-rock-star stage presence, Buckingham quick-picking his guitar and exploiting his own considerable charisma, and Mick Fleetwood going mad on drums.

    But those shows never felt like complete Mac. Not like the Mac that killed it Monday night on the band’s McVie-led 1987 hit “Little Lies.” A harmony bonanza, the song sounds edgier live than on record.

    No one looked happier to see McVie than Buckingham, the band’s creative engine and biggest champion. McVie’s return, Buckingham said, marked a new period for the band that appeared likely to be “poetic” and “prolific.”

    For a 65-year-old to be mapping out a rock ‘n’ roll future with a 71-year-old (and with Nicks, 66, Mick Fleetwood, 67, and bassist John McVie, who turns 69 Wednesday) is inspiring. It also speaks to why the group endures, 37 years after “Rumours” and its surrounding excess and romantic strife. It’s through Buckingham’s sheer will.

    Christine McVie’s road rustiness showed at times Monday, especially during the ballad “Songbird,” during which she clearly had trouble hitting notes. But even at these moments, the band was better with her than without her. The notes might not all still be there, but the reassuring, husky quality of her voice is.

    McVie seemed shy as she thanked her bandmates and fans for their support. Nicks was not shy at any point. Not when turning “Gold Dust Woman” into a welcome bit of performance art involving a sparkly shawl, or when regaling the audience with a story from her days as a Bay Area rock baby.

    She was in a band with Buckingham that once opened for acts such as Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin. After Nicks discovered all the famous San Francisco rock women shopped at a boutique called Velvet Underground (which Nicks name checks in “Gypsy”), she visited the store.

    She couldn’t afford anything in it, Nicks told the crowd. But she had an epiphany while there, that one day she would be famous and play for big crowds. It happened, Nicks said, gesturing toward the 15,000 people watching her in Sleep Train Arena.

    You gotta love Nicks for barely bothering with the “humble” part of humble bragging. But why bother with humility? Nicks has been an icon for decades.

    “Icon” gets used too often. But add up Nicks’ one-of-a-kind, nasal-yet-pleasant singing voice, shawls, scarves, all-summer-long boots and the creation, last year, of an “American Horror Story: Coven” witch character who worshipped the singer, and there it is: icon.

    Now that you know to whom the term legitimately can be applied, don’t go calling Taylor Swift an icon.

    Call The Bee’s Carla Meyer, (916) 321-1118. Follow her on Twitter @CarlaMeyerSB

    Carla Meyer / Sacramento Bee / Tuesday, November 25, 2014

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  • VIDEOS 11/24: Sleep Train Arena, Sacramento

    VIDEOS 11/24: Sleep Train Arena, Sacramento

    Fleetwood Mac made its first appearance of the tour in the Golden State, performing in the state’s capital on Monday night. The band heads south tonight to the Bay Area, where they will perform at SAP Center in San Jose, with additional California shows in Inglewood, San Diego, Anaheim, and Oakland in the coming weeks.

    Stevie and Lindsey dedicated “Landslide” to longtime friend Bob Fogle, who lives in the Sacramento area.

    “So Bob Fogle, this is dedicated to you, from your two pals Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks.”

    Complete Tour Coverage: Photos | Videos | Reviews | Set List

    Photo Gallery

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    Videos

    Special thanks to Anthony Lombardo, Scott Seibel, and Josh Smith for sharing these videos!

    The Chain (courtesy of Josh Smith)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKy0AZu_tn4

    Tusk (courtesy of Josh Smith)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tS0Qqskm3Pw

    Tusk (courtesy of Scott Seibel)

    Big Love (courtesy of Josh Smith)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MunM9cWfNCI

    Landslide (courtesy of Josh Smith)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5wh0WenCpg

    World Turning / Band introductions / Don’t Stop (courtesy of Josh Smith)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTuXwSZkq68

    World Turning – drum solo (courtesy of Anthony Lombardo)

    Reviews

    With Christine McVie, Fleetwood Mac feels complete (Sacramento Bee)

    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 (encore 1)
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird (encore 2)
  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac at Moda Center, 11/22

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac at Moda Center, 11/22

    Growing up, I hated Fleetwood Mac. Maybe part of the problem was I usually lumped them in with the Eagles, a band that is truly terrible, or with my general distaste for classic rock dinosaurs, borne from a childhood spent listening to Phil Collins and Sting greatest hit tapes on every single family roadtrip. Nirvana and Pearl Jam and Hole hit right when I got my first Discman, and soon after, my older next-door neighbor was giving me Radiohead and Built to Spill albums. Fleetwood Mac weren’t just uncool: They were the bloated, overwrought excess of everything a young indie-rock fan and Spin subscriber stood against. But then in college, a close friend lent me a copy of Tusk, saying it was their White Album and also the one where the band’s drug use was a little too intense. I grew older, went through a few breakups, and grew to truly love my former enemies.

    Fleetwood Mac have been touring a lot the past few years (including an appearance at the Moda Center just last year), but the big news here is the return of Christine McVie after a 16-year absence. Though billed as the “On with the Show” tour, there was nothing resigned about the performance Saturday night, except the few moments when the New Age-y visuals recalled a Cialis commercial. Snark aside, this really was a wonderful show. The whole band seemed genuinely stoked to have McVie back in the fold, as most of the pre-song banter featured Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham or even Mick Fleetwood gushing about being able to play with her again. Fleetwood Mac has played most of these songs hundreds of times but they were still loose and nimble onstage, occasionally stretching out a song but never indulging in that classic rock trope of just jamming forever, man.

    The hits from Rumours—”Dreams,” “Go Your Own Way,” “Gold Dust Woman”—naturally got the biggest responses, and the band smiled its way through through every moment. They were augmented by three backup singers and two sidemen on guitar and keyboards, but the mix was always light, centering on Nicks’ husky voice, Buckingham’s exciting guitar playing and the subtle backbone of the rhythm section, which just kept on beating amidst a sea of 20,000 people singing along to every single word.

    But for me, the real pleasure was when the band dived deeper into their back catalogue, dusting off gems like “Tusk” and Tango in the Night’s “Little Lies” and “Big Love,” which Buckingham performed solo while showing off his incredible fingerpicked guitar playing. I nearly died when he played “I Know I’m Not Wrong,” my favorite song off Tusk and easily the most amusing song of the night visually, with his dismembered floating head projected on the screen behind the band mouthing the words through a sea of colorful clouds. Buckingham really is an amazing performer—at 65 years old, rocking skinny jeans and a tight black v-neck, he seems much younger than most of his contemporaries. Though not usually recognized as a guitar hero, his solos were revelatory, never overshadowing the song but pushing each hit to new heights.

    During the encore, I realized this might be the first show I’ve ever seen without an opening band. I mean, who could realistically open for Fleetwood Mac? When Mick launched into a call-and-response drum solo during “World Turning,” I initially wanted to hate on the showmanship, but I actually found it rather endearing, just like when he came out front to play a smaller kit during a nice late set stretch of songs that included “Over My Head.” Sure, it was a little cheesy. But sometimes, we have to know when we are wrong, and just embrace the kitsch.

    Michael Mannheimer / Willamette Week / Sunday, November 23, 2014

  • VIDEOS 11/22: Moda Center, Portland

    VIDEOS 11/22: Moda Center, Portland

    On Saturday, Fleetwood Mac performed at the Moda Center at the Rose Quarter in Portland, their 25th show of the tour.

    COMPLETE TOUR COVERAGE: Reviews | Set List

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    Videos

    Special thanks to Christy Edwards, McKenna Grace Fisher, Michele Mielcarz, pokeadoubledecker, and smeagma for sharing these videos!

    You Make Loving Fun (courtesy of McKenna Grace Fisher)

    Dreams (courtesy of McKenna Grace Fisher)

    Second Hand News (courtesy of pokeadoubledecker)

    Rhiannon (courtesy of McKenna Grace Fisher)

    Everywhere (courtesy of pokeadoubledecker)

    Seven Wonders (courtesy of Christy Edwards)

    Landslide (courtesy of Christy Edwards)

    Over My Head (courtesy of pokeadoubledecker)

    Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of Michele Mielcarz)

    I’m So Afraid (courtesy of pokeadoubledecker)

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of smeagma)

    Silver Springs (courtesy of Christy Edwards)

    Reviews

     

    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 (encore 1)
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird (encore 2)
  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac plays hit after greatest hit

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac plays hit after greatest hit

    Fleetwood Mac
    Moda Center at the Rose Quarter
    Portland

    “Sweet wonderful you,” Christine McVie sang, all smiles. “You make me happy with the things you do.”

    That was pretty much the vibe at Fleetwood Mac’s concert at the Moda Center on Saturday night; five senior citizens touring again for the first time in 16 years, playing their hits like time stopped and it was 1979 again, with more hugs and without all the cocaine. McVie’s decision to return created a pocket of warmth on the left side of the stage and energized her bandmates, who couldn’t stop talking about how happy it made them to play with “our beautiful Christine,” as Lindsey Buckingham called her. Here’s a review in the form of an annotated setlist, 20 songs deep:

    “The Chain”: Christine comes out and slides behind her keyboards like she’s never been away, 71 and looking great. Stevie Nicks is center stage, Buckingham is stage right, Mick Fleetwood atop a huge drum kit, John McVie almost invisible in a cap and red vest. There are two extra musicians behind the McVies and three backup singers, providing a fuller sound that’s immediately put to use on the chorus. First impression: Buckingham is really on it, breaking off a clean solo with that amazing fingerpicking technique.

    “You Make Loving Fun”: Christine’s first solo vocal of the evening is strong and clear — that’s what 16 years off will do for your voice. She once wrote a song called “Warm Ways,” and warmth is the best word to describe her. She’s Christine Perfect from the Lake District of England, and it’s lovely to see her back onstage.

    “Dreams”: Any band is a brand, and a band as big as Fleetwood Mac creates and maintains a brand that stays in people’s minds and brings them to a concert where the newest songs were recorded 26 years ago. The brand doesn’t change, the songs stay on the radio and sound as fresh as ever, but the players — the ones that only love you when they’re playing — get older. All the members of Fleetwood Mac are at least 65 and have been performing since they were teenagers. Time waits for no one.

    Which is one way of saying that Stevie Nicks’ voice, always husky and evocative, sometimes sounds hoarse and flat, like it did on the first verse of “Dreams.”

    “Second Hand News”: Fleetwood, who loves a kick-drum intro, pounded it out and Buckingham took it from there. Short and sweet.

    “Rhiannon”: Nicks put on her black witch shawl and vamped a little as the rear-screen projection flashed some images that were a combination of “The Lord of the Rings” and “The Song Remains the Same.” And speaking of Tolkien, if Fleetwood Mac was “The Lord of the Rings” then Mick would be Gandalf, John McVie would be Samwise Gamgee, Buckingham would be Aragorn, Christine would be Gimli, and Stevie would be Frodo, keeper of the Ring.

    “Everywhere”: Christine thanked the audience — warmly, sincerely — and sang one of her hits.

    “I Know I’m Not Wrong”: Welcome to the Lindsey Buckingham show. He gave a little rap about how having Christine back “feels very circular,” then played the first of two numbers from “Tusk,” his masterpiece (but not the band’s).

    “Tusk”: Slow build led by Buckingham, Christine strapped on an accordion (not that you could hear it), and the light show morphed into the famous USC marching band footage. Worked for me.

    “Sisters of the Moon”: Stevie’s found her voice! Maybe the lower register fits the 2014 Stevie. This song is the one Stevie lovers love most.

    “Say You Love Me”: Christine’s songs are all about love, pure and true. The lyrics are direct and sincere and timeless. Is it possible to have a crush on a woman old enough to be your mother?

    “Seven Wonders”: More grooviness from Her Royal Stevieness, wrapped up with a shout-out to “American Horror Story” for bringing the song back around.

    “Big Love”: Why did Buckingham never become a solo star the way Nicks did? He has so much talent: great voice, charisma, brilliant, unusual guitar technique, outstanding writer and performer. The biggest reason why Fleetwood Mac was so successful the late 1970s was it had three songwriters — Buckingham, Nicks, Christine McVie — coming up with one radio-friendly classic after another. But somebody had to be the boss and bring the sound into a whole live and in the studio, and that person was Buckingham. He was the driving force, the Lennon and the McCartney on “Rumours” and definitely on “Tusk,” and it took so much out of him that he quit after “Tango in the Night,” the last studio album with this lineup and originally a Buckingham solo album. He’s been the backbone of all the tours for the last 25 years and it seems to me forgotten as a live performer by those who see Fleetwood Mac as an oldies band. (Which they are, let’s face it.)

    “Landslide”: Hearing Stevie play this is like hearing Neil Young play “Old Man.” They’ve grown into the song, and it means more now.

    “Never Going Back Again”: Slow and easy, Buckingham whispered his vocal. He hugged Nicks when it was over.

    “Over My Head”: “I wrote this one in 1975,” Christine said. Fleetwood’s out front, playing a smaller kit.

    “Gypsy”: Long, funny introduction from Stevie about being in a band in San Francisco, going into a hippie clothing store called The Velvet Underground, following your dreams, etc. Best video of the night: rainy San Francisco, kinda noir. Lighting strikes, maybe once, maybe twice. Stevie spins!

    “Little Lies”: The last top 10 hit for Fleetwood Mac, unless “American Horror Story” uses a deep cut from “Tusk” or something.

    “Gold Dust Woman”: Stevie shuffled across the stage, and for a minute I wasn’t sure she was going to make it back. Cool outro from Ms. Nicks.

    “I’m So Afraid”: The first of three big fat highlights for me. I love the desperate isolation in the lyric, and then Buckingham shredded a showcase solo. It’s one thing to finger-pick an acoustic, but getting that kind of big sound out of an electric without a pick is fascinating to watch.

    “Go Your Own Way”: Buckingham was out of breath after “I’m So Afraid”; Nicks put on a top hat and waved to the fans. Cell phones light up before the encore. The woman next to me pulled out a lighter and people congratulated her.

    “World Turning”: The first song of the encore meant a drum solo for Fleetwood.

    “Don’t Stop”: The one song in the Fleetwood Mac catalog that feels overplayed. It’s not you, it’s me.

    “Silver Springs”: (Highlight No. 2) How great an album is “Rumours” that this beauty didn’t make the cut? The flip side of “Go Your Own Way,” maybe Stevie’s loveliest lyric. She saved her best performance for last, and thanked the fans for remembering the song. Who can forget?

    “Songbird”: (Highlight No. 3): Christine at a grand piano, Buckingham at her side, playing another wide-open love song, wedding music for a generation of happy couples, at least on that day. It’s all right. I know it’s right.

    Jeff Baker / The Oregonian / Sunday, November 23, 2014

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  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac wows capacity crowd in Tacoma

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac wows capacity crowd in Tacoma

    Fleetwood Mac at Tacoma Dome with Christine McVie like a family reunion

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    With the return of singer-pianist Christine McVie after a 16-year absence, a re-energized Fleetwood Mac wowed a near-capacity crowd with a powerful, sometimes explosive concert Thursday, Nov. 20, at the Tacoma Dome.

    “Our songbird has returned,” drummer Mick Fleetwood proclaimed gleefully in a nearly three-hour show packed with such classic songs as “Dreams,” “Second Hand News,” “Sisters of the Moon,” “Rhiannon,” “Gold Dust” and “Go Your Own Way.”

    Indeed, McVie’s spotlight performance of “Songbird,” with accompaniment by guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, was the soaring finale in a triumphant show celebrating her return. Despite her many years off the road, McVie, 71, sounded as though she had never left.

    She was clearly an inspiration to her fellow bandmates, who treated the show like a family reunion. The crowd cheered as she sang, “This feeling follows me wherever I go,” from “You Make Loving Fun,” bringing back memories of the band’s heyday for an audience dominated by exuberant baby boomers.

    “Welcome back, Chris,” said singer Stevie Nicks, who joined McVie on songs they had not sung together in more than a decade.

    Rounding out the veteran rock band were longtime bassist John McVie, as well as three background singers and an additional guitarist and keyboardist.

    The show featured dreamy, sometimes eye-popping videos and neon-colored lighting. Musically, there were many special moments.

    Buckingham reprised his vigorous, guitar-driven song, “Big Love,” explaining that its focus had changed over the years to reflect his changing view of the world and greater maturity. The ominous-sounding “Tusk” featured Christine McVie on accordion, though her playing was somewhat lost in the mix of instruments.

    Explaining that “Landslide” was one of her father’s favorite songs, Nicks dedicated the haunting tune to several women in the audience and dedicated “Gypsy” to young people who choose to believe in themselves and follow a dream.

    During “World Turning,” the opening song of a first encore, Fleetwood offered an explosive drum solo.

    Before leaving the stage, Fleetwood delivered an impassioned message to fans, thanking them for years of support, urging them to take care of one another and promising many more shows to come.

    “The Mac is definitely back,” he bellowed.

    Gene Stout / Seattle Times / Friday, November 21, 2014

  • VIDEOS 11/20: Tacoma Dome, Tacoma

    VIDEOS 11/20: Tacoma Dome, Tacoma

    On Thursday, Fleetwood Mac performed at the Tacoma Dome in Tacoma, WA, their 24th show of the tour. The band ends the month with shows in Portland, Sacramento, San Jose, and Los Angeles.

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    Videos

    Special thanks to Keara Flynn, Michael Oxman, reswedi, and sdintn for sharing these videos!

    The Chain (courtesy of Michael Oxman)

    Say You Love Me (courtesy of Michael Oxman)

    Landslide (courtesy of reswedi)

    Never Going Back Again (courtesy of Keara Flynn)

    Over My Head (courtesy of Michael Oxman)

    Gypsy (courtesy of Michael Oxman)

    Gypsy (courtesy of sdintn)

    Little Lies (courtesy of Michael Oxman)

    Reviews

    Fleetwood Mac wows capacity crowd (Seattle Times)

    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 (encore 1)
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird (encore 2)
  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac’s renaissance more than ‘Rumours’ in Vancouver

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac’s renaissance more than ‘Rumours’ in Vancouver

    “Sweet, wonderful you.”

    These three simple words produced the biggest cheer in Vancouver last night. Written and sung by Christine McVie, they heralded her return to the band after an 18-year absence, as a full-strength Fleetwood Mac reclaimed their throne as soft rock’s all-time greatest band in a packed-to-the-rafters Rogers Arena.

    McVie’s “You Make Loving Fun” was part of an opening barrage of hits from “Rumours” – beginning with “The Chain” and including “Dreams” and “Second Hand News,” the sequence only interrupted by the equally excellent “Rhiannon.”

    Not that the band were playing it safe with nothing but fan favourites. A quick trip into the “Tusk” album delivered the title track and Lindsey Buckingham’s quirky, punk-tinged “I Know I’m Not Wrong,” soon followed by a brace of lesser-known Stevie Nicks ballads, “Sister Moon” and “Seven Wonders.”

    The songs, many of which were approaching 40, weren’t showing their age. Neither was the band. McVie and Buckingham both oozed style in perfectly-tailored leather jackets, while Nicks’ distinctly flowing fashion, while perhaps starting to resemble a 1970s Miss Havisham, still demonstrated that she knew how to dress and act like a proper rock star. The super-tight, unfussy rhythm section of John McVie and Mick Fleetwood were, for reasons best known to themselves, dressed as The Wurzels.

    Not that anyone noticed. The excitement was happening at the front of the stage, where three massive musical talents were sharing, perhaps competing, for the spotlight.

    Centre stage, in position at least, was the magnificent Stevie Nicks. Wisely avoiding repeating her “Thank you Toronto” gaff from her last visit to Vancouver, she remained the most theatrical member of the band, concluding every song with a sweep of her arms and a flamboyant bow. Her voice perhaps isn’t what it once was, but that doesn’t mean that her songs, highlighted by “Landslide,” “Gypsy” and a lengthy “Gold Dust Woman” have lost any of their melodic or lyrical potency. Soft rock with bite.

    Voice. Guitar. Stage presence. Songs. The dictionary runs out of superlatives when describing the talent of Lindsey Buckingham. Delivering searing brilliance every time he stepped to the mic or demonstrated his unique guitar style, midway through the concert his bandmates left him alone on the stage armed only with an acoustic guitar. After an obtuse introduction, describing the song “Big Love” as “a meditation on the power and importance of change,” he dropped the jaws of an entire arena with a devastating display of guitar technique, repeating the trick five minutes later as Nicks joined him on stage to lend harmonies to “Never Going Back.”

    But the night belonged to Fleetwood Mac’s prodigal daughter, Christine McVie. Although lacking Nicks’ flair for the dramatic and Buckingham’s immense musical dexterity, the simple fact that she’d taken her prolonged break from the stage made hearing impeccably sung, elegantly simple songs like “Say You Love Me,” “Little Lies” and the finale of “Songbird,” played on a grand piano as Buckingham added delicate guitar lines, moments to treasure.

    After two and a quarter hours of high quality vintage rock (including masterful versions of “Go Your Own Way” and “Don’t Stop”) Nicks and the eternally weird Mick Fleetwood both took their turns at the mic to thank the crowd and laud the return of Christine McVie.

    Whether this is really a new chapter in this wonderful band’s lengthy story is still unclear. Sometimes a reminder of greatness is more than enough.

    Robert Collins / CTV Vancouver / Wednesday, November 19, 2014

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  • VIDEOS 11/18: Rogers Arena, Vancouver

    VIDEOS 11/18: Rogers Arena, Vancouver

    On Tuesday, Fleetwood Mac performed at Rogers Arena in Vancouver, their 23rd show of the tour.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to actress Lily Rabe, who played “the super hot, fantastic witch” Misty Day on FX’s horror show American Horror Story: Coven. Stevie credited Lily’s character and the show’s producer Ryan Murphy for exposing Fleetwood Mac’s music to a younger generation.

    “It took our music to a younger generation of people. And, I want to thank you, Lily, for that, and Ryan, and all the people involved in it because it really did. Seven Wonders, we would never be doing ‘Seven Wonders’ if it hadn’t been for American Horror Story. So Lily Rabe, Misty Day, should have been Supreme Witch, this is for you, ‘Landslide.’”

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    Videos

    Special thanks to Andy Barned, dobwat, dougallmac, escapeartist74, D Gavi, gay concert dude, Coral Gilbert, Richard Smith, and tforucla for sharing these videos!

    The Chain (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    You Make Loving Fun (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Dreams (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Rhiannon (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Rhiannon (courtesy of D Galvi)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqC0TFztnDk

    Everywhere (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    I Know I’m Not Wrong (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Tusk (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Say You Love Me (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Seven Wonders (courtesy of dobat)

    Big Love (courtesy of dobwat)

    Landslide (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Landslide (courtesy of tforucla)

    Never Going Back Again (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Over My Head (courtesy of escapeartist74)

    Gypsy (courtesy of D Gavi)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YHN6Xk805v4

    Little Lies (courtesy of gay concert dude)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xpi8fAyW72g

    Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of Andy Barned)

    Go Your Own Way – partial (courtesy of Richard Smith)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKrmz9ozRZ4

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of dougallmac)

    Don’t Stop (courtesy of Coral Gilbert)

    Don’t Stop (courtesy of dougallmac)

    Songbird (courtesy of dobwat)

    Reviews

    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 (encore 1)
    10. Say You Love Me 22. Don’t Stop
    11. Seven Wonders 23. Silver Springs
    12. Big Love 24. Songbird (encore 2)
  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac back on track

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac back on track

    ‘Welcome back Chris, where ya been?’ Fleetwood Mac back on track with everybody on board

    Rogers Arena
    Vancouver, British Columbia
    Tuesday, November 18, 2014

    So there was a missing piece. And her name is Christine “Perfect” McVie.

    Last time through town, Fleetwood Mac was solid but something was certainly missing and the performance was forced.

    All the guitar licks Lindsey Buckingham could pull from his considerable bag of tricks couldn’t replace that key third voice in the band. For many fans, it is keyboardist/singer Christine’s full bluesy pipes that make the group, rather than Stevie Nicks nasal hippie twang.

    “Welcome back Chris, where ya been?” chided Nicks and it was clear the jibe fell flat with McVie. “Let’s move right along.”

    Everything about the show was improved having her back. It played harder and the five musicians seemed self-contained to the point you hardly noticed the three back-up singers and two additional musicians standing in the shadows.

    The quarrels and open discord between Nicks, Buckingham, McVie, bassist John McVie and the band’s namesake, drummer Mick Fleetwood is the stuff of rock legend. But the group that began as a top-rank blues rock unit attained pop superstardom with this line-up and it certainly is at its best together.

    Two albums alone — the self-titled Fleetwood Mac (1975) and Rumours (1977) — form most of the setlist. A few hits from Tusk, Tango In the Night and Mirage round it out. But the quintet can probably keep packing arenas until the singers can’t hit any of those wonderfully off-key but right in-the-pocket harmonies that are its signature.

    The amount of the audience that could have been conceived to Songbird or Don’t Stop was considerable.

    Opening with The Chain, Dreams, Second Hand News and Rhiannon got the crowd to its feet. When Christine took lead for a fast version of the hit Everywhere things hit a highlight.

    The love-in was on stage and off. Christine thanked her bandmates for having her back, Buckingham said her return signalled a new chapter for the band. Yet the set list was all 30-plus years old.

    Nobody is holding their breath to buy new ‘Mac.

    But the band could pull some Peter Green-era gems such as Oh Well or The Green Manalishi into the set and most would think they were new. There were some jewels on Bare Trees and Kiln House too.

    Who am I kidding? Just throw to TV’s American Horror Story using tried and true Fleetwood Mac tracks and skip any messing with the winning formula.

    People came to dance in the aisles to Christine singing Say That You Love Me and to sing-along to Nicks’ signature Landslide. Even if Fleetwood Mac is nothing more than a touring greatest hits package deal, it’s a revitalized one with the full force of the five musicians.

    How interesting to see that this long in its career, putting that key piece back into the puzzle still makes everything better.

    Nicks sounded the best she has in ages, freed from shouldering the lion’s share of singing duties. Buckingham was reined in on the endless solos and fleshing out the setlist with solo tunes. The rhythm section pulsed rather than shuffled.

    No surprises, but the pleasant one of a band in flight.

    Sd******@*********ce.com

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    Stuart Derdeyn / The Province / Tuesday, November 18, 2014