Tag: Fleetwood Mac

  • VIDEOS 12/10: US Airways Center, Phoenix

    VIDEOS 12/10: US Airways Center, Phoenix

    Fleetwood Mac performed at the US Airways Center in Phoenix on Wednesday, the band’s 34th show of the tour.

    Both Stevie and Lindsey spoke affectionately about the city where Stevie’s parents lived and the two spent a lot of time early in their career. Lindsey called Phoenix a “second home” and Stevie expressed regret for selling her beautiful home near Camelback Mountain, where she wrote many songs. Stevie later dedicated “Landslide” to the Phoenix audience, saying “it’s good to be home,” and delivered an especially poignant rendition of her late father’s favorite song.

    Photos

    [slideshow_deploy id=’32037′]

    Videos

    Special thanks to 9693297602 ., Traci Baker, Dan B, mattjohnson723, and Ron Orion for sharing these videos!

    COMPILATION: The Chain / Second Hand News / Rhiannon / Landslide / Gypsy / Gold Dust Woman / Go Your Own Way / Silver Springs (mattjohnson723)

    Second Hand News (Traci Baker)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4z3pgq1Ynz8
    Everywhere (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qwp51a3Uu4A
    I Know I’m Not Wrong (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJyMeKyCdnw
    Tusk (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8PD_Ajarrw
    Seven Wonders (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyZr5bX6S9s
    Big Love (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GY8T3r_DOck
    Landslide (Dan B)

    Never Going Back Again (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w0aXQsC5RY
    Gypsy (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qD0-4F9JUtY
    Little Lies (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoUweY4FsB8
    Gold Dust Woman (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMOOKSDNIYk
    Go Your Own Way (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mW7lJhiZJgU
    World Turning (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qa-MIfCbwaw
    World Turning / Band introductions (Ron Orion)

    Don’t Stop (Ron Orion)

    Silver Springs (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFXO2cBUpaY
    Silver Springs – video is sideways (Ron Orion)

    Songbird (9693297602 .)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tTf7ufmRqlw
    Songbird (Ron Orion)

    Songbird (Tina Zouppas)

    Reviews

    Fleetwood Mac celebrates Christine McVie’s return (Arizona Republic)

    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 celebrates Christine McVie’s return

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac celebrates Christine McVie’s return

    “Our songbird has returned,” Mick Fleetwood told the sold-out crowd at Talking Stick Resort Arena Wednesday night before the reunited “Rumours” lineup treated the fans to an encore performance of “Don’t Stop” that featured the songbird in question, Christine McVie, taking a turn on lead vocals and contributing a rollicking piano solo.

    [slideshow_deploy id=’32037′]

    This is McVie’s first tour with Fleetwood Mac since 1998. And Fleetwood was far from alone in viewing her return as cause for celebration, reuniting as it does the soft-rock icons’ most successful lineup. The crowd responded with enthusiasm when she took her first lead vocal, two songs in, on “You Make Loving Fun,” which was followed by a heartfelt tribute to McVie by Stevie Nicks.

    McVie herself talked about “what a thrill it is for me to be standing on this stage singing with these amazing musicians and friends” before taking another lead vocal on “Everywhere.”

    Lindsey Buckingham shared his thoughts on how “the return of the beautiful Christine” had signaled a new chapter in their history.

    And the second encore started with McVie alone on piano and vocals for two verses and a chorus of an understated “Songbird” before Buckingham joined in on lead guitar.

    That was it for the music, but Nicks returned to share a charming anecdote about a phone call she got last October in Italy, imitating McVie’s British accent to ask, “What would you think if I decided to come back to the band?” and ending her speech with “We so wanted her to come back. And we’re so happy to have our girl back.”

    They did a lot of talking in the course of their nearly three-hour performance. Buckingham talked about how thrilled he was to be in Phoenix, where he and Nicks had spent a lot of time, saying “It kind of feels like a second home.” He gave a lengthy monologue before tearing it up on a solo acoustic performance of “Big Love,” talking about how although that “Tango in the Night” track is actually newer than much of the material in Wednesday’s set, it feels like it came from “a whole different lifetime,” before he “pulled back and made a few adjustments.” The song began, he explained, as “a kind of contemplation on alienation perhaps” but had become “more a meditation on the power and the importance of change.”

    And Nicks talked at length about living in Phoenix.

    “I actually lived here for 20 years,” she said before admitting that she wished she hadn’t sold her house. “I miss coming home to write and being near Camelback Mountain and all of you.” After acknowledging her friends and family in attendance, Nicks said, “A lot of our songs were written here. It’s good to be home.” And after talking about McVie in the second encore, she signed off with “And Phoenix, I’m so sorry I don’t live here anymore.”

    As for the music, they made their way through nine of the 11 songs on “Rumours” and half the songs on 1975’s “Fleetwood Mac,” their first release with Buckingham and Nicks.

    Fleetwood set the tone for their performance with the thumping kick drum of “The Chain,” the first of several tracks that thrived on Buckingham’s intensity both as a singer and as one of rock and roll’s most underrated lead guitarists. The man should be enshrined in the Rock and Roll Hall of Most Watchable Guitar Gods. His tone is amazing and his presence makes his most electrifying moments that much more electrifying. The excitement he seems to be feeling when he plays those leads couldn’t be more contagious.

    They kept the focus on “Rumours” as they traded off lead vocals from McVie on “You Make Loving Fun” to Nicks on “Dreams” and back to Buckingham for “Second Hand News.”

    Highlights of the early part of their performance included “Rhiannon,” an electrifying “Tusk,” which was accompanied by footage of the USC Trojan Marching Band playing the song at Dodgers Stadium, “Say You Love Me” and “Seven Wonders.”

    Buckingham’s solo performance of “Big Love” was exhilarating and far more intense than you’d imagine one man on acoustic guitar can be — unless, of course, you were familiar with Buckingham’s solo performances of that awe-inspiring song. They kept things in acoustic mode for “Landslide,” which featured Buckingham accompanying Nicks on her best vocal of the night. And then he took it up a notch with a haunting performance of “Never Going Back Again.”

    At that point, their bandmates returned for a stripped-down set with Fleetwood on a kit out front for “Over My Head” and “Gypsy,” which was set up by another lengthy monologue from Nicks about a San Francisco dress shop called the Velvet Underground.

    The set built to a climax from there with McVie’s “Little Lies” giving way to a haunted arrangement of Nicks’ “Gold Dust Woman,” Buckingham’s most insane guitar work of the concert on “I’m So Afraid” and a set-closing “Go Your Own Way.”

    After starting the encore with a version of “World Turning” that featured a lengthy drum solo, they brought things up a notch with “Don’t Stop,” ending that first encore with an aching “Silver Spring” (the B-side of “Go Your Own Way”) with a really nice vocal from Nicks. And saving “Songbird” for the second encore was a nice touch, shining the spotlight one last time on the prodigal daughter, McVie, whose return really does suggest, as Buckingham said, a new chapter in Fleetwood Mac’s history.

    Setlist

    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”

    Encore 2

    24. “Songbird”

    Ed Masley / Arizona Republic / Thursday, December 11, 2014

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac, The Forum, Dec 6

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac, The Forum, Dec 6

    Fleetwood Mac
    The Forum
    December 6, 2014

    On Saturday, Fleetwood Mac played their last of three sold-out shows at the Forum. And who cares, right? Reunion tours at the Inglewood arena are as plentiful as scarves on Stevie Nicks’ mic stand.

    But in the 16 years since a Fleetwood Mac tour featured the entire Rumors lineup, something notable happened: The band, long a favorite among baby boomers and Gen X’ers, got discovered by a new generation of fans, many of whom are themselves making emotionally dramatic pop music laced with lush harmonies and fiery guitar parts.

    Tame Impala, Haim, the Entrance Band, even Miley Cyrus: all have worshiped at the altar of the Mac. Foxygen told L.A. Weekly that they recorded their new album while listening to Tusk on repeat, and Best Coast’s Bethany Cosentino breathlessly tweeted out “Fleetwood Mac is honestly THE most important band in my entire life” after one of the band’s first two Forum shows.

    So Saturday’s show — not their last in L.A., as we had originally described it, since they announced an additional Forum date next April just a few days ago — felt important. With the return of singer/keyboardist Christine McVie, Fleetwood Mac are now the biggest band of their era whose “classic” lineup remains intact. And they’ve become, arguably, the most influential.

    Photo by Timothy Norris Christine McVie The importance of McVie’s return can’t be overstated. Though far less flashy than her fellow lead singers, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, her cool alto, underrated piano skills and flair for an irresistible pop hook provided the perfect foil to Buckingham’s histrionics and Nicks’ witchy balladry. She wrote the first and last hit singles of the quintet’s remarkable 12-year run (“Over My Head” and “Everywhere,” respectively) as well as their signature anthem, “Don’t Stop.” More than once, her bandmates expressed elation over her return — though no words could convey more than the ear-to-ear grin Buckingham wore for much of “Say You Love Me,” one of Christine’s most indelible tunes and perhaps the evening’s best showcase of the band’s pinpoint harmonies.

    (Photo: Timothy Norris)
    (Photo: Timothy Norris)

    Though the night in many ways belonged to McVie, Buckingham and Nicks still provided most of the highlights. After nearly 40 years, Buckingham remains the band’s wild card, a guitarist so brilliant — and so clearly enamored of his own brilliance — that his admittedly jaw-dropping solos at times threatened to hijack the whole show. The shrieking cascades of notes pouring forth from his signature Renaissance Model One guitar earned their fair share of cheers from the crowd — but no moment of the show got a bigger cheer than Stevie Nicks’ first twirl during “Rhiannon.”

    It is Nicks, more than any other member of the Mac, who has captured the imagination of a younger generation of fans. During her songs “Dreams,” “Gypsy” and especially “Landslide,” women who clearly weren’t even born when Rumors came out could be seen throughout the crowd, singing along rapturously with every word.

    Wisely and graciously, the band let Christine McVie have the last word, rolling out a baby grand piano on which she delivered a haunting rendition of “Songbird,” the prettiest song on Rumors, accompanied only by some admirably restrained acoustic guitar by Buckingham.

    Afterward, when the band came out to take their final bows, Stevie Nicks credited Fleetwood Mac’s fans for McVie’s return. “You made this happen. You’re magic! You have magical powers,” Nicks declared. And maybe she’s right, but our magical powers pale in comparison to those of a reunited Fleetwood Mac.

    Overheard in the crowd, after Stevie Nicks’ twirling performance of “Rhiannon”: “She knows how to work a shawl.”

    Random notebook dump: The giant floating Lindsey head on the projection screen during “I Know I’m Not Wrong” is freaking me out. It’s like his ego made manifest.

    Andy Hermann / LA Weekly / Monday, December 8, 2014 

  • VIDEOS 12/7: Honda Center, Anaheim

    VIDEOS 12/7: Honda Center, Anaheim

    Fleetwood Mac returned to Southern California on Sunday night, performing at the Honda Center in Anaheim, the band’s 33rd show of the tour.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to a Cecilia Bellissimo, a young girl who overcame a rare form of cancer.

    Photos

    Fleetwood Mac, Honda Center, Anaheim, December 7, 2014
    (Photo: Craig Benedetto)
    Fleetwood Mac, Honda Center, Anaheim, December 7, 2014
    (Photo: Classic FLL Radio)
    Fleetwood Mac, Honda Center, Anaheim, December 7, 2014
    (Photo: Andy B)

    Videos

    Special thanks to  allie3466, CindyR90, Zoe Golightly, jitsu1109, and Kelly L.R. Koczkur for sharing these videos!

    COMPILATION: Dreams / Rhiannon / Big Love / Landslide / Gold Dust Woman / Go Your Own Way / Don’t Stop (courtesy of Zoe Golightly)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCuO1300bmk

    Second Hand News – partial clip (courtesy of CindyR90)

    Rhiannon – partial clip (courtesy of CindyR90)

    Everywhere (courtesy of CindyR90)

    I Know I’m Not Wrong (courtesy of jitsu1109)

    Landslide with dedication (courtesy of Kelly L.R. Koczkur)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YD0rj13Qhjo

    Over My Head (courtesy of Kelly L.R. Koczkur)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DH4A5eHGpxA

    Gold Dust Woman – partial clip (courtesy of allie3466)

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of CindyR90)

    Silver Springs – partial clip (courtesy of allie3466)

    Songbird (courtesy of Kelly L.R. Koczkur)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ugq78A08noc

    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)
  • VIDEOS 12/6: The Forum, Inglewood (3)

    VIDEOS 12/6: The Forum, Inglewood (3)

    Fleetwood Mac made a third stop at The Forum in Inglewood, California, on Saturday night, performing the band’s 32nd show of the tour. The Forum show attracted celebrities such as actor Eric Dane and Fleetwood Mac Rumours producer Ken Caillat (father of singer-songwriter Colbie Caillat), who made their presence at the show known on social media.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to her good friend Kim Brakley, one of Stevie’s past “wardrobe mistresses.” “I’m so thrilled she is back in my life. Kim, I want you to know that. Please never go away again because people like you are so hard to find in the world that we live in. So this is for my friend Kim Brakley. This is ‘Landslide.’” Stevie last acknowledged Brakley in the liner notes of Stevie’s fourth solo album The Other Side of the Mirror (1989).

    Videos

    Special thanks to our LA rock stars — Joe Carson, Hana Dahl, HarlJHogg, Kelly L.R. Koczkur, Majestic Entertainment, Ryan Martin, Michelle Mathisen, Veri Salvador, Stephen Silvagni, and Jen Woodard — for sharing these videos!

    COMPILATION CLIPS: The Chain / I Know I’m Not Wrong / Tusk / Say You Love Me / Big Love / Landslide / Little Lies / Gold Dust Woman / Go Your Own Way (courtesy of Hana Dahl)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6MBm55Dvo0

    The Chain – partial clip (courtesy of Kelly L.R. Koczkur)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Oo_a-qUOZ8

    Second Hand News (courtesy of Kelly L.R. Koczkur)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TP46Tyg4kNM

    Rhiannon (courtesy of Michelle Mathisen)

    Everywhere (courtesy of Michelle Mathisen)

    Tusk (courtesy of Joe Carson)

    Seven Wonders (courtesy of HarlJHogg)

    Landslide (courtesy of Michelle Mathisen)

    Landslide with full dedication (courtesy of Jen Woodard)

    Gypsy (courtesy of Majestic Entertainment)

    Gypsy (courtesy of HarlJHogg)

    Littles Lies (courtesy of HarlJHogg)

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of Veri Salvador)

    World Turning – Drum solo (courtesy of Michelle Mathisen)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KhkTGNCLufA

    World Turning / Don’t Stop (courtesy of Stephen Silvagni)

    Songbird (courtesy of Ryan Martin)

    Photos

    (Photo: Eric Dane)
    (Photo: Eric Dane)
    (Photo: Ken Caillat)
    (Photo: Ken Caillat)
    (Photo: Ken Caillat)
    (Photo: Ken Caillat)

    More photos at Getty Images!

    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)
  • From the Rolling Stone Vault: Fleetwood Mac

    From the Rolling Stone Vault: Fleetwood Mac

    Mega-platinum albums, high school drama, irresponsible living, plus cross-dressing: a quick history of the Mac in RS

    A Quick History of the Mac in RS

    The True Life Confessions of Fleetwood Mac
    RS 235 March 24, 1977

    In 1977, Fleetwood Mac’s breakout album, Rumours, was dominating the charts. But the band was in chaos — Christine and John McVie had split up, Mick Fleetwood was divorcing his wife, and Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham’s relationship was on the rocks. For their first Rolling Stone cover story, they took Cameron Crowe inside that isolation and heartache. “Try being with your secretary at work all day, in a raucous office, and then come home with her at night,” Nicks said.

    Winning Big
    RS 256 January 12, 1978

    When the Mac swept the 1977 Rolling Stone readers’ poll, Fleetwood donned a cheerleader costume for a cover shoot, and the band talked about celebrating its differences. “There’s no continuity in the five people,” said Nicks (right, on tour), “Except the spirit.”

    Like a White Winged Dove
    RS 351 September 3, 1981

    Nicks was enjoying the platinum success of her 1981 solo debut, Bella Donna, which included her duet with Tom Petty, “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around.” Stevie talked about slowing down — “You get to a certain age where you want to be quieter,” she told RS — but she knew she would be back with the Mac: “[With] Fleetwood Mac, you can never really have any other plans for your life.”

    Say You Love Me
    RS 643 November 12, 1992

    Fleetwood Mac and Rolling Stone were both marking their 25th anniversaries in 1992. To celebrate, John McVie and Fleetwood posed for the magazine’s portrait issue. Says photographer Mark Seliger, “I told Mick, ‘I thought it would be really interesting to have you and John as a wedding portrait.’ And Mick goes silent for a minute and then says, ‘I like the idea. Just one favor: I want to be the bride.’”

    Rolling Stone / December 4, 2014

  • Stevie: I will never marry again

    Stevie: I will never marry again

    Stevie Nicks never wants to get married again.

    The Fleetwood Mac singer, who was married to Kim Anderson for three months in 1983, says she is happily single at the moment, and while she would consider online dating she doesn’t want to walk down the aisle at any point.

    The 66-year-old star – who previously dated her bandmates Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood, and the Eagles’ stars Don Henley and Joe Walsh – said: “I’m happy. I might have a relationship, but I’m never getting married again.

    “Mick and I always laugh about going on Match.com together and saying, ‘We’re looking for somebody with no health problems. And no bunches of ex-wives and ex-husbands.’ ”

    The ‘Dreams’ hitmaker admits she would like to fall in love again but if she doesn’t find another partner she will still have a good life.

    She said: “There is always hope. If somebody comes along and he’s worth it, then it will be a lucky throw of the cards. But either way it’s going to be great.”

    Stevie has lost 10 pounds in the last few months since the band embarked on a new tour and she credits Lady Gaga’s song ‘Do What U Want’ for inspiring her to dance off the pounds.

    She added to PEOPLE magazine: “I go onstage for three hours, four days a week and have lost about 10 pounds in the last couple of months.

    “The Lady Gaga song ‘Do What U Want’ makes me want to dance and made me revise the hustle. My girlfriends and I used to do this [dance] at clubs 30 years ago. Now it’s a great way to exercise.”

    BANG Media / Friday, December 5, 2014

  • Mick Fleetwood on photography, Fleetwood Mac

    Mick Fleetwood on photography, Fleetwood Mac

    The Fleetwood Mac lineup that gave the world “Rumours” is headed to Phoenix on Wednesday, Dec. 10, with Christine McVie back on board for her first tour of duty since her 1998 departure. And Mick Fleetwood is as thrilled as anyone to see the soft-rock dream team back together — something no one in that dream team thought would happen.

    “But she came back and we are now very complete,” Fleetwood says. “The chemistry is how it should be. It’s truly amazing. I consider it a real pinnacle in this band’s history, and thus the people in it, including me. I’m overjoyed that we’re doing what we’re doing. We are intact.”

    Having said that, what he’d really like to talk about is the exhibition of his photographs at DeRubeis Fine Art of Metal in Scottsdale, where Fleetwood is hosting a private reception from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9.

    The drummer credits his father with having piqued his interest in photography.

    “We traveled a lot because that was my childhood,” Fleetwood says, “so I’ve got muscle memory of someone who enjoyed documenting things that were gonna be here and then gone, maybe forever, unless captured. We didn’t really have, as a family, any money, but looking back on it, Dad always had a nice camera. So he took the time to do it.”

    Fleetwood started taking photographs while on the road with Fleetwood Mac, if purely as what he would call a snap shooter.

    “I would always be the one accused in the band of being a nuisance,” he says, “taking pictures of everything.”

    And John McVie has no one but himself to blame for that. The bassist bought a camera first, when the British rockers started “doing well in the late ’60s,” Fleetwood says, “or what we thought was doing well.” And at that point, “it was like, ‘If he’s got one of those, I’m getting one of those.’ ”

    So he bought a decent camera, like his father had before him, and started taking pictures on the road, “just documenting my life and being annoying.”

    Much later, he says, he started to focus on still life and nature photography, following the instincts that had served him well in music.

    “I started thinking, ‘Well, what’s gonna turn me on?’ ” he says. “Which is, in truth, how I approach my music, to be driven by a form of passion, a form of romance, versus coming at it hugely technically.”

    Fleetwood first allowed his photographs to be exhibited about 10 years ago.

    “A friend of mine in Maui said, ‘You ought to show these,’ ” he recalls. “And like a lot of people who do things for fun, they go, ‘Well, no one’s gonna want to see those.’ Now, when I hear people say that, I go, ‘No, no, no. You ought to do it. It’ll be fun. The worst that’s gonna happen is someone will say it’s a bunch of crap.’ ”

    Photography isn’t the only extra-musical creative outlet he has put out there to be judged. In late October, he published a memoir, “Play On: Now, Then and Fleetwood Mac: The Autobiography,” co-written with Anthony Bozza.

    “Some of it was sobering and painful,” Fleetwood says. “But once you get over a certain dialogue with yourself, which usually happens, quite frankly, when you get a little older, it’s all fair game. I think the lesson to be learned is not to be sitting there full of remorse and shame and all those awful words that don’t serve any purpose ultimately. What they should be is words like objective, reflective, taking responsibility, trying to be more honest with yourself.”

    While working on the book with Bozza, Fleetwood started sifting through the archives he has accumulated.

    “We got into thousands of pictures that still need sorting out,” he recalls. “And I showed him some footage that I had commissioned during the ‘Rumours’ tour. We were in the Far East right in the middle of all that touring behind the ‘Rumours’ album. So it was in the day, in what really changed this band’s history and the people in it forever.”

    There were ground rules, Fleetwood says. “Not to be all the blood and guts of Fleetwood Mac and all the drug stories and all that. It’s in there because it’s known anyhow and it just would look very odd if it’s not in there. But what I tried to do was to put it in perspective. And where there is sensationalist stuff, I tried to have a sense of humor in an English way and speak to it mainly from my own perspective.”

    In the end, the book is more about Fleetwood’s personal journey.

    “If it stopped tomorrow, you could never separate Mick Fleetwood and Fleetwood Mac,” he says. “It would be impossible. Which is neither bad nor good. It’s just a fact. There are several people that have come and gone in Fleetwood Mac — and come back to it — that can say, ‘Hey, I spent 10, 12 years on my private furlough away from Fleetwood Mac.’ I can’t. And I didn’t.

    “The point I’m making is it’s forever just a fact that my adult life has really been completely dedicated to being in this band.”

    Fleetwood Mac

    Details: 8 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 10. US Airways Center, Second and Jefferson streets, Phoenix. $59.50-$192. 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com.

    ‘Reflections: The Mick Fleetwood Collection’ private reception

    Details: 6-9 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9. DeRubeis Fine Art of Metal, 7171 E. Main St., Scottsdale. Purchase of Mick Fleetwood artwork required. 480-941-6033, roadshowcompany.com

    Reach the reporter at ed*******@*************ic.com or 602-444-4495. Twitter.com/EdMasley

    Ed Masley | Arizona Republic / Friday, December 5, 2014

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac leads a loaded reunion at Oracle Arena

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac leads a loaded reunion at Oracle Arena

    Stevie Nicks is going for it. She’s been dressed in all black all night — a confusing, drapey, sequined and, yes, Stevie Nicks-esque shawl over a dress, whose shimmering tendrils she seems to be handling like rosary beads — but for “Gold Dust Woman” she’s brought out a sheer gold shawl, and she is putting it to work. With her back to the crowd at Oracle Arena, she spreads her arms out wide before bringing both hands to her blonde head for something that looks like the marriage of headbanging and the gesture one performs when experiencing a migraine; the midway point between rocking the fuck out and being in severe pain.

    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)
    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)

    Which is, really, the main thrust of the mood at a Fleetwood Mac show — at least, at the first Fleetwood Mac show in a decade in a half that includes the original ’70s lineup: Christine McVie, notably fresh-faced behind the keyboard after 16 years away; Lindsey Buckingham, whose virtuoso fingerpicking on the electric guitar is rendered nearly unfair when combined with the fact that he apparently doesn’t age at all; John McVie, perhaps the only member of Fleetwood Mac who could reasonably be described as understated, despite providing the crucial bass heartbeat to so many hit songs; Nicks, whose stage presence alone makes Lady Gaga seem like John Kerry; and drummer Mick Fleetwood himself, who — dressed in short pants and red sneakers, wispy sideburn hair a-flying, taking indulgent solos — was quite possibly having more fun than anyone in the room, letting out animalistic yelps between taps of the hi-hat and punctuating his between-song banter with a gesture recognizable as the universal sign for “I am on Splash Mountain and we have just started going downhill.”

    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)
    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)

    In short, emotions ran high last night. From Nicks dedicating “Landslide” to her first real boyfriend at Atherton High School, to Fleetwood’s assertion that things get crazy when you let the drummer up front (his headset mic failed to work at some point, and briefly holding court at the tip of the stage seemed to make many people very happy), the whole thing felt loaded. This is, of course, difficult to separate from the soap opera that is Fleetwood Mac’s history, the romantic entanglements and illicit affairs and buckets upon buckets of cocaine that somehow went up people’s noses and came back out transformed into songs as sunny as “Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow.” There’s a theatrically implied underbelly to nearly everything they do, and no matter how much you’ve painted Stevie Nicks into some kind of fantasy-mom corner — and no matter what percentage of the 19,000 people around you appear to be squeaky-clean retirees with varying degrees of former hippiedom in their pasts, all cutting loose with widely varying degrees of rhythm — there’s the ever-present knowledge that yeah, she partied way, way harder than you ever will, and the same probably goes for a lot of these old-school fans. Lived to tell the tale, too.

    Which is why you indulge Nicks when she starts telling the same story, verbatim, that she apparently told last week in L.A.: About being a poor student at San Jose State University (crowd: “woooooo!”) and driving up to San Francisco to shop at the Velvet Underground, which was the coolest and most expensive rock star store in the world, as evidenced by having Janis Joplin and Grace Slick as customers. About how she couldn’t afford anything, but she stood there in that store and she knew she’d be able to someday. Cue a curtsy, plus exaggerated fondling of her sequined outfit. Cue “Gypsy,” with the opening lines “So I’m back, to the Velvet Underground…”

    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)
    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)

    Can you blame her if it’s cheesy? You can’t. Especially when Christine McVie, her alto and perfect hair seemingly untouched by the ravages of time, launches into “Say You Love Me,” or sits down at the piano for “Little Lies” and you realize that half the Fleetwood Mac songs you hear so often they’ve become background music (in the best possible way) are driven by that almost unnervingly sweet, easy voice. This requires ignoring the weird background visuals — gold dust for “Gold Dust Woman,” strange, unnecessary combinations of water droplets and psychedelic swirls of color for nearly everything else. It also requires removing yourself from the reality of, say, things that actually happened earlier in the day, back in 2014, like the grand jury’s decision in the horrifying police brutality murder case of Eric Garner. It requires shutting off your brain for long enough to live inside a year when Ronald Reagan was a great hope for a great many people.

    Noah Graham for Oracle Arena This will, you see, help with getting into the proper headspace for receiving Nicks’ lines about how Christine McVie came back to the band in January of 2014 — less than two years after Nicks told Rolling Stone that was about as likely as “an asteroid hitting the earth” -— because “when you put something out into the universe, it comes true, and you Fleetwood Mac fans all woke up one day and wanted that. You have magic powers. If you want something bad enough, dreams come true.”

    If nothing else, it requires believing that Fleetwood Mac believes those things. And last night, there were absolutely zero doubts to be had about that.

    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)
    Fleetwood Mac live in Oakland (Photo: Noah Graham)

    Emma Silvers / SF Weekly / Thursday, December 4, 2014

  • More US dates added

    More US dates added

    USA! 2015 dates for the Fleetwood Mac ‘On With Show’ tour have been announced and are ON SALE NOW:

    Mar 03 • Houston, TX • Toyota Center
    Mar 04 • Dallas, TX • American Airlines Center
    Mar 21 • Miami, FL • American Airlines Arena
    Mar 23 • Orlando, FL • Amway Center
    Mar 25 • Atlanta, GA • Philips Arena
    Apr 01 • Denver, CO • Pepsi Center
    Apr 04 • Vancouver, BC • Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena
    Apr 06 • Bakersfield, CA • Rabobank Arena
    Apr 07 • Oakland, CA • Oracle Arena
    Apr 10 • Los Angeles, CA • The Forum
    Apr 11 • Las Vegas, NV • MGM Grand Garden Arena

    FULL TOUR DATES AND TICKET LINKS: http://www.mickfleetwood.com/tour