Tag: Fleetwood Mac

  • VIDEOS 12/3: Oracle Arena, Oakland

    VIDEOS 12/3: Oracle Arena, Oakland

    Fleetwood Mac returned to the Bay Area on Wednesday, performing at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, their 31st show of the tour.

    Stevie Nicks dedicated “Landslide” to her “first real boyfriend,” David Young, whom she dated while attending Menlo-Atherton High School during the late 1960s. Stevie has often dedicated “Landslide” to Young when she is performing in the Bay Area.

    COMPLETE OAKLAND COVERAGE: Photos | Reviews | Set List | Videos

    Videos

    Special thanks to Michael Carr, coldengrey12, cymalc, Ellen H, Barry Gustin, LaBoggs, Jeff Nelson, Marc Santos, sgwarner, and Shell4017 for sharing these videos!

    COMPILATION (courtesy of Michael Carr)

    The Chain (courtesy of Jeff Nelson)

    You Make Loving Fun (courtesy of sgwarner)

    Dreams (courtesy of LaBoggs)

    Rhiannon (courtesy of LaBoggs)

    Everywhere (courtesy of Barry Gustin)

    Say You Love Me (courtesy of Barry Gustin)

    Seven Wonders (courtesy of Shell4017)

    Landslide with dedication (courtesy of coldengrey12)

    Over My Head (courtesy of LaBoggs)

    Gypsy introduction (courtesy of LaBoggs)

    Gypsy (courtesy of Ellen H)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Auh5IMuce1U

    Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of Barry Gustin)

    Go Your Own Way – short clip (courtesy of LaBoggs)

    World Turning (courtesy of LaBoggs)

    Don’t Stop (courtesy of Marc Santos)

    Mick’s closing thoughts (courtesy of cymalc)


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    Reviews

    Fleetwood Mac leads loaded reunion at Oracle Arena (SF Weekly)

    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 concert reunion a triumph

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac concert reunion a triumph

    With Christine McVie back in the fold after a 16-year hiatus, Fleetwood Mac begins a welcome new chapter by looking back to its heyday.

    If Mick Fleetwood’s shout-out to his own band in San Diego Tuesday night simply (and loudly) stated the obvious, well, he’s surely earned the right to crow a bit.

    “The Mac is definitely back!” the towering, 6-foot-5-inch drummer proudly declared. The sold-out audience of nearly 10,000 fans at SDSU’s Viejas Arena cheered loudly in return, just as it had through nearly all of the 2½-hour-plus show.

    Fleetwood Mac in San Diego (Photo: John Gastaldo)

    For the record, apart from a hiatus of a few years in the 1990s, this legendary rock act has never been away. Fleetwood is the only member to have performed in each of the band’s many lineups since its inception in 1967, including the one that performed here last year at Viejas Arena.

    But Tuesday’s concert was especially memorable because it found this veteran ensemble taking a major step forward by taking a major step back. After a 16-year hiatus — a period of time far longer than the entire careers of many rock bands — singer, keyboardist and songwriter Christine McVie this year rejoined Fleetwood Mac for her first tour with the group since 1999.

    Fleetwood Mac in San Diego (Photo: John Gastaldo)

    Her welcome return is both exhilarating and liberating. This holds true both for the band and its multigenerational fans, many of whom remained standing and often sang along for much of Tuesday’s show.

    Or, as Fleetwood put it after “World Turning,” the first of four encore selections: “Having this wonderful lady share the stage, making us complete, our songbird has returned.”

    Fleetwood Mac in San Diego (Photo: John Gastaldo)

    At 71, McVie is the oldest member of Fleetwood Mac, which was a three-year-old English blues-rock band when she came on board in 1970. Her return has bolstered the group in several key ways.

    Down to earth and free of even a hint of affectation, she provides a welcome counterbalance to singer Stevie Nicks and singer-guitarist Lindsey Buckingham. The two American musicians joined Fleetwood Mac in 1975 and helped propel it to international pop-rock superstardom with the classic 1977 album, “Rumours.”

    Fleetwood Mac in San Diego (Photo: John Gastaldo)

    McVie sang lead on nearly a third of the 24 songs performed Tuesday, nearly all of which had been deferentially shelved by the band when she retired in 1999. It was a treat to hear her rustic, fuss-free lead vocals on “You Make Loving Fun,” “Little Lies,” “Say You Love Me” and the concert-concluding “Songbird.”

    It was equally enjoyable hearing her harmonize again with Nicks and Buckingham, who clearly relished having their longtime collaborator back in the fold. So did drummer Fleetwood, 67, and bassist John McVie, 69, Christine’s former husband, who sounded and appeared none the worse after starting treatment last fall for cancer. (The band was tastefully augmented by three female backing singers and two male auxiliary musicians, who also supplied periodic vocal support.)

    Fleetwood Mac in San Diego (Photo: John Gastaldo)

    Christine McVie’s return also means Nicks and Buckingham no longer each have to handle 50 percent of the lead vocals. As a result, both were able to tackle such classics as “Dreams,” “Rhiannon,” “Second Hand News” and “Tusk” with renewed energy and enthusiasm. They also beamed broadly as they harmonized with McVie on “Don’t Stop,” “Go Your Own Way” and other decades-old gems that still sound fresh and vital.

    Buckingham delivered a number of inspired guitar solos that showcased his finger-picking prowess. His rippling lines on “I Know I’m Not Wrong,” “Big Love” and the Wishbone Ash-inspired “I’m So Afraid” were highlights. Ditto Nicks’ deeply moving singing on “Landslide,” and “Gold Dust Woman,” which turned into a rare (at least for the current iteration of Fleetwood Mac) extended jam.

    Fleetwood Mac in San Diego (Photo: John Gastaldo)

    Fleetwood and John McVie provided a rock-solid foundation throughout. Their tirelessly robust playing in no way indicated the two, both of whom are longtime U.S. residents, qualified for Social Security several years ago.

    Alas, the pacing of the concert sagged in places, including a rousing, but overly extended, Buckingham solo segment that seemed designed to give his band mates an extended offstage break. Fleetwood’s 5-minute drum solo on “World Turning,” while an undeniable crowd-pleaser, overstayed its welcome. Conversely, Nicks’ introduction to “Gypsy” was as long as some of the songs performed, but she reminisced about her years as a young aspiring musician with more than enough infectious verve to compensate.

    And when everything clicked, which was often, time almost stood still — even as Buckingham, 65, boyishly bounded across the stage and Nicks, 66, did her witchy woman twirls. Don’t stop, indeed.

    Fleetwood Mac in San Diego (Photo: John Gastaldo)
    George Varga / UT San Diego / Wednesday, December 3, 2014

  • VIDEOS 12/2: Viejas Arena, San Diego

    VIDEOS 12/2: Viejas Arena, San Diego

    Fleetwood Mac performed at the college campus of San Diego State University on Tuesday night, rocking fans, teachers, and students alike at Viejas Arena, the band’s 30th show of the tour. Due to bad weather, which delayed concert goers from getting to the show on time, the band pushed back the start of the show by 30 minutes and skipped final speeches.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to her friend Holly. “Tonight, I’d like to dedicate it to our really good friend Holly and to her husband Dave, and to all of the doctors that were involved in a very difficult situation and have done such an amazing job. So this is for you, Holly, ‘Landslide.’”

    COMPLETE SAN DIEGO COVERAGE: Photos | ReviewsSet List | Videos

    Photos

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    More photos at Getty Images!

    Videos

    Special thanks to Randy Bragdon, Alexis Capitano, Glenn Forrester, Mark Drakk, Christian H, llcoolcomb, Majestic Entertainment, Millerviller, musicsdca, Piano in a Living Room, and Rhiannon Grace for sharing these videos!

    COMPILATION: Tusk / Sisters of the Moon / Over My Head / Songbird (courtesy of muscsdca)

    COMPILATION: Gold Dust Woman / Say You Love Me (courtesy of musicsdca)

    The Chain (courtesy of Alexis Capitano)

    You Make Loving Fun (courtesy of Glenn Forrester)

    Dreams (courtesy of Glenn Forrester)

    Rhiannon (courtesy of Rhiannon Grace)

    Everywhere (courtesy of Glenn Forrester)

    Tusk – short clip (courtesy of llcoolcomb)

    Sisters of the Moon (courtesy of Alexis Capitano)

    Seven Wonders (courtesy of Alexis Capitano)

    Seven Wonders (courtesy of Glenn Forrester)

    Big Love (courtesy of Mark Drakk)

    Landslide with dedication (courtesy of Millerviller)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y43lrJFhEpg

    Landslide (courtesy of Randy Bragdon)

    Never Going Back Again (courtesy of Millerviller)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSIIwGZtBms

    Over My Head (courtesy of Mark Drakk)

    Gypsy introduction (courtesy llcoolcomb)

    Gypsy (courtesy of Alexis Capitano)

    Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of Millerviller)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57Z1yvRQiVw

    I’m So Afraid (courtesy of (Piano in a Living Room)

    I’m So Afraid (courtesy of Millerviller)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKpQqXLQs-U

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of Majestic Entertainment)

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of Millerviller)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fFi2dHYtzQ

    World Turning (courtesy of Millerviller)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YljVpGREovA

    Don’t Stop (courtesy of Christian H)

    Songbird (courtesy of Majestic Entertainment)

    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 live at The Forum, Los Angeles

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac live at The Forum, Los Angeles

    “That’s not Stevie Nicks,” asserted the woman sitting next to me at the first night of Fleetwood Mac‘s 2-night stay at The Forum in Los Angeles. “I’ve been to hundreds of her shows and that is not her. She does not move like that.”

    Not that I would know: this was my first time seeing the band—now in the glory of their classic lineup—and had little more than music videos and her time on American Horror Story: Coven from which to judge. When I looked up at the wispy-but-imposing blonde woman six rows ahead of me, and then compared it to the screen-sized version hung up above, I felt confident that this was the gypsy herself. I posited as such to the woman to my right. She paused before pointing, “look at her ankles!”

    (Photo: Alicia Lutes)
    (Photo: Alicia Lutes)

    Maybe Stevie Nicks was moving differently that night—but she’d have good reason to be. The band’s most famous

    lineup was back in action, including the long-gone Christine McVie, who very well may have stolen the show from her compatriots that night. Her return after a 16-year absence from the group had clearly shot a bolt of electricity up Fleetwood Mac’s collective spine.

    And it was evident from minute one. The 2.5 hour show (with no opener) began with “The Chain,” the only song off of 1977’s Rumours that was written by all five members. The energy— from the stage to the very large room surrounding it was one of celebration and fulfillment. Finally, they were right where they belonged.

    McVie took over for the second song of the night, “You Make Loving Fun,” during which she beamed the whole time. Lindsey Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, and Nicks were all vibrating on that frequency of celebration, loving every minute they were praising McVie’s grounding presence.

    (Photo: Alicia Lutes)
    (Photo: Alicia Lutes)

    This early momentum made this particular concert-goer a bit nervous. The first half of the show was s0 packed with hits—from “Rhiannon” to “Dreams” to “Second Hand News” to “I Know I’m Not Wrong”—that we were, personally, a bit afraid it would all hit a wall.

    But oh no, how that gypsy shines when the stars are aligned. When people talk of star and staying power, of a seemingly otherworldly talent and ability to create things that emotionally resonate with people, all they need do is point to Fleetwood Mac as Stevie Nicks spins and spins and spins her way into the mystic magic she’s creating with her voice. There is truly nothing like her, how she demands your eye with her tambourine playing, how hair swirls around her twirling frame, how she conveys emotional honesty within a single note. It’s something special that cannot be diminished by age or time—it just is, and will continue to be, until there is no more sound to be heard.

    Other highlights included “Tusk,” complete with a video accompaniment of the USC Marching Band performing the very song while McVie broke out the accordion and Buckingham strutted his way across the stage, and “Lies” for its sheer energy and exuberance.

    And, of course, we’d be remiss to not mention “Landslide,” with nothing more than Buckingham on guitar and Nicks on vocals. After all the years between them, and all the words already said about this song, its origins, its relationship to the band that performs it, there’s little more to note that hasn’t already been said. To feel it in that moment, even after the hundreds of thousands of times we’ve all heard it before, it still somehow felt raw, damaged, and poignant. The magic a song like “Landslide” possesses will never really go away—only evolve and get better with age.

    It’s like Buckingham noted before his acoustic take on “Big Love,” when he explained, prior to performing it, how much the song’s meaning has changed for him as the years have accumulated. It’s still the same song, sonically and lyrically, but its frame of reference had changed. The way he moves throughout the song’s meaning has shifted, like a dancer acclimating to the new limits and abilities of an aging body. Yet it looked natural next to Stevie and her new dance moves

    In that way, the woman next to me was right: this wasn’t Stevie Nicks, not like before. This was something new but still familiar, and it moves to a whole different beat.

    (Photo: Alicia Lutes)
    (Photo: Alicia Lutes)

    Here’s the full setlist:

    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

    Alicia Lutes / Nerdist / Tuesday, December 2, 2014

  • Why Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk is better than Rumours

    Why Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk is better than Rumours

    Fleetwood Mac Tusk (1979)The first two albums Fleetwood Mac released after Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham joined Christine McVie, bassist John McVie, and drummer Mick Fleetwood provided the pop soundtrack of the late 1970s. The tender nature of singles like “Landslide,” the mysticism of “Rhiannon,” and the bold confessional nature of “Go Your Own Way” and “The Chain” struck a chord with anyone with a radio and a pair of working ears. Rumours would go on to be one of the top ten selling albums of all time. It continues to resonate today as much as it did when it was first released in 1977, influencing musicians for generations to come, providing the soundtrack for ’90s presidential campaigns, and continuing to set itself upon the lofty perch of various “all-time best album” lists.

    How did the quintet follow up such unprecedented success? By releasing Tusk, a double-album that in 1979 was one of the most expensive albums ever made. Tusk’s 20 experimental tracks felt like the disjointed work of three charismatic solo artists as opposed to five talented musicians. Despite the fact it sold two million copies in the United States, it was considered a costly failure, especially sitting in the long shadow cast by Rumours. Unless they’re Michael Jackson, how could any artist expect to come close to repeating the feeling and enormous popularity of an album that feels like lightning captured in a bottle?

    Buckingham knew it couldn’t be done. It’s obvious in his studio work on the album (he took on most of the production duties for Tusk, and nine of the songwriting credits on the album are his) that it was time to move on and take a more contemporary and experimental approach to the music. This explains why 25 years later, history has been kind to the disc. It was an album that was not only a product of its time, with the album’s influences coming less from the soft rock era the band was leaving behind and more from the punk and new wave sounds that were emerging, but was also ahead of its time. Songs like “Think About Me” feel like they could come out of the indie rock music of today, chock full of rich layers that need to be peeled back with each listen to be fully appreciated. You can hear that influence — a desire to keep a song elegant in its simplicity — in songs like “Ask Me Anything” from The Strokes’ album First Impressions of Earth.

    There are a lot of details that can be picked up on multiple listens of Tusk, which makes the album a far richer experience than the slick production on Rumours. On the strange, percussion-heavy, tribal title track (which supposedly refers to the euphemism Fleetwood has for his member), you can hear Buckingham give some studio direction, and then the drummer says “real savage like” as the USC Trojan Marching Band trumpets in. The one-off line isn’t repeated during any other live recordings of the song. “Here comes the night time looking for a little more/Waiting on the right time somebody outside the door,” a line on the raw and angry track “Not the Funny,” makes another appearance six spots down during “I Know I’m Not Wrong.” Then there’s Christine McVie’s quiet sultry repeat of the final line of “Never Forget,” the album’s lovely optimistic finale. It’s the perfect finish to an album that put everyone in the band through the emotional wringer.

    It was the drama behind each of the songs that made Rumours so relatable to so many listeners. That album is infamous for chronicling the declining relationships and persistent addictions that took place, but on Tusk the music is much more heartbreaking, confessional, and personal. “What Makes You Think You’re the One,” just one of the many songs Buckingham wrote about Nicks, possibly addresses his former love’s cocaine habit by asking her if she is the one “who can live without dying.” Christine McVie sings to a lover (possibly McVie), who is cheating on her to “go and do what you want” as she waits for him to return on “Never Make Me Cry.” Last September, Nicks confirmed to Billboard that the urban rock legend about the song “Sara” was partially true: the song came from the name of the unborn child Nicks conceived with Eagles’ singer Don Henley while the couple were dating. As Nicks recalls:

    “Had I married Don and had that baby, and had she been a girl, I would have named her Sara. But there was another woman in my life named Sara, who shortly after that became Mick’s wife, Sara Fleetwood.”

    The most sonically thrilling aspect of the expansive Tusk is the harmonies of singers, thanks to Buckingham’s continued fascination with California bands like The Beach Boys. The background vocals on “Walk a Thin Line” mesh so well with the guitar virtuoso’s falsetto during the song’s chorus that you want to make that journey across the tightrope right along with him. The harmonies also shine on the heartbreaking “That’s All For Everyone,” as Buckingham “cries out for more” while trying to decide whether the band should continue on together considering all the personal turmoil their collaboration has wrought.

    It was after this album that Buckingham, Fleetwood, and Nicks pursued solo albums. Buckingham went on to explore the experiments he started on Tusk with the album Law and Order. Nicks would grow into the role of the mythical diva she is today. The band as a whole went back to the formula they honed on Rumours with 1982’s Mirage, having spent their creative capital on an album that many see as an oddity, but holds up as a masterwork today.

    Fleetwood Mac is scheduled to play US Airways Center on Wednesday, December 10.

    Jason Keil / Phoenix New Times / Tuesday, December 2, 2014

  • REVIEW: A band reunited, team spirit intact

    REVIEW: A band reunited, team spirit intact

    Fleetwood Mac played the Forum on Saturday night with Christine McVie, back after a long break.

    (Photo: Michael Robinson Chavez)
    (Photo: Michael Robinson Chavez)

    Fleetwood Mac is having a moment.

    Decades after its late-1970s commercial peak, the band can still fill arenas around the world with fans eager to relive memories indelibly linked to old hits like “Dreams” and “Go Your Own Way.”

    Yet Fleetwood Mac’s polished pop-rock has also become a touchstone for younger, hipper acts such as Jenny Lewis and One Direction. In 2011, the television show “Glee” built an episode around the group’s music; the next year it was the subject of a high-profile tribute album.

    So it’s not hard to understand Christine McVie’s decision, announced in January, to rejoin the band after retiring in 1998.

    She helped create the legend — shouldn’t she enjoy the glory?

    (Photo: Michael Robinson Chavez)
    (Photo: Michael Robinson Chavez)

    Fleetwood Mac’s tour with McVie, whose presence restores the lineup that made the gazillion-selling “Rumours,” stopped at the Forum for two concerts over the weekend. (It will return for a third on Dec. 6.)

    But if the cheers that greeted McVie on Saturday confirmed her reasoning, the singer’s participation also reminded you that, despite its huge success, this is a deeply weird rock group, with three songwriters – McVie, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks – whose approaches hardly seem compatible.

    Backed by the stalwart rhythm section of drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie (to whom she was married until 1977), Christine McVie was warm and trusting in “You Make Loving Fun” and the buoyant “Everywhere.” The cheerful optimism – and the propulsive groove – of “Don’t Stop” inspired thousands in the audience to sing along.

    (Photo: Michael Robinson Chavez)
    (Photo: Michael Robinson Chavez)

    And though “Little Lies” hinted at the romantic deception that famously runs through Fleetwood Mac’s history, the tune’s sweet melody neutralized any sense of real desperation.

    Buckingham offered no such protection as he growled the lyrics of “Big Love,” about the cold comfort of material fortune, over harsh finger-picked guitar. He was similarly intense in the stomping “Tusk” and a long, raw rendition of the bluesy “I’m So Afraid.”

    “Second Hand News” was catchier but still anxious, its crisp tempo a promise of escape from the turmoil the song describes.

    Then there was Nicks, who set aside her bandmates’ realism in favor of imagery rooted in history and mythology: “Rhiannon,” “Sisters of the Moon,” “Seven Wonders,” the last of which, she told the audience, had made it back into Fleetwood Mac’s set list after the song appeared in a recent episode of “American Horror Story.”

    That quasi-mystical vibe is a big part of what’s endeared Nicks in particular to a new generation of musicians, including the sisters of L.A.’s Haim, to whom she dedicated “Landslide” on Saturday. (The Haim sisters weren’t the only admirers who turned up to pay their respects: According to a tweet from the Forum, Harry Styles of One Direction took in Friday’s show.)

    Twirling in one of her trademark shawls during “Gypsy,” Nicks drew a wildly enthusiastic response from the crowd. And fans seemed untroubled by the adjustments she made to the melody of “Dreams,” a song whose high notes are now presumably out of her reach.

    Yet that adulation hasn’t led, as it does with so many stars, to an unquenchable need for more.

    Here Nicks appeared happy — even relieved, perhaps — to share the spotlight she grew accustomed to filling while McVie was away, and it was that sense of camaraderie that held Fleetwood Mac’s internal contradictions together.

    “Once you come back, you can’t leave again,” Nicks recalled telling McVie in a rambling monologue about the reunion. That she meant it was clear when McVie, singing her ballad “Songbird,” closed the show.

    Twitter: @mikaelwood / Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

    Mikael Wood / Los Angeles Times / Sunday, November 30, 2014

  • Fleetwood Mac to headline Isle of Wight Festival

    Fleetwood Mac to headline Isle of Wight Festival

    Fleetwood Mac are to appear as headliners at next year’s Isle of Wight Festival.

    The veteran rockers, who have lined up a series of tour dates for the coming months, will play the event on June 14, marking their only festival performance.

    The group said: “We’ve always wanted to come to the UK to play the Isle of Wight Festival, and so we are delighted that in 2015, we are finally making it happen.

    “So many of our fellow artists and friends have played at this historic event over the years, and we can’t wait to see all of our fans on the island next summer.”

    It is thought to be the first time they have headlined a major UK festival with the line-up which took them to worldwide fame with hit albums such as Rumours.

    The performance will feature Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, along with Christine McVie who initially rejoined the band for a guest slot last year.

    Festival organiser John Giddings said: “It’s no secret that Fleetwood Mac have been on my wishlist for the Isle of Wight Festival for some time now, so I’m very pleased and extremely proud to have them headline next year’s event. With Christine now back in the band too, it is going to be a momentous occasion, a moment in music history.”

    Tickets go on sale on Friday at 9am at isleofwightfestival.com.

    Press Association-Independent (UK) / Monday, December 1, 2014

    (Graphic courtesy of Mick Fleetwood's official Facebook page)
    (Graphic courtesy of Mick Fleetwood’s official Facebook page)
  • Stevie: ‘Haim are major force in rock and roll’

    Stevie: ‘Haim are major force in rock and roll’

    STEVIE NICKS gushed over sibling rockers HAIM during a concert in California on Saturday (Nov 29, 2014), calling them a “major force in rock and roll.”

    Fleetwood Mac brought its On With the Show tour, complete with keyboardist Christine McVie, to Los Angeles’ The Forum venue and among those in the audience were sisters Alana, Este and Danielle Haim.

    Singer Nicks told the audience, “Maybe twice in my lifetime I have met a group of other singers, artists, songwriters that I have thought were going to be a major force in rock and roll. And tonight the ladies Haim are here – Alana, Este and Danielle. And I have to say, because I love sharing stuff with the audience about other people that I love – we’ve been on the road for 27 shows and I play their record every day; I love it…

    “It gives me answers, it gives me advice, it wraps its wings around me and it tells me everything will be okay, and I have such respect for them, and I have such respect for who they are and how they play music and how they put their music together, and it just blows my mind.

    “So, girls, never stop. Don’t stop thinking about tomorrow. Don’t stop. Keep doing what you’re doing because you’re important to this world.”

    In October (14), Nicks invited Haim to her house for an interview with the New York Times’ T Magazine, where they performed an impromptu rendition of Fleetwood Mac’s Rhiannon, and the legendary singer presented each sister with matching gold necklaces with moon pendants and declared them fellow “sisters of the moon”.

    Following Saturday’s concert, Haim took to Twitter.com to share a video of Nicks’ dedication to them at the gig, and added the caption, “Was reunited with the original sister of the moon last night (we cried).”

    Express (UK) / Monday, December 1, 2014

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac returns to the Forum intact

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac returns to the Forum intact

    In a recent interview with Mojo magazine, Fleetwood Mac drummer and co-namesake Mick Fleetwood admitted the band had been a bit “one-legged” in the 16 years it carried on without keyboardist/vocalist Christine McVie. If that was the case, Fleetwood Mac was back on two legs, standing tall at the Forum on Black Friday for what was — according to a photo montage from its ’70s heyday proudly displayed in the Forum Club — its 13th appearance at the now remodeled venue.

    Given that this was the group’s first date back in L.A. with Christine McVie and its history with the building, Friday’s show had all the trappings of a special event and Fleetwood Mac didn’t disappoint.

    Opening with “The Chain,” the only song on the band’s 1977 blockbuster Rumours written by all five members, Fleetwood Mac at first celebrated its unity before turning the spotlight on the returning McVie, who sang lead on the even bigger Rumours era hit, “You Make Loving Fun.”

    With all due respect to Fleetwood, we’d argue that Fleetwood Mac was more like a three-legged dog without Christine McVie, with frontwoman Stevie Nicks and frontman and guitarist Lindsey Buckingham holding up the front end while Fleetwood and fellow original member, bassist John McVie, together, supporting part of back. At the Forum, it was clear just how crucial Christine McVie’s role is, not only providing keyboards (although the band was supplemented by an additional keyboardist/guitarist and guitarist) and backing vocals for Nicks and Buckingham (the band was also assisted by three female backing vocalists), but providing an earthy lead vocal presence to counter Nicks’ sometimes out-three gypsy visions and Buckingham’s hyper emotionalism. And, it was that variety that made Friday’s show such a joy.

    Christine McVie’s initial run in the spotlight was followed by Nicks’ turn on “Dreams,” then Buckingham on “Second Hand News,” back to Nicks with “Rhiannon,” extended with the singer altering her phrasing from the recorded version, proving this was no mere carbon copy of the record. The Tusk album track “I Know I’m Not Wrong” was a brief interlude from the hit parade before the title track, complete with video of the USC Marching Band performing the song on the video screen, for which Christine McVie added accordion and Buckingham replicated the elephant walk with guitar in tow.

    The first third of the show was stacked so heavily with classic hits, it made you wonder if the band could sustain the momentum for the remainder of the gig, but that proved not to be a problem, as it used different configurations and vocalists to keep it interesting.

    And the hits kept coming, as well, including McVie’s “Say That You Love Me,” the band’s first-ever top 40 hit after the veteran British blues band was revitalized with the addition of Nicks and Buckingham. After Nicks sang “Seven Wonders,” she gave a shout out to American Horror Story, which last season featured her in a cameo and the song, prompting the band to add it to the set.

    Emotional highlights were natural to Buckingham and Nicks sharing the stage, Buckingham offering a startling acoustic reading of “Big Love,” after noting how the song’s meaning has changed over the years and then Nicks dedicating the ballad “Landslide” to “her fairy goddaughters” before the Forum’s roof sparkled as she sang.

    Nicks also took the spotlight in “Gypsy” and “Gold Dust Woman.” The former was proceeded by a story about her early years in the Bay Area and remaining true to your dreams, while the latter had her donning a gold shawl and offering a freeform dance as she teetered on her high heels while the band provided a psychedelic interlude.

    Towards the end of the set, the monster hit “Go Your Own Way” came off as a celebratory jam, with Nicks and Buckingham facing the drum kit and Fleetwood responding with a devilish grin.
    During the encore, “World Turning” was punctuated with the hoariest of all arena-rock clichés — the drum solo. Yet Fleetwood made it tolerable by turning it into a call-and-response exercise with the audience, spouting gibberish and sporting wacky facial expressions between mercilessly pounding his kit.

    “Don’t Stop” had all three main voices joining in unison and also seemed to be a theme for the two-and-half hour show and this 2014 tour. After Nicks took it down with “Silver Springs” and Buckingham (on piano) accompanied McVie on “Songbird,” Nicks returned to offer the story of Christine McVie’s return to the band. Then Fleetwood returned with his two young daughters in tow to once again thank the crowd and return the love. It was almost as if they didn’t want to stop.

    Fleetwood Mac returns to the Forum Saturday and Dec. 6 and hits the Honda Center on Dec. 7.

    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

    The Bottom Line
    The classic ’70s lineup is complete again with the return of Christine McVie after a 16-year absence.

    Venue
    The Forum
    Inglewood, Calif.
    (Friday, Nov. 28)

    Twitter: @CraigRosen

    Craig Rosen / The Hollywood Reporter / Sunday, November 30, 2014

  • VIDEOS 11/29: The Forum, Inglewood (2)

    VIDEOS 11/29: The Forum, Inglewood (2)

    Fleetwood Mac rocked The Forum for a second night, performing again in Inglewood on Saturday, the band’s 29th show of the tour. The Southern California concert attracted a mix of fans and celebrities, such as all-female music group Haim, who were on hand to receive Stevie’s nightly “Landslide” dedication.

    COMPLETE INGLEWOOD SHOW COVERAGE: Set List | Photos | Videos

    Videos

    Special thanks to DancinSpazz’s channel, frenchamerican, ikepgh’s channel, jitsu1109, Amy Louff, and Stephen Silvagni for sharing these videos!

    COMPILATION: You Make Loving Fun / Second Hand News / Everywhere / Big Love / Never Going Back Again / Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of Stephen Silvagni)

    You Make Loving Fun (courtesy of jitsu1109)

    Second Hand News (courtesy of Amy Louff)

    Everywhere (courtesy of ikepgh’s channel)

    I Know I’m Not Wrong (courtesy of Amy Louff)

    Landslide (courtesy of ikepgh’s channel)

    Landslide (courtesy of DancinSpazz’s channel)

    Never Going Back Again (courtesy of Amy Louff)

    Gypsy – introduction (courtesy of Lisa Wellik)

    Gypsy – short clip (courtesy of Amy Louff)

    Little Lies – short clip (courtesy of Amy Louff)

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of frenchamerican)

    World Turning – drum solo only (courtesy of Amy Louff)

    Songbird (courtesy of ikepgh’s channel)

    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)