Tag: Houston

  • RECAP: Houston TX, Toyota Center

    On Saturday night, Stevie Nicks performed at the Toyota Center in Houston — the third show of the 24 Karat Gold Tour. With no set list adjustments, Stevie has settled into performing the diverse selection of songs she has chosen for the tour, which includes “Wild Heart,” “Bella Donna,” “Crying in the Night,” and three songs from her latest release, 24 Karat Gold: Songs from the Vault.

    All slideshow photos courtesy of Dave Rossman (Houston Chronicle)

    [slideshow_deploy id=’375154′]

    Videos

    Much thanks and love to Ian Conery, DeadMike.com, mistyb420, and Mike Vederman for recording and sharing these wonderful videos!

    Gold and Braid (DeadMike.com)

    If Anyone Falls (Ian Conery)

    If Anyone Falls (DeadMike.com)

    Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around feat. Chrissie Hynde (mistyb420)

    Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around (DeadMike.com)

    Belle Fleur (DeadMike.com)

    Outside the Rain/Dreams (DeadMike.com)

    Dreams (mistyb420)

    Wild Heart/Bella Donna (DeadMike.com)

    ‘Your first album is just a fluke’

    “Thank you. Just a note about those two songs. First of all, ‘Wild Heart’ has never been done onstage—ever. And ‘Bella Donna’s only been done maybe… Like on Bella Donna tour, I think it was like two weeks, and then I had to go rushing back to Fleetwood Mac because that was the promise.

    Those two songs are the real reason that we’re even standing up here because Bella Donna was the first album, Wild Heart was the second album. And that solo career was only cemented by that second album because in this world of music then and now, your first album is just a fluke. Your second album proves that it wasn’t just a fluke. So those are those two songs. Thank you.”

    Annabel Lee (DeadMike.com)

    ‘Steal the poem’

    After performing “Annabel Lee,” Stevie shared some unconventional songwriting advice. “This is what you can do if you’re a poet and you can’t write poetry. You get a book like Edgar Allan Poe or Oscar Wilde, and you steal the poem right out of it. And you sit at the piano and you just like take the poems and write music. And all of the sudden, you’re a songwriter and you love it. Easy. Seriously, I’m not kidding. Try it.” (This is only possible because literature by Poe and Wilde are public domain works, free of copyright restrictions.)

    Enchanted (DeadMike.com)

    New Orleans (DeadMike.com)

    ‘The city survived’

    This next song is a pretty serious song. It was written right as Hurricane Katrina was just about to hit. I was in California in my house by the ocean in Santa Monica. And I had been sitting there probably for 24 hours, watching it like we all were, and like it was scary because it was for me, I was looking at an ocean going, Oh my God, what if that was like coming toward me. And so I started writing a poem, a very long, very formal poem which are my favorite poems, and I finished it very fast because it was so emotional. And I remember that I had a CD next to my bed in my bedside table that had been there like three years that a friend of mine who is a wonderful guitarist and songwriter, had given me, and I just listened to it and put it away. And I ran and got it and by the end of like 20 minutes, I had written this song. So in its own way, it was written at a time when the world was just caving in. But now it has gone to a place where it did what I hoped it did when I wrote the poem. It is somewhat celebratory because everybody survived. Not everybody survived, but a lot of people survived, and the city survived. So it’s called ‘New Orleans’.”

    Starshine (DeadMike.com)

    Moonlight (A Vampire’s Dream) (DeadMike.com)

    “Thank you. Of course, you know that was for Bella and Edward, who live in my heart in the stories of Twilight. And they just live there, so thank you.”

    Stand Back (Ian Conery)

    Crying in the Night (DeadMike.com)

    If You Were My Love (DeadMike.com)

    Band Introductions (DeadMike.com)

    ‘I appreciate you every day’

    During the band introductions, Stevie made some touching comments about her longtime backup singer Sharon Celani. “Sharon Celani has been singing with me since 1978. She has gone to limit for me many, many times. And Sharon, I appreciate you every day. I just want you to know that and remember that you are such a beautiful person.”

    Gold Dust Woman (mistyb420)

    Gold Dust Woman (Ian Conery)

    Gold Dust Woman (DeadMike.com)

    Edge of Seventeen (DeadMike.com)

    Edge of Seventeen (Ian Conery)

    Rhiannon (Ian Conery)

    Leather and Lace (Ian Conery)

    Leather and Lace (DeadMike.com)

    Closing comments

    “You have been an awesome, awesome audience! Thank you for staying. That means more than anything. And you know really, Texas is a great place to come and play music. I’ve always thought that. It never disappoints. So you’re awesome, all of you! Thank you! We’ll come back and see you! Keep listening to music. It will save your lives! Good night!”

    Set List

    1. Gold and Braid
    2. If Anyone Falls
    3. Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around (with Chrissie Hynde & Waddy Wachtel)
    4. Belle Fleur
    5. Outside the Rain/Dreams (medley)
    6. Wild Heart/Bella Donna (medley)
    7. Annabel Lee
    8. Enchanted
    9. New Orleans
    10. Starshine
    11. Moonlight (A Vampire’s Dream)
    12. Stand Back
    13. Crying in the Night
    14. If You Were My Love
      Band introductions
    15. Gold Dust Woman
    16. Edge of Seventeen
      Encores
    17. Rhiannon
    18. Leather and Lace

    Stevie Nicks 24 Karat Gold Tour

    Live Streaming

    Reviews

    Stevie Nicks casts a spell over Houston (Joey Guerra / Houston Chronicle)

    https://twitter.com/arianaa420/status/792576871560949760

    https://twitter.com/juliaadeline/status/792563859110236160

    https://twitter.com/nochaseno/status/792545901956833280

    https://twitter.com/lesakeen/status/792514521763975168

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac turns back time in nostalgic concert

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac turns back time in nostalgic concert

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Hits and cheering

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • Fleetwood Mac – Toyota Center, Houston TX, 12/15/2014

    Fleetwood Mac – Toyota Center, Houston TX, 12/15/2014

    Fleetwood Mac performed at the Toyota Center in Houston on Monday night, the 37th show of the tour. The band has three more shows this week before winding down for the holidays. The second leg of the On With The Show Tour will kick off at the Xcel Energy Center in St Paul, Minneapolis on Friday, January 16.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to Rhiannon, a young woman who experienced medical adversity early in her life. “I’ve watched her grow up, and her name is Rhiannon. [The crowd cheers.] I know. She faced an amazing hell, [this] thing that she’s been fighting her whole life, and she’s just fought right through it, from this big [Stevie gestures low to the ground.] when I first met her. And she’s come right through it like this amazing woman that the mythological Rhiannon is and that this little Rhiannon is. So Rhiannon, this is for you tonight. This is ‘Landslide.’”

    [slideshow_deploy id=’33569′]
    The Mac's other members weren't shy about welcoming Christine McVie back into the fold. (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    The Mac’s other members weren’t shy about welcoming Christine McVie back into the fold. (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    Lindsey Buckingham: the higher the hair, the closer to God? (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    Lindsey Buckingham: the higher the hair, the closer to God? (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    Have Shawl, Will Travel: Stevie Nicks and Mick Fleetwood (back) (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    Have Shawl, Will Travel: Stevie Nicks and Mick Fleetwood (back) (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    (Photo: csnowden)
    (Photo: csnowden)
    (Photo: Jess and the Bandits)
    (Photo: Jess and the Bandits)
    (Photo: John Greeley)
    (Photo: John Greeley)
    (Photo: Pamela)
    (Photo: Pamela)
    (Photo: The Real Egger)
    (Photo: The Real Egger)
    (Photo: Toyota Center)
    (Photo: Toyota Center)
    (Photo: Trish Badger)
    (Photo: Trish Badger)

    Videos

    Special thanks to Doug Garner, dylanelsie 9, and Space City Shows for sharing these videos!

    The Chain (courtesy of Doug Garner)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CtOoFArlwMM

    The Chain (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NC4OaIhMBAs

    You Make Loving Fun (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mv6lWT9lz4g

    Dreams (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfeQ_pWlNxg

    Second Hand News (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3X2CZZzqBo

    Rhiannon (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9arO8eQb6f0

    Everywhere (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O6bYev5qQkY

    I Know I’m Not Wrong (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-Xn7Omk_Lo

    Sisters of the Moon (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8ZjAPtZCiM

    Say You Love Me (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vb5ht51lPxk

    Seven Wonders (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3lu5gmz7gE

    Big Love (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ni_ku7u7Sg8

    Landslide with dedication (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPvjMh-ssto

    Never Going Back Again (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TbhUsS5w_20

    Over My Head (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8lcDVGAHuvA

    Gypsy (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrSIMNEkYJk

    Little Lies (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Ep2d8hCtkA

    Gold Dust Woman (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZAMBdAmEN4

    I’m So Afraid (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6RofcGAc_U

    Go Your Own Way (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOmX4IvlNnQ

    World Turning (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fkTfdebGPg

    Don’t Stop (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hG-9hFvz6aA

    Return for Encore 1 (courtesy of dylanelsie 9)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PG06k19F9F4

    Silver Springs (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Et5jlQQQTH8

    Songbird / Stevie’s closing speech (courtesy of Space City Shows)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QyXupNkcsMk

    Reviews

    Fleetwood Mac thrills Toyota Center for two-plus hours (Houston Press)

    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)

    Preshow Write-up

    Why Fleetwood Mac Is Bigger Than Ever, Fleetwood Mac Music

    Fleetwood Mac will be playing a very special show in Houston on Monday night. It’s special because it is the first time Christine McVie will be joining the band in a performance here since the early ’90s at least. For many younger fans, this is their first opportunity to see the band’s full classic lineup performing together.

    And those younger fans? Well, there’s a lot of them — in fact, there may be more than ever. Against all odds, Fleetwood Mac has gone from a classic-rock band, relegated to bargain bins, to a thriving, relevant enterprise. Monday night’s show will be a celebration of that fact.
    Of course, this has nothing to do with new music on the part of the band, or even anything particularly special they’ve done. Sure, it probably ignited a little bit of renewed interest when Stevie Nicks and all those witch rumors became a focal point of the last season of American Horror Story. But even then, Fleetwood Mac’s revival was rolling around beforehand.

    It wasn’t releasing new music for the first time in a decade either. 2013’s Extended Play was Fleetwood Mac’s first newly released material since 2003’s Say You Will, a tepidly received album that missed the mark of their resurgence by years. While Extended Play was a welcome addition to their discography with some pretty solid songs on it, most younger fans probably never even noticed it came out.

    No, the reason for their revival is indie rock and folk, which are massive these days. You can hardly go anywhere without hearing someone playing an acoustic guitar, once the sort of thing which was only ubiquitous in flashbacks to the long-forgotten era of hippies at parties noodling around on Beatles chords in clouds of weed smoke.

    Bands like the Decemberists and City and Colour have brought Americana and folk into their indie-rock with astounding results. It’s practically a new genre, nothing like the indie rock of yesteryear, represented by bands like Pavement or Archers of Loaf. Much of it is indebted to one band, too: Fleetwood Mac.

    The dual harmonies of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks. The bluesy, roots guitar from Buckingham, combined with the band’s technical proficiency and tendency towards hard-rock breakdowns in their Americana jams. It’s all there plain to see on Rumours, the modern blueprint for how to make a record like this.

    The esteem of Rumours has always been great. It is one of the most lauded and greatest-selling records of all time. But where this sound had once fallen into disfavor, relegated to your parents’ mixtapes while the kids were out breaking bottles and losing their shit to punk rock and metal, it has recently become cool again for the first time in 30 years.

    A song like “The Chain” is so profoundly influential on a band like the Decemberists that one could almost accuse them of ripping it off. Even songs on their other records like “Landslide” have gone from your mom’s favorite song to a legendary ballad held in esteem by singer-songwriter indie rockers around the world.

    Dare I say it, my generation has all but abandoned the distorted guitars and revolutionary attitudes of metal to embrace plaid shirts and beautiful chord melodies. In essence, this is the Fleetwood Mac generation. Almost every twentysomething I know now adores the band and their inestimable influence on modern rock music.

    When Fleetwood Mac plays in Houston on Monday, it will be the first show in our city as a full lineup in at least 20 years. But it will also be the first show they’ve played in Houston where their audience will be so vastly mixed. This isn’t going to be a classic rock show where the average age of the audience member is middle-aged. It will be a legacy show, where everyone from teenagers to people in their thirties will congregate to pay their respects to the fore bearers of a genre.

    The Mac is back, and bigger than ever.

    Fleetwood Mac performs Monday, December 15 at Toyota Center, 1510 Polk. Doors open at 7 p.m.

    Corey Deiterman / Houston Press / Friday, December 12, 2014

  • REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac thrills fans at Toyota Center

    REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac thrills fans at Toyota Center

    Fleetwood Mac thrills Fleetwood Mac fans new and old at Toyota Center for two-plus hours.

    Fleetwood Mac
    Toyota Center
    December 15, 2014

    The Mac Attack is Back! And with the Songbird back in the nest, the Chain has been reforged, and seems stronger than ever.

    Okay, that may be a little heavy on the symbols and metaphors. But it’s hard to overestimate the importance the Fleetwood Mac’s return to its classic mid-’70s to mid-’80s lineup of Lindsey Buckingham (vocals/guitar), Stevie Nicks (vocals), namesake rhythm section Mick Fleetwood (drums) and John McVie (bass), and returning vocalist/keyboardist Christine McVie.

    So many references were made by other band members onstage to McVie’s unlikely and never-thought-possible comeback after 16 years (she had retired to her English castle, vowing never to make music again), that no one would have blamed her for blushing, even nearly 40 dates into this reunion tour.

    Lindsey Buckingham: the higher the hair, the closer to God? (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    Lindsey Buckingham: the higher the hair, the closer to God? (Photo: Jack Gorman)

    Every classic-rock band of any importance or longevity has gone through lineup changes — including Fleetwood Mac, whose origins stretch back to 1967 as a straight-up, all-English blues band. But there just seems something so…right about this lineup reconstituting. Take out any one of the five, and it’s just not the same.

    And for more than 2.5 hours, Fleetwood Mac put on a vibrant, strident, joyous show that was no robotic walk through the Greatest Hits. And they had the sold-out Toyota Center shaking, with even most of those on the floor standing up for the bulk of the set.

    Opening appropriately with the band-of-brothers-and-sister anthem “The Chain” to a rapturous welcome, the band played a seemingly never-ending string of favorites. The included a whopping nine of the 11 tracks from their career apex Rumours, and that album’s haunting B-side “Silver Springs.”

    The Mac's other members weren't shy about welcoming Christine McVie back into the fold. (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    The Mac’s other members weren’t shy about welcoming Christine McVie back into the fold. (Photo: Jack Gorman)

    They also found set list space for a couple of deeper cuts from the more experimental 1979 double album Tusk (“I Know I’m Not Wrong,” “Sisters of the Moon”), possibly to the exclusion of bigger hits “Sara” and “Hold Me” from the set list. Other highlights included a slinky “Dreams,” buoyant “Say You Love Me,” and hard-charging “I’m So Afraid.” The band was augmented by three backup singers and two keyboardists/guitarists, tucked up on risers at the back of the stage.

    Nicks dedicated a lush “Landslide” — performed by just her and Buckingham on guitar accompaniment — to a real-life Rhiannon in the audience who had/was facing some unexplained life challenge. She was likely not the only audience member either named for or conceived by that Tale of a Welsh Witch.

    A handful of numbers were rejiggered from their album arrangements to great effect. Buckingham’s “Big Love” went from a more pop tune (with the orgiastic “oohs” and “aahs” of the chorus) into a howling, guitar-drenched cry of pain. Its author told the crowd that the track’s meaning for him had changed since its 1987 appearance on Tango in the Night.

    “This song was about contemplation in alienation…and now it’s a meditation on the importance of change” he told the audience and — pointing to one close by younger member — “written before you were even born.”

    Nicks’ cocaine elegy “Gold Dust Woman” turned into a far heavier, extended jam. It featured one of Nicks’ trademark stage twirls, all long blonde hair, scarves, and glittering shawl batwings. And while she pulled out her trademark stage moves more sparingly (being a 66-year-old in high heels and all), the audience went apeshit every time she turned.

    This was no robotic walk through the greatest hits. (Photo: Jack Gorman)
    This was no robotic walk through the greatest hits. (Photo: Jack Gorman)

    She also turned out to be the night’s most chatty storyteller, introducing “Gypsy” with a mini-history lesson of her and Buckingham’s adventures first as teenagers in high school, then band partners in L.A. and San Francisco in the late ’70s, where the duo opened for acts like Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Chicago.

    For all the romantic soap opera that has been the band’s history with its members being together, separated, divorced, and changing partners, it’s clear this particular pair still have an unshakeable bond between them that’s neither forced nor fake.

    All five had a sinewy energy about them belling their chronological ages, especially the super lean Christine McVie (who Nicks said has been “working out with a trainer every day since February”) and stage-stalking Buckingham, both in skinny jeans.

    There were, as expected, some concessions to age among the band’s three singers. Christine McVie’s voice is a bit sharper, sometimes removed from its warmer tones; Nicks’ is a bit more gravelly, and Buckingham worked to make his upper register.

    But these are all minor observances, and in fact, actually add to the songs, making them more lived-in and reflective of history.

    When Nicks offered the wistful line “But time makes you bolder/ Even children get older/ And I’m getting older too” on “Landslide” (written in 1973!), it clearly struck a chord with both band and audience. And the vocals could have actually been turned up a bit higher in the mix throughout the show.

    A slowed-down “Never Going Back Again” brought some more regret into the lyrics. And even Buckingham’s well-worn kiss-off “Go Your Own Way” had a visceral power live that belied its FM-radio overplaying. [Note: this paragraph has been edited after publication.]

    The evening came to a close with a rousing “Don’t Stop,” though one can’t help by mentally picture a certain political power couple with the track playing now, and an elegant, heartbreaking “Silver Springs.” Then, fittingly, Christine McVie returned to a grand piano to play the strains of “Songbird.”

    In it, the avian of the title “knows the score.” And the score – brought home with Nicks and Fleetwood’s touchingly personal post-song address to the audience about the current reformation – is that the band has started a new chapter in its ever-unfolding book.

    The quintet are already working on new material for an upcoming studio album, and a second Houston date has been added for March 3 of next year. Get your tickets…now.

    Personal Bias: Longtime fan, and not just of this lineup. And I credit seeing a Mac show in Austin in the late ’80s (sans Buckingham, but with Rick Vito and Billy Burnette) with starting me on a music-journalism path.

    The Crowd: Wider-range of ages than most classic-rock shows, from twentysomethings to sixtysomethings. A handful of shawled Stevie wannabes; Lots of couples.

    Overheard in the Crowd: “I hope they do ‘Sara,’ but they probably won’t. It’s not a song really meant for concerts.”

    Random Notebook Dump: Lindsey’s high, brillo hair is looking more Art Garfunkelesque all the time.

    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 (w/Fleetwood drum solo)
    Don’t Stop
    Silver Springs

    ENCORE 2
    Songbird

    Bob Ruggiero / Houston Press / Tuesday, December 16, 2014

  • REVIEW: Toyota Center crowd has lovin’ fun with FMac

    REVIEW: Toyota Center crowd has lovin’ fun with FMac

    Never underestimate the power of the Mac.

    Three songs into Monday night’s set at Toyota Center, Stevie Nicks promised the crowd she would “get this party started!” Until then, Fleetwood Mac had been pleasing and mostly polite: anthem-ic kickoff “The Chain,” “You Make Loving Fun,” “Dreams” shifted to a lower key.

    But something kicked into gear with “Second Hand News.” Lindsey Buckingham ripped into the song, all wild eyes and stomping feet. It reverberated through the sold-out crowd and energized Nicks’ take on “Rhiannon.” The party had indeed started.

    Christine McVie, who rejoined the band after a 15-year absence, was still soulful and sweet on “Everywhere,” which benefited from a punchy arrangement.

    “Now she’s been here, and it’s almost 40 shows. And now I think she’s gonna stay,” Nicks quipped. The band returns in March for another Toyota Center show.

    The enduring allure of Fleetwood Mac has been the story behind the music. The core unit Buckingham, Nicks, John McVie, Christine McVie and Mick Fleetwood – has continued to thrive both in spite and because of its tempestuous history.

    Buckingham played up the sentiment, saying the band’s success is its ability “to continue to prevail through the good times and the bad.” He called Christine McVie’s reappearance “the beginning of a poetic, a profound and a beautiful new chapter.”

    For now, though, it was about the music.

    Nicks introduced “Gypsy” with a lengthy story about meeting Buckingham, shopping for rock-star clothes and opening shows for Jimi Hendrix, Santana and Creedence Clearwater Revival.

    “Are you listening over there?” she asked him.

    And, yes, something sweet and magical still happens when Nicks’ croons about getting older and snow-covered hills during “Landslide.” The entire venue seemed to sigh in unison.

    Joey Guerra / Houston Chronicle / Tuesday, December 15, 2014