Tag: Lindsey Buckingham

  • Dueling duos

    Dueling duos

    Justin Bieber (“Love Yourself,” “Sorry”) and Selena Gomez (“Hands to Myself, “Same Old Love”) are both in the Billboard Top 10 this week, prompting the following question: “Have any other former couples previously shared space in the top 10 with separate hits?”

    On the Dec. 26, 1981 Hot 100, Stevie Nicks ranked at No. 8 with “Leather and Lace,” which had reached the top 10 the week before. On the Dec. 26, chart, Lindsey Buckingham rose to No. 10 with “Trouble,” joining her in the bracket. The latter would spend three total weeks at No. 10 before climbing to its No. 9 peak for two weeks, all while “Leather and Lace” remained in the top 10, lifting to its No. 6 peak in the former’s final week in the region.

    So, for five weeks in 1981-82, Nicks and Buckingham each placed in the Hot 100’s top 10 simultaneously with their own songs. (Like Bieber and Gomez this week, they avoided back-to-back chart contact throughout that stretch.) Making things potentially more awkward, Nicks had moved on to another … as her hit is a duet, of course, with Don Henley (whom she did date).

    “Relations with Lindsey are exactly as they have been since we broke up,” according to Nicks, who dated Buckingham in the ’70s, helping lead to Fleetwood Mac’s iconic breakup-inspired album, 1977’s Rumours, as they remained bandmates (after first teaming as duo Buckingham Nicks). “He and I will always be antagonizing to each other, and we will always do things that will irritate each other, and we really know how to push each other’s buttons.

    “We know exactly what to say when we really want to throw a dagger in. And, I think that that’s not different now than it was when we were 20. And, I don’t think it will be different when we’re 80.”

    (Beyond continuing in Fleetwood Mac to this day, Nicks and Buckingham teamed 20 years ago this year for “Twisted,” a single worth revisiting from the movie Twister.)

    As for Bieber and Gomez reuniting … not just in the Hot 100’s top 10? Gomez recently said, bluntly: “What I would love to be printed is that I am so beyond done with talking about that, and him.”

    Bieber is more nostalgic, and hopeful. “We have a lot of history together, so it could possibly happen. I think we’re both just on our own journeys, figuring ourselves out. Once we’ve figured ourselves out, we could maybe come together and make an awesome duo.”

    Read the full article at Billboard.

  • Dressed-down Fleetwood Mac out and about in Adelaide

    Dressed-down Fleetwood Mac out and about in Adelaide

    Fleetwood Mac: Supergroup being pretty low-key ahead of their Adelaide concert

    Mick Fleetwood
    Mick Fleetwood outside The Intercontinental in Adelaide (Photo: Mike Burton)

    THE members of legendary supergroup Fleetwood Mac are being pretty low- key during their Adelaide stay.

    Heading out of the band’s city hotel yesterday wearing jeans and a T-shirt Lindsey Buckingham, greeted our shutterbug telling him to stay put because “there will be a raft of people for you to photograph’’.

    He wasn’t telling Little Lies either because soon after appeared Christine McVie, who is back with Mac after 16 years, with an entourage. Like Lindsey, she was casually dressed and looking relaxed as she left to take in some city sights.

    Mick Fleetwood was even more chilled out, rocking a beanie.

    Fleetwood Mac is performing at Coopers Stadium on Wednesday night and there are Rumours the band will be at the Melbourne Cup Carnival.

    Lindsey Buckingham
    Lindsey Buckingham outside The Intercontinental in Adelaide (Photo: Mike Burton)

    “Fleetwood Mac has been invited and inundated with requests to attend Cup Carnival events,” a source close to the band tells Confidential.

    The Advertiser / Tuesday, October 27, 2015

  • REVIEW: Lindsey Buckingham @ USC

    REVIEW: Lindsey Buckingham @ USC

    ‘Go Your Own Way’ Lindsey Buckingham talks, performs for student entrepreneurs at Bovard

    Photos by USC Greif Center, David Belasco, William Vasta, and Los Angeles Times.

    [slideshow_deploy id=’104997′]

    LOS ANGELES, Calif. — In what was arguably one of the most memorable final class sessions, Lindsey Buckingham and the USC Trojan Marching Band performed the iconic “Tusk,” from the 1979 Fleetwood Mac album of the same name, before a capacity crowd of students, alumni, faculty, staff and friends at Bovard Auditorium.

    The April 29 event was the final meeting of David Belasco’s class BAEP 407–Taking the Leap, which focuses on the entrepreneurial mindset and has recently featured guests including Tom Barrack, Mark Cuban, Jessica Alba and Laird Hamilton. Belasco, co-director of the USC Lloyd Greif Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, had long hinted about his final special guest, and with an amplifier sitting onstage, it was clear this would be no ordinary lecture.

    Never Going Back Again

    “We use the term “rock star’ a lot today to describe somebody who has done something great. But tonight,” he said, “we have an actual rock star.” The evening was equal parts artistic discourse and concert, with Buckingham treating the audience to acoustic performances of classic Fleetwood Mac songs such as “Never Going Back Again,” “Bleed to Love Her” and “Big Love.” The band’s 1977 album Rumours hit the top of the charts and stayed there for 31 weeks, selling some 40 million copies and becoming the sixth best-selling album of all time. Buckingham said it was the raw pain of breakups – he and singer/songwriter Stevie Nicks were splitting up after six years, and Christine McVie and her husband, bassist John McVie, had also separated – that fueled the music and lyrics to which so many related. “It was laid bare for all to see,” he said. “The songs were true dialogues from three different writers. People felt that.” The band’s next album, Tusk, was in large part an artistic backlash against superstardom, he said.

    Big Love

    Tusk, of course, is the track that featured the USC Trojan Marching Band. It was Mick Fleetwood’s idea, Buckingham said, to mesh a marching band sound with a driving drum beat. “It was a sublime marriage of two completely different worlds.” The double-album, while critically panned, sold 4 million copies worldwide.

    Tusk is my favorite album because it set me on the path to be an artist, and not just a craftsman doing music,” said Buckingham.

    The evening ended with Buckingham and the Marching Trojans performing “Tusk” and “Go Your Own Way.” Arthur C. Bartner, who for more than four decades has directed the Marching Trojans, and who was present at the 1979 Dodger Stadium taping, conducted onstage.

    Earlier in the evening, the Lloyd Greif Center for Entrepreneurial Studies honored Ben Van de Bunt, a member of the Center’s advisory board, with the Lead Blocker Award, for his role in bringing speakers to USC. In addition to Buckingham, he helped bring Cindy Crawford, Tony Robbins and Gary Vaynerchuk to speak at the Center. Presenting the award were USC Athletic Director Pat Haden ’75 and J.K. McKay ’75, senior associate athletic director.

    Tusk

    At the end of the program, Helena Yli-Renko, co-director of the Lloyd Greif Center, holder of the Orfalea Director’s Chair in Entrepreneurship and associate professor of clinical entrepreneurship, awarded Buckingham with the Musical Entrepreneur of the Year award.

    USC Marshall School of Business / May 1, 2015

  • PRESHOW: Going long with Lindsey Buckingham

    PRESHOW: Going long with Lindsey Buckingham

    On Sunday, the Erwin Center welcomes back the classic lineup of Fleetwood Mac: Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood. This lineup of the group, whose 1977 album Rumours is one of just eight albums to have sold at least 40 million copies, last played the Austin concert arena in 1982, a show we’ll discuss in detail in the Austin360 section of Sunday’s American-Statesman.

    We spoke by telephone on Thursday with Lindsey Buckingham, who offered a good bit of detail about the full band’s current reunion as well as some background about their past. What follows is an assemblage of highlights from that conversation.

    Austin360/American-Statesman: Four of you had been touring and recording off and on since the 1997 full-band reunion, but this is Christine McVie’s first reappearance since 1998. Why did she decide to return for this tour?

    Lindsey Buckingham: When she left, I think she really was just looking for a change. And there certainly has been precedent for this fivesome to have made exits and returns. I did that myself after producing the Tango in the Night album and then did not do the tour. That was for other reasons at the time. But I think with Christine, she was just at a point in her life where she was kind of tired of the whole discipline of recording and writing and touring, and was feeling somewhat ungrounded by that. She’d had a series of relationships that hadn’t held for her, and I think she put some of that down to the kind of life she had to lead and what she had to prioritize. I mean, I’m sure it was way more complex. But basically, back then, she burned all of her bridges in Los Angeles. She sold her house and basically moved back to England, and ensconced herself in a completely different universe.

    And I think over a period of time, I think that that had a good healing effect for her, and it sort of came out the other side. And she started to appreciate what this particular family, dysfunctional as it may be, had to offer for her, and how much she shared with us. Because really, you know, for better or for worse, we as a fivesome have been through things together that no one else has been through. On some strange level, we all know each other in a way you’ll never know someone else who’s been through all that.

    And I think she really just started to miss it. I think her creative impulses, which had kind of gone into a low ebb at the time that she left, started to bubble up again, and she was excited by that. So she started having conversations with Mick, and Mick started having conversations with me. I got on the phone and had a very long conversation on the phone with her. And she said, well, how would you feel about me coming back? And I said, “Well, Chris, we would love to have you come back. If you want to think of there being a number of acts that can last over a number of years, this could be the beginning of a beautiful last act. The only thing I’d say is, if you come back, you can’t leave again!” (Laughs) So she said, “OK, I won’t.” That was that, and we kind of sealed the deal.

    Had the rest of you gotten to where you felt like the band worked well without her?

    Oh yeah. We didn’t really miss a beat. When she left, we took a little bit of time off and then went in the studio to make an album back in 2003. And we’ve done a number of successful tours, businesswise and I’d say artistically, as a four-piece. The only difference, really, is that, you know, Stevie’s sort of at one end of the spectrum, she’s representing one pole, I’m representing the other end of that, and Christine is somewhere in the middle. So I think that the body of work speaks more eloquently. I think that it’s a point at which you can take stock of that body of work and appreciate it at this point in time. With her inclusion in it and her songs in there, suddenly you’ve got a more complete landscape. And I think her songs help inform my songs and Stevie’s.

    And that’s just on a musical level. Then you’ve got to talk about just the fact that I think on some level, Stevie missed having her gal pal, if you will. And that’s been great. It kind of lightens things up again, because if there’s a polarity musically between Stevie and me, there’s also a bit of a polarity politically or socially, given our history. So it fills in that as well. So yeah, we did great as a four-piece, but I think it’s a more complete picture when Christine is there.

    In addition to the tour, there’s apparently a new record in the works. How has that been going?

    Well, it’s been going great. It’s sort of piecemeal, in the sense that I went in quite a while ago and cut some tracks with John and Mick, and some of those got put on the shelf for a while. And then when Christine showed up, she and I went in the studio and did quite a bit, maybe seven or eight tracks over the period of about two months in the studio. And that was phenomenal really, because it kind of tapped into something that I had always done for her and for Stevie, in terms of production and co-writing and informing the whole sensibility. When someone like that has been away that long as Christine has, you don’t know if the tools or the context remains. But we locked in with a vengeance and did some of the most creative and beautiful stuff I think we’ve ever done together.

    So we’ve got that, and now the missing piece is just Stevie. The tour, and the rehearsals for the tour, had already begun, so, like I say, it’s been a little bit piecemeal. But I think it’s going to be incredible when we finish it. We’ve got quite a bit left to do touring-wise, and then we will sit down and try to formulate some kind of a plan. This is one of the differences between us and someone like the Eagles — I admire the fact that they always seem to know what they want, why they want it, and they all want it at the same time. And we are really just the opposite politically. It’s a wild animal and it’s hard to pin everybody down for a common vision. It’s kind of always been that way, but it’s a little more disparate now than it was back in the day, because everyone sort of wended through their particular journey.

    Have you been doing any of the new material at the shows?

    No, we’ve been keeping it pretty much under wraps. You know, on the last tour we did before Christine returned, we had done an EP, and we did a couple of things that were new then. But it seemed to us that the message right now, with Christine’s inclusion, which is such a circular thing, it seemed like the message was really, let’s just underscore the body of work. And that’s what we’re doing.

    Any chance you’ll write songs on this tour that might end up on the record?

    I’m always fooling around with stuff on the road, but as of yet there has not been any formalized interaction in that direction on the road. There is kind of a tendency for everyone to go off to their respective corners. So, as of yet, no. But we still have quite a bit of time. We’ll just have to wait and see. I wouldn’t say there’s been a real sense of urgency for that.

    Your show in Austin on Halloween night of 1982 turned out to be the last show this fivesome played together for 15 years, until the reunion for the album “The Dance” in 1997. What do you remember about how you were feeling at that time in general?

    Well, I know where my head was beginning to be at. You have to kind of backtrack to a post-Rumours environment, which was this kind of area that we found ourselves in where the success had become not about the music but it had become about the success. And when the phenomenon becomes more noteworthy than the substance about which the phenomenon should really be focused on, you’re into this sort of area where – well, I suppose any kind of success brings on that axiom: “If it works, run it into the ground.” But certainly in the wake of Rumours, there was a strong implication that what we needed to do was go in and make something like “Rumours 2.”

    And of course we made Tusk, which, depending on your point of view, I was either the hero or the villain of that story. … That’s still my favorite album; it was the moment at which I felt I had defined the way I still try to think today. But in the wake of the Tusk album, the band – which had slowly gotten drawn into what it was, and was really quite charmed by it and loved it when we delivered it to Warner Bros. – had a rethink on how they felt about it when it didn’t sell 15 million albums. So in the wake of that, then we made Mirage, in which there was this kind of dictate that came down from the other four saying, “Well, we’re not going to do that process again, Lindsey, we’re going to go back to something a little more straight ahead.”

    It’s very easy to move forward; it’s harder to deliberately backtrack into something that might have been where you were spontaneously five years before. So this was where I was at the end of the “Mirage” tour. I was kind of a bit disillusioned with some of the collective priorities of the band, a bit disillusioned with the fact that I was now going to have to a solo album – and I had already made one. I probably never would have made any solo albums had there been a band sensibility that continued to applaud the “Tusk” album at the time and continued to want to move in a riskier direction, or at least a braver direction.

    So I wasn’t sure where I was going in terms of my function with the band by the time we got done with that tour. Because Mirage, which had some beautiful songs on it, to me felt like we were kind of receding back for the wrong reasons. And it left me as a producer feeling like I was treading water. And I wasn’t sure where all of that was going. I think it took a number of years, and getting through to the Tango in the Night period, for that to hit the wall for me, at which point I did take leave of the band for a while. So there was already some disillusionment for me, as someone who’s maybe tried to live out a principle to a fault, sometimes. But that was kind of the mindset for me by the time we ended the Mirage tour.

    Over the past decade, you’ve been able to balance Fleetwood Mac with your solo records and tours. Do you feel like you have the best of both worlds at this point, getting to do both?

    Well, yeah, you start to come the realization that the audience that is coming to see you as Fleetwood Mac, isn’t necessarily — not that they aren’t interested in new material, but they’re less interested in new material than they are in the body of work. That’s not inappropriate; if you’ve been around for a number of years, you should feel good if your work has stood up. That’s the other thing about this tour: I think even more so than the 2013 tour, it’s become very clear that that the body of work stood the test of time. We see people who are, you know, I don’t even want to know how old they are, out in the audience. And then you see teenagers. The music has somehow gotten through and made its mark and is continuing to make sense to all ages of people.

    So I think we’re living in a moment where we feel that that is the case, and it validates the idea that you can go out and do a body of work, and not necessarily have to keep reinventing yourself as Fleetwood Mac. That doesn’t mean that if you are continuing to want to push your boundaries that you should just settle for not doing that. And that’s where the solo work comes in. The terms I’ve been using are “big machine” and “small machine,” and with the small machine, you reach far fewer people and there’s far less at stake in any sort of business sense of the word. In fact, quite often you’re not really turning much of a profit at all. You’re just going out there and playing for the love of playing, for the people who want to see you do what you do and for the chances you’re willing to take, or whatever it may be.

    That’s where the real solo notion continues to thrive, is in the small context. And then hopefully you can bring that back into the larger thing. You can bring the vitality of it, the context of that back into a larger situation. So yeah, I guess in a way I do have the best of both worlds. It’s kind of a tightrope you walk, you know? Not necessarily wanting to fall off on either side. Because probably one would not exist without the other, and one clearly does enable the other. So it’s a pretty fine line there, but yes, I feel very lucky to have all of that. It may be a couple more years before I even think about getting back to anything solo, but, eventually I will.

    Quite a few Fleetwood Mac tribute records have been released, and there’s one in particular that I wondered if you heard: Camper van Beethoven redid the Tusk album in its entirety…

    “Yeah, I did hear that once. I thought, “Wow, that’s my kind of band!” (Laughs) You get a lot of the groups that are a little more to the left who tend to want to sort of gravitate towards that album a little more. So yeah, that was nice. I liked that.

    The one cover version in recent years that had a big run on the charts was the Dixie Chicks’ country-pop crossover hit with “Landslide.” Were you surprised at all that it had such appeal to country audiences?

    Not really. It’s a wonderful song, it’s a very accessible song. And Stevie’s whole thing — or some of it, because she can get into something else slightly more modal, and then you put my sensibilities over that as a producer and it moves farther and farther away — but at her center, a lot of what she does is not too far away from country. And “Landslide” is a pretty good example of that. Just as a song, that song certainly lends itself to something like that. So no, it didn’t surprise me at all.

    A younger-generation local musician here in Austin told me recently that her entry into the band was the 1997 live album The Dance, which revisited a lot of the old material but may have given it a new life among another generation of music fans. Was that part of the band’s motivation in doing that record?

    Well, we did The Dance for a couple of reasons. I think there was talk about making another studio album, but also you have to remember, I’d been away for a while. I had done Tango in the Night in 1987 … but that was really where the behavior set of everyone, and the way we thought we had to lead our lives, was beginning to hit the wall for everyone. The making of that album was the most chaotic and certainly the most intensive study in alternative behaviors, shall we say. So I made the album, we delivered the album, and I said, “I can’t tour with this, I’ve got to sort of regroup and get my feet on the ground.” So I had taken off, they had added a couple of new guitarists, and the band for whatever reason did not seem to function too well without me. Which obviously didn’t make me unhappy, but I didn’t wish them ill in any way. But at the same time, it was nice to know that I mattered that much.

    So I had been gone and made one solo album (1992’s Out of the Cradle) and done quite a bit of touring behind that. And then of course the Bill Clinton thing (when Clinton used the band’s “Don’t Stop” in his campaign) happened, and we were called together, the five of us, to do his inaugural party, and we did that. And that became kind of the catalyst for maybe rethinking whether I wanted to stay out of the band indefinitely. They really wanted me to come back, because they thought that my not being there may have helped the demise of the band.

    So by the time we got to The Dance, I think even though Warner Bros. wanted an album from the band, there was a kind of a sense of means-to-an-end in terms of drawing me back into the group: “Let’s not put him through another studio experience, let’s make a live album.” Which, you know, becomes a whole other exercise where perhaps a few new songs need to be revealed, but basically you’re just restating the body of work, and it’s a much less intensive thing to contemplate than a studio album. I think there was some of that. But there was a lot of wanting me to get drawn into that. I remember we had a dinner up at Christine’s, and there was something almost like an intervention, where everyone was standing around me saying, “We’ve gotta do this! We’ve gotta do this!” And I said, “OK, let’s do it!” So we did it. And it worked; it was great. We got a great video piece out of it, and it really was a lot of fun.

    Peter Blackstock / Austin360 / Friday, February 27, 2015

    Related Article

    Lindsey Buckingham wants Fleetwood Mac to be more like the Eagles (Something Else Reviews)

  • VIDEO: Lindsey Buckingham talks to Tavis Smiley

    VIDEO: Lindsey Buckingham talks to Tavis Smiley

    Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Lindsey Buckingham talks about reuniting with the iconic band, Fleetwood Mac.

  • VIDEOS: Stevie attends the 56th Annual Grammy Awards, Universal Music after-party

    VIDEOS: Stevie attends the 56th Annual Grammy Awards, Universal Music after-party

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    Stevie attended the 56th Annual Grammy Awards at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday night. She arrived for the customary Red Carpet Arrivals, posing for pictures, schmoozing with celebs, and talking to the press.

    Sound City: Real To Reel, for which Stevie contributed the original song “You Can’t Fix This,” won a Grammy for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album (Butch Vig, Compilation Producer).

    Fellow Fleetwood Mac bandmate Lindsey Buckingham was also present for the music industry’s biggest night, performing onstage in a supergroup with Dave Grohl, Trent Reznor, and Queens of the Stoned Age to close the show.

    After the awards, Stevie headed over to the Universal Music Entertainment Post-Grammy Reception at The Palm restaurant, located one block east of the Staples Center. She mingled with other giants in the music industry, such as Katy Perry, John Mayer, Pharrell Williams, and Universal Music Entertainment Chairman and CEO Doug Morris.

    Grammy Interview (courtesy of CBS)

    Stevie arriving on the red carpet (courtesy of SuperPopACCESS)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9KCqrZbBIo

  • Lindsey Buckingham to close out Grammys with supergroup

    Lindsey Buckingham to close out Grammys with supergroup

    2014-0124-spin-jem-aswad-grammys-supergroup

    Nine Inch Nails, Queens of the Stone Age, Dave Grohl, and special guest Lindsey Buckingham will give the closing performance at the 56th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday night, SPIN can exclusively reveal.

    “We’re incredibly excited about this number,” Grammy executive producer Ken Ehrlich said in a statement. “There’s nothing better than when the Grammys can rock out, and to have these artists all together on one stage, doing a number that, when they presented it to us, knocked us out, is going to turn out to be one of those Grammy moments that people talk about for a long time. Long live Trent, Josh, Dave and Lindsey and these great bands!” It will be the first-ever Grammy telecast performance for Nine Inch Nails and QOTSA.

    Thirteen-time Grammy winner Grohl, as usual, is the connective tissue, having performed extensively with both bands, most prominently on QOTSA’s 2002 LP Songs for the Deaf and Nine Inch Nails’ 2005 album With Teeth. Fleetwood Mac guitarist/singer Buckingham, of course, is the wild card, and his role — singing a kickass version of “Tusk” or “The Chain,” maybe his solo hit “Go Insane”? — remains to be seen. However, it’s not as random as it might seem: Buckingham guested on Nine Inch Nails’ latest LP Hesitation Marks and also appears in Sound City: Real to Reel, the Grohl-directed documentary about the legendary, now-shuttered L.A. studio where many classic albums were recorded; his Fleetwood-Mac-mate, Stevie Nicks, appears in the film and also joined Grohl on the Sound City Players album and tour last year.

    While the Foo Fighters did not release any new music during this year’s window of eligibility, Grohl has two nominations, both connected to Sound City: Best Rock Song for “Cut Me Some Slack” (with Paul McCartney and the other surviving members of Nirvana, a group often dubbed “Sirvana”), and Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media; separately, he appears as a songwriter (again, with Nirvana) on a Best Rap Song nominee, Jay-Z’s “Holy Grail.” Queens are up for two awards: Best Rock Album (for …Like Clockwork), Best Rock Performance with the album’s “My God Is the Sun,” and, indirectly, Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. Two-time Grammy winners Nine Inch Nails’ Hesitation Marks is nominated for Best Alternative Music Album. Buckingham is not nominated but is featured on the Delta Rae song “If I Loved You,” which garnered Rob Cavallo a shot at Producer of the Year, Non-Classical.

    While there’s no official word yet on the latest rumor – that Madonna and Beyonce will perform on the show – Sunday’s telecast, to be held at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, already boasts formidable star power: The most recent official additions were Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr — who will accept a Lifetime Achievement Awards for the Beatles — plus performers Jay Z and Beyonce, Taylor Swift, Kacey Musgraves, John Legend, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Keith Urban, and Sara Bareilles (with Carole King). They follow previously announced performers Daft Punk (with Nile Rodgers, Pharrell Williams, Stevie Wonder, and several Random Access Memories session players), Kendrick Lamar (with Imagine Dragons), Lorde, Metallica (with pianist Lang Lang), Taylor Swift, Katy Perry, Pink (with fun.’s Nate Ruess), Robin Thicke (with Chicago), and multiple country legends (Merle Haggard, Kris Kristofferson, and Willie Nelson, with current nominee Blake Shelton).

    The Grammy Awards will be broadcast live at 8 p.m. ET/PT on CBS. Stay with SPIN all week for much more on the show, the performers, the parties and beyond.


    2014-0124-spin-jem-aswad-grammys-400Jem Aswad, New York / Spin / Tuesday, January 21, 2014

    Jem Aswad is Editor in Chief of Spin and the Editor of Billboard.biz. He has also held senior editorial posts at MTV News, Time Out New York, ASCAP and CMJ, and has written for New York magazine, Entertainment Weekly, the Village Voice, Esquire, and other publications.

  • Fleetwood Mac’s creative glue

    Fleetwood Mac’s creative glue

    The real Lindsey Buckingham: He’s their creative glue

    Up close, there was something of the actor Kevin Kline about Fleetwood Mac’s guitarist, songwriter and producer Lindsey Buckingham in 1977. It isn’t the appearance, so much. It’s more that Buckingham’s nervy, jittery demeanour reminds me of Kline in one of his nervy, jittery film roles.

    It’s 10:30am and the tray in Buckingham’s hotel suite contains evidence of a healthy breakfast: lots of juice and half-eaten fruit. Buckingham looks wiry in black shirt, black jeans and flip-flops, but I notice that he wiggles his toes and jiggles a knee when answering some questions. Critics and the other members of Fleetwood Mac have described him as “uptight.” He is, but then he’s earned the right to be. Without Buckingham, Fleetwood Mac would probably have finished in 1975.

    The trouble is, Fleetwood Mac wasn’t what Lindsey Buckingham had in mind when he left the family home in suburban California to try and become a singer-songwriter. It was Stevie Nicks who persuaded him to join Fleetwood Mac. Their Buckingham Nicks album had tanked, and she was concerned they were going to starve. Buckingham, though, would have gone hungry for his “art.”

    His painstaking approach to writing and arranging is what made Rumours so great. That he then stuffed the follow-up album, Tusk, with wonky non-pop songs such as “The Ledge” and “Not That Funny” only makes you admire him even more. Buckingham can “do” pop as well as Nicks and Christine McVie, it’s just that he prefers to sprinkle a little broken glass into the mix as well. Like Nicks, he’s an emotional exhibitionist who bleeds all over his songs. The mind boggles at what it must have been like to have been around that extraordinary couple “back in the day.”

    Since the late ‘90s Buckingham has repeatedly parked his erratically brilliant solo career to make time for Fleetwood Mac. That’s where the money and the acclaim is, but it must have hurt handing over songs he’d earmarked for his own record to 2003’s Mac comeback album, Say You Will. That album went to Number 3 in the US; Buckingham’s next solo album, Under the Skin, made it to 80.

    When I next spoke with him in 2005, he’d become a father to three young children, and had lost that Kevin Kline-like jitteriness. When we spoke again in 2012, he was back on Fleetwood Mac duties, and sounded uptight again. But as the conversation wore on, he gradually thawed out. He admitted that, at times, yes, it was hard being in Fleetwood Mac and dragging all that history and emotional baggage around. But, as he said, it could have ended up like Peter Green.

    “Boy, I consider myself lucky,” he said, with a laugh. “I am one of the few who escaped…mostly unscathed.”

    Photo caption: Lindsey Buckingham, an emotional exhibitionist who bleeds all over his songs (Jeremy Cowart / © 2011)

    Mark Black / Q / October 2013 (from “The high times of Fleetwood Mac – 17-page collector’s special”)

  • Lindsey Buckingham dishes on new EP, Stevie Nicks, Mac tour

    Lindsey Buckingham dishes on new EP, Stevie Nicks, Mac tour

    Lindsey Buckingham on his ‘mythology’ with Stevie Nicks, what is holding up a new album, and the latest on Christine McVie

    Fleetwood Mac is having tremendous success on its current sold-out tour. The band is playing its classic hits with verve and enthusiasm, plus, since the recent release of 4-song EP,  Extended Play,  the quartet has new material to sink its teeth into.  Guitarist Lindsey Buckingham spoke to HitFix about the current state of Fleetwood Mac, the delight he takes in his still dynamic connection to Stevie Nicks, the latest on a full album from the band, and if Christine McVie will join her former band mates when they play London in the fall.

    I saw the band two weekends ago at Jazz Fest in New Orleans and it seemed like you were on fire. The band was playing in daylight without any of the bells and whistles of an indoor arena show and no one missed them at all. 

    There’s a lesson there. We’ve all come to feel that we need to rely on the constructions of quite elaborate set design and the backdrop that changes from song to song and, really, this band, because we are a band of musicians and a great singer, we could go up there and with a couple of spotlights prevail probably just as well. It should be about the music first and, of course, with us, it is.

    “Extended Play,” a four-song EP with your first new music in 10 years, came out on April 30 and landed in iTunes top 10.  How gratifying was it that people were so eager to hear new music?

    I haven’t paid too much attention to how things are going with it because, really, Mick [Fleetwood] and John [McVie]  and I got together last year and we cut a bunch of tracks and then Stevie came to the table later. Even early on,  Mick and John and I felt that the songs that we were doing were some of the best stuff we’d done in quite a while.

    I am also happy with what it represents with the subject matter. The dialogues to Stevie that are, miraculously, still going on back and forth between Stevie and myself after all these years, I find that to be quite touching and somewhat surprising— something that neither one of us would have predicted years and years ago that we’d still somehow be driving each other’s motivation from a distance, and so I’m very happy with the way the EP turned out and it’s great to be doing some new things on stage.

    Fleetwood Mac EP

    You wrote one of the new songs, “Sad Angel,” for Stevie. What was her reaction when she first heard it?

    I was not there, but I believe she latched onto it immediately. [When] that song was written, I was trying to reach out to her a little bit… she had a very good experience making her solo album [2011’s “In Your Dreams”] and it took her awhile to kind of sort of ease into the mentality of being in Fleetwood Mac again this time… That was a song to help lure her in a little bit, not that there was an agenda to do that, but it just seemed appropriate to what was going on at the time… “Hello Sad Angel, have you come to fight the war” and “Here we are, we fall to earth together/the crowd calling out for more.” It’s really sort of sweet that all of this is still taking place.

    With piano ballad “It Takes Time,” you’re pleading for patience to someone who wants to heal you. What’s that about?

    I guess the reflection is that I’m actually looking at some of the actions that I’ve taken over the years and maybe judging them more objectively and maybe getting to a point in one’s life where you can look back and say, “Hmmm, maybe I could have done that differently”  and acknowledging that much of the motivation that has driven certain creative actions and certain decisions has come from that dialogue that  seems to have unfolded in slow motion over a period of many years. We are still somehow on a road of evolvement.

    Is that one about Stevie?

    I would think so.

    It’s not the only relationship you’ve had,  so I wasn’t sure.

    But, you know, you can slip into these roles and it’s not that the feelings that you have aren’t… it doesn’t mean they are any less authentic. But at this point, to some degree, what Stevie and I have, we’ve played these characters for so long, you know, and it doesn’t threaten anything having to do with my home life, my wife completely understands the dynamic of it.  There’s a certain aspect of professionalism to it.

    Do you feel that in some way now it’s part of your role to keep playing into this mythology?

    Well, it’s a mixed bag. There is the mythology and there is, you could call it, a role, but you know that doesn’t mean we haven’t lived it. If you backtrack all the way back to Rumours, when all of this mythology rose up, if you look at the appeal of that album, it went beyond the music. It was, whether people could identify it or not, this idea that under less than ideal circumstances, in fact, under quite emotionally challenging and painful circumstances, that we were able to somehow summon up the strength to rise above that and to sort of follow through on what we needed to do fulfill our destiny, if you want to call it that. And so the subtext of Rumours becomes not the soap opera part so much as that it was an act of will and that has continued. Where reality stops and where the role begins, it’s a little fuzzy in there, you know.

    So not just for us, but for you two too?

    For us too! Yeah, and I think that’s appropriate and I don’t know how it could really be any other way because of how it began, you know.

    This is the first tour since 2009. Every time you guys come back together for a tour, you must discover something new about Mick, John and Stevie. What have you discovered about each one of them this time that you didn’t know?

    (laughs) Wow… As far as Stevie goes, again, if you go back to that song “It Takes Time” and thinking maybe about times in the past when maybe I could have shown her a little more love or shown her a way to make her process a bit easier. From the first day of rehearsal, I had that in mind to try to do.

    I think that difference between Stevie and me right now on this tour: If you go back two tours to 2003, we had just finished doing our last album, Say You Will, and I had produced that. And there was a certain, I wouldn’t call it an animosity, but there was a lot of tension between Stevie and me. Some of that polarity clearly played out on stage and, in a way, it made for a very interesting show. When you cut to 2009, that had been kind of neutralized, but there was nothing so tangible between us. And now, it’s sort of swung the other way where there’s more of a connection. There’s more of a mutual acknowledgement of what we’ve been through, an openness to acknowledge it on stage.

    With John and Mick, the only thing I’d say about John and Mick on this tour is that they are both personally in, I think, the best places I’ve seen them in a long time and possibly because of that, I have never heard the two of them play better as a rhythm section and, of course, they are one of the great rhythm sections in rock. Consequently, as a band, we are playing about the best I can ever remember us ever playing.

    You brought up that there may be a new album, but given the difficulty of getting these four songs together, should the fans not be holding their breath?

    What needs to happen now if we are to do a complete album— because I think my portion of the material is not only written and recorded, but probably mostly finished— Stevie needs to come with some new material… She’s not like me, I work alone a lot when I do my solo stuff. It’s like going down to the studio and painting. I’m kind of self sufficient… With Stevie, she will write lyrics and keep them in a file and a lot of times she doesn’t even come up with melodies until later, until someone says, ‘well, you’ve got to come up with something.”

    There are two scenarios that could lead to new material for Stevie, some of it would be her coming up with new songs. I have a lot of very raw stuff that has no lyrics yet…and if she wanted to sort of co-write on that level, I would love to look into [that] because we’ve never really done that. That’s an intriguing possibility. But that’s what it’s going to take: for her to bring, in one way or another, some stuff to the table so we have a balanced representation between the two writers.

    I’m not overly worried about what we do. Hey, if we don’t do an album, we could always do another EP. That would be another option, so I don’t really know what’s going to happen.

    Extended Play also features “Miss Fantasy,” a new track with very classic Fleetwood Mac harmonies. How did that come about?

    That was sort of in a moment when I’d had some interaction with Stevie where I felt like I was tapping into the whole lexicon of memories and of emotional connections going all the way back to before she and I were a couple. She was really much caught up in the world of her solo effort. It was right at the end of that and I felt like it was hard to kind of find her in all of that or that perhaps more accurately, it was harder for her to find me, and the person that she knew and trusted and so you know, “Miss Fantasy,” it may be “you don’t remember me/but I remember you” and that’s really what that’s about.

    Any truth to the rumors that Christine McVie, who left after 1997’s “The Dance,” might get on stage with Fleetwood Mac in London?

    We did see Christine. She was in LA [on her way back from Maui]. Mick got her to come over to Maui for awhile… When she was living in LA and finally left the band, it was for a number of reasons. I think she really needed to burn as many bridges as she could. She got a divorce, she sold her house, she sold her publishing, she quit the band, she moved back to England. It was a radical set of things that she did all at once. Some of the reasons for that, I don’t exactly grasp, but, you know, what are you going to do?

    She is very welcome to come up and do “Don’t Stop,” or whatever she wants to do. We’ll have to wait and see if she’s comfortable. I think it would be wonderful.

    When the five of you had dinner in LA recently, how long had it been since you had all been together?

    The last couple of times we were on tour and we played in London, she came to the shows, but it was very, very fleeting. Probably [not] since she left the band had we actually sat down for several hours and been able to just kind of interact in a more leisurely way.

    What comes next for you after the tour is over later this year?

    If it were up to me, what I would do is go into the studio with Fleetwood Mac and actually finish an album and put out a whole album. Maybe look at stringing not a whole year, but a big chunk of time behind that [to tour] and do something that we have not done in years and years, which is string a few experiences together without these long breaks.

    My guess is even if we didn’t do that, there are more places in the States that we have not played yet that we’d probably want to get to after the first of the year after we come back from Australia.

    Melinda Newman / HitFix / Monday, May 13, 2013

  • Releasing more new songs ‘matter of how and when’

    Releasing more new songs ‘matter of how and when’

    Fleetwood Mac 2013 Neal PrestonLindsey Buckingham says the group has five more unreleased tracks. “The whole thing is just kind of wide open now, and it really is tantalizing to be able to put together just a few things, three or four songs on an EP”

    Lindsey Buckingham says there’s more where Fleetwood Mac’s new Extended Play came from.

    Buckingham tells Billboard that he, drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie “cut eight songs” with producer Mitchell Froom last year after Fleetwood Mac decided it would be touring this year. Three of those — “Sad Angel,” “It Takes Time” and “Miss Fantasy” — are part of the Extended Play digital release that came out May 6, joined by “Without You,” resurrected by Stevie Nicks from the Buckingham Nicks days before they joined Fleetwood Mac in 1975.

    Buckingham says “it may be too early to tell where things are going to go” with the remaining songs, but he adds that “it’s safe to say there is more than these four songs that you’re going to hear from Fleetwood Mac — it’s just a question of how and when, y’know?”

    The “when,” of course, is complicated by Fleetwood Mac’s current tour, which crosses North America through July 6 and then heads to Europe in September. But Buckingham acknowledges that Extended Play has certainly given the veteran group a fresh perspective on releasing new music rather than the drama and trauma of making an entire album, as it’s done in the past.

    “When I was growing up, EPs were all over the place,” Buckingham notes. “When I was growing up, albums were not really an art form; the single was the thing, and in some ways it has gotten back to that a little bit. The whole thing is just kind of wide open now, and it really is tantalizing to be able to put together just a few things, three or four songs on an EP. There is something quite effective about that, for sure. I have no preconceptions one way or the other in terms of what Fleetwood Mac will do or even what Fleetwood Mac should do. You just do what you can do and what makes sense logically — and politically.”

    Fleetwood Mac has been playing “Sad Angel” and “Without You” regularly in its shows, and has dug into its catalog for “Sisters of the Moon” — part of a four-song blast from 1979’s Tusk that Buckingham says he’s happy to have in the set.

    “After all this time it’s very sweet we’re able to sort of tap into that, just on more of an overview level,” Buckingham reports. “I think we’re playing better, or as well, as we’ve ever played. It’s kind of a lovefest between Stevie and me out there, which is great. And this time there seems to be an enhanced appreciation of the body of work. There seem to be a lot of young people at the shows — not that there haven’t been before, but there seem to be more this time. So I’m having a great time out there. We’re just killing it out there as far as I’m concerned.”

    Fans, meanwhile, are hoping that the tour — which coincides with the 45th anniversary of the release of the very first Fleetwood Mac album — will catch up to one of the group’s most celebrated alumni later this year. Mick Fleetwood rather publicly reached out to Christine McVie, who quit the band in 1998, which resulted in her visiting him in Maui as well as a Mac reunion dinner in Los Angeles. Buckingham calls the gesture “just reaching out to her as a longtime friend” and definitively says that “Christine is never going to rejoin the band.”

    Being together again, however, was a hoot.

    “That was great fun. It was very interesting to see what that extra piece of the puzzle does to the overall equation,” Buckingham recalls. “It was a trip, because she was the same old person I’d always known, and she was cracking me up. We’d always had just a great chemistry, the two of us, and we just kind of hit the ground running as soon as I saw her, which was kind of amazing. If she wants to come up and do ‘Don’t Stop’ with us when we’re in England, I’d love to see that. But beyond that I think there’s not too much you can make out of it — although I’m sure people will try.”

    Gary Graff / Billboard / Friday, May 10, 2013