Tag: San Diego State University Viejas Arena

  • 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

    [slideshow_deploy id=’30420′]

    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)
  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac steamrolls Viejas Arena

    Fleetwood Mac electrified the fans at their sold out show at San Diego’s Viejas Arena on July 5.

    (Arlene Ibarra / U-T San Diego)
    (Arlene Ibarra / U-T San Diego)

    Concert reviews generally don’t write themselves. But what better time to let go of the wheel than a surefire, fired-up, three-hour detonation from a group of million-record-selling, Grammy-winning Rock and Roll Hall of Famers?

    But the problem with any spontaneously combusted recap of Fleetwood Mac’s July 5 Viejas Arena show is that it would focus entirely on the band’s earth-shaping popular music — Stevie Nicks’ whimsically whisky-voiced rendering of their “all-world” chart-topper, “Dreams,” or her equally splendid delivery of the spellbindingly lyrical “Gypsy” for instance.

    Oh, it might mention the full-throated, 13,000-member backing choir that the Mac brought with them to sing every word on Lindsey Buckingham’s crackling masterpiece “Go Your Own Way” and the musical equivalent of the optimist’s creed, “Don’t Stop.”

    But it would probably neglect to mention the band’s remarkable performance of several “semi-precious” tunes — songs that may not have sold a bazillion copies but are every bit as golden. It would miss Buckingham leading the charge on a spirited “Second Hand News” to light the concert’s fuse — or a compellingly stoic John McVie and an impishly elated Mick Fleetwood pounding the rock legends through a hypnotically angry “World Turning.”

    Of course it would overlook the hauntingly melodic “So Afraid,” highlighted by Buckingham’s confusingly underappreciated guitar brilliance. And as long as we’re discussing Buckingham’s mind-numbing talent, that self-generating review wouldn’t say a thing about the astoundingly frenetic 25-year-old fretwork from his 63-year-old fingers on “Big Love.”

    A self-written review would likely disregard the splendidly peaceful, easy Buckingham/Nicks acoustic interlude on “Landslide” — leaving the masses to wonder why the Dixie Chicks would have even considered remaking an already perfect tune.

    It would most definitely have ignored the foursome’s four-song mini-set of tunes — “Not That Funny,” “Sara,” “Sisters Of The Moon,” and the title cut — from the band’s artistically fulfilling, record company disappointment of a follow-up to Rumours, the elephantine Tusk.

    Of course that omission might make sense given that even Buckingham confessed during the show that the commercially disappointing album was a “violation” of the record industry’s “golden rule” — namely that “if it works, run it into the ground.”

    And if it wouldn’t mention one of the band’s critically panned efforts it probably wouldn’t have said anything about the two impressive songs from the Mac’s new self-titled EP, “Sad Angel” and “Without You” — a tune that B/N “lost” almost 40 years ago only to have it resurface in 2010 on YouTube of all places.

    So what are the chances that the review would comment that after thousands of fans had blissfully absorbed three hours of Fleetwood Mac’s best, the band closed the exceptional show with the charmingly obscure — and affectingly moving — lyrical message from Buckingham to Nicks, “Say Goodbye”?

    Nicks stayed on stage to thank the fans for treating the music like they were “hearing it for the first time,” even after close to 40 years. But only “experienced” music fans like this one would know that the band sounds even better today than it did almost four decades ago.

    On second thought, maybe I’d better grab the wheel…

    Here’s the complete set list:

    1. “Second Hand News”

    2. “The Chain”

    3. “Dreams”

    4. “Sad Angel” (new song)

    5. “Rhiannon”

    6. “Not That Funny”

    7. “Tusk”

    8. “Sisters of the Moon”

    9. “Sara”

    10. “Big Love”

    11. “Landslide”

    12. “Never Going Back Again”

    13. “Without You” (lost Buckingham/Nicks track released on new album)

    14. “Gypsy”

    15. “Eyes of the World”

    16. “Gold Dust Woman”

    17. “I’m So Afraid”

    18. “Stand Back” (Stevie Nicks solo song)

    19. “Go Your Own Way”

    Encore

    20. “World Turning”

    21. “Don’t Stop”

    Second encore

    22. “Silver Springs”

    23. “Say Goodbye”


    Kevin Yeanoplos / Examiner / Sunday, July 7, 2013

  • CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac with purpose, passion at Viejas Arena

    CONCERT REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac with purpose, passion at Viejas Arena

    Despite a few bumps, the veteran Anglo-American band played with purpose and passion Friday at SDSU

    Fleetwood Mac showed, and sometimes defied, its age during the legendary band’s generous Friday concert at San Diego State University’s Viejas Arena.

    As a result, “Don’t Stop,” the group’s 1977 hit and second encore, took on new poignancy with its now-weathered refrain: Yesterday’s gone. So did 1975’s rustic ballad, “Landslide,” whose wistful chorus – Children get older / I’m getting older, too – assumes a different resonance 38 years later.

    Then again, for a band that was formed in London in 1967 and whose enduring core members first joined forces in Los Angeles in 1974, Fleetwood Mac’s longevity and renewed energy is worthy of celebration and reflection. Its 23-song SDSU show offered ample opportunity for both, with the band’s members (all now past 60) and their multigenerational audience forming an unusually large, boisterous mutual admiration society.

    The evening began with an impressive salvo of “Second Hand News,” “The Chain” and “Dreams,” all from the band’s epic 1977 Rumours, one of rock’s most popular albums, then and now. The concert, a notable improvement over the band’s mostly rote 2009 San Diego Sports Arena show, concluded with four encore selections. They included the bristling “World Turning,” the jaunty “Don’t Stop” (the only song by former singer and keyboardist Christine McVie, who quit the band in 1998), the country-tinged “Silver Springs” and the gentle acoustic ballad “Say Goodbye.”

    The swirls and twirls that were once Nicks’ trademarks remain, but came only intermittently.

    In between came a mix of classics (“Rhiannon,” “Go Your Own Way”) and deep album cuts (“Eyes of the World”), plus one new song (“Sad Angel,” excellent), and a recently unearthed older one (the Cat Stevens-flavored ballad “Without You,” so-so). Guitarist-singer Lindsey Buckingham and singer Stevie Nicks also did some songs from their solo catalogs, a move that impeded the concert’s flow nearly as much as the four consecutive numbers from the band’s more experimental 1979 album, Tusk.

    The absence of more new material did not appear to bother many in the enthusiastic SDSU audience. Nor did Buckingham seem concerned, as he noted in a U-T San Diego interview Thursday.

    “Well, sure, of course you want to keep doing new material, if you can,” he said in the interview. “But there is also, I would say, a point you get to where you do come to terms with the fac tha you have this great body of work. And there’s nothing wrong with going out and playing it. In a way, it can be a little freeing, because if you don’t feel you have to remake yourself every time (you tour), you can go put and deal with the (vintage) material in a slightly fresh way, every time.

    “And that can be just as effective, once you come to terms with that, it kind of releases you and there’s a point where you really need to come to that (realization). Because you have to understand that, probably, the audience is not really there to hear the new as much as to hear a reaffirmation of the body of work.”

    The underlying sentiments to parts of that body of work sometimes got jumbled during Friday’s show. But that’s par for the course with this famously dysfunctional band, whose best songs from the mid-1970s were born from the crumbling love affairs between Nicks and Buckingham and between McVie and her-then husband, bassist John McVie.

    Given this context, it kind of made sense that Nicks’ declaration early Friday night — “This party starts now!” — came just before “Dreams,” her wrenching 1977 song about the then-imploding relationship between her and Buckingham. The swirls and twirls that were once Nicks’ trademarks remain, but came only intermittently. During “Go Your Own Way” she playfully chased Buckingham, but not too fast, across part of the stage.

    Nicks, 65, and Buckingham, 63, briefly held hands and embraced on stage several times. They also engaged in some between-songs banter that promoted Nicks to liken them to George Burns and Gracie Allen.

    “Can’t we be someone younger?” Buckingham playfully responded.

    Older and wiser, the two are keenly aware that their romance, while now decades in the past, still carries a special allure for fans. This holds especially true for those who might use Rumours as an emotional barometer of their own lives.

    Bassist McVie and drummer Mick Fleetwood, the band’s two remaining charter members still on board, were rock-solid throughout. The sound was enhanced by several instrumentalists and backing singers, who gave added dimension to the music. Kudos, too, to the band’s audio engineers, who achieved impressive warmth and a clear, crisp sound balance in the usually echo-heavy arena. (The secret, as in most sprawling venues of this size, is simple: The lower the volume, the less muddled the sound.)

    Buckingham played guitar with finesse and ferocity. Refusing to rest on his laurels, he often sang with such passion that it almost seemed as if his career prospects depended on it. Nicks sounded more constricted, her trademark tremolo less tremulous, her lower vocal range somewhat diminished. But she is still a commanding presence and the sheer force of her personality usually made up for her technical shortcomings. In a few instances, her struggle to hit the notes of her youth lent added depth to the songs. In others, she simply fell (and sounded) a bit flat.

    After the fourth and final encore, “Say Goodbye,” Nicks thanked the audience for making her and the band’s dreams come true over the past four decades. She also urged fans to listen to the band’s vintage songs in the future as if they were hearing them for the very first time.

    It was sage advice at a nostalgia-fueled concert that could serve as a preview of the band’s valediction (Buckingham’s reference to “new chapters in the Fleetwood Mac” notwithstanding). No fewer than 15 of the 23 selections came from the first three albums he and Nicks made with the band: 1975’s Fleetwood Mac; 1977’s Rumours; and 1979’s Tusk.

    But the high-tech stage production was very much of the moment. And Fleetwood Mac’s best songs, like the group itself, both define and transcend their time. Don’t stop, indeed.


    George Varga / U-T San Diego / Saturday, July 6, 2013

  • CONCERT VIDEOS: Fleetwood Mac @ Viejas Arena, San Diego CA

    CONCERT VIDEOS: Fleetwood Mac @ Viejas Arena, San Diego CA

    [slideshow_deploy id=’11715′]

    Fleetwood Mac performed in concert at San Diego State University’s Viejas Arena in San Diego on Friday night, the penultimate show of the North American tour.

    Stevie dedicated “Landslide” to “three marvelous people,” her San Diego-area friends Shane, Chris, and Lisa. She also told a story about the time in 1969 when she and Lindsey performed in San Diego:

    “I would just like to tell you a very, very quick little story about San Diego.

    Lindsey and I were on the road in the first and only really big tour we did in like 1969. We went, well, (gesturing) we went San Francisco, Salt Lake, San Diego, LA. So every place we played, we played the Civic in LA and a smaller place in Salt Lake. But here, we played the San Diego Civic Auditorium, right? It was the biggest indoor venue that we had ever played. And I always remember that whenever we come to this city that there [were] little pieces of foil hanging from the entire ceiling, and it was all sparkling. And it was so beautiful, and it was almost like I had this premonition — (pointing to Lindsey) premonition — that this was going to happen, that this was actually going to really happen. And as you know, it kind of did.

    So, on that note, I would just like to dedicate this song to San Diego for being the first time time that I really thought, ‘This is going to work.’” (See video of the full dedication below.)

    Fleetwood Mac closes out the North American tour Saturday night at Sleep Train Arena in Sacramento.”

    Videos

    Here is amateur footage from the show. Special thanks to Richard Browning, ceoBailey, B Foust, kandrews, lanelsonconsulting, and Richard Pecor for making these clips available.

    3. Dreams (courtesy of Richard Pecor)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HiAcMHWMk6o]

    4. Sad Angel (courtesy of ceoBailey)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8AxN2mbVZo]

    8. Sisters of the Moon (courtesy of Richard Browning)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJpxB4-_PYQ]

    9. Sara (courtesy of ceoBailey)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rUGQkdX_ksY]

    10. Big Love (courtesy of Richard Browning)
    [youtube=http://youtu.be/0nIAov-FyS4]

    10. Big Love (courtesy of B Foust)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNmsX9tSQn0]

    11. Landslide (courtesy of Richard Browning)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bCvpIjS9Qmc]

    11. Landslide – with full dedication (courtesy of ceoBailey)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0N32jzhJ4bU]

    13. Without You (courtesy of ceoBailey)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3z02JI77Vk]

    15. Eyes of the World (courtesy of ceoBailey)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOkPqEXzUII]

    18. Stand Back (courtesy of Richard Pecor)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_DiMhFvkDc]

    19. Go Your Own Way – partial (courtesy of lanelsonconsulting)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrFAdHPrLnY]

    Encore (courtesy of ceoBailey)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AA-u-CSqIPo]

    Closing remarks (courtesy of kandrews)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56B8oAr5H1M]

    Critic reviews

    Fan reaction via Twitter


    https://twitter.com/eileenalouise/status/353353566657855490

    @mills1216
    Also Fleetwood Mac’s Rumors is perfect tonight.

    @OfficialCarvin
    Fleetwood Mac concert going strong!

    @enmasdillema
    I love her dreams!!!!! Fleetwood Mac!

    @xoxonotorious
    Fleetwood Mac

  • CONCERT PREVIEW: Fleetwood Mac’s saga continues in San Diego

    (Neal Preston)
    (Neal Preston)

    It’s been a turbulent ride, but the band is back on the road — and even getting along

    It’s been 39 years since Lindsey Buckingham and his then-girlfriend, Stevie Nicks, joined Mick Fleetwood and John and Christine McVie in Fleetwood Mac.

    Faster than you can say “Landslide,” the 8-year-old English blues-rock band and its two new American members shifted gears, changed musical styles and soared to international pop stardom. The 1975 album Fleetwood Mac was the group’s first release to top the U.S. charts, while its 1977 masterpiece Rumours has now sold more than 40 million copies worldwide and yielded such enduring hits as “Don’t Stop” and “Go Your Own Way.”

    Did Buckingham ever imagine then that the band would still be active in 2013 and embark on a world tour, which includes a Friday stop here at San Diego State University’s Viejas Arena?

    “Well, time kind of slips by and it doesn’t seem that long,” said the veteran guitarist and singer-songwriter, speaking from a recent tour stop in Boston. “You know, when you’re in your 20s and contemplating that (long an) amount of time, you think: ‘Gee, will I even still be alive by then?’ So, it’s all kind of relative to your perspective. And it certainly is a surprise, although there are bands that have managed to stick around that long.

    “The one thing that probably would have disabused me from thinking then that we’d still be around now is that the chemistry was always so volatile. Not just because there were two couples in Fleetwood Mac who had broken up (before Rumours was completed), and that whole subtext, but from the point of view that we are the kind of people who don’t all belong in the same band together.”

    Those two couples were, of course, Buckingham and Nicks, who split up while making Rumours, and the McVies, who separated before recording sessions for Rumours began and soon divorced. For any other band, such upheaval would spell the end. For Fleetwood Mac, it was the launchpad to fame, fortune and more upheaval, including drugs, Fleetwood’s bankruptcy, his on-tour affair with Nicks and enough other ups and downs to fuel a rock ’n’ roll soap opera.

    “The conception is the volatility would eventually become a divisive force,” Buckingham said. “But I guess it went the other way; that same dynamic has a musical synergy, and we’re still working through things on a personal level.”

    Of course, Fleetwood Mac has hardly remained constant since its Rumours heyday.

    Buckingham, always the most musically adventurous of the band, quit in 1987. He was replaced by Billy Burnette and Rick Vito. Nicks and Christine McVie left the group in 1990, followed by Vito a year later, at which point Fleetwood Mac ground to a halt.

    In 1993, Buckingham, Nicks, Fleetwood and the McVies reunited to perform at newly elected President Bill Clinton’s inaugural ball (“Don’t Stop” was his campaign theme song). Burnette quit the same year, leaving Fleetwood and the McVies to soldier on. They were soon joined by singer Bekka Bramlett and, briefly, ex-Traffic singer-guitarist Dave Mason. Burnette returned in 1994 and Christine McVie left.

    In 1998, a year after the band’s Rumours lineup reunited — perhaps as much for financial reasons as artistic ones — Fleetwood Mac was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Christine McVie quit the band, for good, the same year.

    “The Fleetwood Mac world certainly can be dysfunctional at times,” drummer Fleetwood said in a 2003 U-T San Diego interview.

    Ironically, that very dysfunction seems to have sparked some of the band’s best work.

    “Yeah, it’s very difficult to separate one from the other,” Buckingham agreed.

    So, how are he and Nicks getting along now?

    “In 2003 and 2004, there was a tangible polarity between Stevie and me,” he replied. “By our 2009 tour, that polarity had neutralized. … Now, on this tour, it seems to have swung the other way, to where Stevie and I are sort of playing out these (star-crossed lovers) roles, although it isn’t the reality of our lives! But it was, once, and slowly evolved into these roles. I mean, my God, I have three children and a beautiful wife, and that’s my reality. But the dynamic between Stevie and myself onstage this time is more of a love fest. And, for whatever reason, we are able to acknowledge that offstage and manifest it a little on stage. It seems to be playing out like we’re taking stock of that ‘What’s it all about, Alfie?’ moment. And that’s really very touching, and quite intriguing, to do with someone I’ve known since high school.”

    George Varga / U-T San Diego / Thursday, July 4, 2013