The Buck Stops Here
Fleetwood Mac front man
Lindsey Buckingham shows off his
solo Skin at the Ryman
Friday, 10/06/06
Nashville Tennessean
BY PETER GILSTRAP
Staff Writer
Somewhere, presumably, a man named Fritz Rabyne still exists. He's
of German descent, roughly 57 years old, and, many years ago, as a
joke, some high school classmates named their band after shy, quiet
Fritz.
In 2006 in Nashville, there is no reason why you would know of this
individual. However, in 1966 in Atherton, Calif., chances are the
name was not so foreign, courtesy of something called The Fritz
Rabyne Memorial Band. If you'd seen the group they opened up for
Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix, among others you would have been
watching what was to become the core of one of the biggest groups in
rock.
Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, to be precise. To fast forward
to the present: The pair quit the Fritz combo, recorded demos, moved
to Los Angeles, got a deal, got dropped, joined Fleetwood Mac, made
millions.
Now, as Herr Rabyne continues to keep a low profile, Buckingham has
released his third solo effort. Under the Skin, his first solo
recording in 14 years, is a stunning example of the offbeat pop that
the singer/songwriter/ producer creates by himself when he's not
making not-so-offbeat pop for Fleetwood Mac. The 11 songs (recorded
mainly in hotel rooms) are spare, and the structures deceptively
simple. The arrangements consist largely of guitar and vocals, the
latter layered and awash with effects. In other words, Under the
Skin may not get under everybody's skin, but Buckingham's goal was
not to plop out a batch of hits
"I don't even know what that means now, with Top-40 radio doing
mainly hip hop and Aguilera kind of stuff," he says. "I haven't
geared the album to that, and I'm really not interested so much in
that. You have to go into it with realistic expectations, especially
with an album like this. If something nice happens, that's great.
You're dealing with the masses out there, and there's a certain
boutique echelon of people who are going to appreciate what I do,
and if that's what it is, then that's fine. I can't worry about that
at this point."
Over the years, most of what Buckingham has written for solo
projects has found its way onto Mac albums. When he started writing
the Under the Skin material some two years ago, the music flowed �
"It was like taking a laxative," he reveals. A brain laxative; as
opposed to some writers who jot constantly, that's where the
musician keeps his ideas.
"I do think a lot of the difference between writing a song and not
writing a song is committing the seed to a tape or to something,"
says the California native. "Then again, I would never want to be
one of those guy who walks around with a little recorder saying,
'Idea to myself!' I carry ideas around in my head, and when it's
time to go in and actually commit stuff to recording, you trust that
there's going to be stuff there. There usually is."
Buckingham's lo-fi recording ethos an inexpensive portable
16-track Korg, in this case is part of the charm of Under the
Skin.
"If you have something in your head, you can get to it any number of
ways," he offers. "One may be cleaner than the other, but it's my
belief that people are probably going to like dirty before they're
going to like clean. Yeah, you can hear some hiss on some of the
vocals and stuff, but that's what it is, and certainly, it doesn't
get into the way of anything. That's always been my approach, make
it have soul, and make it feel good and the rest will follow."
Buckingham has a voice to be reckoned with, as all those millions of
Mac fans know, but in his solo work, he coats his pipes in echo,
reverb and delay. It may seem odd, but another guy with a great
voice, John Lennon, used to demand that producer George Martin
drench his vocals with effects. Why?
"Well, it's the same problem. John Lennon and I are both Libras, and
we both have low self-esteem, and I don't like the sound of my
voice," Buckingham states. "But it's not just that. I think on some
level I find the manipulation of voice interesting. And this
particular collection of tunes, probably because there was so much
space I wanted to make it really just guitar and not much else
part of the theory was to make it sound like you were playing in the
living room. In order to do that, one of the things was putting
various delays on the voice, which come through a crappy stage delay
pedal you should be running a guitar through, not your voice. But it
was something I tried and I liked it and it took on its own life, so
of course I used it beyond any level of taste."
Buckingham's signature finger picking guitar style displays a level
of wonderfully economical taste, and owes a debt to Nashville. "You
could say that a lot of the finger style that I do on guitar is
based in the Merle Travis pick, which is a standard rolling folk
pick," says Buckingham, who also admits considerable admiration for
Chet Atkins. "I started playing guitar soon after my older brother
brought home 'Heartbreak Hotel,' and when that first wave of rock
and roll started turning into Fabian or whatever, I started getting
into folk, and also some pedestrian level of bluegrass banjo; all
those things relate to the way I play."
Is he a country fan? "Not in the current sense," Buckingham admits,
"but I am in the Hank Williams sense, and Ferlin Husky and people
that go back a ways, though you start to sound like an old fart when
you date yourself like that. But I don't know how you top Hank
Williams."
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