A new life for Buckingham
Thursday, October 12, 2006
By BRADLEY BAMBARGER
Star-Ledger - New York
POP/ROCK
NEW YORK -- Fleetwood Mac made Lindsey Buckingham rich and
famous, or perhaps it was he -- as studio whiz and
perfectionist driving force -- who made a journeyman blues
band a rich and famous pop group. But for all the rewards, the
singer/guitarist could seem constricted by the Mac's soap
opera, his artistic ambitions bound in the bubble of money and
relationships.
On Tuesday at Manhattan's Town Hall, Buckingham howled with
the delight of a free man, seeming far younger than his 57
years as he unveiled songs from a new solo album and
cherry-picked highlights from his back pages. While Fleetwood
Mac's silver linings often had a darker cloud where he was
concerned, Buckingham's music can take on a new edge and
abandon in the flesh.
That new disc -- "Under the Skin," his first solo effort in 10
years and only the fourth in a fitful non-Mac career --
features Buckingham's most intimate work, mostly acoustic
songs recorded at home. He noted to an adoring crowd that the
album is about "growing up." Certainly, it takes a kind of
maturity to put forth "Not Too Late," a manifesto of naked
artistic ego that led off the show as it does the album.
Driving the song with the ornate, self-taught finger-picking
that made him one of rock's more distinctive guitarists,
Buckingham sang of "feeling unseen ... like I'm living
somebody else's dream." Such verses could sound like
embarrassing whines coming from someone of his station, but
the mix of middle-aged fragility and fresh purpose in the
refrain of "it's not too late" had the disarming sound of
someone whistling in the dark.
Buckingham was joined by a stylish three-piece band for the "Rumors"
kickoff track "Second Hand News." Even if listeners missed the
harmonies of Stevie Nicks, the rollicking tempo and male
bonding brought a helpless grin to Buckingham's face. And that
face is as handsome as ever; if the Californian didn't make a
deal with the devil for his talent, he surely did for his
looks.
Solo again, Buckingham played an ultra-intense version of the
latter-day Mac's "Big Love," his keening vocals as emotionally
unhinged as those of any punk singer. He also gave his '80s
rococo'n'roll hit "Go Insane" -- more romance as psychodrama
-- the definitive treatment. With its slow-tolling guitar
figure and poetic world-weariness, the song could've been by
an Elizabethan troubadour. But at the climax, Buckingham
strummed furiously and yowled at the moon, "I call her name,
she's a lot like you."
Buckingham is a contented family man these days, and such
lovely new songs as the "Under the Skin" title track reflect
intimacy without mawkishness. But he obviously had a great
time channeling those old demons. Back alongside the band, he
sang the primal "I'm So Afraid" sotto voce before exploding
the early Mac song with an epic electric solo that had him
pummeling the fretboard as if his very expensive custom guitar
couldn't produce all the sound in his head.
From "Tusk," Buckingham aired a quick-step rendition of "I
Know I'm Not Wrong" that came closer to realizing his new-wave
vision than did Fleetwood Mac. After ripping through his
timeless breakup song "Go Your Own Way," Buckingham coerced
the band into taking a shouted encore request. They worked up
an arrangement of the plaintive "Tusk" tune "Save Me a Place"
on the spot. It wasn't something one could imagine Fleetwood
Mac doing, with Buckingham's look of surprise and delight
saying as much.