Category Archives: Release Info

Lindsey Buckingham – Reels Himself In!

1984 Article on the recording of Go Insane

Lindsey Buckingham has never exactly set out to make a solo album. A confirmed studio addict, he methodically experiments with sounds and structures until enough of the pieces form the basis for songs that then cry out to be completed and recorded. On his second Elektra album, Go Insane, lyric ideas inspired some of the experiments, and the songs are tied together by a common thread.

*It’s really about going insane in the mildest possible sense, he explains. “It’s about having your sense of reality tested through various circumstances until you’re not really sure where reality lies and you have a choice of letting yourself continue to be insane on some level or of reeling yourself back in.”

Buckingham admits that he particularly “reels himself in on” Side One, which contains the hit single “Go Insane” followed by the tune “Slow Dancing.” “Both of those songs have certain esoteric aspects about them, he says, “although their form is not as challenging as some of the other things on the album. They draw you right in.”

The first side finishes with “Play in the Rain”, a song that continues onto Side Two. “We originally had the version that ends Side One” explains Lindsey, “but it seems like it would be very interesting to continue that particular thing which is probably the most experimental piece on the album.

“That, as the beginning of Side Two, and the next song on that side are rhythm pieces, Then it goes into ‘Bang the Drum’, for which we sent John, the second engineer, into a schoolyard to record kids playing. That song is certainly influenced by the Beach Boys use of vocals, and it is a prelude to ‘D.W. Suite’. It shifts from being non-melodic and purely rhythmic into harmonies in major keys. In fact, the whole second side is pretty much in that frame of mind, going from minor to major keys.

Continue reading Lindsey Buckingham – Reels Himself In!

Christine McVie Album Review | People Weekly

People Weekly, March 19, 1984
Christine McVie. (sound recording reviews)

CHRISTINE McVIE by Christine McVie
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There’s a loose, good-time feeling to this album. The tunes, most of them written by McVie and sometime Hall and Oates guitarist Todd Sharp, are snappy and full of rhythmic rock and roll hooks. The production by Russ Titelman is slick. For all that, there’s not much excitement in McVie’s first solo album since 1970 (shortly after she’d left the British group Chicken Shack to join then-husband John McVie in Fleetwood Mac). The subtle harmonic skills that make McVie a peerless ensemble singer and musician with Mac don’t necessarily translate into a solo act.

Her singing seems colorless at times and her keyboard work is overshadowed by her sidemen. Mac mates Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood sat in, as did Eric Clapton, Elton John, drummer Ray Cooper and rock ‘veteran Steve Winwood. McVie, in fact, calls Winwood “my idol,” and their vocal duet on One in a Million is the LP’s most striking track, though the no-frills rock tune Got a Hold on Me has become its hit single.

Maybe McVie’s heart wasn’t totally in this project–“It had reached a point where this record was expected of me,” she has said–but if nothing else, she has it out of her system.

Review Grade: B

Fleetwood Mac – Can’t Go Home Again | Trouser Press

April 1980
By Chris Salewicz

Of course, Fleetwood Mac is the American Dream. The band’s success story is the stuff of which the mytho-logy of modern day America is made: Mick Fleetwood, John and Christine McVie, down on their luck in the Oulde Country, make the decision to move to the Promised Land. Traveling as far west as possible, these humble immigrants settle on the most advanced technological frontier in the world, Los Angeles.

Operating within rock ‘n’ roll’s picaresque tradition, a surprise encounter teams up the three Britishers with two down-and-out American natives, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham. Within a year, following closely the WASP work ethic, their fortunes change for the better.

Within three years of moving to America they have become part of the aristocracy to which you are granted entry in the United States by virtue of your material rather than your blood. In Washington Fleetwood Mac is invited to the White House for social chit-chat with President Jimmy Carter.

By now they are so rich that Mick Fleetwood tells a friend he knows he need never work again in his life. It’s like a good made-for-TV movie!

Continue reading Fleetwood Mac – Can’t Go Home Again | Trouser Press

Tusk – Warner’s Largest Campaign Ever | Rolling Stone

Warners’ largest campaign ever
Fleetwood Mac’s ‘TUSK’ LP gets big push

Rolling Stone (issue 303)
November 1, 1979
by Steve Pond and James Henke

Warner Bros. Records is unveiling its largest promotional campaign ever to accompany the release of Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk on October 17th. The record company originally hired a New York advertising agency ‘Lord, Geller, Federico and Einstein ‘ to develop a marketing strategy, but after reviewing the plan, Warners and Fleetwood Mac decided against using it. This was the first time in its history that the company went to an outside firm for an ad campaign.

“We felt we owed it to the band to exhaust every conceivable outlet,” said Shelly Cooper, director of advertising for Warners. “We thought we might get a more creative campaign by going to an agency that has experience selling more than just records.”

But Cooper said that the band, which has been heavily involved in planning the campaign, “felt it was being oversold, so the entire campaign is now being done in-house. It’s more understated.”

Added a source close to Fleetwood Mac: “When the group saw the agency’s plan, they thought it was outrageous. They felt that they were being sold like a product ‘ like chewing gum.”

The advertising agency, which specialises in paperback books, hadn’t done any work for the record industry for about a dozen years, according to its executive vice-president, Ed Yaconetti. “We developed a campaign and now it’s in the hands of our client,” he said. “We don’t know whether they’ll use it or not.”

Continue reading Tusk – Warner’s Largest Campaign Ever | Rolling Stone

Best Fleetwood Mac Ever – An Interview With Mick Fleetwood | Hit Parader

May 1977
Hit Parader
by Jim Girard

Speak about Fleetwood Mac these days and you are liable to set off a series of long-winded, laudatory extrapolations about how diverse, fussy, complex and inspiring the five members really are. All that from people who have probably never even seen the band play live. This is especially true in the music business (within these very pages over the last several issues, thousands of words have been written about the band). This is a time when rock writers and music business people are cramming for finals — just trying to brush up on their Fleetwood Mac history. It is, you see, quite unhip to NOT be aware of the band that rose to unparalleled heights this past year, after knocking around the minor leagues (so to speak) in various. aggregations for the past nine years. Rock writers especially get insecure about not being aware of the varied past this band led by Mick Fleetwood and John McVie has had.

Currently, Christine McVie (a member of the band for the past four and a half years), Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks are the other members of the band. It is this lineup that produced last year’s monster album, entitled FLEETWOOD MAC, and has recently released their second album RUMOURS. Mick Fleetwood has considered using his gold records for doorstops, as the continued success of the band is inevitable.

In the following interview, leader and drummer Mick Fleetwood tells HIT PARADER about his band, his longtime relationship with bassist. John McVie (the “Mac” in Fleetwood Mac) and the various things that make Fleetwood Mac an entity in and of itself:

* * * * *

HP: Now that the band has finished RUMOURS, could we talk about the how and why of the album taking so long to finish?
Mick: Well, when we started the album RUMOURS there were a lot of things going on in the band — for everybody involved. Needless to say, it was a very strange time. Things weren’t all that bad with all the personal problems, but needless to say, things just took a lot longer than expected as a result. Lindsey and Stevie broke up, John and Christine had broken up and I was going through some changes too. Then, after two months of laying down basic tracks, we went back on tour for a white. Luckily, sometimes when you overwork at something and don’t get away from it, you get to a point where you lose it. That didn’t happen with us this time; everything we did just kept getting better and better. Since all of the original tracks were done in the first two months, the initial vibe of the album is still there. The energy isn’t gone. It hasn’t been tampered with. Mainly, there were a lot of strong feelings going on in the band, and then on the album. Unwittingly, the songs and moods on RUMOURS are connected to what various people in the band were going through. From that point of view, this is a very emotional album; more than the last one.

HP: RUMOURS was amazingly expensive to record I hear.
Mick: We worked on the album for over six months physically, but we worked on it for over ten months in total. We spent a lot of time on the album and it cost us a lot of money, yeah. However, we didn’t compromise anything on the album. We got past the point of worrying whether or not things cost too much. We didn’t want to quit until everything was as right as it could possibly be. One reason we were able to work on RUMOURS as long as we did was because the FLEETWOOD MAC album was selling so sensationally and it allowed us to keep working on the new one. If we would have put out the new album when we were supposed to, we would have killed the sales of the FLEETWOOD MAC album and there was no point in doing that. It is still selling a lot, although it is starting to drop off now.

Continue reading Best Fleetwood Mac Ever – An Interview With Mick Fleetwood | Hit Parader

Go Your Own Way  to Californ-i-ay | Rolling Stone

Fleetwood Mac blooms in the sun

Rumours – Fleetwood Mac
Warner Bros. BSK 3010

By John Swenson
Rolling Stone Magazine
21 April 1977

Rock & Roll has this bad habit of being unpredictable. You never can tell when a band will undergo that alchemic transmigration from lead to gold. The medium of transformation is almost always a hit single, but such turnarounds often swamp a band in notoriety it can’t live up to.

But in Fleetwood Mac’s case the departure of guitarist Bob Welch who’d reduced the band to recutting pointless and pretentious versions of old standards amounted to the biggest break they ever had. With that and the addition of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, Fleetwood Mac suddenly became a California pop group; instead of laborious blues/rock jams they started turning out bright little three-minute singles with a hook in every chorus.

Christine McVie now leads a classic vocal group working out of the oldest popular tradition, love songs. Vocal harmonies are the meat and potatoes of California’s pop identity, and Fleetwood Mac is now one of the genre’s main proponents, with three lead singers of comparable range and tone. Taken individually, only McVie’s voice has much character, but she anchors their vocal arrangements, since Nicks’ low range and Buckingham’s high range approximate her dulcet, evenhanded timbre.

Despite the interminable delay in finishing the record, Rumours proves that the success of Fleetwood Mac was no fluke. Christine McVie sounds particularly vital, on ‘You Making Loving Fun,’ which works for the same reason ‘Over My Head’ was a smash. The formula is vintage Byrds: Christine sings the verse simply, with sparse instrumental background, and the chorus comes on like an angelic choir high harmonies soaring behind her with 12-string electric guitar counterpoint ringing against the vocals.

This Byrds touch is Lindsey Buckingham’s province, and it’s used most successfully on the single, ‘Go Your Own Way,’ which employs acoustic guitar backing throughout, with best effect on choruses. Mick Fleetwood’s drumming adds a new dimension to this style. Fleetwood is swinging away, but not in the fluid roll pattern most rock drummers use. Instead of pushing the rhythm (Buckingham’s acoustic guitar and John McVie’s bass playing take care of that) he’s punctuating it, playing against the grain. A touch like that can turn a good song into a classic.

Buckingham’s contribution is the major surprise, since it appeared at first that Nicks was the stronger half of the team. But Nicks has nothing on Rumours to compare with ‘Rhiannon,’ her smash from the last album. ‘Dreams’ is a nice but fairly lightweight tune, and her nasal singing is the only weak vocal on the record. ‘I Don’t Want to Know,’ which is pure post-Buffalo Springfield country-rock formula, could easily be confused with any number of Richie Furay songs.

Buckingham’s other two songs here are almost as good as ‘Go Your Own Way.’ ‘Second Hand News,’ ostensibly about the breakup of his relationship with Nicks, is anything but morose, and completely outdoes the Eagles in the kiss-off genre. Again the chunking acoustic guitar rhythm carries the song to a joyful chorus that turns average voices into timeless pop harmony. It may be gloss, but it’s the best gloss to come along in a long time. ‘Never Going Back Again,’ the prettiest thing on the album, is just acoustic picking against a delightful vocal that once again belies the bad-news subject matter.

Fleetwood Mac’s change from British blue to California folk-rock is not as outlandish as some might think. The early Sixties blues scene in England had as much to do with rural American folk music as the urban blues sound, which was predominantly a guitarist’s passion anyway. Christine McVie is much closer to a singer like Fairport Convention’s Sandy Denny than to any of England’s blues shouters. Without altering her basic sensibility McVie moves easily into the thematic trappings of the California rock myth. She’s always written love songs, and sings her ballads with halting emotion. ‘Songbird,’ her solo keyboard spot on Rumours, is elevated by its context from what would once have been referred to as a devotional blues into a pantheistic celebration of love and nature.

So Fleetwood Mac has finally realized the apotheosis of that early Sixties blues crusade to get back to the roots. It’s just that it took a couple of Californians and a few lessons from the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield and the Eagles to get there.

(article sent to me by Dark Angel, with thanks)

Ouija Still Love Me Tomorrow? | Circus Magazine

Circus Magazine
April 14, 1977

Fleetwood’s Future Is Just Unfolding, Their Potential Barely

It is what it is at the time. Whatever comes out is what Fleetwood Mac is,” says John MeVie, that’s always been the way.”

And, probably, it always will be the way. Fleetwood Mac has traveled the roads of rock and roll a for almost a decade — spanning a musical range from electric blues to soft rock, surviving various personnel changes and a management burn that booked a bogus Fleetwood Mac on tour, and, finally, rising to “success-dom” in midst of some very heavy emotional difficulties last year. Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks joined Fleetwood Mac in 1975 after Bob Welch left the band to form his own group. The Buckingham/Nicks combination seemingly provided a refreshing impetus to Fleetwood Mac’s ongoing longevity. A few short weeks later, Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, Christine McVie, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks went into the studio to record.

The result was Fleetwood Mac (WB), the album that took the temperately successful Mac and catapulted them to the top of the charts, an album that was still on Billboard’s charts after 90 weeks. But, there’s a paradox in being successful in rock and roll. Once a rock band does meet with success, everytime they pass “GO” on rock’s Monopoly board, they’re attacked by critics for being commercial. “No one ever sits down and says “This seems to be popular, so let’s do this.’ It’s just whatever it is, which is really healthy and which, I think, has a lot to do with the longevity.”

Continue reading Ouija Still Love Me Tomorrow? | Circus Magazine

Fleetwood Mac: a Realignment & Two New Parts | Rolling Stone

Rolling Stone Magazine
By Elliot Cahn
1975

SAN FRANCISCO Christine Mc-Vie glanced up from her drink – in the hotel bar, a look of surprise on her face. “You know, you’re the second person today who’s told me he thought Bob Welch was hogging the show,” said Fleetwood Mac’s attractive blond keyboard player. “It never struck me that much until the Don Kirshner TV show we did last fall. When I saw that, I said, *Hang on a minute. Am I in the band?'”

Bob Welch has moved increasingly into a position of dominance within the band since replacing Jeremy Spencer – who disappeared mysteriously in Los Angeles in early 1971, only to turn up with the Children of God. By last year Welch was playing lead guitar, cowriting and singing most of the group’s material and running the stage show. The rest of the band, especially McVic, their other singer/songwriter, was pushed into the background,.

“I don’t know how it really happened,” McVie added. guess I let myself get pushed back. Bob Welch was such an energetic, speedy guy. I was happy to let him do all the work. It just boiled down to basic laziness on my part. Anyway, it’s a lot more balanced now.”

Continue reading Fleetwood Mac: a Realignment & Two New Parts | Rolling Stone