Friday, October 16, 2009

FLEETWOOD MAC ENCHANTING (CONCERT REPORT)

FLEETWOOD MAC BETOVEREND (CONCERTVERSLAG)
Een levende entiteit, dat is Fleetwood Mac. 42 jaar geleden opgericht wisselde de band vele malen van bezetting. En met verschillende leden kwamen verschillende geluiden, van blues ging het naar rock en pop. De formatie zoals die tijdens hun Unleashed tour in Ahoy verschijnt is dezelfde als die vanaf 1975 voor de meest succesvolle periode van de band zorgde. Minus Christine McVie. En voor een band die met vier leden gezamenlijk 246 jaar oud is zetten ze een verdomd lekkere show neer. Klik hier voor het concertverslag.

Also...

A few photos from showbiznewz.nl


FLEETWOOD MAC STOND DONDERDAG IN EEN UITVERKOCHT AHOY

Opgelapte Stevie Nicks geeft Fleetwood Mac kleur
Nieuws.nl

(Novum) - Fleetwood Mac stond donderdag in een uitverkocht Ahoy. Een grotendeels ouder publiek vermaakte zich uitstekend. Met nummers als 'Rihannon', 'Go your own way', 'Sara' en zelfs het aloude 'Oh well' kwamen vervlogen tijden tot leven.

Vandaag de dag telt de band nog de vier leden Mick Fleetwood (drums), zangeres Stevie Nicks, John McVie (basgitaar) en gitarist Lindsay Buckingham. Toetsenist Christine McVie is er wegens vliegangst niet meer bij.

Het laatste album van de band album dateert uit 2003. De band promootte tijdens het concert dus geen nieuwe cd, maar speelde hits uit de oude doos. "We just came to have some fun", was het motto van de avond.

Een bandlid voorkwam dat het optreden slechts een opsomming van 'golden oldies' werd. Buckingham slingerde de ene na de andere gitaarsolo de zaal in. Stevie Nicks, die haar hoge noten niet allemaal meer haalde, kleurde het optreden met haar wisselende kleding en accessoires. Ze oogde duidelijk afgeslankt, afgekickt, opgelapt en als herboren.

(english translation)

Patched Stevie Nicks Fleetwood Mac gives color

(AP) - Fleetwood Mac was in a sold out Ahoy Thursday. A largely older crowd enjoyed a great time. With songs like "Rihannon ',' Go your own way ',' Sara 'and even the old' Oh well 'came to life a bygone era.

Today the band still has the four members Mick Fleetwood (drums), singer Stevie Nicks, John McVie (bass) and guitarist Lindsay Buckingham. Keyboardist Christine McVie is no longer there because of fear of flying.

The latest album from the band's 2003 album release. The band promoted during the concert so no new album, but played hits from the old box. "We just came to have some fun" was the motto of the evening.

A band member appeared that the action just a list of 'golden oldies' were. Buckingham threw one after another guitar solo in the room. Stevie Nicks, her high notes are not all took longer, the action turned to her changing clothes and accessories. They oogde clearly leaner, kicks off, patched and reborn.

FLEETWOOD MAC BIRMINGHAM, UK TICKET COMPETITION AND "BEST OF" GIVE AWAY


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Mojo4music

REVIEW: Fleetwood Mac Energetic Adolescents Sell Out Sportpaleis

(Translated Review)

Fleetwood Mac sold out Sportpaleis: Energetic adolescents with 42 years experience 
Live in Antwerpen, Belgium October 14, 2009
De Morgan.be

Almost 30 years ago that it was Fleetwood Mac in Belgium once had stood on a podium. Or at least, the central creative figure version with Lindsey Buckingham. But Wednesday was the day, and was one of the most successful pop groups ever stop at a sold out Sportpaleis. It was worth the wait.

The life of Fleetwood Mac begs to be filmed. Quarrels, adultery, divorce, love triangles, drugs, splits, flops, successful comebacks, using egos clash, and reconciliations in between thirty hits world ... all form part of the DNA from which the group has raised. In 1992 there was a need for U.S. President-elect Bill Clinton as the ¿¿to the classic lineup of Fleetwood Mac to get back together.

Christine McVie did not much later retired for good, but the four others ¿bassist Jon McVie, drummer Mick Fleetwood star, singer Stevie Nicks and, yes, Lindsey Buckingham working together since then, and the group currently touring for the first time in Europe. A new CD is not ( "yet", stressed Buckingham), so the foursome strolled - complemented by three background singers and two musicians - freely by that unbreakable repertoire. Rumors, with 40 million copies still one of the best selling CDs ever, was the focus.

Indeed striking how those numbers succeed time and again to speak to new generations. The start was also the bad sound mix that the first hours or more lateral lying, a little difficult, but with "The Chain" and "Dreams" said the company immediately organized. Stevie Nicks - now 61 and even that is difficult to leg, but still head to toe Gold Dust Woman ¿sang with irresistible, torn from her voice to a lump in your throat is settled, but live you immediately understood why Fleetwood Mac the biggest successes in Buckingham at the helm.

That man ¿sixties, but with the energy of a teenager ¿has it all: excellent songwriter, producer, visionary, and charismatic frontman - yet most of all - an amazing guitarist. The latter was, although no news, yet the most striking of all in Antwerp, where his solos in "I" m So Afraid "and the acoustic" Big Love "of such nature that they were prompt with a standing ovation were invented.

The interaction between Nicks and Buckingham made the set despite supply ¿the group was a small three hours on stage was varied and interesting ¿. Highlights listing is hopeless, but alongside hits such as "Don" t Stop "and" Go Your Own Way "must do" Landslide "are given: acoustic and serene played by Lindsey Buckingham and Nicks in such heart-rending grace sung that way you got tears in his eyes.

Brilliant is a word often used lightly as it is about pop music, but this time was chosen with the greatest caution. Fleetwood Mac plays - 42 years after the group was founded ¿still in first division.

(Bart Steenhaut)
Foto Alex Vanhee

Thursday, October 15, 2009

(REVIEW) FLEETWOOD MAC - ROTTERDAM

Muziek.nl
FLEETWOOD MAC - ROTTERDAM, NL
Concertverslag: Fleetwood Mac
Af en toe houden ze pauze en knijpen ze d'r even tussenuit. Maar iedere paar jaar gaat het toch weer kriebelen en dan komen ze weer samen. Om te touren, en simpelweg om lol te maken. Aldus Lindsey Buckingham, zanger/gitarist van Fleetwood Mac. De laatste tour stamt al weer uit 2004 en het is zelfs nog tien jaar langer geleden dat de band Nederland bezocht, maar donderdagavond waren ze present in de Rotterdamse tennishal Ahoy.


STEVIE NICKS TELLS HOW THEIR WILD PAST STILL INSPIRES (FLEETWOOD MAC)

On the eve of Fleetwood Mac's reunion, Stevie Nicks tells how their wild past still inspires them

By ADRIAN THRILLS
Dailymail.co.uk

When they open their Unleashed tour in Glasgow next Thursday, Fleetwood Mac will be putting the emphasis on a set of superb tunes that have truly stood the test of time.

Drawing heavily on 1977's Rumours, a record that has sold more than 40 million copies around the world, the Anglo-American rockers will surely delight thousands as they breathe fresh life into standards like Go Your Own Way and Dreams.

But that will be only part of the story.

With a career riddled by cocaine-addled excess and the pitfalls of superstardom, Fleetwood Mac have often resembled a celebrity soap opera. Their biggest hits pulled few punches in laying bare their tangled love lives.

Even now, guitarist Lindsey Buckingham regularly peppers the group's stage show with wry asides about their 'fairly convoluted emotional history' - a contender for understatement of the century.

And singer Stevie Nicks, Buckingham's former lover, agrees that their turbulent past can only add to the intrigue as Mac get ready to roll back the years once more.

'If you think you know the truth about this band, you can think again,' says Nicks, 61. 'Other than the people involved, nobody knows what really went on.

'One day, when I'm an old lady, I'm going to tell the whole tale and people will be amazed. The truth will blow your mind.

'The story is deep, dark and heavy. But it's also beautiful, sexy and more romantic than you could ever imagine. Now's not the time, though. You'll have to wait ten years for that one.'

Despite her reticence to reveal all, Nicks is refreshingly chatty and candid as she looks forward to the iconic band's latest get together. She is keen, too, to dispel a few of the myths that have built up around Rumours, an LP that topped the U.S. chart for seven months.

As the year-long album sessions got underway in 1976, she and Buckingham were breaking up, while the marriage of keyboardist Christine and bassist John McVie was also on the rocks.

Meanwhile, drummer Mick Fleetwood (who went on to have a twoyear affair with Nicks) was in the throes of a divorce from his first wife, Jenny Boyd. Are you keeping up at the back?

For all the turmoil and paranoia, though, the band were not constantly at each other's throats in the studio. 'The reality of Rumours was different to the mythology,' says Stevie.

'Of course, there were days when none of us were speaking to each other. There were angry moments and sarcastic ones, too, but it wasn't always like that. If we came up with a great piece of music, we'd all be friends.'

Rather than fight openly, the warring band washed their dirty linen in song. Buckingham's Go Your Own Way was a bitter parting shot at Nicks, who responded with the more philosophical Dreams.

Christine McVie then took aim at erstwhile hubby John with Don't Stop, prompting the aggrieved bassist to suggest that the album they were making should be called Rumours because they were all writing songs about one another without actually admitting it.

Stevie continues: 'I remember the night I wrote Dreams. I walked in and handed a cassette of the song to Lindsey. It was a rough take, just me singing solo and playing piano. Even though he was mad with me at the time, Lindsey played it and then looked up at me and smiled.

'What was going on between us was sad. We were couples who couldn't make it through. But, as musicians, we still respected each other - and we got some brilliant songs out of it.'

The current incarnation of Fleetwood Mac - which features Nicks, Buckingham, Fleetwood and John McVie - is, according to Stevie, 'very different' from the band of the late Seventies.

With drugs no longer part of the equation, the group are considerably more stable off stage, though Christine McVie, who announced her sudden departure after the group had played at the Grammy Awards in 1998, is sorely missed.

'Christine had been having panic attacks before gigs and was developing a fear of flying, but she kept everything bottled up inside,' Stevie says. 'Then, on the night of the Grammys, she told me she simply couldn't go on any more.

'When you love someone as much as I love Christine, you know instantly when they are serious. Her big green eyes filled with tears as she spoke, and I started welling up, too.

'I told her she needed to go home immediately, and she did. She flew home to England and she hasn't been back to the States since.

'Without Christine, the band is more of a boys' club. When there were two women, we had a certain feminine power. Christine was brilliant at standing up to the boys - she'd march across the floor and tell them when she was unhappy with their playing.

'I'm more of a mediator. I'll sometimes go along with things to keep the peace. But I still think we're a great group. I'm proud to walk out every night and sing those songs.'Having moved to LA from Arizona as a schoolgirl, Nicks joined the band with Buckingham at the start of 1975.

The couple had been bit-part players on the vibrant West Coast rock scene, and their inspired songwriting added a radio-friendly Californian sheen to an outfit whose roots lay in the British blues boom.

Stevie's mystical image - billowing skirts, riding jackets, suede platform boots and a Victorian top hat - gave the band an exciting visual dimension. This 'uniform', she explains, was inspired by her teenage years as a Californian hippy chick.

'Before we joined Fleetwood Mac, Lindsey and I played gigs all along the West Coast,' she says.

'On our first tour, I wore my street clothes and it was a nightmare. Then, one day in Santa Monica, I saw this beautiful girl in a flowing pink outfit and high suede boots. Apart from the pink, I knew I wanted to look exactly like her. So I turned myself into this little Dickensian wharf rat in a raggedy skirt.

'I later found a top hat in an antiques store in Buffalo. And that was my uniform - the jacket, skirt, boots and hat. The hat changed everything.'

That trademark costume will, of course, be dusted down before next week's first night in Scotland.

But beyond the current tour, Nicks is uncertain as to what the future holds for the band. She also has a thriving solo career and a recent DVD, Live In Chicago, featured an elaborately staged gig from her last U.S. tour.

Despite her solo plans, though, she refuses to rule out the prospect of another Mac studio album.

'When we're on the road, we barely have time to go and have a meal, let alone write new material,' she says. 'But in January we'll have a meeting and decide what to do.

'Fleetwood Mac still presents some amazing opportunities. Thirty years ago, we were all so self-absorbed that we couldn't see out of our own corner. Things are a lot more fun now.'

• The Unleashed Tour opens at the SECC in Glasgow on Thursday. The Very Best Of Fleetwood Mac is out on Rhino on Monday.

(PHOTOS) FLEETWOOD MAC PHOTOS BY (SHAKEFROG) ANTWERPEN

FLEETWOOD MAC - BELGIUM 14.10.09
Thank you to ShakeFrog  for sending me the link to his photos he took of FLEETWOOD MAC in Antwerps, Belgium at Sportpaleis. Just stunning!... Thank you Shake!

Check out the rest of his gallery here

Photos: Fleetwood Mac @Ahoy

Now on stage: Fleetwood Mac @Ahoy
Photo by: drummert2 




Photo by: Pierre Oitmann
Photo by: paracid

ROTTERDAM AWAITS FLEETWOOD MAC

Full House Awaits Fleetwood Mac in Rotterdam


At the Fleetwood Mac concet waiting for the show to start!! on Twitpic
Photo by: MikkaDinah

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Photo by: Niels Buijs

Mick Brown charts the remarkable history of Fleetwood Mac

Fleetwood Mac: sex, drugs, fear and loathing
Telegraph.co.uk
Ahead of a new tour, Mick Brown charts the remarkable history of Fleetwood Mac.

There is probably no group in the history of pop music that would provide such a diverting evening’s worth of pub quiz questions – and not one of them to do with the groups’s musical output.

No points for identifying Rumours as Fleetwood Mac’s biggest-selling album. But how much money did the drummer Mick Fleetwood fritter away on cocaine? Name the guitarist who in the middle of a tour walked out of a hotel one day to “buy some groceries” and instead vanished into a religious cult? Which prescription drug was the singer Stevie Nicks addicted to for eight years after she’d freed herself of her addiction to cocaine. And which male members of the group did Nicks not have an affair with – or at least, not as far we know?

The Rolling Stones might have been more dangerous, Led Zeppelin more debauched, but, when it comes to grand guignol drama, soap-opera bathos and sheer flagrant excess, it is Fleetwood Mac who take the biscuit – or, in their case, make that a crate of the Dom Perignon ’66, and be quick about it.

Fleetwood Mac are back on the road again for the first time in six years. It is the latest chapter in a saga that has lasted for 37 years, featured a cast of dozens and often resembled nothing so much as a kind of soft-rock version of the misery memoirs of Dave Peltzer.

In the beginning, they were a blues band, their name a cannibalisation of those of two of the founder members, the drummer, Mick Fleetwood and bass guitarist John McVie. The third founder was Peter Green, the most brilliant guitarist of his generation.

In 1969, the group had their first number one single, Albatross, and for a while their albums were matching the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in sales. Then the soap opera began. In 1970, Green took LSD for the first time, beginning a catalogue of events that would lead to him attempting to give away all his money and culminating in him being diagnosed as schizophrenic. On an American tour, the guitarist Jeremy Spencer walked out of his Hollywood hotel one morning “to buy some groceries” and didn’t come back – claimed by the Children of God cult. A third guitarist, Danny Kirwan, ended up in psychiatric hospital. A fourth, Bob Weston, was fired after conducting an affair with Mick Fleetwood’s wife.

By the early Seventies, Fleetwood and McVie were marooned in Los Angeles, seemingly on their uppers. They joined forces with a young couple Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, to form what would become the classic version of Fleetwood Mac, built on an improbable chemistry of opposites: the reliable old stagers Fleetwood and McVie; Nicks, the unreconstructed fantasy flower-child; Buckingham, the Byronic, brooding musical genius; and John McVie’s wife Christine, a sensible English girl who sang like an angel and, like her husband, was fond of a drink.

An eponymous album went to number one in America. The follow-up, Rumours, released in 1977, was the apoethosis of the California soft-rock sound, but what added immeasurably to its appeal was the tangled and incestuous mess that the album chronicled. Buckingham and Nicks were breaking up after five years together. The McVies’ seven-year marriage was coming to end, Fleetwood was conducting an on-off affair with Nicks while divorcing his own wife, Jenny Boyd.

Heartache, loathing and recrimination had never sounded so beguiling. Rumours, as Lindsay Buckingham put it, “brought out the voyeur in everyone”, and went on to sell more than 40 million copies, propelling the group into the realms of bacchanalian self-indulgence.

Christine McVie bought two Mercedes, with licence plates bearing the names of her dogs, to park outside her Beverly Hills mansion, and went on to have affairs with the band’s lighting director and Beach Boy Dennis Wilson. Buckingham took up residence in the swanky Four Seasons Hotel – for two years.

Nicks went on to have affairs with both Joe Walsh and Don Henley of the Eagles.John McVie, meanwhile, bought an ocean-going yacht, suffered an alcohol-induced seizure and was arrested for possession of firearms.

“We decided to be comfortable and lost control,” Fleetwood would later reflect in his autobiography. He somehow managed to go bankrupt after a series of disastrous property ventures, while at the same time remarrying Jenny Boyd, only to divorce her again.

In the years since then, the group have broken up and and reunited with a regularity that has bewildered even their most devoted followers. Buckingham departed in 1988, following a particularly heated meeting. “It got physically ugly,” John McVie would later recall. “I just said, 'Lindsay, why don’t you just leave?’ He left. But what I meant was, 'Why don’t you leave the room?’” He was gone for nine years. In 1998, apparently exhausted by it all, Christine McVie retired altogether and now leads a quiet life in Kent.

But it is Nicks who has remained the most intriguing member of the group. With her improbable black-chiffon confections, her songs about Celtic witches and gipsies, her enthusiasm for Tiffany lamps and illegal substances, Nicks embodied the idea of rock music as a sort of romper room for grown-ups to act out their fantasies.

During the Seventies and Eighties, her addiction to cocaine became the subject of myth. She finally kicked her cocaine habit in the Betty Ford Clinic, but then became addicted to tranquillisers.

When the group toured in 2003, relations between them were said to be difficult. But, like so many groups of their era, they have discovered that the cachet of the brand name is far greater than the sum of its individual parts, and that no matter how painful it may be, habit, financial imperatives or the simple want of a better idea will inevitably bring them together again. Psychotherapists call it co-dependence. Nobody would call it love.
Reports from the current tour suggest the group are getting along famously. It would be the most unbelievable chapter in the saga yet.