Tuesday, October 20, 2009

OBSESSION WITH STEVIE NICKS - CLINTON

I'm not even sure what to think about this... It's just odd, but I suppose it's a tribute in some strange David Lynch type of way... DAVID LYNCH INTERVIEW PROJECT: CLINTON



We met Clinton on an overcast afternoon. He was standing on the side of the road as if he had been waiting for us to come along. We quickly turned around and drove back to ask him for an interview. He agreed and began telling us his story. He told us about his obsession with Stevie Nicks and about his trip to Hollywood where he met Rosanne Barr. Clinton also told us a story about his friend Johnny S. who was murdered and dumped into his fireplace one night during a three day party. When we finished the interview we said goodbye to Clinton and drove north, listening to Fleetwood Mac at high volume.

(PHOTOS) FLEETWOOD MAC - PARIS, FR - OCT 17th (OVER 200 PICTURES)

Well over 200 pretty amazing shots of the band in Paris on the 17th.
all photos by: Stephanie Keegan(click link for gallery)
Or the slide show option





(REVIEW) Fleetwood Mac wagten sich in Berlin mal wieder gemeinsam ins Konzert

Fleetwood Mac wagten sich in Berlin mal wieder gemeinsam ins Konzert
Von Gerd Dehnel

BERLIN - Wer es schafft, eine Band zusammenzuhalten, obwohl sie doch gerade von privaten Trennungen und Affären erschüttert wird, wer in einer solchen Krise sogar noch ein großartiges Album auf den Weg bringt, der hat alle Bewunderung verdient. Mick Fleetwood ist ein solch talentierter Menschenführer. Ihm vor allem ist es zu danken, dass sich die getrennten Christine und John McVie sowie Stevie Nicks und Lindsey Buckingham 1976 im Studio nicht die Augen auskratzen, sondern eine Handvoll unsterblicher Popsongs aufnehmen.

Ihm auch ist zu danken, dass Fleetwood Mac sich noch immer gelegentlich auf den Weg zu ihren Fans machen, obwohl der ganz große Pop-Ruhm schnell verblasst ist. Im Wesentlichen gründet er auf der zweiten Hälfte der 70er Jahre mit den Platten „Fleetwood Mac“, „Rumours“ und „Tusk“. Vorher galt die Band eher als britische Blues-Combo für Spezialisten, nachher gab’s vor allem Streitereien und minder erfolgreiche Solo-Versuche ohne Fleetwood.

Der Namensgeber hat eigentlich genug zu tun als Schlagzeuger seiner Mick Fleetwood Blues Band. Manchmal aber packt ihn wohl die Lust auf den großen Pop-Rausch – und vielleicht auch auf die höheren Tantiemen. Dann holt er die Weggefährten von einst wieder zusammen und feuert wie am Montagabend mit ihnen alte Über-Hits wie „Second Hand News“ oder „Little Lies“ in die bis unters Dach besetzte Berliner Arena am Ostbahnhof.

Sein Kumpan aus Anfangstagen John McVie legt dynamische Basslinien, Lindsey Buckingham reißt ohne Plektrum die E-Gitarre, als wolle er seine Fingerkuppen einbüßen. Und Stevie Nicks lässt mit rauchiger Stimme weitgehend vergessen, dass seit „Rumours“ mehr als drei Jahrzehnte ins Land gegangen sind. Leider fehlt in dieser Besetzung Christine McVie und damit das harmonische Ineinandergreifen verschieden getönter Stimmen. Stattdessen setzt die Band auf knirschenden Rock-Radau, was den Songs nicht immer gut tut. Zumal die Halle ohnehin das Entstehen von pappigem Soundbrei fördert. Nervende Längen tun sich auf, wenn Buckingham zu immer neuen und immer ähnlichen Soli anhebt, dazu gockelhaft als Gitarrengott über die Bühne stolziert.

Auf diese Weise wird ausgerechnet „Tusk“ brutal dahingemetzelt. Das verwirrende Klangexperiment von einst mit den alptraumhaft gewisperten Passagen und den furiosen Ausbrüchen ist, in brachialen Haudrauf-Rock gewandet, kaum zu erkennen.

Doch alle Einwände verfliegen in einem Finale, wie es nicht alle Tage vorkommt. Da feuert erst Lindsey Buckingham ein ausuferndes hochenergetisches Solo in bester Brit-Blues-Manier ab, das die Besucher in einen tanzenden Haufen vor die Bühne treibt.

Schließlich findet die Band zu einem derart beseelten und inspirierten Zusammenspiel für „Go Your Own Way“, als werde der Song just in diesem Moment auf dieser Bühne erst geboren. „Don’t Stop“ im Zugabenblock klingt nach Ankündigung. Aufhören scheint kein Thema. Im nächsten Jahr soll’s sogar ein neues Album geben. (Von Gerd Dehnel)

WIN FLEETWOOD MAC VERY BEST OF...


Fleetwood Mac Release remastered double CD set
‘The Very Best Of…’
on October 19th on Rhino
Deadline for answers: 2009-10-31

We have 5 Copies of Fleetwood Mac's ‘The Very Best Of…’ CD to give away…

Fleetwood Mac will release the remastered double CD compilation album ‘The Very Best Of…’ on October 19th on Rhino. This is the first time that the 2 CD format of the album has been released in the UK and coincides with the British leg of their gargantuan arena trek ‘The Unleashed Tour.’ ‘The Very Best Of Fleetwood Mac’ will also be released digitally.

TO ENTER ANY OF OUR COMPETITIONS YOU MUST FIRST JOIN SUBBA-CULTCHA.COM. IT'S EASY PEASY TO JOIN (NO TRICKY QUESTIONS OR DEMANDS FOR YOUR FIRST BORN) ALL WE NEED IS YOUR NAME & E-MAIL ADDRESS. IF YOU'RE ALREADY A MEMBER, ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS ANSWER THE QUESTION AND CLICK ENTER... IT'S REALLY THAT SIMPLE IF YOU WANT TO WIN SOME FABULOUS FREE STUFF, COURTESY OF SUBBA-CULTCHA.COM...

Question:
Name the band's biggest selling album to date?

(REVIEW) FLEETWOOD MAC BERLIN - KONZERTKRITIK

Fleetwood Mac at the O2 World
Always twisting your breaks again, but now they're back: Fleetwood Mac played in Berlin's O2 World - and feed on the successes of the past.

BERLIN --
H.P. Daniels
Der Tagesspiegel

At half past eight, it is in the duster vollbestuhlten, packed O2 World. Metallic crickets is washed over by a roaring surf rejoicing, for on the stage a couple of shadows: Fleetwood Mac scurry, perhaps with the Eagles, the largest American Main stream pop band for over thirty years. Even the wild jubilation, as can be seen in the darkness, the silhouettes of a couple: Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham, hand in hand. Once the two were a married couple, long time ago, before everything started to go under it and over it, both privately and in the band. As has been internal squabbles and excessive use of drugs for a long time for more exciting topic of the gossip press as the music of Fleetwood Mac, their fine, pleasing melodic pop songs, theme of those very difficult interpersonal relationships.

The couple splits to pieces, light goes on: "One-Two-Three-Four" roars Buckingham - jeans, pink T-shirt, leather jacket - and he sings the first of those old pop songs: "Monday Morning" from the year 1975. Lindsay stakelt on his spindly legs like a wounded stork, while Stevie beside him in schwarzgerüschten designer dress scarves and Schellenkranz vibrates and rotates on high platform boots like a mixture of blond and Rauschgoldengel bleiente on a music box. "Bööhlinn," she cries, and that could now start the party. Even more cheering, and two songs from "Rumors", one of the most commercially successful pop albums of all time. Fans jump out of their seats to run, before the stage, stretching his arms and camera phones, while the music so hinplätschert before him, with a sound that sounds like a tiled swimming pool. On the front edge of the stage, the American couple stands behind the two Englishmen, after which the group was originally named: the long 67-year-old Mick Fleetwood on drums, the drives properly. And John McVie, who backed a solid bass. Both had played in the '60s with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, along with the gifted guitarist Peter Green, with whom she eventually founded the excellent blues band Fleetwood Mac.

Few other bands would have taken a blatant stylistic direction as Fleetwood Mac after leaving her severely injured LSD front man Peter Green in their history. The rhythm section with the former singer and keyboardist Christine McVie, wife of the bassist, moved 1974 of regengrauen England to sunny California, teamed up with Nicks and Buckingham, and was a rasping blues band to the lovely mainstream pop group. With the enormous worldwide success of which they consume today. Yes, they have brought in between and over again a couple of long pauses, says Buckingham, and now they are back again, without a new album, but with all the old songs. And only the old fans who want to be heard. " So they get what they want: Most of the pieces of the two best albums: "Fleetwood Mac" (1975) and Rumors (1977), the old hits, "Rhiannon," "Dreams," "Sara," "Go Your Own Way, "" Do not Stop "and so on. Since then, it does not matter that everything is a bit bumpy and reverberant sounds like Stevie Nicks' husky voice is still beautiful and more blecheimerig. Where it does well to not to try to meet the very high notes from the past, but holding it in a deeper interval, and let the rest of the three leather mice in the background doing, to act where even a keyboardist and an additional guitarist.

Buckingham's solo on his Rick Turner Model One Guitar contribute a bit unimaginative and klischeebeladen and his guitar player, poses a little too narcissistic. But no doubt he is the chief role of the evening. Nostalgically recalls one voice and guitar of the good old Peter Green, as attempts to Buckingham with heavily mannered in his hit song "Oh Well Pt. 1". The most beautiful are even the more delicate-Buckingham Nicks duets with economical acoustic guitar accompaniment. But for the fans today is the party as an event with sausage and beer more important than any musical nuances, dynamics and artistic expression. And so is the boundless joy long after two and a half hours and several encores, with drum solo and a lot Gegröle.

Monday, October 19, 2009