Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Lindsey Buckingham on His New Solo Album and the Fleetwood Mac ‘Machine’


Lindsey Buckingham on His New Solo Album and the Fleetwood Mac ‘Machine’

As a singer and songwriter for Fleetwood Mac, Lindsey Buckingham has produced some of the most well-loved and commercially successful songs in the history of pop music. But he still considers himself an outsider. “The fringe is where my heart is,” he told us. Today he demonstrates his indie spirit by putting out his first ever non-major-label release, the solo album Seeds We Sow. We spoke with Buckingham about balancing creativity with domesticity, his new approach to writing lyrics, and keeping the peace within Fleetwood Mac.

Full Article Here


NEW DATE: Lindsey Buckingham Live in Albany Nov 2nd


Lindsey Buckingham Live
in Albany, NY
The Egg Performing
Arts Center
Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Tickets on sale Sept 9th
Ticket Prices: $32.50 - $55.00

NEW DATE: Lindsey Buckingham Live in Tulsa Nov. 14th


Lindsey Buckingham Live 
in Tulsa, OK
November 14, 2011
Hard Rock Hotel & Casino

Tickets on sale September 29th
Ticket Prices: $45

TULSA, Okla. – Lindsey Buckingham left his mark on legendary rock band Fleetwood Mac and has since built an international following as a solo performer. On Nov. 14, the guitarist will perform at The Joint inside Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa.

Around Tulsa

NEW on iTunes: Lindsey Buckingham "Seeds We Sow" with Bonus Track

Finally!  Something on itunes in North America!

Lindsey Buckingham "Seeds We Sow"

Includes one bonus track:
"Sleeping Around The Corner"


Review: Lindsey Buckingham Seeds We Sow ★★★/5 Rollingstone Mag


Lindsey Buckingham
Seeds We Sow
Mind Kit
★★★/5

Lindsey Buckingham's 2008 Gift of Screws, assembled with some of his Fleetwood Mac compadres, was a shockingly good set from a dude who hardly needed to prove anything. This self-released and -produced LP is a true solo affair. The best moments - the title track, the Rumours-echoing "Rock Away Blind" - show a sweet guitar picker, a haunting high-tenor and an unmistakable melodic touch. But the recording suffers from thin, uneven sound and, on tracks like "Stars Are Crazy," a surfeit of muddling reverb. Sometimes a man needs to go it alone, but sometimes it's good to bring your buds.

By WILL HERMES
Rollingstone Magazine

Review: Lindsey Buckingham Seeds We Sow ★★★ 1/2 out of 4 Chicago Tribune


In the increasing down time between Fleetwood Mac tours and albums, Lindsey Buckingham has become unusually prolific as a solo artist, doubling his career output in the last five years by producing three albums. The latest, “Seeds We Sow” (Eagle Rock Entertainment), is essentially a one-man-band affair, with Buckingham donning his mad-scientist lab coat to orchestrate mood swings on voice, guitar and percussion.

Unencumbered by the commercial and ego demands in Mac, Buckingham affirms his talent for turning eccentricity into twisted pop songs. He tackles big themes: how time reveals consequences; the grudging arrival of enlightenment. He favors undulating guitars, voices woven into choirs, a shimmering sense of space. Not that he’s gone soft. Instead, he’s restless, anxious, as exemplified by the protagonist in “Stars Are Crazy” who awakens in the middle of the night to torture himself with questions he can’t answer.

The turbulence lurking just beneath the surface crashes through on “One Take,” a nasty song about a despicable character (A politician? A rock star?  Buckingham himself?) who’s “got a publicist who covers up the avarice.” The jumpy beat gives way to a lovely vocal interlude, only to have Buckingham shatter the fine china with a crazed guitar solo.

Buckingham has a knack for disrupting beauty, intruding on the serene. A deceptively hushed vocal brings “Seeds We Sow” to a seething finish. Tense guitar-playing and furtive percussion overtake “In Our Own Time.” And even as mortality closes in on “End of Time,” the narrator still can’t let go of the lies and hostility that wrecked a relationship.

A cover of the Rolling Stones’ “She Smiled Sweetly” makes for a particularly apt closer. The guitarist is a huge fan of the Stones’ mid-‘60s pop era, a time of gloriously jaded singles and social commentaries. He plays “She Smiled Sweetly” as a sparse, haunted, 3 a.m. reckoning, exhaling the lines as if he were expiring. “Don’t worry,” the song’s femme fatale advises as the narrator stresses out, his fate sealed.


Greg Kot - Music critic
Chicago Tribune