Tuesday, June 11, 2013

REVIEW | VIDEOS | PHOTOS: Fleetwood Mac Live in Atlanta

FLEETWOOD MAC LIVE
ATLANTA, GA - PHILIPS ARENA
JUNE 10, 2013

Concert review: Fleetwood Mac enchants Philips Arena crowd
By Melissa Ruggieri
Accessatlanta
Photo Gallery

They’ve always been a crew of characters.

Mick Fleetwood, the wild-eyed co-founder and beat keeper.

Lindsey Buckingham, the perfectionist artiste with the gift for guitar.

Stevie Nicks, the mystical Glinda the good witch and poet.

John McVie, the stoic root of the rhythm section.

Even Christine McVie, before she departed Fleetwood Mac in 1998, played the part of the classy Brit whose keyboards added lushness and sweetness to the band’s sound.

Though Fleetwood Mac has toured sporadically during the past 15 years, it wasn’t always convincing that they were squeezing onto planes and tour buses and stages for anything other than a paycheck.

But now, after even more years of solo projects and time spent apart, it’s apparent that there is genuine affection tying the onetime soap opera-etic Mac together.

Buckingham and Nicks almost always entered the stage at Philips Arena together, holding hands like the king and the queen of the prom – the roles they’ve always filled within the band.

The songs from “Rumours” – seven of the 11 tracks from their landmark album made the live cut – at one time stung with hurt and betrayal, showcasing the most dysfunctional band in rock.

But as Nicks and Buckingham joined voices during the ominous creep of “The Chain,” with Fleetwood’s rattling snare drum bumping the song along, and Nicks unleashed her throaty warble on “Dreams,”  the songs now sounded like beautifully constructed couplets from a musical era never to be duplicated. The music is as potent as ever, even if the impetus behind the lyrics has softened.

For 2 ½-hours on Monday, Fleetwood Mac enchanted a sold-out crowd at Philips – mostly happy middle-agers thrilled to see the gang one more time, or maybe for the first time – and unveiled a comprehensive, 23-song set list.

Above Photos by Robb D Cohen
Since it’s the 35th anniversary of “Rumours,” favorites from the album – the opening “Second Hand News,” the grungy guitar shadowing “Gold Dust Woman,” the aggravated kiss-off “Go Your Own Way” among them – took center stage.

However, one thing Fleetwood Mac can brag about is recently releasing new songs (on the digital EP, “Extended Play”) that are well-suited for the band’s canon.

“It appears there are a few chapters left in the book of Fleetwood Mac,” Buckingham crowed from the stage.

“Sad Angel” is a driving pop rocker featuring those trademark Buckingham/Nicks vocals, while the “Peace Train”-like “Without You,” an unearthed demo from the pair, chugged along appealingly.

As for the rest of the hits, yes, some keys were modified to suit aging voices, but it was still a treat to hear “Rihannon,” perfectly complemented by images of a colorful moon on the high-def screen stretching the stage, and “Sisters of the Moon,” a song Fleetwood Mac hadn’t played live since 1981 prior to this tour.

The bond between Nicks and Buckingham was apparent throughout the show – she in her trademark uniform of black jagged-edge dresses and scarf-adorned tambourines and he in skinny jeans and black leather jacket – but most obviously during “Sara,” when Nicks laid her head on Buckingham’s shoulder and closed her eyes as he played, and the ever-poignant “Landslide,” which featured the two standing alone center stage.

While their dynamic is always a draw, it would be unfair not to underscore the awesomeness of Buckingham’s playing on every song, but particularly “Big Love” – he shook out his right hand before tackling the speedy chord changes in the song – and “I’m So Afraid,” which was raw and explosive. And Buckingham knew he nailed it.

By the time Fleetwood Mac – augmented by two musicians and Nicks’ two backup singers – started to wind down with the sunshine-and-rainbows anthem “Don’t Stop” (Nicks handled McVie’s verses), it became apparent that while the band can be dark, they’ve always found a flame of hope to guide them.

WARDROBE
For anyone paying attention to Stevie's and Lindsey's stage costumes this tour, it's remained pretty much static the entire tour thus far except for tonight Stevie began the show in the frilly dress she's worn on previous solo and Mac tours.  Then eventually she changed into the 2 outfits that she's been ending the tour with. 

FAN PHOTOS


 Above 3 Photos by California Dreamin'

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VIDEOS BELOW

Update: CNN Interview w/ Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood THURSDAY AM w/ @CarolCNN

Carol Costello of CNN interviewed both Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood today (Monday June 10th).  

Carol's post on Facebook 

Update from Carol Costello:
(June 11th) Good Morning! So..I did interview Mick Fleetwood and Lindsey Buckingham from Fleetwood Mac. Mick was amazingly down to earth. Friendly. So nice. Lindsey was nice too, but a tad more reserved. Both are amazed their shows have sold out. They tried to explain why -- but, it's simple isn't it? People love their music. And who doesn't want to re-live a great moment in time? 

My interview will run Thursday (June 13, 2013)

Check out CNN between 9-11am ET

Monday, June 10, 2013

Fleetwood Mac Tickets & Mick Fleetwood VIP Packages Still Available for European Dates


Tickets & Mick Fleetwood VIP Packages Still Available!

Ladies & Gentlemen, there are still a limited amount of Mick Fleetwood VIP packages available for some of the European dates on the Fleetwood Mac Live 2013 Tour. Click the show of your choice for purchase links:

9/20 - The O2 - Dublin, Ireland
9/21 - The O2 - Dublin, Ireland
10/6 - Lanxess Arena - Cologne, Germany
10/7 - Ziggo Dome - Amsterdam, Netherlands
10/9 - Sport Palais - Antwerp, Belgium
10/13 - Hallenstadion - Zurich, Switzerland
10/14 - Shleyerhalle - Stuttgart, Germany
10/16 - O2 World - Berlin, Germany
10/18 - Jyske Bank Boxen - Herning, Denmark
10/20 - Oslo Spectrum - Oslo, Norway
10/23 - Globen - Stockholm, Sweden
10/26 - Ziggo Dome - Amsterdam, Netherlands

Most of these shows have two VIP Packages to choose from depending on seat location:

Mick Fleetwood VIP Experience - $425

-Ticket in First 5 Rows
-VIP Entry to Venue
-VIP Host for the Evening
-Meet & Greet with Mick Fleetwood
-VIP Q&A with Mick Fleetwood onstage at his Drum Kit
-Personal Photo with Mick Fleetwood
-Mick Fleetwood VIP Laminate

Mick Fleetwood VIP Experience - $375

-Ticket in the First 20 Rows
-VIP Entry to Venue
-VIP Host for the Evening
-Meet & Greet with Mick Fleetwood
-VIP Q&A with Mick Fleetwood onstage at his Drum Kit
-Personal Photo with Mick Fleetwood
-Mick Fleetwood VIP Laminate

Act fast! These will sell out. Don't miss your chance to get up close & personal with Mick Fleetwood.

All prices are listed in USD. You can reference your local currency at XE.com.

View the above cities and availability at MickFleetwoodOfficial.  It's a cool experience and I highly recommend it.

STEVIE NICKS "In Your Dreams" at Rio Theatre in Vancouver Tonight! | Fleetwood Mac Live in Atlanta Tonight!


This week (June 10th - 17th) in Canada "In Your Dreams" can be seen in Vancouver at The Rio Theatre and in Montreal at Cinema du Parc. Dates, movie times and links to purchase tickets in advance listed below.

In Your Dreams Movie Website

Released digitally on May 14, 2013
Now Available on iTunes
BUY NOW

No DVD Release date has been announced.



CANADIAN THEATRE LISTING

VANCOUVER Rio Theatre June 10 7:00pmTickets
VANCOUVER Rio Theatre June 10 9:30pmTickets
MONTREAL Cinema Du Parc June 14 9:00pm Tickets
MONTREAL Cinema Du Parc June 15 9:00pm Tickets
MONTREAL Cinema Du Parc June 16 9:00pm Tickets
VANCOUVER Rio Theatre June 16 7:00pmTickets
MONTREAL Cinema Du Parc June 17 9:00pm Tickets

ONLY 14 TO GO!
There are only 14 dates left for Fleetwood Mac in North American - then it's off to Ireland, the UK and the rest of Europe in September. Who knows if they will be back again in 2014 for another round of shows - so if any of the dates below are in your neck of the woods.... Check them out, it's a pretty awesome show!

GET TICKETS AT TICKETMASTER


Sunday, June 09, 2013

Stevie Nicks, the Fairy Godmother of Rock



Stevie Nicks, the Fairy Godmother of Rock
By Jada Yuan
New York Magazine - June 17th issue

Look to the shawls; let them show you the way. All night you’ve been ­anticipating their arrival on the Fleetwood Mac stage: the witchy moment when Stevie Nicks, that blonde chanteuse, abruptly dis­appears from view and, with a simple costume change she’s perfected over 35 years, reemerges a woman transformed, wrapped in fringed silk signaling a visitation by Rhiannon or Gold Dust Woman or the livid spurned lover of “Stand Back,” fine fabric unfurling from her delicate shoulders like the banner of an advancing army, heralding not just a song but the coming of an event. There may also be a wind machine, or perhaps you’re just imagining it. This was all to be expected, and somehow it still thrills. Twirling in the outstretched arms of Stevie Nicks, those shawls have magic in them.

No one rocks a shawl like Stevie Nicks. That much was evident at Madison Square Garden this spring, the third stop of a constantly extending, sold-out Fleetwood Mac world tour (coming to Jones Beach on June 22). Everywhere in the arena were homages to Stevie: top hats, feathers, flowing black fabric. And, of course, shawls. ­Fathers and daughters danced enthusiastically side by side, and the air was thick with the smell of furtive intergenerational pot smoking. Chances are, you or someone next to you was weeping during “Landslide,” with that chorus you might casually dismiss as cliché until you find yourself singing it in unison with 15,000 fans: “Time makes you bolder / Children get older / I’m getting older, too.”

Nicks’s 65th birthday was May 26, and she spent it twirling onstage at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Stevie Nicks, her generation’s great California girl sex symbol, who very publicly fought her way back from drug addiction and weight gain, now an aging rock star unafraid of the passage of time and, having long ago married her music, still an undefeated romantic searching for love. “She’s like your fairy princess godmother,” Courtney Love has said, “who’s gonna save you, and lives in a magical kingdom somewhere, and has, like, fabulous romances.”

Friday, June 07, 2013

PHOTOS | REVEIW | VIDEO: Fleetwood Mac Live in Tampa

FLEETWOOD MAC LIVE IN 
TAMPA, FL - TAMPA BAY TIMES FORUM
JUNE 7, 2013

The '70s rock icons, who showed a nearly packed house of 14,071 at the Forum why their popularity not only has endured, but has attracted a new generation of loyalists.

Above Photos by Tampa Bay Times Forum
FLEETWOOD MAC SHOWS WHY THEIR POPULARITY ENDURES AT TAMPA SHOW
BY Carl Lisciandrello
TBO.com

TAMPA - Their fans may have been quite a bit younger when Fleetwood Mac hit the charts with one of music history's most renowned works some 40 years ago.

But the years have been kind for the '70s rock icons, who showed a nearly packed house of 14,071 at the Forum on Friday night why their popularity not only endured, but has attracted a new generation of loyalists.

Even the most casual fan could sense the close connection between Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, back together and promoting "Extended Play" - their first release in 10 years.

Fleetwood Mac told poignant, compelling stories within their lyrics. They opened up on stage, offering an important glimpse into the very personal side of why this foursome remains so ingrained in the spotlight.

Specifically, the connection between Buckingham and former girlfriend, Nicks, became apparent as the duo shared a hug following "Sara."

That propelled Buckingham into an introduction of "Big Love," in which he explained how this was a song about transition, contemplation and meditation that illustrated the "importance of change" - clearly an ode to his former romantic relationship with Nicks. What followed was an inspired acoustic solo that brought the crowd to its feet.

Nicks then gave a shout-out to a pair of friends before she and Buckingham paired on an emotional "Landslide."

The pair remained on stage as they recounted their journey to Los Angeles and introduction to the band in 1970. They told of a song on which they collaborated even before they knew of Fleetwood Mac, which had been "stolen" but was found online in 2011. "Without You," the primary vehicle in the new four-song EP, was a sweet duet that deftly showed the closeness they have maintained as they transitioned from romantic couple to close friends.

While they interacted and shared playful glimpses throughout the night, even holding hands twice to the crowd's delight as they returned to the stage, the show allowed the individual artists to spotlight their considerable talents.

Nicks, whose soulful voice belies her 65 years, set the stage by opening with a playful "Second Hand News" and spirited "The Chain."

She mesmerized with "Gold Dust Woman," emerging with a gold wrap and floating across the stage in one of her recognizable solo dances which she repeated during "Gypsy."

Nicks may be the recognizable face of the band, but Buckingham reminded fans of his considerable talent and why Fleetwood later introduced him as "our leader and inspiration."

Buckingham's guitar prowess was on full display during "I'm So Afraid" and "Go Your Own Way," and he set the tempo throughout as the band performed hit after hit from "Rumours," the 1975 album that launched them to stardom.

Fleetwood had his best moment during "World Turning," the first encore in which he toyed with the audience and launched into a drum solo that helped him work up a sweat and work the crowd into a frenzy.

But the band saved their most emotional moments for last. Nicks and Buckingham, again hand-in-hand, came out alone for a final encore that began with Nicks' heartfelt "Silver Springs" and ended with Buckingham sharing his philosophical thoughts on "discarding illusions in order to grow" and embracing "acceptance, faith and resolve" as they concluded with "Say Goodbye."

Hopefully for their fans, this wasn't a goodbye, but just a "so long" as they look ahead to the next great story in their legendary collaboration.
Photo by Austin Anthony - More at Tampa Bay Times

FLEETWOOD MAC'S TIME-TESTED DYSFUNCTION MAKES BEAUTIFUL MUSIC AT TAMPA BAY TIMES FORUM
by Jay Cridlin
Tampa Bay Times

Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks walked onstage Friday at the Tampa Bay Times Forum hand in hand,
like the oldest of friends in the world.

Then, for the next eight songs, the onetime lovers didn't interact. Not even a little. Not a nod. Not a glance. Certainly nothing as intimate as skin-to-skin contact.

Could there be a better encapsulation of the Fleetwood Mac experience?

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Thirty-six years after Rumours, the definitive breakup album of the 20th century — yeah, I said it — the interpersonal conflict that drove Fleetwood Mac to its greatest creative heights remains an integral part of its mystique and eternal appeal. Fans with a ticket to a Fleetwood Mac show expect not only decades of indelible pop hits, they expect a taste of the drama that begat them.

The band knows this. Which is why Nicks and Buckingham waited until that ninth song — Sara, a slithering meditation on rancor and reconciliation among lovers — to look each other eye to eye, to edge in each other's direction, to share a microphone and, finally, to embrace.

Such is the choreography of a modern Fleetwood Mac show. Whatever dysfunction once festered between Nicks, Buckingham, gregarious drummer/mascot Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie — John's ex, retired singer-songwriter Christine, hasn't toured with the band in years — it hasn't stopped them from delivering the goods live.

Buckingham, for example, remains one of the most dynamic guitarists on the planet. He's played a couple of smaller solo shows in Tampa Bay since 2011, but on the big stage, his fingerpicking wizardry on the tomahawking Tusk, buzzsawing Big Love and incendiary I'm So Afraid is breathtaking to behold.

The free-spirited Nicks seems to get a little loopier with every tour — she laughed off some good-natured ribbing from Buckingham when they failed to connect on the opening notes of Landslide — but she remains an enchanting presence behind the mic, whether dusting blond strays from her eyes on Dreams or twirling in a silken tornado on Stand Back.

Fleetwood Mac's hit-packed sets don't change all that much, but they did throw in a couple of long-lost favorites, such as the bouncy folk ditty Without You, a Buckingham-Nicks demo lost for years before it surfaced online, and which appears on the band's new Extended Play EP.

And then there was Sisters of the Moon, a driving rocker from 1979's Tusk that Nicks said hasn't been performed regularly since 1981. Between Nicks' incantatory moan and Buckingham's furious power chords, it was a great example of the push-and-pull sexual tension that brought 14,071 fans to see them interact.

After Don't Stop and Silver Springs, Buckingham and Nicks closed with the acoustic, heartfelt duet Say Goodbye, and then a hug and a kiss at center stage.

How could they not? Dysfunction may be Fleetwood Mac's meal ticket. But it's one they can't cash in without love.

CONCERT REVIEW: FLEETWOOD MAC AT TAMPA BAY TIMES FORUM
by Jim Abbott
Orlando Sentinel

There are a few Fleetwood Mac biographies already out there, but at least one member of the beloved
Photo By cberru72 (Instagram)
1970s hit-making band believes that the story isn’t over yet.

“You would think that there would be nothing left to discover,” singer-guitarist Lindsey Buckingham said of Fleetwood Mac’s long history early in the band’s generous concert on Friday for a packed house at the Tampa Bay Times Forum. “But it seems there are a few chapters left in the book of Fleetwood Mac.”

Musically, it’s obvious that Buckingham, singer Stevie Nicks, bassist John McVie and drummer Mick Fleetwood aren’t ready to turn the final page.

In a hit-laden two hours and 40 minutes, they offered signature songs with drop-the-needle-on-the-record precision, showcased promising new songs and, most impressively, embraced music and audience with more emotion than one would think possible after almost four decades.

It’s a chatty bunch.

Nicks, in particular, was prone to rambling (if endearing) recollections about bygone days. She introduced the obligatory “Landslide” with a lengthy dedication to two “strong” women in her life: One was a high school classmate who now lives in Tampa; the other, a woman who ran the hotel where Nicks stayed this past fall in the Florida Keys.

When she had finished, she turned and shared a laugh with Buckingham, standing next to her waiting to start the song with his acoustic guitar: “He just said to me, ‘You’re done, right?’”

Buckingham was equally talkative, reflecting on the music business, the band’s “Tusk” album and how his feelings about songs such as “Big Love” have changed over the years.

That song offered one of the many opportunities for Buckingham to display his unique guitar technique, a combination of power and finesse that peaked in the explosive extended guitar solo of “I’m So Afraid.”

Vocally, Buckingham and Nicks harmonized with unconscious ease on “The Chain,” “Rhiannon,” “Never Going Back Again” and “Sara,” a song that concluded with the two singers in a long embrace.

Behind them, McVie provided an understated foundation and Fleetwood kicked off songs such as the opening “Second Hand News” with unmistakable rhythm figures.

 In the end, after an encore that included “Don’t Stop” and “Silver Springs,” Fleetwood joined the procession of lingering band members to talk – yet again -- about their feelings for the music and fans.

With all those words, there’s obviously another chapter for Fleetwood Mac.

LANDSLIDE
RHIANNON (CLIP)
SECOND HAND NEWS