CBSNews.com
(if you missed Mick, Stevie and Christine on CBS Sunday Morning today... Here's the segment in text)
(if you missed Mick, Stevie and Christine on CBS Sunday Morning today... Here's the segment in text)
"Don't Stop" is the tune that rock band Fleetwood Mac serenaded Bill and Hillary Clinton with at the Inauguration Gala back in 1993. And "Don't Stop" is the band's guiding principle today , as its leader tells our John Blackstone . . . For The Record:
At his mountainside estate in Hawaii, Mick Fleetwood could be mistaken for an eccentric country gentleman, spending quality time with his pet pig, Tilly. "Sit! Sit!"
But Fleetwood is better known as the drummer of the group that shares his name: Fleetwood Mac.
In a rehearsal hall in Los Angeles, the five members responsible for the group's biggest hits are preparing for their first tour together in 17 years.
Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood have been rejoined by Christine McVie, who left the band in 1998, swearing she would never come back.
"She called me and said, 'How would you feel if I came back to the band?'" said Nicks. "And I'm like, 'Are you serious?'"
McVie said, "God, I'm really actually on this black carpet with these fantastic musical friends of mine and all just having, really enjoying it, you know, really enjoying it."
For Mick Fleetwood, having the band complete again has come at the right time.
"I think it's about getting your house in order, without being overly heavy," he told Blackstone. "The reality is, I'm sitting here, I'm 67 years old, I'm certainly not planning on leaving anytime that I know of, but you do see the picture in a different way just because you're older."
As part of "getting his house in order," Fleetwood has just finished his autobiography, "Play On," out next month. Why a book now? "I don't write songs," he said. "So this is a version of me writing a song."
He writes about his divorces from three wives, and his failures as a father to his four daughters.
"I would imagine that someone reading this document would say that he's sort of sold his soul to his band," said Fleetwood.
"I don't think he's sold his soul," said McVie. "I think he did it out of love."