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-   -   Volume 4 - Year of the Mac: 1973 (http://ledge.fleetwoodmac.net/showthread.php?t=49068)

MacShadowsBall 10-29-2011 03:42 PM

Volume 4 - Year of the Mac: 1973
 
I've been doing this on the Rumours forum, so now I'm introducing it to the Pre-Rumours forum.

Post videos, articles, pictures, opinions, questions, etc that pertain to Fleetwood Mac in the year 1973. :cool:

Blueletter18 10-30-2011 11:23 AM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MUxC...eature=related

1973 Midnight Special!

Villavic 10-31-2011 09:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blueletter18 (Post 1025721)

Interesting!! First time I see a MS video from that FM era, Christine looks great

Villavic 10-31-2011 09:59 AM

Here's a bit from 1973, from Mick's book

Mystery to Me was probably the best Fleetwood Mac album since Peter Green had left the band three years earlier, and was also the biggest hit we had in the early 1970s. Bob Welch wrote most of the record, including the album's best-known song.

" 'Hypnotized' was originally written for Dave Walker as a 6/8 blues screamer," Bob says. "After Walker was fired I rewrote the piece in Christine's kitchen so I could sing it instead. At the time I was very influenced by the books I was reading, like Carlos Castaneda and material on the Bermuda Triangle that whole area where the paranormal intrudes upon reality. The other influence on that song was the general atmosphere at Benifols, which was rather spooky and strange, even in the summertime. There was an odd, ethereal mood around those grounds all the time, and a feeling that anything could happen. I was reading about, as the Iyric says, 'a place down in Mexico where man can fly over mountains and hills,' and one night I had a vivid dream that a UFO piloted by a Navajo shaman landed on our overgrown grass tennis court one moonlit night. That was the feeling that went into 'Hypnotized.' Chris helped a lot with the new tempo and the mood. I remember listening to the playback with her. She looked at me and said, 'It gives me the willies, Bob.' I felt the same way, even after a hundred playbacks."

Bob wrote most of the album, whose title comes from a phrase in his song "Emerald Eyes." He also authored "In the City," "Somebody," a great tune called "Miles Away," and "Keep On Going," which Chris sang. We had another track as well, "Good Things," but it was dropped for a version of the Yardbirds' "For Your Love" at Bob Weston's suggestion. We were very laissezfaire in those days, and said what the hell.

MacShadowsBall 10-31-2011 03:45 PM

I had no idea about Hypnotized originally being for Dave Walker. It definitely is one of my favorite Fleetwood Mac songs.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Villavic (Post 1025828)
We were very laissezfaire in those days, and said what the hell.

I have noticed that they were kinda less organized and more carefree before the Buckingham/Nicks years.

Blueletter18 10-31-2011 07:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Villavic (Post 1025828)
Here's a bit from 1973, from Mick's book

Mystery to Me was probably the best Fleetwood Mac album since Peter Green had left the band three years earlier, and was also the biggest hit we had in the early 1970s. Bob Welch wrote most of the record, including the album's best-known song.

" 'Hypnotized' was originally written for Dave Walker as a 6/8 blues screamer," Bob says. "After Walker was fired I rewrote the piece in Christine's kitchen so I could sing it instead. At the time I was very influenced by the books I was reading, like Carlos Castaneda and material on the Bermuda Triangle that whole area where the paranormal intrudes upon reality. The other influence on that song was the general atmosphere at Benifols, which was rather spooky and strange, even in the summertime. There was an odd, ethereal mood around those grounds all the time, and a feeling that anything could happen. I was reading about, as the Iyric says, 'a place down in Mexico where man can fly over mountains and hills,' and one night I had a vivid dream that a UFO piloted by a Navajo shaman landed on our overgrown grass tennis court one moonlit night. That was the feeling that went into 'Hypnotized.' Chris helped a lot with the new tempo and the mood. I remember listening to the playback with her. She looked at me and said, 'It gives me the willies, Bob.' I felt the same way, even after a hundred playbacks."

Bob wrote most of the album, whose title comes from a phrase in his song "Emerald Eyes." He also authored "In the City," "Somebody," a great tune called "Miles Away," and "Keep On Going," which Chris sang. We had another track as well, "Good Things," but it was dropped for a version of the Yardbirds' "For Your Love" at Bob Weston's suggestion. We were very laissezfaire in those days, and said what the hell.

I do love Mystery to Me- I think it's really underrated (as most pre-BN Mac albums are), and I especially like Emerald Eyes, Just Crazy Love, and Why. The band did seem much more fun and relaxed in those days.

jbrownsjr 11-02-2011 09:01 AM

Awesome excerpt Villavic!! I learned something today.

MacShadowsBall 11-04-2011 09:20 PM

Any Ledgies get to see Fleetwood Mac tour back in '73?

MacShadowsBall 11-07-2011 12:08 PM

I find 1973 interesting in that Fleetwood Mac had two studio albums, one that is disliked so strongly and then one that is praised and well liked.


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