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elle 04-29-2013 06:57 AM

St. Paul 4/28 - Lindsey Buckingham, not Nicks, carries Fleetwood Mac at Xcel Center
 
http://www.startribune.com/entertain...medium=twitter

Lindsey Buckingham, not Nicks, carries Fleetwood Mac at Xcel Center

Article by: JON BREAM , Star Tribune Updated: April 29, 2013 - 5:57 AM

Live-wire Lindsey Buckingham, not croaky Stevie Nicks, carried Fleetwood Mac Sunday night at the X.


Fleetwood Mac stopped by Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul with their Fleetwood Mac Live 2013 tour Sunday night, April 28, 2013. Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, who both joined the band way back in 1975, during the band's second number, The Chain, Sunday...Photo: Jeff Wheeler3 comments resize text printbuy reprints

Lindsey Buckingham wore the exact same outfit again. Black leather jacket, black V-neck T-shirt, black boots and, presumably, the same bluejeans.

That’s what the rock star sported when he performed a solo concert in November at the Dakota Jazz Club, the most impersonal (and loudest) performance probably ever in that intimate space. On Sunday at the sold-out Xcel Energy Center, he gave one of the most impassioned performances ever in a Twin Cities arena, this side of Bruce Springsteen.

Oh, sorry, it wasn’t actually a Lindsey Buckingham show. It was Fleetwood Mac, the band that made him famous. But singer/songwriter/keyboardist Christine McVie retired in 1998 and Stevie Nicks — Buckingham’s former lover whose romance and breakup has been the subject of many of the band’s songs — needed a good half of Sunday’s 2 ½-hour show to warm up her voice.

Granted, her voice is lower, harsher and less fluid than before, but her versions of “Rhiannon” and “Sara” were so croaky and lifeless that she couldn’t have placed in the top 5 in a Stevie Nicks sound-alike contest.

Nicks, 64, finally found her voice for “Landslide,” a duet with Buckingham, his voice and acoustic guitar. After saying she usually dedicates the song each night to a family member, Nicks said on Sunday, it would be a rare dedication to her “one and only husband,” Minnesotan Kim Anderson, who was in the audience and, of course, is no longer her husband (they divorced after a short marriage; he was the widower of her best friend, who died of leukemia).

Nicks’ incurable romanticism has fueled her art and Fleetwood Mac. She got so inspired during “Landslide” on Sunday that at song’s end she and Buckingham blew kisses at one another. Of course, they followed that with a scorching “Never Going Back Again,” during which Buckingham sounded maniacally determined on vocals and guitar and Nicks offered credible vocal harmonies.

Although she did only a few slow-motion revolutions of the famous Stevie Nicks dervish dance, she hit her vocal stride, delivering “Gypsy” with conviction while facing drummer Mick Fleetwood (another of her exes).

She finally became the bewitching Nicks of yesteryear on “Gold Dust Woman,” investing the song with mystery, passion and her trademarked accouterments of shawls and scarves (the top hat would come later, thank you).

But while Nicks clearly was a favorite of the 16,000 fans on Sunday, it is Buckingham who elevates Fleetwood Mac into an exciting arena attraction 36 years after the blockbuster “Rumours” album made them one of the biggest bands of the 1970s. On Sunday, he was a live-wire ringmaster, a guitar monster, a heartfelt singer, a hammy performer and, as Mick Fleetwood put it, “our inspiration.”

With all of the Buckingham/Nicks soap-opera songs, the comforting, buoyant tunes (and sweet vocal harmonies) of McVie were missed. The band did her “Don’t Stop,” with Buckingham and Nicks alternating as lead singer on the verses. But this really was the Lindsey Buckingham Show.

Buckingham, 63, tried to provide context with his introductions to songs. For instance, he explained that “Big Love” was written as a “contemplation on alienation” but now he sees it as “a meditation” on change. Indeed, his transformation to de facto frontman of Fleetwood Mac has helped the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame group maintain its magic.



set list: www.startribune.com/artcetera

Jon Bream • 612-673-1719

shackin'up 04-29-2013 07:18 AM

So true, every Stevie fan must see this too. Without Lindsey this would be a very Sad nostalgia act.

HejiraNYC 04-29-2013 07:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shackin'up (Post 1090175)
So true, every Stevie fan must see this too. Without Lindsey this would be a very Sad nostalgia act.

...and without Stevie, they would be playing the Dakota Jazz Club.

gypsy333 04-29-2013 08:02 AM

SO TRUE!!!! HejiraNYC!!:laugh:

MikeVielhaber 04-29-2013 08:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HejiraNYC (Post 1090177)
...and without Stevie, they would be playing the Dakota Jazz Club.

It's weird how that works.

redtulip 04-29-2013 08:32 AM

Not That Funny


redtulip 04-29-2013 08:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HejiraNYC (Post 1090177)
...and without Stevie, they would be playing the Dakota Jazz Club.

Stevie's not exactly selling out large arenas on her own either.

gypsy333 04-29-2013 08:48 AM

she may not be selling out large venues...but she plays larger venues with her solo career than the other Mac members...

redtulip 04-29-2013 08:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gypsy333 (Post 1090182)
she may not be selling out large venues...but she plays larger venues with her solo career than the other Mac members...

Yes, but they need each other to sell out the large arenas, it's not all Stevie's presence that makes these shows what they are.

elle 04-29-2013 08:57 AM

well, if it makes anyone feel any better, this reviewer clearly is neither a SN or a LB fan.

he's pi**ing on both of them at every turn, as much as possible.

while the Dakota may have not been LB's favorite venue (which he apparently said to some aftershow m&g attendants as a reason he omitted to do a SMAP request, and maybe this reviewer overheard that conversation?), the reviews at the time were still raving about his Dakota solo show.

gypsy333 04-29-2013 08:57 AM

True Dat...they do need each other...

redtulip 04-29-2013 09:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by elle (Post 1090184)
well, if it makes anyone feel any better, this reviewer clearly is neither a SN or a LB fan.

he's pi**ing on both of them at every turn, as much as possible.

while Dakota may have not been LB's favorite venue (which he apparently said to some aftershow m&g attendants after he omitted to do a SMAP request, and maybe this reviewer overheard that conversation?), the reviews at the time were still raving about his Dakota solo show.

Jon Bream is a crabby music snob who pretty much always has some sort of ridiculous complaint about a show. I've never seen a review of his that didn't have some sort of bitchy critique.

shackin'up 04-29-2013 09:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HejiraNYC (Post 1090177)
...and without Stevie, they would be playing the Dakota Jazz Club.

But not being a sad nostalgia act.

redtulip 04-29-2013 09:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shackin'up (Post 1090188)
But not being a sad nostalgia act.

And it was a great venue and I'm very happy I was able to see him play at such an intimate show.

redtulip 04-29-2013 09:34 AM

Sad Angel



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