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Old 04-03-2019, 06:12 PM
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Originally Posted by elle View Post
it would have been interesting to see where they'd rank. but i did like that writer provided his reasoning of what he included and what he excluded:
Our list of Fleetwood Mac Solo Albums Ranked Worst to Best focuses on the principal contributors to the band's rich legacy, rather than members with shorter, less celebrated tenures like Bob Brunning, Billy Burnette, Dave Mason, Bekka Bramlett, Rick Vito and Dave Walker. That leaves more than 40 recordings by Buckingham, Fleetwood, Nicks, Christine and John McVie, Peter Green, Danny Kirwan, Jeremy Spencer, Bob Welch and Bob Weston.

As usual, we skipped live recordings by Nicks (2009's Soundstage Sessions), Buckingham (including 2008's Live at the Bass Performance Hall), Welch (2004's Live at the Roxy), Spencer (In Concert – India 1998) and Fleetwood (2008's Blue Again!), as well as a list of all-instrumental albums that includes Fleetwood's Total Drumming and Spencer's Treading Softly.

We also stayed away from specialty projects -- straight-blues recordings like Spencer's Precious Little, and Green's A Case for the Blues and Blues Don't Change, as well as Welch's 1999 jazz-oriented Looks at Bop and Bob Weston's home-recorded, personally distributed There's a Heaven.
I didn't see that. Sometimes I'm blind out of one eye and can't see with the other. It still would have been nice to see Billy's work on there. Other than Stevie, I believe he has released more solo material than any of the other members of Fleetwood Mac.
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