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The Chain (Who Wrote What)
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I would tell Christine Perfect, "You're Christine f***ing McVie, and don't you forget it!" |
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Well that seems to prove that the contribution ratios I suggested in a recent thread were in the right ballpark. And even 'The Chain' as a title might not have been written by Stevie after all.
The Chain -- yet another brilliant Christine and Lindsey collaboration! Re Silver Springs Quote:
I've always wondered though--why on earth did she need to be told in the carpark? Just how violent did she get with those tambourines in the studio confines?
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Joe |
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Does it? Sorry- I still cant agree. I recall there is a sizable thread about this subject somewhere. If you haven't watched this Youtube clip- its worth a view; How Fleetwood Mac Wrote The Chain https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RqTARzw7j_w (Its best to skip the first 2 minutes) Also, I'd suggest it well worth listening to Stevie's original composition; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNHbe0Q9UfI -I have no reason to believe this is anything other than a full Stevie composition as a demo (as opposed to her singing a mish-mash of hers and Lindsey's lyrics). Clearly the bare bones of the actual song are Stevie's. Clearly the original foundations and feel are set by the original Christine track. Obviously John contributed the killer iconic bassline. Lindsey played around, added bits, cut bits and put all the individual bits together. Clearly Mick....er...drummed
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'Where words fail, music speaks' Mick Fleetwood |
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I know they would scream at each other on mic. And $he got bent out of shape over Everywhere. But really, $he didn't seem to be the diva $he is now.
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I would tell Christine Perfect, "You're Christine f***ing McVie, and don't you forget it!" Last edited by jbrownsjr; 09-20-2018 at 01:10 PM.. |
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Does it? I seem to your estimation was 10% SN. But the article says, “The lyrics would be the final link. “Originally we had no words to it,” Fleetwood later told Lucky 98 FM radio. “And it really only became a song when Stevie wrote some.“
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Lindsey's song
Did we read the same article?
All that Stevie definitely contributed was the chorus lyrics (note: just the words, not the melody). There's a studio session recording that used to be floating around, about 5 minutes long, with Lindsey introducing the guitar and verse lyrics to the other members, and they gradually join him on harmonies. The song literally builds up over the course of the 5 minutes. I couldn't find it on YouTube now. Can anyone make it available? Intro music-LB Verse music-LB Verse lyrics-LB Listen to the wind blow Watch the sun rise Run in the shadows Damn your love, damn your lies [Chorus music-CM] [Chorus lyrics-SN] And if, you don't love me now You will never love me again I can still hear you saying You would never break the chain (Never break the chain) x 2 Listen to the wind blow Down comes the night Run in the shadows Damn your love, damn your lies Break the silence, Damn the dark, damn the light And if, you don't love me now You will never love me again I can still hear you saying You would never break the chain (Never break the chain) x 3 [Bass solo-JM] Outro solo-LB Chain keep us together (running in the shadows) Thanks a lot for making me listen yet again to Stevie's rambling demo track, which sounds nothing like The Chain. But in a world where a track consists solely of its lyrics, then sure--let's give Stevie a 40-50% contribution.
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Joe |
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(Not sure if it's the one that FuzzzyPlum is referring to.)
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Joe |
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I would tell Christine Perfect, "You're Christine f***ing McVie, and don't you forget it!" |
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There’s an interview that you can search for (and it would appear that you’re inclined to do so) where SN says that LB’s contribution to the lyrics was “listen to the wind blow.” Just those five words - not “listen to the wind blow,” and then the rest of the verses...literally, just, “listen to the wind blow.” Hard stop. And I never said that a “track consists solely of its lyrics.” All I said was that... “The lyrics would be the final link. “Originally we had no words to it,” Fleetwood later told Lucky 98 FM radio. “And it really only became a song when Stevie wrote some.” ...sounds to me like a little more than 10%. Just my interpretation though. Sometimes people hear what they want to hear. I don’t know for certain who wrote or contribute what. I wasn’t there.
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Last edited by Nathan; 09-20-2018 at 09:39 PM.. |
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So Stevie and Christine wrote "damn your love, damn your lies"?
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In the context of what we know, here she is clearly saying that Lindsey wrote the verse and he took the words for the chorus from her other demo. While I gather that in your literalistic way of thinking there isn't much room for the likes of metonymy(--> edit: synecdoche), I think you'll find that by quoting the first lines of the verse and chorus, respectively, she is referring to the whole verses and chorus.
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Joe Last edited by DownOnRodeo; 09-20-2018 at 09:53 PM.. |
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Isn't the chorus melody on Stevie's demo essentially the same as the chorus melody on the finished version of "The Chain"?
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#12
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It appears to me, based on all of this, that Lindsey did indeed write the verses, though. Joe makes a good point about the cussing and aggression of the verses. Not very Stevie / Christine. I'm not saying they'd never curse, but to make it a central part of the lyric, repeated again and again? No, I don't see that as their style. Of course, length-wise, the verses are quite short; I'd say if you give LB the verses and SN the chorus, you've got 50/50 lyrically. Musically, the percentage is more lopsided even with the chorus, but I do think the chorus is largely hers. Last edited by sodascouts; 09-21-2018 at 11:38 AM.. |
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The most iconic part of the song is the bass solo, so I'll give John McVie the lion's share of the credit for creating this great song.
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-Joanne (from Cape Cod) |
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#15
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So basically, Christine wrote most of it.
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I would tell Christine Perfect, "You're Christine f***ing McVie, and don't you forget it!" |
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