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Old 05-28-2017, 03:42 PM
xhector xhector is offline
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Default The Times interview

From here:
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/i...mula-nlj08kvdk
You have to register to read the full article. But I copied the text:



MUSIC INTERVIEW
‘In Fleetwood Mac nothing fits into any formula’

Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie have got back together to sing duets, they tell Will Hodgkinson

Will Hodgkinson
May 26 2017, 12:01am, The Times

Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie: “It was clear early on that this wouldn’t be Fleetwood Mac”

Just when you have a handle on the Fleetwood Mac drama, the principal characters go way off script and do something nobody could have predicted. First, the songwriter and pianist Christine McVie makes a surprise return in 2013 after a 15-year absence. Now McVie has recorded a duets album with Lindsey Buckingham, the guitarist associated, through good and bad times, with the other woman in the group: one Stevie Nicks.

“This is a band where nothing fits into any formula,” says Buckingham, on an atypically stormy afternoon in Los Angeles. He is at the Beverly Hills office of Fleetwood Mac’s manager, Irving Azoff, where I have just heard a handful of songs from the forthcoming duets album. From Buckingham’s sweet, fairytale-like In My World to McVie’s breezily romantic Feel About You, the album features classic Fleetwood Mac-style soft rock, which isn’t surprising given that Mick Fleetwood and John McVie form the rhythm section. The only Maccer missing, in fact, is Nicks.

“Oh, she’s fine about it,” insists Buckingham, on what Nicks makes of her old boyfriend recording an album with her one-time ally in the male-dominated world of 1970s rock. “She was off on her own thing [a solo tour], she knew what we were doing, and it was clear early on that this wouldn’t be Fleetwood Mac. You can look at it cosmically. The universe was speaking to Christine and me, even to Stevie, for this to be a duets album.

“Doing a duets album with Lindsey was the last thing I expected,” says McVie. “We don’t hang out in the way Stevie and I do, but we do work well together, and we ended up with all this material while Stevie was off doing other things. It started when I was in LA to rehearse for the tour and it developed from there. It’s just another splinter off the tree.”

Ever since 1977’s Rumours — 45 million albums sold and counting — the world’s leading purveyors of break-up rock have turned personal turmoil into musical gold. Buckingham and Nicks, the Americans of the group, teenage sweethearts who wrote the classic kiss-offs Go Your Own Way and Dreams about each other respectively, have maintained some sort of affection amid the mutual friction. To this day they hold hands while performing Landslide, written by Nicks when they were still in love. Christine McVie wrote Don’t Stop as a way of telling her ex-husband, the bassist John, to get over their marriage and move on. And throughout it all Mick Fleetwood kept the show on the road, turning Fleetwood Mac into one of the world’s biggest live acts. Their 2014-15 tour, which featured the return of Christine McVie, grossed $200 million.


“When Christine returned I thought, ‘OK, here comes the next chapter’,” says Buckingham, who looks much the same as he always did. The mass of black curls may have given way to cropped grey hair, but he’s still slim and somewhat intense, with piercing blues eyes suggesting a steeliness beneath the friendly exterior. “Christine burnt all her bridges in LA and made a new start in the UK, so when she said she wanted to join I told her, ‘If you do come back, you can’t just leave again. It can’t be this year’s lark.’ And then she started talking about these songs she had.”

Rejoining the band at the end of 2013 saved McVie from a downward spiral. After her marriage to the Portuguese musician Eddy Quintela came to an end in 2003 she became something of a recluse, living alone in a big house near Canterbury and becoming increasingly isolated from the world.

“I said I left because of a fear of flying, but it went deeper than that,” says McVie, who now lives in a high-ceilinged flat, filled with Mac memorabilia, opposite Hyde Park. “My father was dying, I realised I had spent most of my life in Fleetwood Mac, and I made the unwise decision to return to England and live like a retired person. At first I thought I was happy, and I loved the countryside. Then my marriage broke up, he left, I got very depressed, and my two dogs became my excuse for living. Nobody would call me prolific, but I wasn’t writing anything at all. Eventually I went to a therapist, who said I had to get on a plane or I would never go anywhere.That led to visiting Mick in Maui, where I asked him what it would be like if I joined the band again."

The history of Fleetwood Mac is so full of tragedy, intrigue and surprise that McVie’s shock decision not only to return, but also to make an album with Buckingham, is almost par for the course. Take the former guitarists. Peter Green gave away all his money before being diagnosed with schizophrenia. Danny Kirwan was homeless for much of the 1980s and 1990s. Jeremy Spencer joined the LA cult the Children of God. Bob Welch killed himself.

“It’s a grim story, isn’t it?” says McVie, who has a no-nonsense way of talking about the band’s history, a product, perhaps, of her Birmingham upbringing. “Mick started wondering if he was the Devil incarnate. The rest of us survived because we have a great capacity to laugh at ourselves, which goes a long way to solving uncomfortable issues. It could be tricky singing Don’t Stop in front of John, and You Make Loving Fun was rubbing his face in it [McVie wrote the song about the lighting engineer she was having an affair with], but you exorcise those demons through song and feel better for it.”

“Animosity has been fodder for the songs, and Stevie and I have problems to this day,” says Buckingham. “But you have to acknowledge that underneath it all is a great deal of love. It is the glue that keeps this band together, against the odds.”

Buckingham left the band for a while too, after substance abuse by his fellow members reached an apotheosis during the recording of Tango in the Night in 1987. Fleetwood, having filed for bankruptcy, was living in a trailer in Buckingham’s front yard in LA. Nicks had checked into the Betty Ford clinic to quit cocaine, while embarking on a debilitating addiction to the painkiller Klonopin.

“It was the 1960s and 1970s reaching its ugly conclusion,” says Buckingham about that era. “Mick was transcending, shall we say. Stevie was a non-presence. For an album that took ten months to a year to make, she was in the studio for a couple of weeks. But back during Tusk [1979], Mick and Stevie were setting examples I wanted to reject. We recorded it at Village studio in Santa Monica and it would be one in the morning, I would go out to my car to drive home and Mick would drag me back into the studio. It got to the point where I’d say, ‘I’m just going to the bathroom,’ and then I’d run to the car and drive away. And they would stay up well into the next day.”

“Me and Lindsey . . . we’re not exactly the best of friends,” confirmed Nicks, when I spoke to her this year. That lack of amiability has curtailed plans to reissue Buckingham Nicks, the 1973 album the couple (and they were a couple back then) made before joining Fleetwood Mac. It is something of a buried treasure, long revered among fans of heartfelt 1970s Californian rock.

“The problem is, a reissue would require Stevie and myself to carve out time to do something together,” says Buckingham. “And there is never a meeting of the minds on when that would be a good thing to do . . . Go figure.” He raises his eyebrows meaningfully.

The universe was speaking to Christine and me
In their separate interviews, Buckingham and McVie reach the same conclusion: Fleetwood Mac should, by the standard laws of physics and divorce, have split up decades ago.

“We’ve never had a fantastic time,” says McVie when I ask if she has memories of a golden period for the band she has been in, apart from that 15-year break, since 1970. “All of the albums have been strewn with angst. Making Mirage in 1982 was particularly weird. We decided we needed a bubble to work in so we rented the Honky Château [a recording studio in D’Hérouville, France]. Lindsey and Stevie did not like that one bit, partly because Lindsey does not care for Europe in any big way. God knows how we survived.”

As Buckingham points out, there is no precedent for Fleetwood Mac. No other band has featured the same five wildly different, frequently warring people for so long.

“Stevie is very ethereal while also enjoying the trimmings of being a singer,” says Buckingham, describing his fellow band members. “She’s concerned with how things are perceived from the outside. I’m the opposite. I have a good time on stage, but I could be just fine never going on the road again, and I’m most grounded when working. Mick is the guy that keeps it all together, and it’s a comment on his tenacity that people have floated in and out and still Fleetwood Mac has continued. John is more like me, except without the drive. He plays his bass and chills out on his boat. It’s a healthy way to be.”

How about McVie? “When Christine came back, it was so clear she was the middle ground of this band. She’s a woman who has a lot of things she can share with Stevie, but she’s also a musician grounded in her craft, which falls on my side. It’s why she can get on with both of us.”

Buckingham and McVie are doing a handful of dates to support the album. Nicks has been carrying on with a solo tour, and joined her mega-fan Harry Styles on stage at a recent LA date. Then it is back to Fleetwood Mac for all. American summer dates lead to a world tour planned for next year, but not a much-rumoured Glastonbury festival appearance (“I’m a bit suspicious of the mud,” explains McVie). Against all odds, Fleetwood Mac is the thing that endures. Go to one of their concerts today and the audience is multi-generational, a far cry from the early 1980s when, according to Buckingham, “we were the enemy for not being the Ramones. Or even the Police”.

“I never thought we would still be doing this,” Buckingham concludes, as our interview winds up. “When I met my wife, and had my first son at 48, it changed everything because you can’t live a crazy rock’n’roll life and be a spouse and a parent at the same time. Yet these five disparate people create something intangible, something other people can see so much better than us. Despite all the animosity and chaos, there is a shared destiny.”

Or, as McVie states in her unflappable way about a life in Fleetwood Mac: “I’m up for it if they are.”
Lindsey Buckingham/Christine McVie (Rhino) is out on June 9

Last edited by xhector; 05-28-2017 at 03:59 PM..
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Old 05-28-2017, 04:40 PM
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Wow, an interview where the reporter asked some different questions! So weird about the inability to get together to have Buckingham Nicks rereleased. Still, it's practically a moot point now. I mean, bootlegs can easily be bought off the internet, and if Stevie and Lindsey can't agree on something as simple as a rerelease, that's their loss.

I really liked this interview, but just remember- it's not a Fleetwood Mac album, it's a duets album!
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Old 05-28-2017, 08:52 PM
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aleuzzi aleuzzi is offline
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The bulk of the interview is about Fleetwood Mac and clearly the making of this record--whether they call it a duet or acknowledge it as a 4/5 Mac project--is inextricably connected to the band dynamics Lindsey points out.

The upcoming band tour will be different from the 2015-16 one. I'm not sure yet how it will play out, but LB-CM's dynamic will be that much stronger having written and recorded and toured together before reconvening with the other three. Given Mick's interviews last October and November about the future of the record, it's clear he WANTED this to be a full-blown Mac project. So I'm also not sure how his disappointment will play out on the road, either.
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Old 05-28-2017, 09:02 PM
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Originally Posted by bwboy View Post
Wow, an interview where the reporter asked some different questions! So weird about the inability to get together to have Buckingham Nicks rereleased. Still, it's practically a moot point now. I mean, bootlegs can easily be bought off the internet, and if Stevie and Lindsey can't agree on something as simple as a rerelease, that's their loss.

I really liked this interview, but just remember- it's not a Fleetwood Mac album, it's a duets album!
Isn't it funny they have to keep repeating that to not make someone feel left out. They are tripping over themselves over and over saying this.
Just remember....EVERY Fleetwood Mac musician plays on the album. Say You Will was Fleetwood Mac. Behind the Mask was Fleetwood Mac. Time was Fleetwood Mac. The difference now is the name of the band member only.
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Last edited by Macfan4life; 05-28-2017 at 09:04 PM..
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Old 05-28-2017, 11:24 PM
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"and Stevie and I have problems to this day,” says Buckingham. "

hmm, that's different. usually he said that they are still working on new chapters etc etc, not that they are still have having problems.
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Old 05-29-2017, 12:06 AM
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Notice that there only seems to be a problem when one person is around?

Other than that, it's all hugs and kisses. Seemingly GENUINE hugs and kisses.
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Old 05-29-2017, 12:18 AM
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Originally Posted by elle View Post
"and Stevie and I have problems to this day,” says Buckingham. "

hmm, that's different. usually he said that they are still working on new chapters etc etc, not that they are still have having problems.
Yes I noticed this....usually he talks about the new chapters in a positive and excited way

Now its ....we got 'PROBLEMS'

.....There is Trouble in Little China
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Old 05-29-2017, 12:22 AM
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Originally Posted by Angel75 View Post
Yes I noticed this....usually he talks about the new chapters in a positive and excited way

Now its ....we got 'PROBLEMS'

.....There is Trouble in Little China
maybe new chapters talk was when he was still hoping there might be some creative endevours in their future.
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Old 05-29-2017, 12:25 AM
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Yes I noticed this....usually he talks about the new chapters in a positive and excited way

Now its ....we got 'PROBLEMS'

.....There is Trouble in Little China
It used to be bittersweet, now it's just sweet. Fastforward 20 years and now it's just bitter.

Michele
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Old 05-29-2017, 12:28 AM
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Originally Posted by michelej1 View Post
It used to be bittersweet, now it's just sweet. Fastforward 20 years and now it's just bitter.

Michele
i love you!!
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Old 05-29-2017, 12:52 AM
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It used to be bittersweet, now it's just sweet. Fastforward 20 years and now it's just bitter.

Michele
I wonder if she knows that she's the problem now? Or she just doesn't care? Or she just believes her own delusional crap she spews?
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Old 05-29-2017, 01:06 AM
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I wonder if she knows that she's the problem now? Or she just doesn't care? Or she just believes her own delusional crap she spews?
I think in her mind she's like "F Lindsey, Im more popular then him and I'm going to go on a big tour just to prove it". I could care less how many seats she sells to sing that Rhiannon and Landslide for the thousandth time. She could have been a part of the this and said F U to the band. Screw her. If there is a God, Buckingham Mc View will get some sort of grammy nod. I can only imagine she'll be tearing her weave out. BTW honey, stop saying you look young because you stopped going in the sun at 30. NO ONE is buying it.
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Old 05-29-2017, 01:24 AM
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Sigh. In reference to something I just posted on another thread, if Mick's team reads this thread the meet and greet prices will be even higher. I don't blame Mick one bit!
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Old 05-29-2017, 03:57 AM
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Sigh. In reference to something I just posted on another thread, if Mick's team reads this thread the meet and greet prices will be even higher. I don't blame Mick one bit!
I suspect he would offer discounts. The fans have his back! FM is his life -- and it remains dormant because of one person who holds it all hostage. And I wish people wouldn't post the same thing in multiple threads. We heard you the first time.
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Old 05-29-2017, 04:56 AM
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Originally Posted by Macfan4life View Post
Isn't it funny they have to keep repeating that to not make someone feel left out. They are tripping over themselves over and over saying this.
Just remember....EVERY Fleetwood Mac musician plays on the album. Say You Will was Fleetwood Mac. Behind the Mask was Fleetwood Mac. Time was Fleetwood Mac. The difference now is the name of the band member only.
That is one theory, but I don't believe it. It's hard to imagine Lindsey and Christine being that afraid of Stevie, and I think you're overestimating her power.

Another theory would be that by going out of their way to insist this is not a FM album, they are lowering the expectation that it should sell well. This is not an insult, I'm just being objective here, and this is a possible theory. Some people can believe this, or they can believe the band is so afraid of Stevie that they recorded under another name.
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