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#1
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Her most underrated song
http://www.tumblr.com/tagged/christine+mcvie
It's got to be ''Come A Little Bit Closer'' , sounding so good on that tumblr player. Damn they need to remaster all the pre-Rumours stuff NOW |
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#2
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Sugar Daddy!
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"They love each other so much, they think they hate each other." Imagine paying $1000 to hear "Don't Dream It's Over" instead of "Go Your Own Way" Fleetwood Mac helped me through a time of heartbreak. 12 years later, they broke my heart. |
#3
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Prove Your Love.
I had Rowan make me an 8 minute loop of the ahh ahh's in the intro because I love it that much... |
#4
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Quote:
Still, I think it's often thought of as a standout from Heroes, no? I'm casting my vote for the criminally underrated "Love in Store." What a perfect opener! Perfectly snappy, with lovely harmonies. I start every workout with it; it just puts me in the best mood. Honorable mentions: "Bad Loser," "Honey Hi," "Isn't it Midnight"
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"Just to hear Lindsey's voice with mine and Stevie's, I get goosebumps the size of chicken eggs." --CM |
#5
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^^ I think I w0uld join your sister in prodding the wall with a broomstick! Of all of Chris's wonderful songs, that's the one song of hers that makes my skin crawl. It's like an acid trip gone wrong...
My absolute favorite is "Ask Anybody." It has to be about Dennis Wilson. "...they say that I should walk out, but that's not what I want... somehow, some way he'll change and we'll try it all over again... without all the pain..." Such sad, hopeful but delusional words. Poor Chris . She manages to capture an elegiac mood that is uplifting in an odd way. The Steve Winwood solo always gets me. "Morning Rain" is my go-to feelgood song. So simple, but so rocking. "There's no use being dissatisfied... you'll never know until you try." |
#6
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Quote:
Sometimes, Edward, I cannot believe we're friends! "Ask Anybody" doesn't do much for me, but then, I really haven't given Christine McVie much of a shot. I should get around to that one... I've been listening to Christine Perfect a bunch lately, and I might add "When You Say" to my list. Maybe it's just because it sounds so different from the rest of that album, but I absolutely consider it the standout track. Danny Kirwan did a wonderful job with that one.
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"Just to hear Lindsey's voice with mine and Stevie's, I get goosebumps the size of chicken eggs." --CM |
#7
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Well the issue is underrated by who? People, media, or the band itself? My previous sentences were based in the band itself. My list would be: Never Make Me Cry Warm Ways Wish you were here Do you know
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#8
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Love In Store was never played again, as far as I know, right? I wish it was. Isn't it Midnight was played on two tours--Tango and Mask. Why oh Why was it not included in The Dance? It would have been a great up tune.
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#9
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This was a particular gem in my life. I can still link everything that was going on in my life at that time, to Do You Know. Young love!
DYK meant everything to me....
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Christine McVie- she radiated both purity and sass in equal measure, bringing light to the music of the 70s. RIP. - John Taylor(Duran Duran) |
#10
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#11
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I love Honey Hi and it fits perfectly on that album. If it had appeared on Mirage or somewhere else, then I don't think I would appreciate it so much. The drum beat is hypnotic, but peaceful too, mirroring the simplicity of the lyrics. It would have been a beautiful thing to see Mick and Christine performing this live.
Michele |
#12
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Lindsey is one strong man. |
#13
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I have to assume that they meant Did You Ever Love Me here in this review of a recital by Dr. Dan Moore. Here is an excerpt.
http://uimusicrising.wordpress.com/2...n-performance/ I know what you’re thinking, saxophones in a steel band? The horns actually provided an interesting timbral characterist that was quite nice. Second, they played an arrangement of Fleetwood Mac’s “Could You Ever Love Me?” featuring Dr. Moore on the marimba with two exciting solo sections. Leaving smiles on the audience’s faces, they ended their portion of the concert with a medley of the Muppet Show Movie that featured a rogue percussionist during the “Mahna-mahna” portion of the piece. |
#14
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My vote goes to "Homeward Bound." Great piano, very believable emotion. And a real rocker, something we didn't get too often from Christine.
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-Joanne (from Cape Cod) |
#15
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It reminds me of a passage in Wicked when all the college friends are having a post-funeral gathering: good food, drink and company. Abundant laughter. And the narrator says if they had known that it would be the last time they'd all be together, maybe they would have lingered a little longer over dinner. It gave me a chill to read that and it put me in mourning, even though nothing bad had happened in the book yet and the characters didn't suspect how their futures would divide them. Of course, the RRHOF was the real ending for FM. And much later in Wicked, when the little girl, Nor, asks if the witch ever returned, the mother says, "Not yet." That's what I will say of FM: not yet. Michele |
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