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#16
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In Mick’s second book, he said there were “too many essential pieces missing” from your lineup and he regrets going out under the name Fleetwood Mac. Do you agree? F--k no. Fleetwood Mac is Fleetwood and Mac and whomever else. Who knows what the f*** is going to happen to other people? Fleetwood and Mac are best friends. They are Johnny and Mick. They’re going to keep going no matter what. They’ve been showing that for 50 friggin’ years now. I’m just proud to be one of the entities of it. I wasn’t disposable, but I felt a little bit disposable. Basically, put it this way, when their management said, “Stevie only does two or three shows a week,” I was like, “Let’s do five. I’m taking this to the bank. Let’s do this. I’m never going to let you down. Let’s do this as many times as you want to until your queen comes back.”
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#17
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The first album with those three had Peter Green and Jeremy Spencer. The sixth album with those three had Bob Welch, Bob Weston, and Dave Walker. The ninth album with those three had Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham. The twelfth fifteenth album with those three had Billy Burnette, Bekka Bramlett, and Dave Mason. It’s literally whomever else. I’ll concede that the public image of Fleetwood Mac was fairly cemented by 1993, and I think the label should have intervened before that lineup ever saw the light of day, however, Bekka wasn’t wrong that it was Mick and John’s band.
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On and on it will always be, the rhythm, rhyme, and harmony. THE Stephen Hopkins |
#18
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![]() I like the Time album and it totally belongs in the Fleetwood Mac catalog. I think all the songs work well together with the exception of Blow by Blow. I still believe this is an important chapter in the soap opera of Fleetwood Mac.
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#19
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![]() Yes, that's the reason I don't feel Time as a Mac album. But it's just my feeling, my perception. The same feeling that makes me think no reunion is feasible anymore, even if John were there with Mick.
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#20
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![]() Here’s what I don’t understand.
The label obviously wanted a Rumours lineup reunion, knew that’s the direction they were going to push Lindsey, Stevie, and the band, and that they had zero interest in Time (although were legally obligated to release the album). If they knew they weren’t going to promote Time, why wouldn’t they have pulled I Do, Nights In Estoril, and All Over Again and saved those for the Rumours lineup? The (Rumours) band could have had a new studio album finished by late 1996, done the live reunion TV show in early 1997 in conjunction with the released of the new studio album, and released The Dance at the conclusion of the tour. TIME Talkin’ To My Heart Winds of Change Blow By Blow Hollywood The Bigger The Love Nothing Without You Sooner or Later Dreamin’ The Dream I Wonder Why I Got It In For You These Strange Times ALL OVER AGAIN My Little Demon Easy Come, Easy Go Twisted Miranda I Do Steal Your Heart Away Temporary One At Last Nights In Estoril Bleed To Love Her Sweet Girl All Over Again
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On and on it will always be, the rhythm, rhyme, and harmony. THE Stephen Hopkins |
#21
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Would you not say that the Time bomb (funny pun) facilitated The Dance? You have probably with the most knowledge of the Time era. Of course if you knew the future you have made them record an album in 1996 and tour in 1997. But when Time was getting its footing 1993, 1994 and 1995 a reunion seemed unlikey.
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#22
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![]() —— Reunion talk likely started heating up in late Fall, 1994. The Eagles and Page/Plant had just had massively successful reunions, the Street Angel wrapped up on Sept. 18, and then on October 4, Smashing Pumpkins released a cover of “Landslide” that was a minor hit. While Lindsey and Fleetwood Mac were relegated to the dinner club/opening act/packaged tour circuit and Stevie was headlining the state fair circuit, one of the premier alternative rock bands was having a minor hit with one of their songs. (Mick, John, and Christine had to have been having “Black Magic Woman” déjà vu.) In late-1994, Mick was interviewed about his restaurant. He was engaged to Lynn by that point (it was the first I’d heard of her). Anyway, it said Stevie attended the restaurant’s Halloween party. While I don’t know any of the details, there was apparently some type of détente. So, Stevie finished a disappointing (to her) tour for an album she didn’t like, a cover of one of her Fleetwood Mac songs was suddenly getting buzz two weeks later, and then she was quietly hanging out with Mick four weeks after that. —— At some point, Lindsey made a cameo appearance on Time because he was recording in the same studio as the band, which means he was working with Rob Cavallo by that point. Billy said Stevie’s lawyer were around when they were finishing up the album and that he warned Bekka and Dave the end was imminent. Fleetwood Mac, Lindsey Buckingham, and Stevie’s lawyers were in the same place at the same time. Time was released on October 10, 1995. It supposed to have been released a few weeks earlier, but Lynn’s father died in late August. The band’s last tour stop was on Sept. 1 and Mick references the passing in the liner notes, which means the liners were done sometime in September. That tells me the label was planning on only making a small batch of albums. Don’t you think it’s funny that there was minimal promotion, the album only sold 36,000 copies, yet there aren’t tons of used or cut-out copies out there? So, the label knew in September they weren’t going to promote it and, via Rob Cavallo, were actively campaigning for a reunion. Which now makes me wonder how much of Christine’s departure had to do with Dave Mason and how much had to do with reading the tea leaves. Not that there weren’t issues with Dave, but it’s not hard to imagine Christine wanting to pull the plug on that lineup and have her songs on a viable Fleetwood Mac album once the “Landslide” cover became a minor hit. All of their careers were in the toilet, yet a relevant band was having success with their music. The problem was she contractually couldn’t. We still don’t actually know when Christine bailed, where in the timeline the Smile sessions and Richard bailing on Fleetwood Mac were, how far along they were when Billy rejoined, when the band submitted the rejected album, and when Lindsey’s sessions began at the studio. The band’s touring schedule for 1995 really doesn’t provide much help. They did two shows in Japan and one in Puerto Rico in April, a few weeks in Europe from late-May to mid-June, and one last haul from mid-July through September 1. So, there was a month off in April/May, a month off in June/July, the tour ended on September 1, and the album was released on October 10. — Still, if I’m WB, I’m pulling the three most mainstream songs. Maybe they could be used on a new Fleetwood Mac album, maybe they could be used as “new” tracks on complications. OTOH, maybe the label was hesitant to even discuss a new studio album before seeing how the TV reunion went, first.
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On and on it will always be, the rhythm, rhyme, and harmony. THE Stephen Hopkins |
#23
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#24
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![]() I don't necessarily disagree with you Steve but it makes no sense for a record company not to promote one of their albums from a band with a mainstream name. Yanking Chris songs from Time would have hurt it even more.
Ideally it would have been wonderful to scoop everyone up in mid 1995 record another album and do a tour the following year. I wish Chris was allowed to record on SYW. I also wish Chris could have come back in 2013 before the Unleashed tour and they recorded an album and went on with a proper farewell tour. I say this all the time but its ridiculously sad the last album of these 5 was Mirage when they all appeared to record and craft an album together. However Stevie was not around much for Mirage either. Tusk was mostly a Lindsey album so you literally have to go back to Rumours for all 5 working everyday in the studio together to record an album.
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#25
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Time was the first one without Stevie. I’m sure you knew it would be tough to sell that without her. Oh yeah. We all knew it would be a tough road for radio back then. You wrote Dreaming the Dream” with Bekka. I remember us writing that in a hotel room somewhere. I brought it back into the band. Dave, Christine, and Mick loved it, so it made the record. When you brought a new song in, everyone had to like it. It was something the band voted on. I still carry that to this day. There’s a lot of things I learned in Fleetwood Mac that work. When you toured in 1995, there was no Stevie, Christine, or Lindsey. It must have been tricky to go out without at least one of them. It was tricky, but it was still a good band. The people loved it. I sang Don’t Stop” and “Go Your Own Way.” People want to hear the hits when they come to a concert. When we put out Behind the Mask, we put up a list of all the songs we want to do. At the first night, we’d do a bunch of the new songs. But we’d just go back to doing the hits after the first night. People don’t want to hear the new stuff. https://ledge.fleetwoodmac.net/showp...91&postcount=6
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#26
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When alternative rock took over, legacy artists generally didn’t have success with new studio releases. Since WB had already paid for the Time songs, they decided to release what they had when they could, guaranteeing at least some measure of recouping versus the reunion potentially failing and getting nothing back on their investment. Nobody knew what to expect in 1995, especially from Stevie, who’d gotten some pretty brutal reviews on her 1994 tour. Things were fluid at WB after Mo and Lenny left in 1994. The bean counters took over. There was no loyalty left. They dropped Van Halen after one flop, and think of the tens of millions of albums they sold.
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On and on it will always be, the rhythm, rhyme, and harmony. THE Stephen Hopkins |
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