 Fleetwood Mac
Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac (as the band were originally known)
debuted in 1967 at the Windsor Jazz festival to a tumultuous
reception with Green on vocals and guitar, Jeremy Spencer on
vocals, guitar and piano, Mick Fleetwood on drums and Bob Brunning
on bass.
Green (real name Greenbaum) had earlier replaced Eric
Clapton in John
Mayall's Bluesbreakers when Eric left to form Cream.
He had soon become something of a guitar hero in his own right -
which was the prime reason for the inclusion of his name in the
band's moniker, although it was soon shortened down to just
Fleetwood Mac.
Mick Fleetwood had also been one of the Bluesbreakers, and when
he and Green decided to leave Mayall and start their own group
early in 1967, they had attempted to persuade bassist John McVie
to go along with them. He resisted and as a result, Bob Brunning
got the gig. But McVie was soon to change his mind. A month later
he gave in and replaced Brunning.
Fleetwood Mac were now ready to start winning audiences. The
band were not only superb in live performances and on record, but
they were also just possibly the best combination of blues-based
musicians in the UK. The summer of 1968 saw the line-up swollen by
the addition of guitarist Danny Kirwan. With this unique
three-guitar line-up, Fleetwood Mac were to become the kings of
the British blues boom.
Achieving fame seemingly overnight, the bands' first
self-titled album reached the Number One spot in the album charts
and stayed in the best-seller list for 13 months. In the meantime
Green wrote Black Magic Woman (later to be a hit for Santana)
which proved a minor singles hit.
This was followed by I Need Your Love So Bad at which
point Kirwan joined the line-up, and one month later, Fleetwood
Mac recorded Albatross. The record entered the British
singles chart in mid-December 1968 and reached Number One, selling
over a million copies within 13 months.
In April 1969 Man Of The World - the fourth single -
hit the Number Two spot and in September that year the band
released their third album, Then Play On. Christine
Perfect, John McVie's wife - who had also had considerable success
as a singer and piano player - played keyboards on the album Coming
Your Way. It was an omen of what was to come . . .
It has been said that during 1969 Fleetwood Mac outsold The
Beatles and The Rolling Stones
combined. But all was not well within the group. On the verge of
signing with Apple, they pulled out of the deal at the eleventh
hour as two of the band's key members were about to lose the plot.
Peter Green, a casualty of the stress of life in a top band,
left the music business, gave away all his money, and took a job
as a grave digger. He played his last gig with Fleetwood Mac in
Bristol on May 23, 1970.
Christine then became part of the band and first appeared as a
'proper' member on the album Kiln House. This became
their first hit album in the US, marking the beginning of their
shift in popularity from Britain to America.
On tour in Los Angeles in 1971, Jeremy Spencer told the rest of
the band that he was "just popping out for a bit". They
didn't see him again for two years - he renounced his former life
and joined the religious cult, The Children of God. Peter Green
flew out to help the band complete the tour but refused to rejoin
them on a permanent basis.
California provided a replacement for Spencer, in the shape of
American composer and guitarist Bob Welch. Welch proved to be an
important addition to the band, bringing - as the band would later
comment - "a breath of fresh air". By the time the album
Bare Trees came out, Fleetwood Mac had well established
themselves in the States but had seemed to lose much ground in
their native Britain.
The situation intensified when Danny Kirwan left the band early
in 1972, leaving John McVie and Mick Fleetwood - the rhythm
section - as the only surviving original members. Two new
replacement members joined - Dave Walker (who had sung with Savoy
Brown) and Bob Weston (who had played guitar with Long
John Baldry, Alexis Korner and Graham
Bond).
This line-up completed two tours of the US and released the
album Penguin in April 1973. Walker left during the
sessions for the following LP, Mystery To Me, and Bob
Weston left in October.
In 1975, while checking out recording studios in California,
Mick Fleetwood heard a track by ex-Fritz duo Stevie Nicks and
Lindsey Buckingham. Vastly impressed, Fleetwood invited the pair
to join the group (bringing about the band's 10th line-up in eight
years). Their self-titled "debut" - recorded in a mere
10 days in 1975 - was a slice of seamless California pop,
emphasising that the band was no longer a blues outfit.

In fact, their re-emergence as a mainstream pop/rock outfit
produced three Top 20 hits, including Nicks' witchy anthem Rhiannon
and McVie's animated yet decidedly unenlightened Over My
Head. It also forged a faultless outline for what would
become Rumours two years later.
The 1977 album Rumours was recorded amidst much
internal strife. After an extensive tour, the ravaged band were a
solemn bunch as they filed into Sausalito's Record Plant to come
together as a band, despite the fact that the McVies were
separated, Buckingham and Nicks were on the rocks, and the
Fleetwoods had filed for divorce.
But
through all the melodrama and self-medication they were able to
pen songs that bristled with betrayal, bile and heartbreak, like Go
Your Own Way and the emphatic Never Going Back Again. The
album sold over 115 million copies worldwide, and spent over 400
weeks on the UK charts and 130 weeks in the USA.
If Rumours anticipated the end, the excessiveness of Tusk
guaranteed it. The two-disc LP - often referred to as
Buckingham's folly - was not a band record by any stretch of the
imagination. It is a collection of songs by individuals who by
accident of geography and association have made a record together.
Vague, and with no real direction, the collection had some
moments of shimmering beauty - the ethereal That's All For
Everyone and the winsome Sara, which could have been
pulled off Rumours - but it's the title song that
everyone remembers: a beguiling quasi-instrumental, rendered
excessive by the presence of the University of Southern California
marching band.
While Fleetwood Mac were legendary for their ability to turn over
members and still make fine music, the loss of lead guitarist
Lindsey Buckingham was the figurative end of the road. Replacement
guitarists Rick Vito and Billy Burnette were natural sidemen with
second-tier ideas and had no business writing or singing songs
with a band as musically savvy as this.
Although most bands find one boss is plenty, when Fleetwood Mac
reunited in 1997 all five members brought their own managers with
them, with all decisions made by managerial junta.
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