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Old 05-09-2009, 04:11 PM
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slipkid slipkid is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by becca View Post
I just reread the insert of Madison Blues and was amazed how much is mentioning the Rumours whatever it was/is to come. Not any info about Purple Dancer so much or if either of the live recordings might predate the studio one. The obsession some have with Rumours! Anyway, I think 'Jet' is pretty much reaching as to the three vocalists setting the stage for Rumours idea. Like some Beatles fans who claim no artists wrote or were allowed to write their own songs before them (Chuck Berry, Bo Diddly, and Fats Domino sure as @#%&! did), some Mac fans are clouded by Buckingham & Nicks' dramatic rise to the heights of mythic immortality. Kiln House and Station Man/Purple Dancer specifically as a warm-up to a full west-coast harmony-pop sound? Nuh-uh! Some of it does remind me of the folk-rock around in England then, in drawing on older musical themes ala Music From Big Pink/The Band a bit. Fairport did some really neat versions of earlier Everlys songs along with the stuff from old English ballads/poems. Like I wrote earlier I wish there had been more of the Jeremy-Danny-Christine line-up and the Madison Blues set is a major reason for changing my mind on that.


I think the liner notes are for those Mac fans that only know Nicks/Buckingham, and beyond. I agree the songs stand on their own, no need for the sales pitch.

You should read the liner notes for "Boston Blues". Here is the final paragraph:

"Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, of course soldiered on, hiring various American session muso's, eventually re-emerging as the most successful AOR band of the 70's and 80's. But despite their name on the door, they weren't a patch on the REAL Fleetwood Mac, never mind how many platinum records they were awarded!" This CD is of course the 2/70 Boston shows.

After Jeremy left, the band was the interesting Green/Kirwan/C. McVie/J. McVie/Fleetwood (Nigel Watson: congas) line-up for about six weeks. Though I think Green's LONG concert jams drove the group away from him as much as he didn't want to be there at the same time. If all parties allowed it, that would've been the streamlined Fleetwood Mac that would've continued its success, instead of being lost for four years. Yet there's always that 3 ton elephant in the room named mental illness.

Last edited by slipkid; 05-09-2009 at 08:31 PM..
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