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#1
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The Death Of Fleetwood Mac...Time
First off I had this response all written out and then through some
computer magic, I must have hit the wrong button and lost the whole thing. So thank your lucky stars. And now an edited version: Bretonbaquet, Of course some of my comments were meant to "antagonise". Much like your "Steve still waiting tables" statemeant. I used the word imposters to describe the members of the band that were there without Peter, Lindsey and Stevie. As I've already listed in the other locked thread the real stars were: Peter, Mick, John, Christine, Lindsey and Stevie . And that's it. TrueFaith77, How do I seperate Danny and Jeremy because they were there when Peter left? That kind of answers itself. Peter was the heartbeat of the band. Without him they just started drifting into a bland band. And the reason I didn't continue the story about the band during the Lindsey, Stevie and Christine years is because everyone already knows about the amazing success that version had. Without finding Buckingham Nicks the band would have been forgotten. I love Stevie and Christine too (Stevie's the reason I became a Mac fan), but without Lindsey they became a boring bland band again. So even though I think Danny, Jeremy, Bob, Billy, Rick and Bekka are talented, their versions of Fleetwood Mac Light were hurtful to the band's image. Does anyone on this board really think that Behind The Mask and Time didn't hurt the image of the band. The band's brand was going down, down, down. It would have been really sad if that's the way the Mac's story would have ended. Without The Dance and even the mediocre Say You Will to give them real credibility, or a respectable legacy - those other versions would have been the death of Fleetwood Mac. |
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#2
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I appreciate your opinion iamnotafraid, but what exactly do you feel was the death of Fleetwood Mac - the Behind the Mask and Time albums themselves, or the new members. What in your opinion makes the albums so bad or individual new members so bad? Should the band had called it quits when Peter or even Lindsey left?
I notice you state your opinions openly, but don't seem to provide evidence to support your opinions. If you got fired, laid off from your job, would you be going around giving your former boss and former company the highest praise? |
#3
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Not going to comment on the whole Time/Behind The Mask controversy, because people know my opinions. But how can you class Say You Will as a mediocre album? It was a fresh and intriguining responce to the years past and commentary on the world as it stood then and today. Where it may not have been another Rumours, it was still successful in its own right. It was the most commercially successful, from a chart point of view, album in the US since Mirage and it went Gold in the US and United Kingdom. They obviously did something right if so many people bought back into the "franchise.
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#4
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Thanks for your responses.
I shall answer after the Miami Dolphins game tonight. Which starts in just a few minutes... |
#5
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Well the Dolphins lost so I'll try and not let that affect
what I write about this band we all love and loathe. My green eyed friend I do believe "Say You Will" was a mediocre album. Mostly because of Stevie. Her only contribution to that album was Goodbye Baby (a song NOT about her abortions, as some think). I imagine the outtakes of Destiny Rules goes something like this... Stevie - Lindsey I can't sing that high, lower key please... Lindsey - I can't sing that high either, but just how low can we go? Stevie - Can you still work your magic with the VSO? Lindsey - What if I just whisper my lyrics? They sound for the most part like they need their batteries replaced or something. I do like a few of Lindsey's songs from Say You Will. Even the much hated "Come". That song rocked in concert. It's just sad to me that they couldn't put out a better album. I think Lindsey and Stevie had their chance to shine and they blew it. Less Stevie and a few Christine songs would or could have made this album better. This album could have been a decent solo album for Lindsey. But $$$ talks. ChiliD and MacShadows, I'll reply to you guys later. I know it's killing you to know what I think. |
#6
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Time how do you think they would be remembered? Or even worse, conitinued on with the line-ups of either of those two albums? If I joined Mick and John would it still be Fleetwood Mac? The only positive things to come from those two albums were the songs: Skies The Limit - Hard Feelings - Winds of Change And to answer your question, "should they have called it quits after Peter left?". Well the only reason I'm glad they didn't is obvious, it lead to Lindsey and Stevie joining. "Quit after Lindsey left?" YES. |
#7
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Yes. Quote:
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#8
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Personally I glad FM never called it quits, look at what great music the world would have missed out on if they quit when Peter and others along the way left the band. FM could have easily ended when Welch quit. I'm sure Mick, John, Christine were fed up with the revolving door of guitarists, and could have just as easily "pick up their pieces and go home". As far as the Dance reunion two years after Time goes ,while people wanted the Fab 5 back together, people didn't want Stevie and Lindsey to quit to begin with. The "failure" of Time, does not mean fans wanted Stevie and Lindsey back. It just means that fans didn't like the Time album. One thing doesn't always mean or relate to some bigger thing. |
#9
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fans, would have bought that album and wondered what in the world happened to the great Fleetwood Mac. "No Lindsey, no Stevie...you've got to be kidding", I can just hear them saying. Since we've all been talking about Time and Behind The Mask, I've been suffering through listening to these albums again. And while looking through BTM booklet I found an old review from an audio magazine. I'll post it later. |
#10
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With some different song choices and better promotion, "BTM" probably would have done better and been more widely accepted by the public and perhaps even some of the Buckingham/Nicks-ites out there.
Had that line up lasted, then theoretically "Time" would have been a much better album with or without Stevie due to her solo career and back and forth issues with Mick. Rick and Billy could have further stretched their creative muscles (which are considerable both as a duo and as solo artists), and if Stevie had not stuck around for "Time", then (again theoretically) perhaps that would have been the change over to Bekka joining the band or some other female personnel change. But this is all theoretical/hypothesis/"what if" stuff.
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Don't ask me what I think of you, I might not give the answer that you want me to!!!!! |
#11
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oh, f*** Quote:
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The fatal blow to the band was Rumours...and the proof of that was The Dance. Because they couldn't remove themselves from the Rumours curse in the meantime, they took a giant leap backwards and became for all eternity, an oldies retro band. Forget any future creativity, they were stuck forever in the Rumours quicksand.
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Among God's creations, two, the dog and the guitar, have taken all the sizes and all the shapes in order not to be separated from the man.---Andres Segovia |
#12
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Your logic still doesn't hold on the Jeremy/Danny not being the true Fleetwood Mac... because... your whole point is that a similar blanding occurred when Rick and Billy joined... which means according to that same logic... Christine was part of the post-Peter blanding and Stevie and Christine were (like Jeremy/Danny) around for the blanding after Lindsey left. Which means, you ACTUALLY only think that Fleetwood Mac is Fleetwood Mac if Peter and Lindsey are there: Mick, John, Christine, Stevie are all incidental according to your logic.
ETA: Now I understand. Peter Green is the heartbeat (he worked with Jeremy and Danny separately for example). AND Lindsey-Stevie-Christine are, as a unit, the heartbeat. Your internal logic is sound. However, to Chili's point--and to your particular standards--do you think the band's blanding began before Behind the Mask, with Mirage, in which the Rumours juggernaut proved to great for them to successfully negotiate? My pov is conflicted: I admire and enjoy all eras of Fleetwood Mac and I see how that history participated in the three Off-White albums of the late 70s, which I regard as a pinnacle in ALL OF MUSIC. But if THAT brand were smudged, it began with Mirage, no? Compromised though it may be (as we know as insiders rather than as fresh listeners, I contend), I consider Say You Will to be the greatest American album of the 00s. To put it in perspective, Mirage and Tango (both of which I love) wouldn't make my Top 50 of the 80s (I don't even know if they'd make the top 10 for their respective years!). I have a friend who believes in the "brand" concept as well. Look at something like Roxy Music where every album must be perfection and for which Bryan daringly retired the name at its greatest financial and international success. For him, the Mac should have ended with Tusk. And he argues that 90s Mac didn't "look" right--and in part he intuits the compromise at the heart of them, in which certain artists may have been forced into the Rumours mold. I happen to think this means he is missing some wonderful moments and wonderful records (even Behind the Mask is a fascinating whole; I feel the cover captures the album's quality of being steeped in American folk/pop lore--of which the Rumours Mac were an undeniable part). And, THUS, I feel that therefore the definition of the Mac is, in fact, held in the much-hated Time album in which Mick reveals that the Mac is his way of honoring Peter Green. And, THAT is as good a definition of the "real" Fleetwood Mac as I need. Chili and I won't agree on the worth of revisiting Rumours on The Dance or on the more-than-a-fluke specialness of that phenomenon. However, I think the point is to call something the "real" fleetwood mac or not kinda misses the larger issue of how and where and why and to what point Fleetwood Mac became what it became at different junctures. Just some thoughts.
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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. Last edited by TrueFaith77; 11-19-2010 at 12:13 AM.. |
#13
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#14
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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. |
#15
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Time was the best thing to ever happen to FM. God forbid that lineup had ever been given the chance to shine, though. I'm no Dave Mason fan, but B & B were great additions. But the jello mold had been set, and as long as Mick could talk S&L into returning, Mick could return to making his mortgage payments. |
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