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#1
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"If Christine McVie isn't on board, then it doesn't count"
Here's an internet posting with which I agree 100%.
From http://steelyankee.blogspot.com/2008...ack-again.html Quote:
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-Joanne (from Cape Cod) |
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#2
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Agreed, but it's doubtful she'll be back. I think she has pretty much made it clear her performing days are over now. Of course one can always hope upon a lucky star ... and we've certainly seen our share of celebs and stars who pack it in for good, only to reprise a while later.
Otherwise but here's to wishin' |
#3
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Hmmm
Controversial opinion. I think the band lack the balance that Christine gave them and of course that voice. It's not an opinion that most would agree with but yes (for me at least) if she's not there it's not the real deal Gail |
#4
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If Bob Welch were picked up in her place, then frankly I wouldn't care. THAT lineup I would pay to see in a heartbeat.
Hmmm, wonder what Lindsey + Dave Mason would sound like paired together? |
#5
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But that's the point. It doesn't matter who is in the band as long as Mick and John are in the band. That's part of the wonder of Fleetwood Mac!
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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. |
#6
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Yes, I definitely think it's the genuine Mac without Christine. But I like the 5 of them together -- or if forced to reduce, I'll take the three songwriters -- better than I like any one of them by him or herself. I live for the dame, the gal and the guitarist.
And I feel I never got a last concert from Christine. I want that. I don't feel complete. No goodbye. No closure. Michele |
#7
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The only reason I don't like this logic is she wasn't a member during the Green years, and that most certainly counted.
BTW, if they bring back anybody, I'd love to see Rick Vito come back to do some of the Green-era stuff. Bob Welch and/or Billy Burnette wouldn't be bad, either. For that matter, I liked the way Bekka Bramlett sang Christine McVie songs better than Stevie.
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On and on it will always be, the rhythm, rhyme, and harmony. THE Stephen Hopkins |
#8
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Quote:
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So many possibilities, so little time. |
#9
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Michele |
#10
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* thud * Is there such a thing as blasphemy around these parts? |
#11
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If it's a FM record, it always counts--regardless of who is on it. That philosophy has kept the band chugging along even when it seemed to do so on one wheel.
I think, Time would have been more interesting if there were no Dave Mason (horrible contributions there) and no Christine (great contributions). Becka and Billy coulda' done their own, unified thing. Christine coulda' done that solo album she was talking about. More Christine--even if it means apart from the band--is my philosophy. |
#12
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Maybe it "counts" as Fleetwood Mac without Christine ... but to me the band is now missing its heart and soul. I think that may have been the point the person who wrote that post was trying to make.
By the way, this is not my feeling about the PRE-Christine Mac. I like the early Peter Green band just fine. But I think of them as virtually a different band, for which the name "Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac" can be used. That was a blues band (with some pop/rock elements) that ended when Peter left the band. Then the band recreated itself, and the sound of the band made a fairly abrupt turn toward pop/rock. Christine has been present for the band's entire pop/rock history up until the last album, and in my thinking she is an essential ingredient of the band in its long-enduring pop/rock incarnation. Something is very seriously missing without Christine.
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-Joanne (from Cape Cod) |
#13
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Gail |
#14
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As I have always seen it, having followed the group from its early days (even watching Bob Welch shut down a concert in mid-flight due to poor audience response), it's been a continual evolution, as opposed to an accumulation of separate sound units. I definitely agree that their history could be divided into three "waves" or periods, but fact is they have all been thoroughly connected and overlapped, with Fleetwood and Mac (J. McVie) serving as the continuum or glue so to speak. If you want a "recreated itself" scenario, look no further than the Moody Blues. When led by Denny Laine (later of Wings fame) initially, they were a true Birmingham blues-rock unit. When he departed in '66 and Justin Hayward and John Lodge came aboard, the band truly recreated its sound and stage image, quite consciously (purposefully), even when 3 of the 5 originals remained on board. Hayward took center stage, and with the help of Mike Pinder's mellotron and producer Tony Clarke, they never looked back. Last edited by snoot; 12-08-2008 at 05:42 PM.. |
#15
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It would be interesting to visit a parallel universe where Peter and then Jeremy didn't succumb to outside influences and leave the band, to see how the band might have continued to evolve with that lineup intact. They most certainly would, considering how different 'Then Play On' was from the previous, more blues-centered records.
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-Joanne (from Cape Cod) |
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