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Cage Tour Review
Globe and Mail, October 21, 1987
HEADLINE: Fleetwood Mac gets on track despite Nick's loss of power BODY: BY ALAN NIESTER Special To The Globe and Mail A decade ago, an appearance by Fleetwood Mac would have been the highlight of the rock social season. It almost certainly would have been held outdoors to accommodate the crowds and would have been preceded by massive media coverage and weeks of anticipation. But that was then and this is now. While Fleetwood Mac still has enough clout to appear at Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens, as it did Monday night, it's no longer capable of filling the place and it's doubtful the scalpers got rich from this event. About 12,000 attended, filling the green seats, but barely even touching the upper-level greys. What the faithful saw was a band starting its third decade and undergoing yet another reincarnation. Fleetwood Mac arrived without guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, who left the group after recording the recent Tango In The Night album. Replacing him were Rick Vito and Billy Burnette. By actual count, the two represent the sixth and seventh guitarists in the band's 20-year history. While they proved capable, they are probably the least distinctive of any of the guitarists ever associated with the band. But the guitar work was not the problem with this concert. The sad truth is that vocalist Stevie Nicks, once a dazzling and evocative heartthrob, and the one most responsible for the group's late seventies renaissance, is not the performer she once was. On Monday night, the band did everything in its power to conceal the fact that her vocal range has shrunk to practically a monotone: the group cranked up the volume; it slipped in a trio of backing vocalists; it even added an African drummer to pad out the rhythm. But none of this could disguise a voice that has moved progressively closer to that of a nanny goat. Nicks can turn it up and turn it down, but she can't push it to where it has to go. Rhiannon, formerly her signature tune, has become something of an albatross. A decade ago, Nicks twirled and spun amid diaphanous veils, while her voice soared majestically. Now, she has been forced to alter the tune. The carefree twirls have given way to careful, almost matronly stage movements, and the chorus of the song is unrecognizable because Nicks can no longer handle the high notes. The concert's success came about in spite of Nicks, rather than because of her. While Tango In The Night has yielded a trio of hits, the band chose to place the emphasis on past glories. Virtually every song a longtime fan would want to hear was presented, from Rattlesnake Shake to Seven Wonders, from Dreams to Never Break the Chain. Even the earliest days were fair game, as guitarist Vito paid tribute to founding member/guitarist Peter Green with his own renditions of Another Woman and Oh Well. Vito showed vitality but hardly matched Green's tasteful stylings; on the former number, he came off more like Eric Clapton, on the latter, like Stevie Ray Vaughan. At least the intentions were noble. It was the ageless rhythm section of Mick Fleetwood and John McVie that held the whole event together. Never flashy, always consistent, this duo represents the most dependable rhythm section in rock. Mention must also be made of vocalist/singer Christine McVie. Although her range is limited (and she recognizes the fact better than Nicks does), her vocals on numbers such as Say You Love Me and Over My Head were understated and appealing. |
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THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
December 8, 1987 HEADLINE: Low-key Christine McVie rescues a new incarnation of Fleetwood MacBYLINE: Jim Washburn, The Register BODY: How many changes can one band take? In its 20 years, Fleetwood Mac has changed members about as often as Italy has changed governments. Since the only constant is the rhythm section of bassist John McVie and drummer Mick Fleetwood, those changes obviously affect the nature of the group. Not counting a bogus outfit floated for a time by former managers of the band, Fleetwood Mac has now been at least five distinct bands. The band's fifth incarnation -- the one that performed at the Forum Sunday andMonday nights -- seems less an infusion of fresh blood than an attempt to cover the immense hole left by Buckingham's departure from the group earlier this year. Singer-guitarist Billy Burnette's chief attribute seems to be his ability to cover Buckingham's vocals, while singer-guitarist Rick Vito (a hired-hand vet of Jackson Browne and Bob Seger's bands) is adept at both the textures and flash of Buckingham's guitar work. Most of those, for this writer, came during Stevie Nicks' songs. While lots of swell people think she's just dandy, to me her harsh, quavering vocals seem suited for scouring barbecue grills or scraping barnacles off boat hulls. Her selections included "Dreams," "Seven Wonders," "Gold Dust Woman," and her solo LP song, "Has Anyone Ever Written Anything for You?" McVie and Fleetwood proved themselves still a propulsive rhythm section, though a drum solo in which Fleetwood pounded synthesizer pads hidden in his vest and pants was a bit overworked for the few musical ideas that were put across. Burnette and Vito tackled only a requisite minimum of Buckingham's songs -- "World Turning," "Go Your Own Way" -- choosing instead to reach back to Green-era chestnuts "Oh Well," "Rattlesnake Shake" and "If I Loved Another Woman." By default, the stalwart Christine McVie has emerged as the heart of the new band. Of the handful of songs from the current "Tango in the Night" featured in the show, her "Little Lies" and "Isn't It Midnight?" were the only ones to stand out. |
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December 9, 1987 Wednesday, San Diego Union Tribune
HEADLINE: Fleetwood just won't stop; `Don't Stop' is fitting motto on current tour BYLINE: George Varga BODY: When Fleetwood Mac recorded the song "Don't Stop" for their 1977 album, "Rumours," no one could have guessed that -- 10 years later -- it would stand as a reaffirmation of the band's ability to endure and triumph over adversity. Yet, at their concert at the Sports Arena last night, the song served exactly that purpose. Performed as the second of three encores in a show that stretched more than two hours, "Don't Stop" perfectly summarized this Anglo-American band's dogged determination to persevere when faced with challenges that would have finished many other groups. Indeed, the song's chorus -- "Don't stop thinking about tomorrow ... yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone" -- would make an ideal motto for their current tour -- their first since singer-guitarist-composer Lindsey Buckingham left a few months ago and new members Billy Burnette and Rick Vito joined. Many observers had sternly predicted that, without Buckingham's artistic vision to guide them, the band was finished. But, while less than a total victory, last night's concert demonstrated that Fleetwood Mac has more than just a great past to its credit. Unusually generous in length, their performance featured 21 songs that ranged from the band's eponymous 1968 debut album to this year's "Tango in the Night." Appearing before a crowd of slightly more than 9,000, they kicked off their set with a spirited version of Christine McVie's "Say You Love Me." As with all but two of the 20 selections that would follow, the song was driven by the strong, propulsive drumming of Mick Fleetwood and the no-frills bass work of John McVie, the band's two founding members. (African drummer Asante added a nice percussive touch, but the two unidentified female background singers were virtually inaudible.) As the show progressed, it became increasingly apparent that new members Burnette and Vito were more than capable of filling the void left by Buckingham -- at least in concert. Burnette sang with gruff conviction, while Vito's blistering slide guitar work and lean, piercing solos on songs like "Oh Well," "Rattle Snake Shake" and "I've Loved Another Woman" recalled the bluesy passion of original Mac guitarist Peter Green. |
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