Tag: “Go Your Own Way”

  • Fleetwood Mac- Rumours- Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood, Lindsey Buckingham

    Fleetwood Mac- Rumours- Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood, Lindsey Buckingham

    When assembling your album shortlist for that Seventies time capsule, better reserve space for the February 1977 release Rumours by Fleetwood Mac. And you can measure its merit any way you choose: quality of songs; sheer number of quality songs; stellar sound production,; musicianship; awards, sales. Holy cow, the worldwide sales are estimated now at 45,000,000 copies!!! Rumours was like a Fleetwood Mac greatest hits album unto itself, with “Second Hand News”,”Dreams”,”Never Going Back Again”,”Don’t Stop”,”Go Your Own Way”…and that’s just side one. Band co-founder Mick Fleetwood, chanteuse Stevie Nicks, and prodigal picker Lindsey Buckingham all join me here In the Studio  for  Fleetwood Mac Rumours.

    When California musical duo (and lovers) Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks  joined British blues-rock veteran band Fleetwood Mac, their first collaboration in 1975 (their “white album” ) sold more copies than any previous album in the long history of their label. No one was in any way prepared for this new line-up’s stunning initial success, so you can imagine the in-house anticipation for Fleetwood Mac’s next effort.
    They had to wait a full year for it, however, as four of the five members were breaking up literally in the studio while Rumours   was being recorded. Fleetwood Mac co-founder drummer Mick Fleetwood joins Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks with me In The Studio for one of history’s most popular albums ever at an estimated forty million sold worldwide, an album that Rolling Stone magazine ranks at #25 on their Top 500 All Time list. Thanks to band co-founder Mick Fleetwood himself for providing some musical mirth to perilous times here with how rock’n’roll can adjust to social distancing. “I’d rather be six feet apart than six feet under.” –Redbeard

  • Lindsey Buckingham- Best Of

    Lindsey Buckingham- Best Of

    The Best of Lindsey Buckingham  apart from his Fleetwood Mac output, starting with  his very first solo album, Law and Order, allows us to share my  2006 deep dive conversation. As a seeking, searching, growing musician, Lindsey Buckingham knows firsthand what David Bowie once described to me as “the tyranny of the mainstream.” For two days, Buckingham and I sat in a small windowless studio serving as his confessional, his therapeutic safe space, and we did not leave until Lindsey told me his truth about playing the role of Vincent in the real-life Van Gogh soap opera that has been much of his life and musical career.

    Two significant things have transpired since this very revealing classic rock interview: Buckingham has recovered from serious open heart surgery and subsequent vocal chord damage from intubation in early 2019, after being dismissed from longtime band Fleetwood Mac in a public spat the year prior.  But only the health scare was a first for the singer/songwriter/guitarist/producer. My  In the Studio rare in-depth conversation with the very private Lindsey Buckingham begins with his growing up in a highly competitive Northern California family of over-achievers (his older brother was on the US Olympic swim team); developing his musical chops with his high school transfer classmate Stephanie Nicks; and together moving to Los Angeles for their first shot at recording the tasty but ill-fated Buckingham Nicks album in 1973. After being unceremoniously dropped from their record label, the star-crossed opportunity which miraculously appeared with a veteran British band recently relocated to LA, Fleetwood Mac; “Trouble” from his first foray solo on 1981’s Law and Order; the infectious title song from Go Insane in 1984;  “Countdown”  from Out of the Cradle in 1992; and the fourteen year layoff effort  Under the Skin from Lindsey Buckingham in 2006 which included “Show You How”. Bonus chestnuts include the singalong “Holiday Road” from National Lampoon’s Vacation and one of the later songs, “I Don’t Mind”. Lindsey Buckingham made breathless headlines in 2018 by being fired from Fleetwood Mac, but us longtime watchers of that never-ending Mexican telenovella know well that, for over a forty year period now, Buckingham’s role has resembled Al Pacino’s mafia Don Corleone character in Godfather 3 exclaiming, “Every time I think I’m out, they pull me back in!” So before you get to feeling too sorry for Lindsey for being summarily dismissed and are tempted to start a GoFundMe page for him, realize that it is quite possible that getting sacked may have been the only way out of his contractual obligation to the Big Mac tour. And who knows? Maybe the old Br’er Rabbit routine was the best way out of a bad situation for Buckingham, who has put the free time to great use by collecting the best of his solo albums Law and Order, Go Insane, Out of the Cradle, Under the Skin, Gift of Screws,and Seeds We Sow with live performances and even a couple of previously unreleased songs into Solo Anthology- The Best of Lindsey Buckingham. –Redbeard

    (And coming in September 2025!!!)

  • Lindsey Buckingham- Never Going Back Again- Dallas ’92

    Lindsey Buckingham- Never Going Back Again- Dallas ’92

    Lindsey Buckingham made a rare solo appearance in 1992 on my Q102 Dallas afternoon radio show when he performed his chestnut, “Never Going Back Again”, from the Fleetwood Mac Rumours  sessions. – Redbeard