|
Chicago Tribune 11-21-97
Rock review, Fleetwood Mac
By Greg Kot
The members of Fleetwood Mac, the kings and queens of '70s pop, had
been playing for more then two hours Thursday at the Rosemont Horizon
when they encored with ``Don't Stop.'' It's a song that advises,
``Don't you look back,'' but nobody paid attention. The Mac and a
willing audience plunged back 20 years into an era when the quintet's
songs about coke spoons, Welsh witches and romantic betrayal dominated
rock radio and the conscience of a generation.
In performing slightly more than two-dozen songs, the band introduced
only four new compositions and pulled no less than eight from its 1977
landmark ``Rumours.'' But like the band members themselves, who
showed up in fighting trim and strong of voice, the vintage tunes have
aged well.
Though Fleetwood Mac has never officially dissolved -- its namesake
rhythm section of drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie has
remained intact since 1967 -- it has gone through numerous
incarnations. The most famous was the lineup that ruled the charts
with 17 top-40 hits from 1975 to '87, which included Lindsey
Buckingham, Stevie Nicks and Christine McVie.
It was this configuration that has reunited for a two-month tour, a
decade after an acrimonious break-up when Buckingham walked out on the
band before a national tour. ``I know I'm a different man than I was
then,'' Buckingham said, as if to explain that no, it wasn't just the
promise of a big payday that lured him back into the fold. And
Christine McVie offered a bright new song that could be interpreted as
the band's current state-of-the-union anthem: ``The sea that divides
us is a temporary one/And the bridge will bring us back together.''
Whatever merchandising opportunities motivated the rebuilding of that
bridge, it was difficult not to admire its design: three distinctive
voices supported by a remarkable rhythm section delivering pop songs
that, if anything, have grown richer in meaning. From the rueful,
apocalyptic opening, ``The Chain,'' the set sounded like a running
commentary on opportunities lost and regained, with former lovers and
collaborators Buckingham and Nicks playing the lead roles.
Their microphones set up several feet apart, the two singers stood
facing in opposite directions for a half-dozen songs, but were drawn
inexorably together for a devastating acoustic duet on her tale of
regret, ``Landslide.'' Even more potent was ``Silver Springs' '-- in
which a spurned lover vows to haunt her intended to the grave -- with
Buckingham echoing Nicks' lead vocal until they stood head to head.
Nicks, spinning in shawls that hung from her arms like Gothic drapery,
remained the band's quasi-mystical visual focus, offset by Christine
McVie's dusky dignity and Buckingham's blue-flame intensity,
particularly on a solo acoustic ``Big Love.'' His finger-picking solos
on ``I'm So Afraid'' and ``Go Your Own Way'' were etched by a
guitarist who, even at this late date, played like his band's towering
songbook deserved every ounce of his conviction.
Thanks to CLMoon for the submission to the newsgroup.
|