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Salt Lake Tribune 10-29-97
Fleetwood Mac Sounds Great -- But Predictable
BY LORI BUTTARS
More than a decade after they went their own way, Fleetwood Mac is
back.
The reconciled, most-popular five members of the 1970s supergroup --
John and Christine McVie, Mick Fleetwood, Lindsey Buckingham and
Stevie Nicks -- took over the Delta Center Tuesday night as part of
one of the year's most unexpected reunion tours.
Some rock bands take the stage weighed down by their past hits,
carrying audience nostalgia like a burden they can't wait to unload.
Not Fleetwood Mac. This group seems to be liberated by
its largely autobiographical songs.
Any notions of lingering antagonisms within the band were laid to rest
in the opening number, ``The Chain,'' with the lyrics ``If you don't
love me now, you'll never love me again . . .''
Longtime fans will remember that it was the fussing and fighting of
husband and wife, boyfriend and girlfriend and best friends that
fueled the band throughout the '70s. In an echo of that, Buckingham
and Nicks, two members most conspicuously absent from the group in
recent years, entered the arena holding hands, keeping fans guessing
about exactly how reunited the group and its couples are.
Nicks greeted the crowd of about 12,000 (mostly hand-holding couples
themselves) with a simple ``Welcome. Thank you for coming, everyone''
and said it was nice to be back in the town where she once lived,
dedicating ``Landslide'' to her junior high school friend, Karen.
Some things don't change. Nicks was draped in a loose black outfit to
accent her swirling and twirling at center stage, though the swirls
were much more subduded than those of her hardcore ``Rhiannon''
period.
The rest of the band was also in sharp-dressed black and white, with
Buckingham sporting an Art Garfunkel look at the crown.
All were in strong voice, trading off lead vocals among Nicks,
Christine McVie and Buckingham (John McVie was content to stand in the
background plucking on his bass), with Fleetwood, the wild-eyed human
drum machine, pounding out the pace.
Buckingham, with a virtual arsenal of guitars, headed off into
frequent solos, overtaken only once by drummer Fleetwood. In fact, at
one point Fleetwood was so unstoppable that Buckingham laid down on
the side of the stage to wait him out.
But it couldn't last. This group has learned that it does its best
work together and they were all on the same page. So were the fans,
who sang along with every number, from ``Say That You Love
Me'' to ``Gypsy.''
Yet after an hour or so, the show became almost lackluster in its
predictability, giving the ticket holders everything they wanted and
nothing they didn't expect. It was as if the band, in the end,
couldn't escape its own familiarity.
A pounding ``Tusk'' and finale of their new single, ``Silver Springs''
provided only warm-up for the inevitable and necessary ``Don't Stop
(Thinking About Tomorrow)'' encore. But despite the
urging, everyone was happily lost in yesterday.
Thanks to CLMoon for the submission to the newsgroup.
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