Fleetwood Mac may not be the (debatably) easiest classic rock band on the planet to cover, but man are their songs a delight to play. That being said, these four bands and musicians covered Fleetwood Mac quite beautifully. Some of these covers might even rival the source material. Weโll leave that up to you to decide. Letโs take a look, shall we?
1. โDonโt Stopโ by Elton John
Elton John contributed to the 2005 tribute album Legacy: A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours among big names like The Cranberries (โGo Your Own Wayโ), Matchbox20 (โNever Going Back Againโ), and Jewel (โYou Make Loving Funโ).
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His contribution was a beautiful cover of the often underrated Christine McView track from Rumours, โDonโt Stopโ. It was an apt song for the Rocket Man to take on, considering it is one of the punchiest and poppiest tracks on that very record.
2. โLandslideโ by Smashing Pumpkins
Everyone and their mother has covered โLandslideโ by Fleetwood Mac, so picking the best of the best isnโt easy. The Chicks could have easily made it to this list. However, weโre particularly partial to Smashing Pumpkinsโ take on Stevie Nicksโ (debatably) greatest song.
The alt-rock outfit covered โLandslideโ quite beautifully back in 1994. According to Nicks, she and Billy Corgan became friends after he first contacted her about covering โLandslideโ.
3. โThe Chainโ by Florence + The Machine
Florence Welch has the perfect voice and general aura to take on anything in Fleetwood Macโs discography, particularly anything written (or co-written) by Stevie Nicks. So, it makes sense that she covered โThe Chainโ as part of Florence + The Machine. Her 2010 live cover of the song at Glastonbury Festival is on another level.
4. โGold Dust Womanโ by Hole
We think this is one of the most appropriate examples of other musicians who covered Fleetwood Mac and did the songs justice. In a way, Courtney Love and Stevie Nicks are on either side of the same coin, even if you love one and hate the other.
At the end of the day, they are both misunderstood women in rock music who have historically been associated with drug use. And โGold Dust Womanโ is an ode of sorts to being in a rock band and doing one particular drug. Naturally, Holeโs 1996 cover of this track is excellent, though it has a more haunting energy to it than the original song does.
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