Reviews

Fleetwood Mac: Rumours (Deluxe Edition)

fleetwood mac

Fleetwood Mac
Rumours (Deluxe Edition)
(Rhino)
Rating: 5 stars (out of 5)

To be a fan of tuneful, tastefully literate rock in the mid- to late- 1970s was to walk among giants. The better the albums were, the more sophisticated and polished the songs and arrangements, the better they sold and the bigger their cultural impact โ€“ Jackson Browneโ€™s The Pretender, Steely Danโ€™s Aja, the Eaglesโ€™ Hotel California, Boz Scaggsโ€™ Silk Degrees, Joni Mitchellโ€™s Court And Spark, Paul Simonโ€™s Still Crazy After All These Years.

Yet the biggest and most enduring of all those โ€œsophisticated rockโ€ albums came from the unlikeliest of sources โ€“ Fleetwood Mac, which had started in late-1960s Britain as a psychedelicized blues-rock outfit and, through a long and complex evolution of personnel and direction, became L.A.-based purveyors of plangent confessional pop-rock. To accomplish that, three of the bandโ€™s core members โ€“ drummer Mick Fleetwood, bassist John McVie and pianist/composer Christine McVie (Johnโ€™s wife) had moved to L.A. and hired a California singer-songwriter pair, guitarist Lindsey Buckingham and his girlfriend, Stevie Nicks. Magic resulted. Not only did that give Fleetwood Mac three strong voices, but two were female โ€“ rare at the time.

Their finest album, 1977โ€™s Rumours, addresses with heart and sharp insight the romantic disengagements and re-entanglements of the members in the free-spirited, free-love 1970s. It has just been reissued by Rhino Records in a four-disc edition that includes โ€œSilver Springsโ€ (originally left off the album), studio outtakes, live recordings from a 1977 tour, a vintage film about the making of Rumours, and a vinyl platter. (A smaller but โ€œexpandedโ€ Rumours also is available.)

Fleetwood Mac at this point was a sum of some very strong parts. Christine McVie was a tunesmith worthy of the Brill Buildingโ€™s heyday โ€“ Goffin and McVie? โ€“ yet had also been touched by Joni Mitchell. She also had perfect pitch โ€“ the outtakes and live cuts show she could find the right key, the perfect melodiousness, for her vocals right from the get-go. She has four songs on Rumours โ€“ the jauntyย  โ€œDonโ€™t Stopโ€ and โ€œYou Make Loving Fun,โ€ and the introspective โ€œSongbirdโ€ and โ€œOh Daddy,โ€ a tribute to Fleetwood.

Nicks was at her vocal peak here. The huskiness, which she still could control, gave โ€œDreams,โ€ โ€œGold Dust Womanโ€ and โ€œSilver Springsโ€ a moody, bluesy sensuality that suited the subject matter and provided a touch of the mystic.

Buckinghamโ€™s three solo songs are a cornucopia of influences โ€“ Buddy Holly and Everly Brothers on โ€œSecond Hand News,โ€ Americana and Appalachian folk on โ€œNever Going Back Again,โ€ and folk-rock/garage-rock on โ€œGo Your Own Way.โ€ The latter continues to amaze for the way the opening acoustic strumming โ€“ it slams like punk โ€“ fights with Fleetwoodโ€™s drumming. When it comes together, its raw driving urgency and the desperation of Buckinghamโ€™s thin, stretched voice keep you riveted.

The discipline that Buckingham the guitarist showed in service of these songs is particularly notable โ€“ he is a virtuoso guitarist whose finger-picking style and confident soloing could have led him to really show off. His restraint is one of his greatest contributions.