He describes a lot of shapely young female bodies in a way that will make you feel ill, and complicit in the leering. But the insights into the making of the album are good.
― Pinche Cumbion Bien Loco (stevie), Thursday, 6 August 2020 14:39 (three years ago) link
Like, the subtext, or maybe the text, of the book is basically "Ken Caillat is a producer who fucks".
― Pinche Cumbion Bien Loco (stevie), Thursday, 6 August 2020 14:40 (three years ago) link
Yeah I started this the other day and it's good when it talks about the band. I have a whole new appreciation for "Oh Daddy"
― calstars, Saturday, 8 August 2020 03:56 (three years ago) link
the Rumors book that is. I'm not sure if I care enough about Tusk to sit through another volume
― calstars, Saturday, 8 August 2020 03:58 (three years ago) link
I liked the rumours book despite the very otm cavils itt
― gnarled and turbid sinuses (Jon not Jon), Saturday, 8 August 2020 18:14 (three years ago) link
Agree. Great book (« Rumours »)when he gets into the details of the recording process. If you’ve ever been in a control room with different personalities all working for a common goal then you’ll recognize a lot of the stuff he writes about. The old goat shit is distracting but didn’t ruin the book for me.
― SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Sunday, 9 August 2020 12:49 (three years ago) link
Big fan of the Rumours > Tango run now. Took some years. Thanks, Covid. Always dug them but am now revelling in those harmonies, their smarts when it came to knowing what worked in their hits ( except maybe with the exception of the magnificent "Tusk" ) and their way with production gloss. Whatta band.
― SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Saturday, 15 August 2020 20:23 (three years ago) link
Also, this thread made me go back and relisten so thanks ILM as well.
― SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Saturday, 15 August 2020 20:25 (three years ago) link
Tush is a real snore and Lindsey’s coked up punk is even worse
― calstars, Saturday, 15 August 2020 22:25 (three years ago) link
counterpoint: shut up nuh unh
― methinks dababy doth bop shit too much (m bison), Saturday, 15 August 2020 22:45 (three years ago) link
Lol at nabisco upthread.
― Time Will Show Leo Weiser (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 15 August 2020 22:51 (three years ago) link
I Said Lawd Take Me DowntownAnd Why Don't You Tell Me Who's On The Phone?
― "...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 15 August 2020 23:07 (three years ago) link
There’s a great song exploder episode with Lindsey talking about “go your own way”.
https://songexploder.net/fleetwood-mac
― that's not my post, Sunday, 16 August 2020 00:13 (three years ago) link
― Pinche Cumbion Bien Loco (stevie), Sunday, 16 August 2020 13:46 (three years ago) link
It’s my pleasure
― calstars, Sunday, 16 August 2020 20:54 (three years ago) link
odd to be dissing ZZ Top though
― assert (MatthewK), Sunday, 16 August 2020 21:15 (three years ago) link
Dallas, Texas/Hollywood
― "...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 16 August 2020 21:16 (three years ago) link
Y’all
― calstars, Sunday, 16 August 2020 21:25 (three years ago) link
happy Sunday
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhau5Q4NENc
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 16 August 2020 22:20 (three years ago) link
I’m so over Stevie nicks
― calstars, Sunday, 16 August 2020 22:25 (three years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXWia0TWAMM
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 16 August 2020 22:42 (three years ago) link
https://youtu.be/RTa6KEE9cZU
― calstars, Sunday, 16 August 2020 23:45 (three years ago) link
Angel please don’t go
― calstars, Sunday, 16 August 2020 23:46 (three years ago) link
Buckingham McVie album is really pretty darn good.
― Naive Teen Idol, Sunday, 30 August 2020 04:34 (three years ago) link
Peter Green is without question my favorite of the British blues guys, but "Then Play On" is just so much more than that. Such a strange psychedelic space blues excursion. Green, Kirwin and Spencer had such an interesting dynamic together.
Was out with some dudes this past weekend, and while they claimed they liked Fleetwood Mac, I think a) that mostly meant "Rumours" and b) they had no idea there was anything before Buckingham and Nicks joined. That can't be that unusual, tbh, at least in America.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 29 June 2021 20:37 (two years ago) link
Not unusual at all, in my experience. I understand the late 70s era is very attractive for the mythology/narrative, but it’s not like the earlier periods are lacking for it—dropping out to join a cult is surely more epic than swapping partners!
I always play “Hypnotized” for folks unfamiliar with pre-B/N Mac. It’s my platonic ideal of 70s FM radio studio rock.
― blatherskite, Wednesday, 30 June 2021 17:43 (two years ago) link
I always knew there was a pre Buckingham/Nicks version of the band, but it wasn't until I was just out of college that I learned just how long that history had been and how expansive the pre-1975 S/T catalog was.
― a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 30 June 2021 17:46 (two years ago) link
I was close friends with a guy who had off and on booked clubs in Seattle, and was thus close to big shots in the 00s scene there, and as a result in the past decade got a major job at Spotify… so when I say that he really liked Tusk, he REALLY REALLY liked Tusk, in the way that white music people in the indie/alt space in the 00s were known to, and was way into everything the famous version of the band had done, had gone to see 'em when Xtine came back, etc etc. Eight years ago, he was staying with me in Brooklyn and I said, "you want to listen to the original Mac?"
"Uh, why would I want to do that?"
"Aren't you curious?"
"Not really"
And so we didn't. He liked the Stones, but was not interested in Brit blues that he didn't already know. I played him Raw Power instead, which he had never heard and didn't like. What I realized then was that he and a lot of other friends were all about the classic rock that everyone had grown up with, and the 80s/90s shit that middle class/upper class whites self identified as music people had known from their early adulthood/teen years, and which naturally led to Modest Mouse/ Decemberists/ Long Winters/ Death Cab and other stuff that is pretty easy going down, all things considered. but when it came to stuff that wasn't in the air or was really abrasive, like say Pere Ubu or Beefheart, that kind of stuff wasn't gonna fly.
― veronica moser, Wednesday, 30 June 2021 18:16 (two years ago) link
For whatever reason, back in the early and mid '00s, I got a tremendous amount of shit for liking Bonnie Raitt and Buckingham/Nicks-era Fleetwood Mac. Those two stood out as being unforgivable. It felt like some trendy tastemaker bullshit, and I even remember my friends shitting all over Rilo Kiley's last album because it sounded like Rumours to them. Then sometime around 2009 or later, it was like the pendulum had swung the other way for the very same age group, especially for that era of FM, to the point where I felt like I was surrounded by much bigger Buckingham/Nicks fans than I ever could be. Go figure.
Anyway, I prefer the Peter Green-era, just as I love the album Green did with John Mayall (and the one Mayall did with Clapton, etc.), but I never liked the idea of putting down one era simply because it was different from another. The "middle" years had plenty of gems, especially from Danny Kirwan and Christine McVie, and the 1975 LP, Rumours and Tusk are all great LP's, better than anything their SoCal pop contemporaries were making at the time.
― birdistheword, Wednesday, 30 June 2021 18:35 (two years ago) link
my dad was a huge Peter Green era fan in high school.. “oh well” definitely got some fm play in California at least I think.
― brimstead, Thursday, 1 July 2021 01:47 (two years ago) link
Maybe those of us who wrote for Stylus and worked for Pitchfork subsequently helped changed this attitude, but by 2004-2005 I remember having drunken rock crit conversations about "I Can't Make You Love Me" and a few years later Tango as Balearic classic.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 July 2021 01:57 (two years ago) link
"Hypnotized" is great, but "Bermuda Triangle" is one of the lamest attempts ever to concoct a followup hit. Probably he had a song called "Sasquatch" ready to complete his trilogy of unsolved mysteries.
― Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 1 July 2021 02:07 (two years ago) link
Danny Kirwan was the only writer in that 1970-74 era who wrote consistently good songs. Christine McVie was still finding her way.
― Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 1 July 2021 02:09 (two years ago) link
lol “Bermuda Triangle” rules
― brimstead, Thursday, 1 July 2021 02:19 (two years ago) link
it sort of felt like peter green-era mac became cool a few years after tusk did in the late 2000s? probably just me reading this darn board though lol. there can't be many bands whose different eras line up with entire mini-generational changes in taste like that. i need a friend who would get me stoned and play me peter green-era mac for the first time. if you're blocking out that possibility then you need to re-examine your life choices imo.
― Linda and Jodie Rocco (map), Thursday, 1 July 2021 02:29 (two years ago) link
The world tide had been turning slowly since The Dance anyway: I recall a terrific Douglas Wolk piece on Tusk for CMJ in '97-98, and around the same time Alternative Press ran a Mac fact sheet for new listeners.
― blue whales on ambient (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 1 July 2021 03:25 (two years ago) link
The real hipsters are into Dave Mason/Bekka Bramlett-era Mac now, it's the undiscovered country.
― Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 1 July 2021 03:49 (two years ago) link
One of the first things I wrote for NME when I started there in 1999 was a "buried treasure" piece on the 1980 Live album, and the following week's letters page was full of screeds from irate readers outraged that any positive press had been given to the maligned and then-deeply-unfashionable Mac. They were ***hated*** back then.
― burnt hombre (stevie), Thursday, 1 July 2021 08:56 (two years ago) link
The first I remember the hip tide turning was when Spin put out a Top Ten Underrated Albums List in some random issue, iirc, and it included both "Tusk" and "Paul's Boutique" (whose own tide turned radically shortly thereafter). This discussion has already taken place at length, iirc, in a Haim thread, right down to me mentioning the Spin list.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 1 July 2021 12:20 (two years ago) link
I read Tusk-is-awesome essays months before The Dance. I can tell you my friends, a few years younger than me, used that MTV performance as a gateway.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 July 2021 12:51 (two years ago) link
and Simon Reynolds wrote a seminal piece on Tusk in the early or mid '90s.
Redd Kross (and possibly other LA-centric bands of a similar vintage, but certainly them) were fond of talking up FM and Tusk in particular in and around this time period
― Master of Treacle, Thursday, 1 July 2021 13:34 (two years ago) link
Aye, in a Melody Maker book of essays on buried treasures that came free with the paper, iirc, and which was a BRILLIANT read (I have a copy here somewhere). Simon Price's essay on More Specials is also excellent.
― burnt hombre (stevie), Thursday, 1 July 2021 13:40 (two years ago) link
There was a definite generational repulsion from Stevie/Lindsey-era Mac, though. I remember, when doing my Black Flag book, Keith Morris talking about how much he loved early Mac, and being at pains to emphasise how much they actually hated the Rumours-era band.
― burnt hombre (stevie), Thursday, 1 July 2021 13:41 (two years ago) link
In the UK they were still a phenomenon through 1990's Behind the Mask, so I wonder if longevity fueled the disgust.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 July 2021 13:55 (two years ago) link
From the archival stuff I've read, it looks like Buckingham/Nicks FM always had strong critical support. Greil Marcus was already an enormous Peter Green-era fan, but he loved the later incarnations as well and was a fan of Tusk from the start. Christgau gave their first two albums an A- and an A when they came out, and Dave Marsh slotted a few of their singles into his 1001 Singles book. But I remember some old Rock List entry had them on a list of late '70s hits that was supposed to show why punk "had to happen," so there's that too. That era of punk and post-punk has always been my favorite rock music, but that's decades after the fact and not once did I ever feel like Rumours was somehow antithetical to everything I liked about music, even if most people I knew was shitting on it for a while.
― birdistheword, Thursday, 1 July 2021 14:47 (two years ago) link
In the UK they were still a phenomenon through 1990's Behind the Mask
I mean, sort of - I remember As Long As You Follow off the 1988 greatest hits getting play on the radio over here, but I don't remember anything off Behind The Mask. As for the backlash, I think they were just seen as fogeyish and from the past, and the single "I'd Rather Jack Than Fleetwood Mac" definitely put a negative spin on these veterans.
― burnt hombre (stevie), Thursday, 1 July 2021 14:56 (two years ago) link
Years ago I skimmed through the DeRogatis-edited collection Kill Your Idols: A New Generation of Rock Writers Reconsiders the Classics, which has an essay on Rumours where a critic fantasies about assassinating Fleetwood Mac on stage. Book came out in 2004, though I don’t know if the piece itself is older.
― blatherskite, Thursday, 1 July 2021 14:57 (two years ago) link
and "Go Your Own Way" is punk as fuck. And fuck punk.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 July 2021 15:00 (two years ago) link
I think the ubiquity is what hurt its reputation, however much. I have a good friend that's told me of family road trips in the '70s where it felt like radio was literally nothing but the Eagles and Fleetwood Mac and occasionally Boston or something. That's when he told me he first felt a glimmer of the notion of "corporate rock," when it felt like someone higher up mandated that this music had to be played, like, every 20 minutes or something. So sure, I can imagine punk or whatever reacting against the ubiquity of Fleetwood Mac just as any of us might react to the ubiquity of anything we hear all the friggin' time. But there's a level of artistry and creativity to "Rumours" that counterbalances its slickness, and that's something I'd argue a band like the Eagles lacks.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 1 July 2021 15:00 (two years ago) link