The Pittsburgh Post Gazette
Concert Review: Fleetwood Mac's body language fosters
rumours
Monday, May 12, 2003
By Scott Mervis, Post-Gazette Weekend Editor
Was that a Fleetwood Mac concert or a Meg Ryan movie?
Sure, they have their own lives and families now, and
it's been a long time since they were a pair, but you
couldn't help wondering watching the band on stage if
Lindsey Buckingham was going to get the girl in the
end.
Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, who were a hot item
during the '70s, spent Saturday night at the Mellon
Arena looking across the stage at each other
exchanging heartbreaking lines that they obviously
wrote about their own tangled affair.
Through 25 songs and two and a half hours, the band
members said little to the crowd, which made it all
the more startling when Buckingham stopped to confide,
"It's not easy for couples who had broken up to work
together. ... It was only after I left in the mid-'80s
that I could get closure," and with that he introduced
"Say Goodbye," a new song during which he looked over
at her and sang, "Oh, I let you slip away, there was
nothing I could do/That was so long ago still I often
think of you."
The soap opera that is Fleetwood Mac added a layer of
intrigue to a show that would have held up musically
with or without it. This was the third gig of the
band's first tour since '97, and it wasn't just
because they had a decent new album that it didn't
come off like a money grab or a nostalgia play.
Both the band (minus Christine McVie) and the crowd
still seem to be sufficiently haunted by the black
magic in the songs.
Buckingham, despite not being road tough, plays and
sings with real passion and guts. His guitar jams on
the showcase songs, such as the new "Come," "I'm So
Afraid" and "Go Your Own Way," rivaled the best of
Neil Young or Richard Thompson. Throughout the
evening, he hit every riff just right, whether it was
linking "The Chain" or picking out the intricate
acoustic parts on "Big Love." Although his voice may
not be the same pristine instrument it once was -- it
gets a little craggy -- he's still a compelling
singer.
As for Nicks, she holds the mystique, even having hit
the half-century mark, and even moving, as she does,
as if she has lead in her heels. It took her a while
to get into the show, but she came around about the
time "Rhiannon" kicked in, and she built the climax to
that song as if it were all new to her.
She donned a gold, beaded shawl for a stunning version
of "Gold Dust Woman," becoming the "dragon," "gypsy"
and "black widow" that she was singing about. Perhaps
the most moving moment of the evening was a more
honest one, when on "Landslide," she broke into a rare
smile as she sang "And I'm getting older, too."
The foursome -- including the namesakes of this old
blues-rock outfit, drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist
John McVie -- had major backup in the form of two
guitarists, one keyboard-guitarist, two backup
singers, a percussionist and a second drummer (why?).
When they all played together, they were an arena-rock
bombshell on songs like "Tusk" and "Don't Stop," a
reminder of the good old days of the Clinton years and
one of the few flat-out happy songs in the set.
They sounded better really when they broke it down
into more intimate groupings, whether it was
Buckingham-Nicks on "Landslide," the core group on
"Never Going Back Again" or Fleetwood with the
percussionist, doing a drum solo that -- surprise --
was actually fun.
All these years later, Fleetwood and McVie must still
be counting their blessings that they stumbled upon
Buckingham and Nicks, who, in middle age, haven't lost
their ability to mesmerize and fascinate. They came on
and off the stage holding hands. At one point, they
embraced and kissed. And throughout, the ghost of
their past hovered on almost every line.
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