(L-R) John McVie, Christine McVie, Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood, and Lindsey Buckingham of the rock group "Fleetwood Mac" in 1975. (Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images) In 1967, three members ...
Carolyn Jenkins is a voracious consumer of film and television. She graduated from Long Island University with an MFA in Screenwriting and Producing where she learned the art of character, plot, and ...
A review of Fleetwood Mac albums from the start of the blues band, before Stevie Nicks, and the evolution of their musicality ...
Kiln House was previously part of a five-album reissue on Original Rock Classics and will now be part of the Fleetwood Mac ...
Fleetwood Mac had been through countless lineup changes since staking their claim on the frontlines of the British blues explosion by the time they invited two Yanks — a folk-rock duo named Buckingham ...
"If you wondered how Fleetwood Mac evolved into the Rumours-era juggernaut, look no further than Buckingham Nicks" ...
Before Fleetwood Mac officially released their follow-up to Rumours in 1979, frontwoman Stevie Nicks made it clear that she hated the album name that the rest of the band chose. When she found out ...
Talk about an unlikely recipe for stardom. A British blues-rock band that had been kicking around for nearly a decade with hardly any U.S. success revamps by adding a singing/songwriting duo whose ...
In 1967, three members of John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers recorded four songs in a session at Decca Studios in London. One instrumental track was named “Fleetwood Mac” after two of the musicians, ...
Loving wasn’t always fun for one of the ‘70s most popular rock bands, but that hasn’t stopped Fleetwood Mac from ascending the charts once again. Aptly titled “Rumours,” the record was infamous for ...