Fleetwood Mac toiled for a decade before they achieved massive success by adding Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham to the lineup. The duo provided the spark that helped the band explode in ...
Fleetwood Mac created some of the most enduring hits of the '70s, and stood out for being one of the few rock bands at the time to prominently feature two women. Those women, Stevie Nicks and ...
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 ...
Years prior to the Buckingham and Nicks’ entry, the band also had earlier hits during their Peter Green-era with his 1968 instrumental single “Albatross,” along with “Man of the World,” and “Oh Well,” ...
Fleetwood Mac had their biggest successes in the 1970s and 1980s, but they overlapped with The Beatles for a couple of years. The Fab Four established themselves as the biggest band of the 1960s ...
Christine McVie served as the beating heart of Fleetwood Mac. The band came undone more times than most, but through it all, she was a steady, brilliant presence that kept the group rooted in their ...
It was the week of June 18, 1977, that Stevie Nicks, a singer born in Phoenix, made her way to No. 1 on Billboard's Hot 100 as the voice of "Dreams," the biggest, most enduring hit on Fleetwood Mac's ...
Fleetwood Mac released their follow-up album to 'Rumours' in 1979, confusing several band members in the process.
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Fleetwood Mac's ‘Rumours': New Book Reveals Untold Secrets Behind the ‘Greatest Breakup Album of All Time'
When Fleetwood Mac stepped into the windowless California studio known as The Record Plant in 1976, they had no idea they ...
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