To commemorate the 20th anniversary of the best selling 'Rumours' album, Fleetwood Mac decided to reform to record an album, embark on a national tour and film an MTV Special appearance. The reformed band includes Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, John and Christine McVie and Mick Fleetwood.
D**E
One of the major events of the nineties
Live albums aren't easy to pull off, but this recording of Fleetwood Mac's 1997 reunion concert comes out a winner. THE DANCE marks the first time the most popular lineup of the band had performed together in 10 years and the program (along with the following tour) proved to be a moving and lucrative investment. The song set includes the typical mix of familiar songs along with a few new ones. Like most live albums, there is an air of predictability that hangs over the proceedings, although this never becomes a major problem. No matter how contrived the reasoning behind the band's reunion, the audio version of THE DANCE retains all of the cathartic emotion and sheer excitement of that evening's performance.The band sounds great, and all three of the vocalists are in good form. It is true that Stevie Nicks has lost a noticeable amount of her vocal range. This is especially jarring on "Dreams," where Nicks' inability to reach the higher notes lessens the impact of number. However, Nicks' intensity as a performer carries her through, and her now-lowered actually benefits several of that evening's selections.The same is true of Lindsey Buckingham, who does not seem to be able to reach the very top of his range with the ease that he once did. In many ways, he doesn't even sound like the same man when comparing that evening's performance of "Go Your Own Way" to the 1977 studio version. But Buckingham's voice has only increased in sheer power, and I have never heard him sing with such raw and unhinged passion before. Throughout the entire show, he sounds alive, wired, and very sexy.No matter how you choose to look at it, there is no doubt that Christine McVie looks and sounds better than ever. Never having been much of a clothes horse in the past, Christine looks absolutely stunning in a tailored suit and an extremely flattering bob, and she sounds terrific. On the night of this particular concert, she delivered knockout renditions of "Everywhere," "You Make Lovin' Fun," and "Say That You Love Me" - all three of which remain bright highlights on this recording. Even with her unassuming and humble nature, Christine managed to steal much of the show without even conspiring to.Without mincing any worlds, all else that needs to be said of the band's performance is that the skills of rock's greatest rhythm section, Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, have only improved with time. The biggest surprise of all, however, is Lindsey Buckingham's continued prowess on the guitar. Always one of the criminally underrated guitarist, Buckingham emerges on THE DANCE as an absolute genius on the strings. I honestly do not believe there was ever another guitarist with such raw talent as Buckingham since Jimi Hendrix, and that is the highest compliment possible for anyone who plays the instrument.The band sounds particularly fantastic on the four newly-written songs, all of which are worthy enough to stand next to the classics. Lindsey Buckingham's "Bleed To Love Her," a moving love song with a unique bent and a nearly acoustic arrangement, is the best of the new material (even though it borrows the bridge from Buckingham's own 1992 composition "You Do or You Don't"). Buckingham's neurotic ditty "My Little Demon" is also a cute addition to the set, and is one of his most straightforward compositions. Buckingham also introduces both numbers before performing them, and his stage comments reveal him to be a likeably warm and soft-spoken man.I was generally disappointed with the banal quality of Christine McVie's original material on 1995's TIME, however, she is back in top form with the bouncy "Temporary One" - her newly-penned contribution to THE DANCE. Very much in the style of her most endearing Mac compositions, "Temporary One" features the most memorable refrain McVie has written since 1987's incomparable "Little Lies." The remaining newly-written song, Stevie Nicks' stark "Sweet Girl, is a tense and wrenching number that far outshines most of the material that she contributed to 1990's BEHIND THE MASK and her 1994 solo recording STREET ANGEL. The song memorably makes the swift transition from spirited verses to a moody chorus, with a killer lyrical hook ("I used to dance across the stages of the world"). It easily ranks among her finest songs of the nineties.Most of the Mac's signature numbers are faithfully performed, with arrangements that are very similar to their studio counterparts - yet there are a few surprises. The major departures come with a new ballad-like opening for "Rhiannon," an epic guitar solo to close "I'm So Afraid," and the addition of a marching band to "Don't Stop." All of these deviations are interesting, especially Lindsey's amazing acoustic rendition of "Big Love," which is surprisingly superior to the heavily-produced 1987 studio version. Some of the evening's other standout moments include Stevie's wrenching rendition of "Landslide," the thundering opening performance of "The Chain," and a vibrant version of Christine's "Say That You Love Me" (with John singing for the first time on back up).The highlight among highlights, however, is the addition of the Nicks-penned, former B-side "Silver Springs" (which failed to make the cut on RUMOURS) to the set list, with Nicks giving the song such a passionate performance that one may wonder why it was ever scrapped in the first place. Justifiably, the song has since finally become widely recognized as one the Mac's signature songs, and even snagged the group a 1998 Grammy award nomination. The belated gratification must have been sweet for Nicks, who admitted to having previously been frustrated over the song's inexplicable exclusion from that colossal 1977 album. The heavy radio air-play of "Sliver Springs," the high-rated cable airing of the filmed concert, and all the publicity surrounding the group's reunion combined sent THE DANCE all the way to the #1 position on the Hot 200 and has sold a whopping five million copies in the US alone. For at least a few months, it felt like 1977 all over again, and it was great while it lasted.
C**L
Fantastic Live Performance by a Great Band!
I'm old enough that I saw FM live during the Rumours tour (FWIW, they weren't that good; they were sooo stoned). This is one of the best live performances I've encountered. If you weren't impressed by Lindsey Buckingham before, you will be after this. His guitar work is beyond mesmerizing. Of course, Christine McVie (RIP) sounds amazing and the musicianship by the entire band is superb. Fleetwood's drumming is maniacally good. McVie's bass work is so good, you almost miss it. Stevie does a great job banging her tambourine and with most vocals, although I felt she phoned it in with "Rhiannon." Many have commented on the daggers she throws as Lindsey during "Silver Springs," a moving performance of a song that was supposed to be on Rumours but didn't make the final cut. This version is infinitely better than the one you may have heard from 1977. The song will haunt you (see what I did there?) The appearance of the USC Marching Band is superb for "Tusk" and "Don't Stop."If you're a Fleetwood Mac fan, this is a must-have. You can check out on YT the interview the band gave in support of this tour. It seemed like everything was fine between the band members. Too bad they couldn't sustain it.
J**S
Great CD
Buy a copy
R**P
The Bomb
This concert DVD is just magnificent. They got together one more time and this was the result. There three singers are all unique and they all write wonderfully. Christine and her beautiful smooth contralto voice gives me joy in "You make lovin' fun" and brings tears when she did "Song Bird" at the end of the show. Stevie Nicks story telling and unique voice are so great. Lindsey Buckingham is a very special guitarist and his songs are interesting. I really love the sweet moment in the middle of the show when Stevie and Lindsey shared an embrace on stage in the middle of all the "breakup" songs they do. Mick Fleetwood pounds away in his manic style which topped off the whole thing.
D**I
Exactly what I wanted
One of the songs on this album came on the radio while my brother and his wife were visiting from the West Coast. They'd never heard the song before, but loved it. Sometimes it's hard to find something for a unique gift for us older folks who have most of what we want or need. So I packed it up with some other goodies and sent it for Christmas. They and their friends loved the album. I was glad to see it was still available, plus it came when they said it would.
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