To casual Fleetwood Mac listeners, the band is Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham and everybody else. But the contributions of Christine McVie (not to mention co-founder Mick Fleetwood and mainstay John ...
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 ...
Keyboardist Christine McVie wrote the Fleetwood Mac song “Over My Head,” which Reprise Records selected as the lead single from the band’s 1975 self-titled album. The song reached No. 20 on the ...
Fleetwood Mac’s Christine McVie died on Wednesday (Nov. 30) at the age of 79 after a short illness. “There are no words to describe our sadness at the passing of Christine McVie,” read a statement the ...
The music of Fleetwood Mac hasn’t only had a profound impact on the band members and their fans. Like all art, it also reflects the inner lives of those who created it. And in the case of one song ...
The singer, songwriter and keyboardist, who died on Wednesday, was a hitmaker for Fleetwood Mac whose crystalline voice and roots in the blues gave her music a distinct emotional punch. By Lindsay ...
Christine McVie was, and forever will be, one of a kind. She was born Perfect—literally, her birth name was Christine Perfect—before marrying John McVie. She joined Fleetwood Mac alongside him in 1970 ...
In most instances, John McVie had no problem coming up with bass parts for Fleetwood Mac songs. The iconic riff in “The Chain,” for example, was all his doing. “I butted heads [with] Lindsey ...
“Don’t Stop” is the first Fleetwood Mac song I remember, and I’d say it’s the perfect introduction. The hook feels instantly familiar, like you’ve spent your whole life with it, even if you haven’t.