Dreams
The Many Lives of Fleetwood Mac
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- 6,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
Fleetwood Mac have had a chart-topping career that spans over fifty years and includes some of the biggest-selling albums and greatest hits of the 20th and 21st centuries. But the band's story is one of enormous triumph and also unimaginable tragedy. There has never been a band in the history of music riven with as much romantic drama, sexual tension and incredible highs and lows as Fleetwood Mac.
Dreams is a must-read for casual Fleetwood Mac fans and die-hard devotees alike. In this unique collection of mini-biographies, observations and essays, Mark Blake explores all eras of the Fleetwood Mac story to explore what it is that has made them one of the most successful bands in history.
Blake draws on his own exclusive interviews with Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham and the late Peter Green and Christine McVie, and addresses the complex human drama at the heart of the Fleetwood Mac story, including the complicated relationships between the band's main members, but he also dives deep into the towering discography that the band have built over the past half-century.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Music journalist Blake (Bring It On Home) stitches together a kaleidoscopic chronicle of one of rock's most fabled groups. In its earliest days, Fleetwood Mac was a blues band helmed by cofounders Mick Fleetwood and Peter Green, who composed such hit singles as "Albatross"and "Mr. Wonderful." A "folky, progressive" sound came to the fore in the 1970s with Then Play On, Green's last album with the band. In 1975, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, then a folk-rock duo, joined the group and ushered in a pop-rock style and a period of intense interpersonal drama. The pair, who were dating, broke up in 1976, as did married band members Christine and John McVie; Nicks later began an affair with Fleetwood. In loose, episodic sections drawing on interviews with bandmembers, Blake analyzes the makings of their famous ("Dreams," "The Chain") and lesser-known ("Tell Me All the Things You Do") songs; dissects their romantic rivalries; and traces the destructive effects of the rock and roll lifestyle (Peter Green, who departed in 1970 because of his eroding mental health, was being treated for schizophrenia by the time his former band found superstardom with 1977's Rumours). It's a colorful account of a fascinating chapter in rock history.