Showing posts with label Seeds We Sow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seeds We Sow. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Lindsey Buckingham on His New Solo Album and the Fleetwood Mac ‘Machine’


Lindsey Buckingham on His New Solo Album and the Fleetwood Mac ‘Machine’

As a singer and songwriter for Fleetwood Mac, Lindsey Buckingham has produced some of the most well-loved and commercially successful songs in the history of pop music. But he still considers himself an outsider. “The fringe is where my heart is,” he told us. Today he demonstrates his indie spirit by putting out his first ever non-major-label release, the solo album Seeds We Sow. We spoke with Buckingham about balancing creativity with domesticity, his new approach to writing lyrics, and keeping the peace within Fleetwood Mac.

Full Article Here


NEW on iTunes: Lindsey Buckingham "Seeds We Sow" with Bonus Track

Finally!  Something on itunes in North America!

Lindsey Buckingham "Seeds We Sow"

Includes one bonus track:
"Sleeping Around The Corner"


Monday, September 05, 2011

INTERVIEW: Lindsey Buckingham Feature in 7 Page Spread



October, 2011 Issue

Review: Lindsey Buckingham "Seeds We Sow" ★★★ Stars (out of 4) LA Times

Lindsey Buckingham
"Seeds We Sow"
(Mind Kit)
★★★ Stars (out of 4)

It’s been a good year for Fleetwood Mac, even without the actual existence of Fleetwood Mac, which last toured in 2009 and hasn’t released a new studio album since 2003’s "Say You Will." In May, the hit Fox series "Glee" devoted an episode to the band’s 1977 record "Rumours," the same day that singer Stevie Nicks released "In Your Dreams," her best-received solo disc in decades. And echoes of the group’s lustrous West Coast pop have cropped up recently on records by buzzy young acts like the Belle Brigade and Fleet Foxes. No wonder, then, that Lindsey Buckingham told Rolling Stone last week that Fleetwood Mac will likely return in 2012.

Until then, here’s Buckingham’s latest solo album, his third in five years and the first one he’s releasing himself following a lengthy stint with Warner Bros. Like all of the singer-guitarist’s own work, "Seeds We Sow" is thornier than Buckingham’s material for Fleetwood Mac, with an emphasis on his percussive, sometimes-discordant acoustic guitar playing and on his intimately recorded vocals, which in a stripped-down rendition of the Rolling Stones’ "She Smiled Sweetly" push intriguingly at whatever border separates passionate from creepy. (Buckingham’s originals reflect his usual blend of midlife introspection and limousine-liberal hand-wringing.)

Several cuts, though, suggest that the man who wrote "Second Hand News" and "Go Your Own Way" has indeed been thinking big of late: In "That’s the Way That Love Goes" he layers an insistent vocal melody over a zippy fuzz-pop groove, while "Gone Too Far" has the lush light-rock feel of Fleetwood Mac’s radio-bait late-’80s phase. Stand by to see what these "Seeds" grow.

- Mikael Wood

NEW VIDEO: Lindsey Buckingham "In Our Own Time"

First single from "Seeds We Sow"
filmed before a live audience April 22, 2011 Beverly Hills, CA 
Featured on the Soon To Be Released:
"Songs From The Small Machine"
Live DVD/Blu-ray
In stores Oct 31st UK | Nov 1st North America



NEW ALBUM "Seeds We Sow" available TODAY ONLY 
on Amazon.com for $3.99 BUY NOW





ONE DAY SALE: Lindsey Buckingham Seeds We Sow - AmazonMP3 Daily Deal - ONLY $3.99

Don't miss out... Head on over to Amazon TODAY ONLY!  $3.99 for the full album with TWO BONUS TRACK! One day ahead of the Street date.



Sunday, September 04, 2011

Lindsey Buckingham Seeds We Sow (Amazon MP3 Exclusive Version) $3.99

Full MP3 album available for download 1 day ahead of the street date for the hard copy... 

Available for download from Amazon.com September 5th the latest album by Lindsey Buckingham "Seeds We Sow" includes 2 bonus tracks:

1. Seeds We Sow
2. In Our Own Time
3. Illumination
4. That's The Way Love Goes
5. Stars Are Crazy
6. When She Comes Down
7. Rock Away Blind
8. One Take 3:25
9. Gone Too Far
10. End Of Time
11. She Smiled Sweetly
12. End Of Time (Acoustic - Amazon Exclusive)
13. Seeds We Sow (Electric - Amazon Exclusive)

Amazon.com

Saturday, September 03, 2011

Video: "Seeds We Sow" Live....

Tune in to Tavis Smiley Sept 5th... PBS


Tavis talks with the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer about his sixth studio CD, “Seeds We Sow.”
check your locale listings

Though he taught himself to play guitar and still can't read music, Lindsey Buckingham has had a thriving career as a producer, solo artist and a member of Fleetwood Mac. He provided the band with brilliant songs and gifted arrangements, but left to concentrate on his solo career (though he’s joined the group for several reunions). On his latest release—his sixth studio album, “Seeds We Sow”— the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer wrote, produced and mixed every song. Buckingham has also announced a 31-city North American, which kicks off this fall.

Friday, September 02, 2011

Buckingham took a few minutes from his Los Angeles home to discuss his music


Lindsey Buckingham on his buoyant new album, upcoming tour and future Mac attacks

By Mark Brown
Special to MSN Music

The 61-year-old rock veteran begins touring for "Seeds" in Nevada on Sept. 10. Buckingham took a few minutes from his Los Angeles home to discuss his music and Fleetwood Mac's future before rehearsals started.

Canadian Press... September 2nd: Planting the Seeds


Lindsey Buckingham loves to go his own way – provided he can come back.
BY DARRYL STERDAN ,QMI AGENCY

The 61-year-old singer-guitarist says he has the best of both worlds these days: A career that balances his Fleetwood Mac duties with the freedom to make solo albums.

“On the one hand, I’ve got this large machine,” the California rocker explains. “And then on the other hand, I’ve also had this small machine. And I’ve been very fortunate to have both of those and to have those support each other. One serves as a palate cleanser for the other.

“You know, we all make choices in life. And I think I’ve been very lucky with those choices. Whether they were conscious or just the fate that was cast upon me — however you want to look at it, I think my karma as an artist and as a man has been pretty good. This is the best time of my life right now. So hopefully I did something right.”

Full Interview can be read online here

Note:
This full page article is featured in the following Sun newspapers across Canada today, which is really great! The Ottawa Sun | The Toronto Sun | The Winnipeg Sun | The Calgary Sun

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Check out this Vh1 Classic Interview with Lindsey Buckingham - Europe Tour Confirmed!

Eddie Webb interviewed Lindsey on August 26th... Hit the image for the Vh1 Classic Rock Nights website and check it out.  Lindsey confirms with Eddie that he's doing some shows in Europe!  No specific dates or cities mentioned... This is awesome news for the European fans of Lindsey who have been waiting for this moment.
Interview length is approx. 30 minutes. Two songs included "In Our Own Time" + "Rock Away Blind"

Buckingham on Nicks, Mcvie, Family and Seeds...


Lindsey Buckingham still working but puts fatherhood first

By: James McNair
The National
United Arab Emirates

The Fleetwood Mac guitarist Lindsey Buckingham talks to James McNair about his new album and fatherhood late in life

In 1974, when the drummer Mick Fleetwood asked Lindsey Buckingham to join his band, the California-born guitarist insisted that he and his girlfriend Stevie Nicks should come as a package.

"It wasn't a slam-dunk, 'Oh my goodness, this is our big break thing'," Buckingham tells me on the line from his home in Los Angeles. "Stevie and I could have made another Buckingham Nicks album - and who knows what would have happened if we did?" History records that the couple did not, of course, and when the gifted and glamorous duo joined Fleetwood Mac, they helped transform the group from esteemed British blues outfit to drive-time radio colossus.

Formerly led by the troubled guitar magus Peter Green, the band became an Anglo-American entity whose eponymous 1974 debut reached number one in the US. The new recruits' song-writing talent sat nicely alongside that of the keyboardist, Christine McVie, whose bass-playing husband John was also a long-term member.

Amazingly, the success of Fleetwood Mac was surpassed by that of the group's 1977 follow-up album, Rumours. Essentially a document of two relationship break-ups - Buckingham and Nicks were separating; ditto the McVies - the album has since gone on to sell more than 40 million copies. The band was indulging in all kinds of excess, and songs such as Go Your Own Way and Dreams aired their dirty laundry in public. Not for nothing, then, has Rumours been dubbed "rock's greatest soap opera".

"We can laugh about it now," says the soft-spoken Buckingham, "but at the time it was incredibly painful. The instinct was to run away, but we had to make the right choices for the band. Rumours brought out the voyeur in everybody, I think, but we learnt to be philosophical about that and use it to our advantage. I'm just glad it wasn't today's media covering the story - there was no phone hacking or people rooting through your trash back then."

Now 61, Buckingham is about to release his sixth solo album, Seeds We Sow. He recorded it in his home studio, where a poster of the Beach Boys' Smile album hangs for inspiration ("I also have a little teak warrior figure standing between the speakers to remind me that I have to fight on"). The new record packs echoing lattices of nylon-string guitar, songs such as Illumination and That's the Way confirming Buckingham's pop sensibility is still highly attuned. The album also benefits from the guitarist and singer's left-field production technique, something that, in Fleetwood Mac, was only ever let loose on the brilliant, defiantly uncommercial Tusk, an album the band's record company later dubbed "Lindsey's folly" despite its selling four million copies.

Buckingham says his new album is about "karma" and how the decisions we make influence our lives. So is he happy with his own choices? "Yes, I think so. With the music, my small, independent projects allow me to take risks, and that has a positive effect when I go back to Fleetwood Mac. More personally speaking, I think it was good not having children too young." He and wife Kristen Messner had their first child, William, when Buckingham was 48, and have since had two daughters, Leelee and Stella. "I've seen a lot of parents not really be there for their kids, so I'm glad that gift came when I was ready."

Chatting more about the new album, Buckingham explains that When She Comes Down was written for his wife. "When we first met, it took Kristen a while to open up and feel safe with me," he says. "I just had to wait and have faith." 

Happily married the couple may be, but for Fleetwood Mac fans, Buckingham will forever be romantically linked with Stevie Nicks, the girl he first met when they were pupils at Menlo-Atherton High School in Atherton, California.

BUCKINGHAM NICKS
In May of this year, Nicks released her seventh solo album, In Your Dreams, and, much to the delight of Mac fans, Buckingham sang and played guitar on the song Soldier's Angel.

"It was great," he says of the dynamic between them. "We spent more time together than we had in while, and we even talked about trying to get the [long deleted] Buckingham Nicks album out again and perhaps doing some kind of tour around it."

FLEETWOOD MAC
There are plans for new Fleetwood Mac projects, too, and Buckingham says that once he and Nicks have finished with their respective solo album commitments, their thoughts may well turn to another Mac studio album and tour. At 64 and 65 respectively, the band's titular rhythm section Mick Fleetwood and John McVie are still game, but Christine McVie - who retired from touring in 1998 and only fleetingly appears on 2003's Say You Will album - is unlikely to return to the fold.

"You could call Chris and ask her," laughs Buckingham, "but she quite deliberately burnt her bridges some years back. As far as I can tell, she's living the quiet pastoral life back in England, but I would imagine that must get a little one-dimensional for her from time to time."

For all his gentle ribbing, Buckingham, too, has clearly taken his foot off the accelerator ("Have I mellowed? Oh, I hope so!"). As for Buckingham, he's happier than ever. "I just want to be a consistent and present parent and not let anything get in the way of that. I don't have any big burning ambition, or anything I feel is just out of my grasp.

"One of the most frustrating things about Fleetwood Mac," he adds, "is that you don't get everybody wanting the same things for the same reasons at the same time,but it would be nice to reach a place that dignifies where we started. I find it rather touching and sweet that Stevie and myself might be able to share something beyond the formal designations of recent years. I think there are still a few chapters of our story to be written."

Seeds We Sow is out on September 5 on Cooking Vinyl

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Lindsey Buckingham set for Lorain Palace in fall


The Morning Journal 

Lindsey Buckingham, who earned a spot in the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame with Fleetwood Mac, winning countless awards defined the sound of rock for the last three decades, will be coming to the Lorain Palace Theatre at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6.

His concert is part of Time Warner Cable Music: Sessions series.

“It’s our working relationship with the Live Nation (promotion company),” Lorain Palace general manager John Handyside said about his local venue landing a top-tier booking such as Buckingham.

“That’s what we’re hoping, that this will be a successful test of bringing in A-list attractions for the future.”

Buckingham is regarded as the predominant musical force behind such Fleetwood Mac albums as “Rumours” and the innovative “Tusk.” He has created a critically acclaimed body of solo work that yielded the hits. Trouble,” “Go Insane” and “Holiday Road.”

Buckingham’s sixth solo album, “Seeds We Show,” showcases Buckingham’s full arsenal of skills — from the soft melodic pop-rock tinge of “End Of Time” and the album’s most rocking track, “One Take,” to the touching “When She Comes Down” and the lullaby feel and hushed tones of “She Smiles Sweetly.

Tickets are $29.50 to $75, available online a www.LorainPalace.com and www.livenation.com. Loge seating (with food) is $250 for four.

Lindsey Buckingham on Solo Work, the Mac and 'Glee'

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Photos: Lindsey Buckingham at home

Musician Lindsey Buckingham poses for a portrait in Los Angeles, Thursday, Aug. 25, 2011.  Buckingham's new album, "Seeds We Sow", will be released Sept. 6, 2011 (AP Photo / Matt Sayles)



Billboard Magazine: Lindsey Buckingham Goes ALL THE WAY DIY

Billboard Magazine (September 3rd issue)
We pose 6 questions to Fleetwood Mac icon, Lindsey Buckingham.


(mention on the cover - click to enlarge)














Things are starting to ramp up in the promotion dept. for Lindsey... We'll start seeing press and tv coverage over the next couple of weeks as the album release date nears.


Jerry Penacoli (Extra TV) met up with Lindsey today at his home and posted this photo to his facebook page saying that Lindsey sang his new single "Seeds We Sow" live acapella.

Also, Sandy Cohen of the Associated Press interviewed Lindsey at his home today... She tweeted that it was so cool to interview him as she has been listening to his music all her life thanks to her mother.

Check out the >> 2 Bonus Tracks << For Lindsey Buckingham's New Album... Listen!

Amazon in the US now have the album sampler up to pre-listen to Lindsey's new "Seeds We Sow" album (in stores September 6th).


12. End of Time (Acoustic)
13. Seeds We Sow (Electric)

Quite different from the standard album versions.  Not sure if these are exclusive tracks to the mp3 album download or if Amazon or another retailer will offer the hard copy album with the bonus tracks... Hope it's the latter if this is the mp3 album.

In any case... They sound great!

Fleetwood Mac: No Recording Plans...Yet

Fleetwood Mac have no definite commitments for the future. 

Talking to Classic Rock, guitarist/vocalist Lindsey Buckingham denied reports that the band are currently working on a new album.

“We’ve nothing like that going on at all. Stevie (Nicks) has been busy touring and I’m just about to release my new solo album (Seeds We Sow, out on September 5) and have plans to tour on the back of that. So, right now nothing’s booked for the band.

“However, I would be very surprised if we don’t make a new album at some point. Currently, I have eight or nine new song ideas, some of which might fit in with Fleetwood Mac.”

Classic Rock Blog

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

A Conversation with Lindsey Buckingham by Mike Ragogna - Huffington Post


By: Mike Ragogna
Huffington Post 

Seeds We Sow: 
Chatting with Lindsey Buckingham

A Conversation with Lindsey Buckingham

Mike Ragogna: Lindsey, how are you?

Lindsey Buckingham: Good. How are you?

MR: I'm doing fine. It's an honor to speak to you, sir.

LB: Well, thank you. I appreciate that.

MR: I've been a fan since your first solo album, Law And Order. Of course, I loved the Fleetwood Mac material, but I've really enjoyed all of your solo material as well.

LB: Well, that's nice to hear. We do our best, what can I say?

MR: Lindsey, you're on your sixth solo album now, Seeds We Sow. No surprise, you produced, mixed, and performed virtually every note. Oh, and you wrote almost all the songs.

LB: Well, pretty much. There's a Rolling Stones cover at the end, "She Smiled Sweetly," and I co-wrote one of the songs, "Stars Are Crazy." My road band is also playing on one of the songs, but yes, for all intents and purposes, I did. I must have control issues, yes?

MR: (laughs) Nah, you're just über-creative. "Stars Are Crazy" is one of my favorite tracks on this new album. Who co-wrote that with you?

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Guitar Aficianado Sept/Oct Issue... Lindsey Buckingham


In the new September/October issue of Guitar Aficionado, we visit Fleetwood Mac guitar great Lindsey Buckingham at his L.A. home for an in depth look at the famous instruments with which he has created some of classic rock’s most enduring tunes. Here, we present four examples of his inimitable fingerstyle work, both with the Mac and during those times when he’s gone his own way.


By Richard Bienstock
Guitar Aficianado