Monday, May 02, 2011

This Kula abode is where Mick Fleetwood unscrews up

Rock Meets Mountain 
This Kula abode is where Mick Fleetwood unscrews up. 
STORY BY PAUL WOOD | PHOTOGRAPHY BY TONY NOVAK-CLIFFORD
Maui Magazine

“We’re going to ‘the boys’ house,’” says the six-foot-six drummer, namesake and driving force of that rock-music turbulence famously known as Fleetwood Mac. We have rendezvoused at the Kula Lodge Restaurant, and Mick is devouring a hamburger, talking all the while. Upcountry fog has piled against the mountain, and the windows of the restaurant show nothing but opaque silver-gray. Then rain begins pounding. Mick has just driven his middle-aged BMW all the way from Napili, where he spent the day on the telephone talking with “somebody” about creating a reality TV show.

He’s imagining something “fun and entertaining—a rock-and-roll version of John Cleese; you know, Fawlty Towers.” But he worries about the risks involved with television exposure. “If you’ve built a mystique over thirty years, you can kiss your ass goodbye in one show.” He takes another chomp out of the burger.

At age almost 64, Mick has outgrown some of his customary shagginess, his beard now white and neatly trimmed, his long hair reduced by time to an unobtrusive pigtail. Is this hyperactive Brit finally ready to let go and vegetate by the sea?

“I can’t think of anything worse than not doing anything,” he says. (Chomp.) He talks about wanting to start a new Front Street club that will reincarnate the old Blue Max, a Lahaina nightspot that he and other drop-in rockers (Elton John, David Bowie . . .) used to frequent in the 1970s. Besides occasional reunion gigs with heyday band mates such as Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, he leads a couple of on-again/ off-again bands—the Island Rumours Band with a raft of Maui all-stars, and the Grammy-nominated Mick Fleetwood Blues Band. He’s a two-fisted tom-tom pounder, one of those drummers who hold both sticks like wrecking hammers. But most rock drummers are content to go bang-bang in the background. Mick has always had the drive to put his drum kit in front of the band, to produce and conceive and lead, to get things done. There’s no way that the allure of Napili sunsets and mai tais would ever lull this guy into anything like relaxation.

Read the full article at Maui Magazine

Sunday, May 01, 2011

Stevie Nicks Week +

What's coming up for Stevie Nicks and Fleetwood Mac 


  • May 3rd: Stevie Performs on the Today Show. 
  • May 3rd: In Your Dreams Released in stores and online (North America)
  • May 3rd: Glee's "Rumours" Episode airs on FOX Tuesday. Check local Listings. 
  • May 4th: Stevie performs at Webster Hall in New York City. 
  • May 6th: Night of a Thousand Stevie's Event in NYC (Stevie does not appear). 
  • May 6th: Stevie performs at The Borgata in Atlantic City. 
___________________________________________________________

TV APPEARANCES:

Confirmed:
May 10th: Stevie Nicks appears on Ellen

Reported, but Unconfirmed:
Stevie is reportedly appearing on Dancing With The Stars in May.

INTERVIEWS:

Perez Hilton (@PerezHilton) Interviewed Stevie Wednesday April 27th at her home. He reported that the interview will be shared this week.

Howard Cohen (@HowardCohen) Features Writer for The Miami Herald has a piece on the Heart and Soul Tour and In Your Dreams coming out Tuesday in People Radar.

Extra TV (@JerryPenacoli) Interviewed Stevie Nicks April 27th at her home. No info on when the Extra TV interview will air - but it will likely show up on TV this week.

Robert Burke Warren (@RBWUncleRock) conducted an interview with Stevie Nicks sometime shortly after April 18th. The Q&A will appear in an upcoming issue of New York Magazine.

Jessica Pilot (@JessicaPilot212) a New York City based Freelance Writer with her work appearing in Vanity Fair, Glamour, New York Magazine among others Tweeted May 1st that she is about to interview Stevie Nicks. No information on where the interview will be published, but has said she will keep us posted as to when and where.

(Review) Stevie Nicks "In Your Dreams"

A new solo album from rock legend and beloved quasi-mystical figure Stevie Nicks should be cause for celebration. From a year's worth of tweets by producer Dave Stewart to a predictably fawning Rolling Stone profile, the lead-up to Nicks's In Your Dreams has certainly built a fever-pitched level of anticipation among the singer's die-hard fans. But In Your Dreams indulges in some of Nicks's worst tendencies as a songwriter and is slathered in chintzy, dated production values.....

Full Review at Slant Magazine
Stevie Nicks  "In Your Dreams" *  ½
BY JONATHAN KEEFE

Only misfire are some critics. Fans 'get' Nicks!

NICK OF TIME - Stevie Nicks Full Page Article in today's New York Post

Stevie Nicks Still Hooked on Fleetwood Mac
Click To Enlarge
Page 42 in the Pulse Section
Online Article can be read at NYPost.com

Saturday, April 30, 2011

STEVIE NICKS Scheduled on ELLEN Tuesday MAY 10th

Check your local listings for times during the day when it airs.

Others Scheduled on the show: "American Idol" judge Jennifer Lopez; actress Rose Huntington-Whiteley.

Stevie's also expected to appear on Dancing With The Stars in May although no official announcement has been made. There have have also been hints of a American Idol appearance.

Lindsey Buckingham Receives Golden Note Award at ASCAP

Lindsey Buckingham Goes His Own Way

By EXPO StaffApril 30. 2011 10:30 AM
By Stephanie Fehrmann

Lindsey Buckingham, the songwriter, producer and performer known by most for his role in Fleetwood Mac, was interviewed by Sara Bareilles during yesterday's “I Create Music” interview. The influence his Northern California upbringing had on his career, the impact Tusk had on Fleetwood Mac as well as his solo endeavors, and the current state of rock music were all focused on throughout the course of the interview.

Read the full article at ASCAP Expo

Chairman and CEO ASCAP Paul Williams presented Lindsey Buckingham with the ASCAP Golden Note Award at the ASCAP "I Create Music" Expo at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel on April 29, 2011 in Hollywood, California.

Interview 'Go Your Own Way: Lindsey Buckingham Interviewed by Sara Bareilles.  All Photos by: Kristian Dowling via AP - More Photos HERE









Lea Michele [Sneak Peek] Fleetwood Mac's Go Your Own Way! GLEE Rumours Episode



Air Date: Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011
Episode Name: Rumours (Season 2, Episode 19)

Stevie Nicks CD reviews

US Magazine May, 2011
“In Your Dreams” Stevie Nicks (Warner) * * * ½
While we all wait (okay, maybe just some of us) for anything new from Fleetwood Mac, Stevie’s first album of solo material in ten years, co-produced by Dave Stewart and Glen Ballard, is going to fill the gap very nicely.

Full Review at RosslandRadio.com

Stevie Nicks CD review 4/5
The album sounds like a pleasant mixture of old and new, and most pleasantly it works. The songs have a kind of mysticism to them, Stevie singing about ghosts and vampires. The stories are beautifully told by Stevie's voice that shines especially on slower New Orleans, which is the absolute highlight of the album.

Full Review at Vinyl Player




Friday, April 29, 2011

(Photos) Lindsey Buckingham at ASCAP Interview with Sara Bareilles

A couple of photos send in of Lindsey Buckingham being interviewed by Sara Bareilles this evening at ASCAP Expo in LA.

Paul Williams presented him with the ASCAP Golden Note Award 


Photo: Lindsey Buckingham at ASCAP in LA... Interview underway with Sara Bareilles

Lindsey Buckingham during his interview with ASCAP prior to being interviewed by Sara Bareilles
Follow #ascapexpo on Twitter
Photo by: ASCAP

**SPOILER** In Your Dreams... Picture Disc

If your are interested in seeing what the disc and photo look like for Stevie's new album In Your Dreams... Click this link.

If you want to wait until Tuesday, or your release day in your country, close your eyes and don't hit the link.

Thanks to M.E. for sending it in.

Stevie Nicks Admits Undying Love for Lindsey Buckingham, Dedicates New Album to Fan Who Succumbed to Cancer

by Mike Doherty
Spinner
After Stevie Nicks released 'Trouble in Shangri-La' in 2001, she thought she'd never record another solo album again. The process was tiresome and besides, she still had her longtime band Fleetwood Mac to satisfy her musical creativity.

 Now, 10 years later, she's back with 'In Your Dreams' -- a rich, dynamic album co-written and co-produced by Eurythmics guitarist Dave Stewart, and featuring Fleetwood Mac's Mick Fleetwood on drums and ex-boyfriend Lindsey Buckingham on guitar and vocals. From a San Francisco hotel room, on a rare night off from her recent tour with Rod Stewart, Nicks told Spinner about gaining inspiration from a lost friend, how recording this album changed her life and why she and Lindsey are like Bella and Edward from 'Twilight.'

 On your recent tour with Rod Stewart, was there a friendly rivalry between the two of you? Would you ever tell him before a show, "I'm going to go out and wipe the floor with you tonight?"

 Oh no, you would never say something like that to Rod Stewart [laughs]. Even though he's only a few years older than me, he is from a generation before me. Rod Stewart was a big rock star before Lindsey [Buckingham] and I even moved to Los Angeles. He was one of my big inspirations: Rod Stewart, Led Zeppelin, Janis, Jimi ...

You and Lindsey got a record deal in 1972 as Buckingham Nicks. Would you have been signed in 2011?

The music business is in terrible shape right now because artists don't sell ten million albums anymore. [Labels are] not making all that money, so they can't have a whole slew of bands that they're helping and developing. Lindsey and I were really lucky. I was just a waitress for four years, and he wasn't [working]. It was okay because we worked on our music, we had a four-track Ampex tape recorder, and we were able to survive.

 But I don't see how the kids can do it today. I feel sorry for them. I want it to happen, because in 20 years, I don't want everybody to be just listening to the Rolling Stones and Fleetwood Mac and Led Zeppelin; I want this generation to have their own rock stars that last. But it's going to be very hard for the kids that are popular right now to still be doing this when they're 40.

We're so used to hearing about how your albums have had difficult gestation periods, but you've said that making 'In Your Dreams' was great -- it must be a relief.
Well, this is how it should be. When you make records with Fleetwood Mac, they're difficult. That's not to say they're not amazing -- they obviously are, and that's why I am famous; every time I drive up to my gorgeous house, I go, "This is the house that Fleetwood Mac built." So did we argue? Yes. Did we have fights? Yes. But was the music that came out of it fantastic? Yes. However, it was difficult.

Even making my own records -- between 'Bella Donna' in 1981 and 'Shangri-La' in 2001 -- was difficult. [With this album], I have been reminded that you can make great music and have a good time doing it, and that you don't have to be heartbroken and freaking out. [You can] go back to your poetry from the last 30 years, and if you want those passionate, crazy moments, you can find them in your writing.