Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Hypnotized" is a song written by Bob Welch. The song originally featured on Fleetwood Mac 's 1973 album Mystery to Me . The track was released on a single as the B-side of " For Your Love " and has been described as "gorgeous and lyrically strong", and referred to as the album's best track.
A full-scale reunion took place four years later, and Fleetwood Mac released their fourth U.S. No. 1 album, The Dance (1997), a live album marking the 20th anniversary of Rumours and the band's 30th anniversary. Christine McVie left in 1998 after the completion of The Dance Tour.
Mystery to Me is the eighth studio album by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, released on 15 October 1973.This was their last album to feature Bob Weston.Most of the songs were penned by guitarist/singer Bob Welch and keyboardist/singer Christine McVie, who were instrumental in steering the band toward the radio-friendly pop rock that would make them successful a few years later.
Fleetwood Mac will have their story told in an upcoming documentary.. Apple TV+ is joining forces with The Kennedy/Marshall Company and White Horse Pictures and director Frank Marshall for a ...
all Fleetwood Mac releases from Fleetwood Mac (1975) to Mirage Tour (1983) Tango in the Night (1987) The Dance (1997) all Fleetwood Mac releases from Say You Will (2003) onwards; as a session musician on Behind the Mask (1990), 25 Years – The Chain (1992) and Time (1995).
The 1967–1969 era Blue Horizon albums (Fleetwood Mac, Mr. Wonderful, The Pious Bird of Good Omen, and Fleetwood Mac in Chicago) and the 1971 outtakes album The Original Fleetwood Mac have been remastered and reissued on CD, as have the 1975–1987 era Warner Bros. studio albums (Fleetwood Mac, Rumours, Tusk, Mirage, and Tango in the Night).
Live from the Roxy is a live album by the American rock musician Bob Welch, recorded in 1981, released in 2004, and later issued onto LP in 2021.Welch had been a member of Fleetwood Mac from 1971 to 1974, and this album features appearances by many members of that band.
McVie, initially hesitant to commit, was later prompted to leave the Bluesbreakers and join Fleetwood Mac full-time when the former adopted a horns section with which he disagreed. [16] He replaced the initial bassist, Bob Brunning. McVie, Fleetwood, Green and guitarist Jeremy Spencer thus formed the first fixed line-up of Fleetwood Mac. [17]