Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"I Don't Want to Know" has a country music flavor. [4] [5] It is an uptempo song, which recording engineer Ken Caillat describes as "3:16 of high impact energy."[3] Fleetwood Mac biographer Cath Carroll describes the opening of the song as being "unprepossessing" and "almost lumpen."
The ninth track on Rumours, "I Don't Want to Know", makes use of a twelve string guitar and harmonising vocals. Influenced by the music of Buddy Holly, Buckingham and Nicks created it in 1974 before they were in Fleetwood Mac. "Oh Daddy" was crafted spontaneously and includes improvised bass guitar patterns from John McVie and keyboard blips ...
"I Know I'm Not Wrong" is a song by Fleetwood Mac from the 1979 double LP Tusk. It was recorded as the final song of side three of the LP on 19 September 1979, written by Lindsey Buckingham , whose sparser songwriting arrangements and the influence of punk rock and new wave were the leading creative force on it and other Tusk tracks. [ 2 ]
"I Don't Wanna Know" (1998), by Julian Lennon from the album Photograph Smile "I Don't Wanna Know" (2000), a single by Wicked Beat Sound System "I Don't Want to Know" (2003), by Matthew Sweet from the album Kimi Ga Suki "I Don't Want to Know (If You Don't Want Me)" (2004), by the Donnas from the album Gold Medal
"Not That Funny" is a song by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, released in 1980. Composed and sung by guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, it was written as a response to the punk movement in the late 1970s. [3] The song shares some lyrics with "I Know I'm Not Wrong", another Buckingham penned song that appeared on the Tusk album. [4]
Like many other Rumours tracks, "Go Your Own Way" was partially recorded in Sausalito's Record Plant, a wooden structure with few windows, located at 2200 Bridgeway.. Early tracking was done with Mick Fleetwood using an eight-inch Ludwig snare in his drum kit, John McVie on a Fender bass, Christine McVie on Hammond organ, Stevie Nicks on tambourine, and Lindsey Buckingham on a 1959 Fender ...
A music video was produced to accompany the song, directed by British music video director and editor Dani Jacobs. Shot in Singapore on April 10th, 1998 at the Thian Hock Keng Temple during the bands promotional tour of South Asia. [89] It won the "Best Adult Contemporary Video" award from Billboard magazine in 1998.
"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.