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The same year, USA Today placed Rumours at number 23 in its Top 40 Albums list, [110] while Rolling Stone ranked it at number 25 in its special issue of "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time", in 2003, the highest Fleetwood Mac placement, [111] number 26 in a 2012 revised list, [112] and number 7 in the 2020 and 2023 lists. [113]
Greatest Hits is a greatest hits album by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, released on 21 November 1988 by Warner Bros. Records. [3] It covers the period of the band's greatest commercial success, from the mid-1970s to the late-1980s.
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).
While it became the band's first studio album to miss the charts in the UK, it helped to expand the band's appeal in the United States. In Europe, CBS released Fleetwood Mac's first Greatest Hits album in late 1971. In 1972, six months after the release of Future Games, the band released their sixth studio album, Bare Trees.
The clock has tick-tocked in reverse to put a Fleetwood Mac album and single back in the top 10 43 years after their initial appearance. The group's 1977 "Rumours," one of the all-time blockbuster ...
Tonic covered the song on the 1998 tribute album Legacy: A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac's Rumours. [22] Julienne Taylor covered the song on her 2002 album Racing the Clouds Home and as a single. [23] Kid Rock sampled "Second Hand News" for the bassline of his 1998 song "Wasting Time." [24]
Cate Blanchett’s new film “Rumours” took its name from the iconic Fleetwood Mac album, it was revealed on Sunday at a Cannes Film Festival press conference. The dark comedy, directed by Guy ...
"Never Going Back Again" is a song written by Lindsey Buckingham that was first released by the British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac on their eleventh studio album Rumours (1977). The song was also released as the B-side to the top-ten single "Don't Stop" in the US and the "You Make Loving Fun" single in the UK.