10 Facts You Need to Know About Fleetwood Mac!

In this post, we’ll look at some of Fleetwood Mac’s most startling facts. These ten simple facts will assist us to learn about the band’s lifestyle.

10 Facts About Fleetwood Mac

Fleetwood Mac are one of the most well-known bands of the twentieth century. Fleetwood Mac has a legacy that survives to this day, legendary for their drunkenness and infighting as well as their unique, dreamy music – at the time of writing, Dreams is ranked #35 on Rolling Stone’s Top 100 Tracks. Since its inception in 1967, the band has been continuing strong for an incredible five decades.

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  1. A founding member of the band left to join a cult

The first Fleetwood Mac lineup was very different from the ‘classic’ Rumours lineup. Many of the band’s founding members left or were fired, but one of them left for an unusual reason. Jeremy Spencer left the band’s hotel room just before a scheduled engagement in 1971 to visit a nearby bookstore.

  1. Guitarist Danny Kirwan departed the band when a fight broke out backstage

Danny Kirwan, another early Fleetwood Mac member, left the band in an unusual manner in the early 1970s. When Kirwan became aggressive during a tour to promote their new album Naked Trees in 1972, the band was about to go onstage. The guitarist had been arguing with bandmate Bob Welch over a guitar issue when he fell into an explosive rage.

  1. Christine McVie believed the band’s biggest hit, Dreams, was “boring” at first

Dreams is one of Fleetwood Mac’s most enduring songs; TIME named it one of the 100 Best Popular Songs of All Time in 2011, and it’s even re-entered the charts in 2020.

One of the members of the band believed the song was “boring.” Keyboardist Christine McVie told Blender in 2005, “When Stevie initially played it for me on the piano, it was only three chords and one note in the left hand.” I thought, ‘This is incredibly boring,’ but then Lindsey’s creativity kicked in, and he created three pieces out of identical chords, each sounding completely different.

  1. In Big Love, Lindsey Buckingham sings both the male and ‘female’ background vocals

Big Love, one of Lindsey Buckingham’s songs on Fleetwood Mac’s 1987 album Tango in the Night, is undoubtedly one of the band’s most underappreciated songs.

Buckingham’s voice, however, is not very feminine, as proven by his live solo renditions of the song. His vocals were modified to sound like a woman’s dulcet tones for the recorded track. Nonetheless, Nicks does give backing vocals on the 12-inch extended dance mix of the song.

  1. Mick Fleetwood’s ‘balls’ are really stolen toilet chains that he wore for good luck

The Rumours cover is iconic, with Nicks dressed in her famed ‘Rhiannon’ costume and Fleetwood clutching a crystal ball.

Fleetwood took the toilet chains off a lavatory in a bar where Fleetwood Mac was performing in the 1960s and went on stage with the chains hanging from his belt. The initial pair of chains was stolen, but Fleetwood had replacements produced because the chains became a sort of good luck charm for the drummer.

  1. Lindsey Buckingham rejected the band’s invitation to join them without then-girlfriend Stevie Nicks

Buckingham received a call from Fleetwood offering him a spot in the group. Although Buckingham was glad to agree, he had one requirement that he would not waive.

He explained to Fleetwood that since he was already a member of a band with his girlfriend, Stevie Nicks, and that they were strongly devoted to one another, he couldn’t accept the position without bringing her along. The two had been dating and making music together since they were in high school.

  1. The group reformed to play at Bill Clinton’s Inaugural Ball

In 1987, Nicks and Buckingham both quit Fleetwood Mac, bringing an end to the group’s heyday. To perform at Bill Clinton’s Inaugural Ball in January 1993, the Rumours-era lineup did, however, briefly come together.

Don’t Stop by the band was Clinton’s 1992 campaign anthem, therefore the incoming President requested that they play it live at the event.

  1. Neither John McVie nor Mick Fleetwood came up with the band’s name

Peter Green, the original guitarist for Fleetwood Mac, was given recording time by blues great John Mayall for his birthday. Green then asked Fleetwood and McVie to join him in the studio to record five songs. In honor of the two musicians, Green gave Fleetwood Mac as the name of the sixth song.

Soon after this infamous recording session, Green and Fleetwood started talking about starting their own band. Green made the suggestion that they call the band Fleetwood Mac in an effort to convince McVie to join them even though he was hesitant to do so. McVie continued to say no, but a few weeks later he decided to change his mind and join Fleetwood Mac.

  1. Stevie Nicks loathed the Tango in the Night recording process

It should come as no surprise that Nicks felt awkward working on an album with two of her ex-boyfriends. To make matters worse, Tango in the Night was primarily recorded in Buckingham’s bedroom even though she had just recently completed recovery.

  1. Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks, and Mick Fleetwood are all on TikTok

Nathan Apodaca uploaded a video of the Fleetwood Mac song Dreams in October 2020 to the social media platform TikTok. In the brief movie, he skateboards to work while drinking cranberry juice and lip-syncing to the well-known Fleetwood Mac song. The video gained a lot of attention and even caused Dreams streaming to skyrocket.

To reproduce Apodaca’s viral video, Fleetwood, Nicks, and Buckingham all opened their own TikTok accounts in response to the viral video.

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