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Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac [Bonus Tracks] (CD - 1975)UPC: 00184719000121Artist: Fleetwood Mac Label: Blue Horizon Genre: Blues - British Blues Album Description: Fleetwood Mac: Lindsey Buckingham (vocals, guitar); Christine McVie (vocals, keyboards, synthesizer); Stevie Nicks (vocals); John McVie (bass); Mick Fleetwood (drums, percussion).Additional personnel: Waddy Watchel (guitar).Recorded at Sound City, Los Angeles, Californ... read more Fleetwood Mac: Lindsey Buckingham (vocals, guitar); Christine McVie (vocals, keyboards, synthesizer); Stevie Nicks (vocals); John McVie (bass); Mick Fleetwood (drums, percussion). Additional personnel: Waddy Watchel (guitar). Recorded at Sound City, Los Angeles, California. Originally released on Reprise (2225). Includes liner notes by Parke Puterbaugh. Fleetwood Mac: Peter Green (vocals, guitar, harmonica); John McVie, Bob Brunning (bass guitar); Jeremy Spencer, Mick Fleetwood. Personnel: Jeremy Spencer (vocals, guitar, slide guitar, piano); Mick Fleetwood (drums). Liner Note Author: Mike Vernon. Recording information: CBS Studio, London, England (??/??/1967-12/11/1967); Decca Studio, West Hampstead, London, England (??/??/1967-12/11/1967). With this album, years of personnel changes ended for Fleetwood Mac with the departure of guitarist Bob Welch. The remaining core of the group (Mick Fleetwood, John McVie and Christine McVie) invited guitarist/vocalist Lindsey Buckingham and singer Stevie Nicks to join, and thus began the most commercially successful period for Fleetwood Mac. With 3 strong songwriters in Nicks, Buckingham and Christine McVie, FLEETWOOD MAC was their first number-1 album. PETER GREEN'S FLEETWOOD MAC, the band's full-length debut, is miles removed from commercially tailored soft rock of Fleetwood Mac's 1970s incarnation. The '60s version of the band, led by guitarist/singer Peter Green, was edgy, psychedelic, and rooted deeply in the blues. Green's love of revved-up 12-bar jams, raw boogie grooves, and shredding electric leads come together beautifully on this album, with the help of slide guitarist/singer/pianist Jeremy Spencer, drummer Mick Fleetwood, and bassist John McVie. With the exception of Spencer, the members had played together in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, and took the slashing, mercurial sound and lock-step interplay from that outfit and--arguably--improved on it. Though the album is steeped in traditional blues and includes covers of tunes by Robert Johnson ("Hellhound on My Trail"), Howlin' Wolf ("No Place to Go"), and Elmore James ("Got to Move"), the compositions penned by Green and Spencer stand up, especially the subtler singing and playing by Green (as on "Looking for Somebody"). Released at time when the market was glutted with amped-up British blues, PETER GREEN'S FLEETWOOD MAC stands above the competition with its superior musicianship and gutsy punch. It remains a template for hard-driving blues-rock. Fleetwood Mac's debut LP was a highlight of the late-'60s British blues boom. Peter Green's always-inspired playing, the capable (if erratic) songwriting, and the general panache of the band as a whole placed them leagues above the overcrowded field. Elmore James is a big influence on Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, particularly on the tunes fronted by Jeremy Spencer ("Shake Your Moneymaker," "Got to Move"). Spencer's bluster, however, was outshone by the budding singing and songwriting skills of Green. The guitarist balanced humor and vulnerability on cuts like "Looking for Somebody" and "Long Grey Mare," and with "If I Loved Another Woman," he offered a glimpse of the Latin-blues fusion that he would perfect with "Black Magic Woman." The album was an unexpected smash in the U.K., reaching number four on the British charts. [This version of the album includes bonus material.] ~ Richie Unterberger minimize
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