Fleetwood Mac – Say You Will (2003/2014)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:16:12 minutes | 1,66 GB | Genre: Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Rhino – Warner Records
Say You Will is the 17th studio album by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, released on 15 April 2003. It was the first Fleetwood Mac album since Kiln House in 1970 that did not include tracks written by vocalist/keyboardist Christine McVie, who had left the band in 1998. It was however the band’s first studio album since Time was released in 1995. Members Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks and John McVie shared keyboard duties for the album, though Christine McVie is featured on two songs which had been originally recorded for an unreleased Lindsey Buckingham solo album (tracks 13 and 14). It also marks the first album in 16 years to feature Buckingham as a full-time member.
Say You Will was the first studio Fleetwood Mac album to peak in the top 3 in the US since 1982’s Mirage.The album debuted at No. 3 with sales of 218,000, spent two months within the top 40, and was certified Gold by the RIAA in July 2003 for 500,000 copies shipped in the US. It debuted on the UK charts at No. 6 with sales of approximately 34,000 and has also been certified Gold for 100,000 copies shipped. It has sold over 150,000 copies in the UK.
Lindsey Buckingham hadn’t recorded a studio album with Fleetwood Mac in 16 years when Say You Will was released in April 2003. His partner, Stevie Nicks, had been missing in action from the group since 1990, and while both joined the reunited group in 1997 for a tour and live album (The Dance), not to mention Bill Clinton’s 1993 inauguration, it had been a long, long time since the two made new music for the Mac. They were lured back into the fold for…well, the specifics — whether money, prestige, status, publicity, or creativity — don’t really matter, since the end result is the same, it’s that Buckingham and Nicks have come home. This doesn’t qualify as a full-fledged Fleetwood reunion, since Christine McVie isn’t here, choosing to opt out of this high-profile return to the breach (although her playing is occasionally heard on the album). This results in a record that never quite sounds like Fleetwood Mac. Mick Fleetwood and John McVie are so grateful to have the two superstars back in the group that they cede ground to Buckingham and Nicks, who never collaborate as much as share space. Each singer/songwriter is given nine songs apiece, a move which, in itself, would not necessarily be a problem, but over the course of this lengthy, lengthy album, the evenhandedness starts to give the impression that this is two solo albums presented as a group effort. An assessment that’s a little harsh, since the group can still conjure echoes of their classic sound, but the division of work is so deliberate and their work so dissimilar, it can’t help but feel like two separate pieces pushed together to make the whole. Which is where Christine McVie becomes a critical factor. While never a star like Nicks, nor possessing the mad genius of Buckingham, McVie was a strong, likeable songwriter whose gently melodic works balanced the extremities of her bandmates while also forcing them to choose the best material to fit the record. Add to this that Fleetwood Mac have decided to run wild with the length of a CD, producing a record that is significantly longer than the messy, chaotic Tusk, but without its inspired insanity or depth of sound and character. Here, even if most songs are in the four-minute ballpark, they all feel longer, partially because the album clocks in at nearly 80 minutes and the sequencing flows as it was designed by committee. So, Say You Will winds up occupying a strange middle ground, often feeling as if it was Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks’ albums bouncing around on shuffle play, but also occasionally flashing moments that are purely, satisfyingly Fleetwood Mac. Although there are occasional misguided attempts to modernize the songs — most notably drum loops on some of Nicks’ songs — none of the songs sound as if the band were forcing themselves to sound contemporary. Sure, it sounds commercial, but that’s the band’s idiom — what’s important is that it never sounds compromised, it sounds as if the band is at once trying too hard while being unwilling to sacrifice individual moments for the greater good. So, Say You Will straddles many lines at once. Nicks’ material is better-realized than many of her recent albums, but Buckingham’s always sounds as if it should be wilder than it is (it should all sound as unrestrained as his guitar, which is continually surprising throughout the record). It never sounds like classic Fleetwood Mac, nor does it sound modern. It often sounds like solo albums, but without the freedom that allows. Most of these problems derive merely from the length. Cut out half of the record — have it weigh in at nine or ten songs and run no longer than 45 minutes — and it would have been a good, solid comeback, perhaps even eclipsing the uneven Tango in the Night. But there are too many songs, simply too much to make Say You Will work, even if there is enough to admire to make you wish it did.
Tracklist:
01. Fleetwood Mac – What’s The World Coming To (03:48)
02. Fleetwood Mac – Murrow Turning Over In His Grave (04:12)
03. Fleetwood Mac – Illume (9-11) (04:51)
04. Fleetwood Mac – Thrown Down (04:02)
05. Fleetwood Mac – Miranda (04:18)
06. Fleetwood Mac – Red Rover (03:58)
07. Fleetwood Mac – Say You Will (03:49)
08. Fleetwood Mac – Peacekeeper (04:11)
09. Fleetwood Mac – Come (05:59)
10. Fleetwood Mac – Smile At You (04:33)
11. Fleetwood Mac – Running Through The Garden (04:34)
12. Fleetwood Mac – Silver Girl (03:59)
13. Fleetwood Mac – Steal Your Heart Away (03:33)
14. Fleetwood Mac – Bleed To Love Her (04:06)
15. Fleetwood Mac – Everybody Finds Out (04:29)
16. Fleetwood Mac – Destiny Rules (04:26)
17. Fleetwood Mac – Say Goodbye (03:26)
18. Fleetwood Mac – Goodbye Baby (03:50)