Fleetwood Mac - Fleetwood Mac (Hybrid SACD, Limited Numbered Edition) - Audiophile

Fleetwood Mac - Fleetwood Mac (Hybrid SACD)

€45,00
banner
banner
NOUS NE POUVONS PAS NOUS ENGAGER SUR UNE DATE DE LIVRAISON POUR LES VINYLES & CD/SACD EN PRE-COMMANDE
Les Labels prennent parfois plusieurs mois pour livrer les vinlyes & CD/SACD en pré-commande
worldwide-delivery
La TVA est incluse dans le prix pour les pays de l'Union Européenne, et ajustée sur la base du pays de destination au moment du paiement.
L'expédition est gratuite au sein de l'Union Européenne au dessus de 99€ d'achat, sauf pour certaines destinations, et jusqu'à 50kg. Au dessus de 50kg, frais d'expédition sur demande à contact@audiosounmusic.com. Il n'y a pas de politique de retour pour les pays hors Union Européenne.



ORDER LIMITED TO ONE ITEM PER CUSTOMER

Drums: Mick Fleetwood [click here to see more products featuring Mick Fleetwood]

Lindsey Buckingham – electric, acoustic, and resonator guitar, banjo, vocals

Mick Fleetwood – drums, percussion

Christine McVie – keyboards, synthesizer, vocals

John McVie – bass guitar

Stevie Nicks – vocals

 

 

1 Hybrid SACD, Mini-LP-Style Gatefold Packaging

Limited numbered edition 

Original analog Master tape : YES

Stereo

Studio

Label : MOFI

Original Label : Reprise Records

Originally released in 1975

Recorded February–August 1976 at Criteria (Miami), Record Plant (Sausalito and Los Angeles), Zellerbach Auditorium (Berkeley), Wally Heider's Studio 3 (Hollywood), Davlen Studio (North Hollywood)

Engineered by Ken Caillat, Richard Dashut

Mixed by Ken Caillat, Bill Inglot, Brian Kehew

Original session produced by Fleetwood Mac, Ken Caillat, Richard Dashut

Engineered & Produced by Keith Olsen

Reissued in 2025

 

 

Tracks:

  1. Monday Morning
  2. Warm Ways
  3. Blue Letter
  4. Rhiannon
  5. Over My Head
  6. Crystal
  7. Say You Love Me
  8. Landslide
  9. World Turning
  10. Sugar Daddy
  11. I’m So Afraid

 

Awards:

Rolling Stone’s “500 Greatest Albums of All Time” - Ranked #182

Album of the Year at the 1977 Grammy Awards ; inducted in 2003 into the Grammy Hall of Fame

40 million copies sold worldwide, making it one of the best-selling albums of all time

 

 

Reviews :

"The band's two romantic couples - bassist John and singer-keyboard player Christine McVie, who were married; guitarist Lindsey Buckingham and vocalist Stevie Nicks, who were not - broke up during the protracted sessions for Rumours. This lent a highly charged, confessional aura to such songs as Buckingham's "Go Your Own Way," Nicks' "Dreams," Christine's "Don't Stop" and the group-composed anthem to betrayal, "The Chain." The Mac's catchy exposes, produced with California-sunshine polish, touched a nerve; Rumours, a landmark Seventies pop album, ruled Billboard's album chart for thirty-one weeks." Rolling Stone

“Rumours is the kind of album that transcends its origins and reputation, entering the realm of legend -- it's an album that simply exists outside of criticism and outside of its time, even if it thoroughly captures its era. Prior to this LP, Fleetwood Mac were moderately successful, but here they turned into a full-fledged phenomenon, with Rumours becoming the biggest-selling pop album to date. While its chart success was historic, much of the legend surrounding the record is born from the group's internal turmoil. Unlike most bands, Fleetwood Mac in the mid-'70s were professionally and romantically intertwined, with no less than two couples in the band, but as their professional career took off, the personal side unraveled. Bassist John McVie and his keyboardist/singer wife Christine McVie filed for divorce as guitarist/vocalist Lindsey Buckingham and vocalist Stevie Nicks split, with Stevie running to drummer Mick Fleetwood, unbeknown to the rest of the band. These personal tensions fueled nearly every song on Rumours, which makes listening to the album a nearly voyeuristic experience. You're eavesdropping on the bandmates singing painful truths about each other, spreading nasty lies and rumors and wallowing in their grief, all in the presence of the person who caused the heartache. Everybody loves gawking at a good public breakup, but if that was all that it took to sell a record, Richard and Linda Thompson's Shoot Out the Lights would be multi-platinum. No, what made Rumours an unparalleled blockbuster is the quality of the music. Once again masterminded by producer/songwriter/guitarist Buckingham, Rumours is an exceptionally musical piece of work -- he toughens Christine McVie and softens Nicks, adding weird turns to accessibly melodic works, which gives the universal themes of the songs haunting resonance. It also cloaks the raw emotion of the lyrics in deceptively palatable arrangements that made a tune as wrecked and tortured as "Go Your Own Way" an anthemic hit. But that's what makes Rumours such an enduring achievement -- it turns private pain into something universal. Some of these songs may be too familiar, whether through their repeated exposure on FM radio or their use in presidential campaigns, but in the context of the album, each tune, each phrase regains its raw, immediate emotional power -- which is why Rumours touched a nerve upon its 1977 release, and has since transcended its era to be one of the greatest, most compelling pop albums of all time.” AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

 


Ratings
:

Allmusic : 5 / 5 , Discogs 4,91 / 5 

 

Vu récemment