Who are some of your biggest influences as a guitar player?
You did a bunch of solo records in the Seventies and Eighties. Did it frustrate you that none of them found a big audience? It seems like this band existed since Stevie was busy with her solo career, and Mick wanted to keep going. Getting back to when I was asked to join the band, I was in the studio with Roy. Mick goes, “Can you join Fleetwood Mac? We’d need you to get free from all your contracts and everything.” I’d just been nominated for my record [] for Best New Country Artist. Things were starting to go somewhere. I had to get out of my deal with Curb MCA. They weren’t happy about that since I just got the nomination.Not at all. How can you? It was Fleetwood Mac.
We rehearsed the songs. Everyone got along great. We did our first date in Kansas City. It was fantastic. I don’t think we got a bad review on thattour until we got to Pittsburgh. The critic said, “Billy Burnette merely aped Lindsey’s parts,” which I did. Rick [Vito] and I played the stuff to the T of how it was supposed to be played. We were both guitar players, and we could hit the parts. In fact, the song “Everywhere,” Christine asked me to play that song and sing those parts.
He did mostly the lead stuff. I did the parts that were on the records. We got together and worked it out. We’d known each other for years, and Rick was a huge Peter Green fan. In fact, he did a Peter Green song in the show. I did “Oh Well.” Rick did “I Love Another Woman.” We split up the parts. We knew what we were doing before we got with the band.
No. The problem was that Stevie and Lindsey had a rift at the band meeting when I joined the band. Something happened there.I don’t think they were more frustrated than I was. The business was changing. I knew it. I don’t think the band really knew it, or cared as much as I did. I just wanted to have hits and be loved by the masses like they were. When you step onstage with Fleetwood Mac, you know that Stevie is the star of that show. Everybody knows that, in the band, and outside the band.
Source: Entertainment Trends (entertainmenttrends.net)
Great article, thanks.
Behind the Mask is one of the most underrated albums ever. Still listen to it on the regular. Hard Feelings, a quintessential break up song, got me through a lot of bad times.
Isn't that Rick Vito?
What an interview, enjoyed that.
He was excellent.
He certainly had regrets during Fleetwood Mac's heyday.
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