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Thursday, October 15

Big Mac


The biggest-selling album in 1977 was Fleetwood Mac's Rumours which shifted so many copies (40 million!) it went way beyond being merely a successful record into the stratosphere inhabited by cultural juggernauts like Saturday Night Fever and Thriller — before those two came along it was the best-selling album of all-time (it's now the 8th). I bought a copy too even though I don't remember particularly being a fan of the group or any of the singles from it (none of which even cracked the Top 20 in England) because I thought an album that had become such a monster was something I should buy as a 15-year-old with growing pretensions to being a "serious" music fan (though I still didn't "get" punk.) I bought the mega-selling Dark Side of The Moon for the same reason — "you have to buy it!" a schoolfriend had said to me — but that turned out to be a dull snoozer of an album (God, what a bore Roger Waters is) that I only played a few times while Rumours was actually a decent record, though I'm still puzzled why it sold the cartloads it did — it's good but not that good. I didn't particularly care for their more folky, mandolin-y leanings but I did love the bright AM pop songs of Christine McVie who is still my favourite voice in the group.

Download: You Make Loving Fun (alternate outtake) - Fleetwood Mac (mp3)
Buy: "Rumours" (Expanded Edition)" (album)

Obviously there were other, more radical, things happening in 1977 and I imagine that a lot of people who didn't buy Rumours bought the first Clash album instead and saw rich, long-haired soft-rockers like Fleetwood Mac as representatives of the rock ruling class who would be among the first up against the wall after the punk revolution. So by the time they followed it up over two years later (an eternity back then) the musical landscape had completely changed, supposedly making the group and their brand of sunny Californian AOR irrelevant, at least in England — I'd had my own musical epiphany too during that time and was now firmly on the side of the revolutionaries.

But surprisingly, the Tusk album didn't sound like they had just spent the previous two years lounging by swimming pools and smugly counting their royalties but were actually very aware that there had been a musical earthquake while they'd been gone and were open to it. Instead of Rumours: Part Deux it was a sprawling, often "difficult" record full of banging primitive beats and nervy jerky rhythms that sounded like Lindsey Buckingham (in particular) been listening to a lot of Talking Heads and probably The Fall and Gang of Four too (I vaguely remember him name-checking them in interviews), it was startling to hear these laid-back hippies making a noise like this:

Download: The Ledge - Fleetwood Mac (mp3)
Download: What Makes You Think You're The One - Fleetwood Mac (mp3)
Buy: "Tusk" (album)

Too startling for some people I guess as the album "only" sold four million copies (boo hoo), though the bizarre Tusk single was a bigger hit than anything off Rumours had been in England. It must have been a nightmare trying to follow up the biggest selling album ever so they decided to not even bother and do the "interesting" thing instead. So I ended up buying that album too but not because I felt any obligation to either, turns out these oldsters weren't that bad after all and maybe didn't deserve to get shot.

4 Comments:

At 4:39 PM, Blogger Davy H said...

An album by The Backstreet Boys that no-one remembers sold 40million!!!! I mean, what the -?

 
At 12:58 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I didn't get to fully listen to Rumours at the time as it was too Adult Contemporary Rock! For me, Frampton Comes Alive was THE album of the times.

 
At 11:00 AM, Anonymous Lynchie from Aberdeen said...

Thankyou for the "You Make Loving Fun (alternate outtake)" which i hadn't heard before.

Always thought Rumours was a great album and that Fleetwood and McVie were one of pop's best rhythm sections...

 
At 8:51 AM, Blogger Hallway Of Memories said...

I grew up on Long Island, and I was 10 in 1977. the Rumours album was EVERYWHERE, am radio, TV, you name it. Punk didn't exist (yet) for us and disco was "cool"....ugh. But, anyway, the reason TUSK didn't sell well was , amoungst other reasons, many FM radio stations played the album in it's entirety a week or two before the album was released, and most of us just taped it off the radio. ....it was the beginning of music piracy

 

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