Boston Herald

The Buck stops here for Fleetwood Mac

- By MIKAEL WOOD LOS ANGELES TIMES

Did he jump or was he pushed?

In the matter of Lindsey Buckingham’s departure from Fleetwood Mac, the answer isn’t yet clear.

On Monday, the veteran rock band issued a statement announcing that Buckingham — the singer and guitarist with whom Fleetwood Mac made such genre-defining albums as “Rumours” and “Tango in the Night” — would not be performing with the group on its upcoming tour.

Rolling Stone said that Buckingham had been fired over a disagreeme­nt pertaining to the tour; Variety cited a source who said Buckingham’s leaving was harder to classify. (A representa­tive for the band said she wasn’t authorized to speak on Buckingham’s behalf.)

Either way, the speed with which the guy was replaced — on tour, Fleetwood Mac will be joined by Mike Campbell of Tom Petty’s Heartbreak­ers and Neil Finn of Crowded House — suggests that Buckingham’s former bandmates weren’t exactly tripping over themselves to keep him off the ledge.

So: Poor Lindsey, you might thinking.

Dude puts his own career on hold to team up with an unremarkab­le English blues-rock band, then quickly transforms that band into one of the world’s most popular acts — and this is the thanks he gets?

But maybe stepping away from Fleetwood Mac, voluntaril­y or not, was actually a smart move for Buckingham, at least in a creative sense.

Anyone paying attention over the past few years could tell he didn’t seem to be having much fun with the group he’d been with (on and off) since the mid-1970s, when he and his then-girlfriend Stevie Nicks teamed up with Mick Fleetwood, John McVie and Christine McVie to make the chart-topping “Fleetwood Mac” album that spun off hits like “Rhiannon” and “Landslide.”

Sure, Christine McVie’s surprising return to the group in 2014 (after a long break that began in 1998) appeared to go some way toward recharging Buckingham’s enthusiasm.

At L.A.’s Forum that year, he looked and sounded genuinely psyched to be playing McVie songs like “Little Lies” and “Everywhere” again, even as the concerts kept him from concentrat­ing on the idiosyncra­tic solo work that seems truly to float his boat these days.

By last summer, though, Buckingham was sleepwalki­ng through Fleetwood Mac performanc­es like the band’s miserable headlining set at the Classic West festival at Dodger Stadium — a gig he openly described to me in advance as a cash-grab.

And yet it wasn’t the case that Buckingham had simply run out of inspiratio­n.

Just weeks before the Classic West, he and McVie released an excellent duo record that demonstrat­ed how much juice he still has as a songwriter and a studio tinkerer.

And as a performer too: Last May, I spent an afternoon watching Buckingham and McVie rehearse on a Culver City soundstage in preparatio­n for a run of shows behind their record. The playing was taut and energetic, the singing full of color and energy — no doubt because they were doing new stuff as opposed to the oldies they’ve each played a zillion times before.

Which makes you wonder if the disagreeme­nt Rolling Stone pointed to about Fleetwood Mac’s upcoming tour had to do with what the band was going to play on the road.

If anyone in the group was likely to advocate for more obscure tunes — or maybe some from the band’s most recent recording, 2013’s overlooked “Extended Play” EP — it was Buckingham, who famously steered Fleetwood Mac toward the deranged “Tusk” in the wake of “Rumours’” runaway success.

But perhaps that idea was met with less warmth than he’d anticipate­d. (Also possible: Buckingham wanted more money than anyone was willing to give him — likely more, anyway, than Campbell or Finn will get for doing his job.)

Whatever friction led to his departure, it wasn’t the first time Buckingham had experience­d misgivings about playing in Fleetwood Mac. In the late ’80s, of course, he quit after “Tango in the Night,” only to come back a decade later.

Nobody’s keeping him from doing his own thing now.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO ?? GOING HIS OWN WAY: Lindsey Buckingham won’t be a part of Fleetwood Mac’s upcoming tour.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO GOING HIS OWN WAY: Lindsey Buckingham won’t be a part of Fleetwood Mac’s upcoming tour.

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