Miami Herald

Fleetwood Mac singer-songwriter

- BY MIKAEL WOOD

Christine McVie, the singer, songwriter and keyboardis­t whose dreamily optimistic tunes for Fleetwood Mac — including such radio staples as ‘‘You Make Loving Fun,’’ “Don’t Stop,” “Little Lies,” “Songbird,” and “Everywhere” — helped make the band one of the most successful acts in music history, died Wednesday. She was 79.

Her death was announced by her family in a statement that said she’d “passed away peacefully” at a hospital following “a short illness.” The statement didn’t specify the hospital’s location. McVie, who lived in London, told Rolling Stone in June that she was in “quite bad health,” describing a chronic back problem that made it difficult for her to stand.

“There are no words to describe our sadness at the passing of Christine McVie,” Fleetwood Mac said on social media. “She was truly one-of-a-kind, special and talented beyond measure. She was the best musician anyone could have in their band and the best friend anyone could have in their life. Individual­ly and together, we cherished Christine deeply and are thankful for the amazing memories we have. She will be very missed.”

In a famously fractious outfit filled with competing songwriter­s — Fleetwood Mac’s classic lineup also included singers Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks along with drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie, to whom she was married (they divorced in 1976) — Christine McVie was perhaps the most-gifted hit-maker, with a natural flair for melody and a lithe, soulful voice that seemed to send her songs sailing out into the world. Onstage, her steady presence behind the keyboard provided a crucial counterwei­ght to the more dramatic figures cut by Buckingham and Nicks, whose rocky romantic relationsh­ip powered the band’s glamorous legend.

She also served as a kind of connective link between Fleetwood Mac’s early days as a British blues-rock combo and its commercial peak as a Los Angelesbas­ed soft-rock act in the 1970s and ‘80s. Among the other well-known songs she wrote for the band were “Say You Love Me,”

“Think About Me” and “Hold Me.”

Fleetwood Mac won a Grammy Award in 1978 for album of the year with “Rumours;” the band was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.

McVie was born Christine Perfect on July 12, 1943, in the village of

Bouth in northwest England. Having learned to play piano as an adolescent — her father was a college music professor — she joined the British band Chicken Shack in 1967 and scored a modest hit with a cover of Etta James’ “I’d Rather Go Blind.” She married John McVie in 1968 and joined Fleetwood Mac in 1970, not long after releasing a debut solo album called “Christine

Perfect;” Buckingham and Nicks arrived in time for the band’s self-titled 1975 LP. “Rumours.”

Christine McVie continued playing with Fleetwood Mac throughout the late ‘70s and ‘80s — “Hold Me,” from 1982’s “Mirage,” was inspired by her relationsh­ip with Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys — and she released a second solo album in 1984.

A reluctant traveler who spoke frequently of her fear of flying, McVie opted out of a Fleetwood Mac tour in the early ‘90s, though she later took part in “The Dance,” a hugely successful live album released in 1997, after which she quit the band and moved to the English countrysid­e.

She returned to Fleetwood Mac in 2014 for a reunion tour and made a 2017 duo album with Buckingham.

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