All Over Again Fleetwood Mac 2018

1995 studio album past Fleetwood Mac

Time
Timecdmac.jpg
Studio album past

Fleetwood Mac

Released x October 1995
Recorded 1994–1995
Studio
  • Sea Way (Hollywood)
  • Sunset Sound (Hollywood)
Genre
  • Stone
  • country rock
Length sixty:eighteen
Label Warner Bros.
Producer
  • Fleetwood Mac
  • Richard Dashut
  • John Jones
  • Ray Kennedy
Fleetwood Mac chronology
Backside the Mask
(1990)
Fourth dimension
(1995)
The Trip the light fantastic toe
(1997)
Singles from Time
  1. "I Practice"
    Released: x October 1995
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [1]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music [2]

Time is the 16th studio album by British-American stone band Fleetwood Mac, released on x October 1995. This album features a unique line-upward for the band featuring the addition of former Traffic guitarist Dave Stonemason and state vocalist Bekka Bramlett (girl of Delaney and Bonnie). Lindsey Buckingham, who had left Fleetwood Mac in 1987, makes an appearance every bit a backing vocalizer on one track, but Time is the merely Fleetwood Mac album since 1974's Heroes Are Hard to Detect non to feature any contribution from Stevie Nicks.

The anthology received unfavorable reviews from critics and was a commercial disappointment, failing to chart in the US and peaking at number 47 in the UK.

Background [edit]

The new lineup toured in July 1994 with Steve Thoma deputizing for Christine McVie – McVie had retired from touring in 1990. A second leg of the tour began in April 1995 with dates in America, Europe and Japan. Jeremy Spencer, one of the ring's original guitarists, joined the group on stage for their Tokyo operation.[3]

Fleetwood mentioned in his autobiography that Christine McVie did non originally intend to participate on the album (she had technically quit in 1990) but that Warner Bros. had insisted she announced. As such, her five featured songs were recorded separately from the full band and all guitar parts on these were played by session musician Michael Thompson, although Baton Burnette is featured on the anthology's only single, "I Do", which only charted in Canada.[4] "Hollywood" alludes to the homesickness that would cause her to retire temporarily from the band, while "Nights in Estoril" historic time spent at Estoril in Portugal with her then-hubby Eddy Quintela, who was Portuguese himself.

Inside a year this ring line-up had carve up, with Bricklayer, Bramlett and Baton Burnette all leaving the band. Christine McVie, who had already retired from alive performances, informed the band that information technology would also be her terminal album appearance. Bramlett and Burnette recorded the Bekka & Baton album together in 1997, the same year Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks rejoined Fleetwood Mac.[three]

The band did not tour following the album's release in Oct 1995, but had (without Christine McVie) toured from July to Dec 1994, and again from Apr to September 1995.[five] The but songs from Fourth dimension to be performed at these shows were "Blow past Blow" and "Dreamin' the Dream". "All Over Again" received its kickoff alive performances on the An Evening with Fleetwood Mac bout in 2018 as a live duet between Christine McVie and Stevie Nicks, with new guitarist Neil Finn playing keyboards.[half dozen]

Songs [edit]

Another version of "Accident by Accident" had featured on the album for the 1994 World Cup the previous year. The 5-piece lineup fronted past Billy Burnette, Stonemason and Bramlett performed information technology at the tournament's launch concert along with "Dreamin' the Dream", "The Concatenation" and "Oh Well".

"Nothing Without Y'all" had originally been recorded past Delaney Bramlett, the father of Bekka, on his 1975 album Giving Birth to a Song which had featured writing contributions from Baton Burnette. An additional poetry written by Bekka ensured she got a writing credit. Aside from this her only writing contribution was "Dreamin' the Dream".

The album likewise featured a rare lead song from drummer/band leader Mick Fleetwood on the seven-infinitesimal spoken piece "These Strange Times", produced by Duran Duran producer John Jones and written with Embankment Boys co-writer Ray Kennedy. The spoken-word piece paid tribute to Peter Green and openly alluded to his songs "Man of the World" and "The Dark-green Manalishi". The third verse also alluded to Stevie Nicks' "Dreams" and Lindsey Buckingham's "Walk a Thin Line". Fleetwood'southward simply previous vocal/lyrical contribution to the grouping had been another spoken piece, "Cadger People" (from the "In the Back of My Heed" single).

Disquisitional reception [edit]

AllMusic gave the album a two star review, considering information technology to be a drib in quality from their previous efforts.[vii] It was voted number 10 in the All-Fourth dimension Worst Albums Ever Made from Colin Larkin'due south All Time Elevation 1000 Albums.[viii]

Rails list [edit]

No. Championship Writer(s) Pb vocals Length
1. "Talkin' to My Heart" Billy Burnette, Deborah Allen, Rafe Van Hoy Burnette/B. Bramlett 4:54
2. "Hollywood (Another Kind of Boondocks)" Christine McVie, Eddy Quintela C. McVie 5:45
3. "Blow by Accident" Dave Mason, John Cesario, Mark Holden Mason 4:24
four. "Winds of Modify" Kit Hain B. Bramlett four:26
5. "I Do" C. McVie, Quintela C. McVie 4:28
6. "Nix Without Yous" Delaney Bramlett, Doug Gilmore, Bekka Bramlett B. Bramlett 3:06
seven. "Dreamin' the Dream" B. Bramlett, Burnette B. Bramlett 3:43
viii. "Sooner or After" C. McVie, Quintela C. McVie 5:41
ix. "I Wonder Why" Mason, Franke Previte, Tom Fuller Bricklayer/B. Bramlett 4:28
10. "Nights in Estoril" C. McVie, Quintela C. McVie 4:47
11. "I Got It in for You lot" Burnette, Allen Burnette 4:08
12. "All Over Once more" C. McVie, Quintela C. McVie 3:36
13. "These Foreign Times" Mick Fleetwood, Ray Kennedy Fleetwood (spoken discussion) 7:07
Japanese Bonus Track
No. Title Writer(s) Length
fourteen. "Piddling Lies (Extended Version)" C. McVie, Quintela 6:07

Personnel [edit]

Fleetwood Mac

  • Christine McVie – keyboards, vocals
  • Dave Mason – guitars, vocals
  • Billy Burnette – guitars, vocals
  • John McVie – bass guitar
  • Mick Fleetwood – drums, percussion, guitars (13), vocals (thirteen)
  • Bekka Bramlett – vocals

Additional musicians

  • Scott Pinkerton – synthesizer programming
  • Steve Thoma – keyboards (3, four, 9)
  • John Jones – keyboards (13)
  • Michael Thompson – guitars (2, 5, 8, 10, 12)
  • Fred Tackett – trumpet (eight)
  • Lindsey Buckingham – backing vocals (half-dozen)
  • Lucy Fleetwood – backing vocals (13)

Production [edit]

  • Fleetwood Mac – producers (one, three, 4, 6, 7, 9, 11)
  • Richard Dashut – producer (i, two, 4-12)
  • Christine McVie – producer (2, 5, 8, ten, 12)
  • Dave Mason – producer (3)
  • Billy Burnette – producer (seven)
  • John Jones – producer (xiii), recording (13), mixing (13)
  • Ray Kennedy – producer (13)
  • Ken Allardyce – recording (1-12), mixing (1-12)
  • Charlie Brocco – additional engineer (one-12)
  • Alan Sanderson – additional engineer (1-12), assistant engineer (1-12)
  • Allen Sides – additional engineer (1-12)
  • Jimmy Hotz – additional engineer (13)
  • David Eike – assistant engineer (1-12)
  • Richard Huredia – assistant engineer (1-12)
  • Tom Nellen – assistant engineer (1-12)
  • Dave Shiffman – assistant engineer (1-12)
  • Stephen Marcussen – mastering
  • Don Tyler – mastering assistant
  • Scott Pinkerton – product assistant
  • John Courage – product coordinator
  • Mick Fleetwood – comprehend concept
  • Gabrielle Raumberger – art direction
  • Frank Chi – design
  • Lance Staedler – ring photography
  • Dale McRaven – cover photography
  • Bonnie Nelson – encompass photography

Studios

  • Recorded and Mixed at Ocean Way Recording (Hollywood, California).
  • Boosted recording at Sunset Sound Recorders (Hollywood, California).
  • Mastered at Precision Mastering (Hollywood, California).

Charts [edit]

Chart (1995) Peak
position
High german Albums Chart[nine] 92
UK Albums Nautical chart[10] 47
Dutch Album Charts[11] 59

References [edit]

  1. ^ Ruhlmann, William. "Fleetwood Mac Time review". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  2. ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). Encyclopedia of Popular Music (quaternary ed.). Oxford Academy Press. ISBN978-0195313734.
  3. ^ a b Evans, Mike (2011). Fleetwood Mac: The Definitive History. New York: Sterling. pp. 257–267. ISBN978-1-4027-8630-three.
  4. ^ Canada, Library and Athenaeum (17 July 2013). "Particular 2851". www.bac-lac.gc.ca . Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  5. ^ The Time Tour Archived 26 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Fleetwood Mac Debuts New Lineup at Tour Opener in Tulsa: Setlist & Videos". JamBase. 4 October 2018. Retrieved two June 2019.
  7. ^ Ruhlmann, William, "Time - Fleetwood Mac", AllMusic , retrieved 22 August 2020
  8. ^ Colin Larkin (2000). All Time Pinnacle thousand Albums (3rd ed.). Virgin Books. p. 28. ISBN0-7535-0493-6.
  9. ^ "Home - Offizielle Deutsche Charts" (Enter "Fleetwood Mac" in the search bar) (in German). GfK Amusement Charts. Retrieved xiii March 2017.
  10. ^ "Fleetwood Mac | Artist". Official Charts. Retrieved 24 November 2018.
  11. ^ "dutchcharts.nl: Discographie: Fleetwood Mac" (ASP). Hung Medien (in Dutch). MegaCharts. Retrieved half dozen May 2014.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_%28Fleetwood_Mac_album%29

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