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FLEETWOOD MAC
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Bare Trees
By Lawrence David Lanberg
May 19, 2004
Rating: 7.5
The energetic, highly ambitious, widely diverse (some say disjointed), and in places
slightly artsy sounds on this transitional Fleetwood Mac album effectively veiled the
shaky insecurity that was beginning to disintegrate the harried band. Bare Trees
wound up being a rather uncharacteristic F. Mac album, serving up tracks that one could
confidently classify as Good, Rocking Music. As with any solid music album, though, it was
interspersed with occasional bland filler songs
yet this writer strongly recommends Bare
Trees for any walk of Rock music fan, especially those who had found themselves
unimpressed by other Mac albums.
It was 1972 and Fleetwood Mac was still working at a frenzied pace, desperately trying to
land a reliable (and profitable) fan base in the States. The bands unofficial front
man by default was a mentally troubled, chaotic guitarist named Danny Kirwan, who
frequently fought with the bands newest member - a then unknown American
folk-guitarist Bob Welch. Welch personified the laid-back California hippie
style and had been hired just a year prior, largely to fill a void and be a background
player for these nomadic British travelers. Meanwhile Christine McVie, wife of bassist
John, had been hired two years prior to provide augmentary piano sounds. By the time Bare
Trees was recorded, Christine was beginning to assert her own material
sterile, concise and affable tunes.
The album opens with a surprising dark rocker, Child of Mine, giving a rousing
feel of a garage band playing their frustrations out. But for listeners that are more
versed in frills and complexities, the initial grab of this number may be lost by the time
of its second minute. Three tracks down is the hallmark of this album
the bouncy and
eclectic rocker Bare Trees. Kirwan and Welch actually sound as though they are
enjoying playing together on this one, with Danny doing some distinguished
pseudo-Nashville-style picking on his lead. The confident and catchy guitar sounds on
Bare Trees title track juts from a bold, Biker Boogie bass foundation by John
McVie
with Mick also sounding in unusual form on his drum kit, a crisp yet prominent
flow adding its own touch to the track. This is one of those rare tunes that youd
wish would go on for ten minutes or longer.
Homeward Bound is a really enjoyable rocker also, but is very weird in that it
is actually a Christine McVie song. What possessed her, here, is unknown but the listener
will not at all question the irony. That one opens with a loud, driving guitar solo and
also closes with one (!) it sounds as though it is Bob Welch doing the deed on this
one while trying to test his abilities on lead electric. Sunny Side of
Heaven, a short and picturesque instrumental and Welchs more characteristic
The Ghost are also memorable parts of the Bare Trees album
these
last two mentioned place the listener into a more ethereal mode.
An uncomfortable time for Fleetwood Mac, a period the surviving members would just as soon
forget about, but this album that resulted is the perfect rock album for one to reach for,
when looking for a pleasurable diversion from their routine listening.
To listen to some sound clips from Bare Trees,
or to buy it click on: Bare
Trees
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