Fleetwood Mac
1987-11-28
Tango in The Night Tour
Salt Lake City, Utah
Soundboard Recording
160 kbps
Artwork Included
CD 1:
01. Say You Love Me
02. The Chain
03. Dreams
04. Isn't it Midnight
05. Oh Well
06. Seven Wonders
07. Rattlesnake Shake
08. Over My Head
09. Gold Dust Woman
10. Don't Let Me Down Again
11. Has Anyone Ever Written Anything For You
12. Loved Another Woman
CD 2:
01. Brown Eyes
02. Little Lies
03. Stand Back
04. You Make Lovin' Fun
05. Go Your Own Way
06. Blue Letter
07. Don't Stop
08. Songbird
Fleetwod Mac has been a long time supporter of Hungerthon, often donating signed memorabilia for the annual charity auctions. In addition, the band he also participated in WhyHunger's 'Summer Meals Rock for Kids' program, helping to raise funds to ensure that school children who receive free or reduced in-school meal programs during the school year are fed during the summer months as well.
Today's psot goes back to a tumultuous time in Fleetwood Mac's long storied but often volatile history. In April 1987, Fleetwood Mac released the album Tango In The Night, which quickly became their biggest selling disc since Rumours, 10 years earlier. In the US, the album went triple platinum and 4 singles reached the Billboard Top 20: "Big Love" (#5), "Little Lies" (#4), "Everywhere" (#14) and "Seven Wonders" (#19). The album was even more successful in the United Kingdom where it reached #1 three times during 1987-88 and it was the seventh biggest selling album of the 1980s. It is still one of the UK's Top 50 best selling albums of all time. In the midst of that success, however, the band suddenly began to come apart. In August, Lindsay Buckingham left Fleetwood Mac, after a heated argument with the rest of the band. Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks, Christine McVie and John McVie decided to carry on, drafting Billy Burnette and Rick Vito to play guitar and provide additional vocals. The new line up hit the road that fall in support of Tango In The Night. This soundboard captures them on November 28, 1987, 29 years ago today, in Salt Lake City.