Consequently, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks split songwriting duties between them, supplying nine songs each to make an epic 18-track album. Released in 2003, ‘Say You Will’ is Fleetwood Mac’s last studio album to date – and the first since 1970 not to feature any songs written by Christine McVie, who appears on a couple of tracks, ‘Steal Your Heart Away’ and ‘Bleed To Love Her’, but otherwise sits this one out. ‘The Dance’ was originally recorded at a studio in California for an MTV special before being released as an album and brilliantly intimate VHS/DVD – yes, that really is Courtney Love fan-girling in the audience and yes, Stevie Nicks does look like she’s placing a curse on Lindsey Buckingham when she sings ‘Silver Springs’.
Fleetwood mac albums in order mac#
Though each of the band’s songwriting triad contributes a perfectly respectable new tune, Fleetwood Mac essentially deliver an awesome Greatest Hits set here, culminating in a rousing rendition of ‘Don’t Stop’, which by this point had been reinvented as Bill Clinton’s political campaign trail anthem. OK, so it’s a live album, but 1997’s ‘The Dance’ feels worthy of inclusion because it reunited the classic Rumours era lineup – Lindsey Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood, Christine McVie, John McVie and Stevie Nicks – for the first time in a decade. Here’s a look back at the albums recorded by the band’s current touring line-up, ranked in order of greatness.
![fleetwood mac albums in order fleetwood mac albums in order](https://www.bear-family.com/media/image/96/cb/89/0636551083225.jpg)
Just look at 40 million selling R&B behemoth ‘Rumours’ for god sake. Fleetwood Mac, purveyors of pure and unfiltered pop gold, aren’t just a ridiculously successful hit factory, they also made a ton of ace albums.