Christine McVie (album)
Christine McVie | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 27 January 1984 | |||
Recorded | 1983 | |||
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Genre | ||||
Length | 43:48 | |||
Label | Warner Bros. | |||
Producer | Russ Titelman | |||
Christine McVie chronology | ||||
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Singles from Christine McVie | ||||
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Christine McVie is the second solo album by the English musician, singer, and songwriter Christine McVie, released on 27 January 1984, by Warner Bros. Records.[2][3] It was McVie's first solo recording in over a decade, since her 1970 self-titled album (released under her maiden name), and featured guest contributions by Steve Winwood, Eric Clapton, Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood.[4]
It includes two singles that reached the top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, "Got a Hold on Me" and "Love Will Show Us How", peaking at numbers 10 and 30, respectively. The album peaked at number 26 and spent 23 weeks on the Billboard 200 chart.[5] In the UK, it reached number 58 on the UK Albums Chart.
Background
[edit]Before joining Fleetwood Mac, Christine McVie recorded a solo album titled Christine Perfect in 1970.[4] However, she later expressed a strong dislike for her debut album,[6] and explained that she did not intend to launch that "first, disastrous solo career," arguing that she was "very immature emotionally", was not "at all ready for it",[4] and that she did not feel "artistically together" until she joined Fleetwood Mac.[7]
Many of McVie's bandmates —Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks and Mick Fleetwood— had already begun working on their solo careers since 1980, after the end of the Tusk Tour.[8] She later admitted that she had wanted to record a solo album for a long time, but felt "nervous about it".[9] McVie explained that she was not ready when "everybody else was doing it", did not want "that kind of pressure or responsibility", and that she was "insecure" about her material,[10] but added: "After all, I'd been so used to being a fifth of a band, and suddenly it had reached a point where this record was expected of me."[9]
It was not until the end of the promotional tour for Mirage, when the band went on hiatus to keep working on their separate projects, that McVie contemplated recording what she considered to be her first "real" solo album.[11][12] She explained that, at first, touring with Fleetwood Mac had left her "shattered", making her want to "spend time at home," fixing up her house, and getting to know her dogs again.[12] However, she "inevitably" got bored and "started spending more time in the music room", as she was "ready for something adventurous, like stepping out the front door."[13]
On 5 February 1983, Christine McVie revealed that she was getting songs together for a solo album, with the intention of releasing it by Christmas.[11] Although McVie had previously produced one of Robbie Patton's solo albums, she still felt unprepared to tackle the responsibility on her own album, and hired Russ Titelman as producer.[14] McVie did not expect the recording sessions to begin until June 1983, as Titelman was occupied working on Paul Simon's Hearts and Bones during the first half of the year.[7][11]
She began working on the project with guitarist and friend Todd Sharp, whom she met in 1978 when he was a member Bob Welch's band.[3][15] They spent three months preparing material for the album,[16] and when they had a few "strong songs together", McVie decided that it was time to "tackle the project."[15] Since Sharp had already been her first choice as guitar player for the record, she proceeded to recruit George Hawkins as her bassist.[15] He had previously played bass on Lindsey Buckingham's song "Trouble", and had also worked with Sharp on Mick Fleetwood's first solo album, The Visitor.[17][18]
They were stilling missing a drummer and, at the recommendation of Titelman, ultimately selected Steve Ferrone, who had previously worked with Titelman at a Paul Simon recording session in New York City,[15] and had recently departed from the Average White Band.[19]: 33:55–34:31 Ferrone originally declined Titelman's offer, as he already had prior obligations with George Benson, but eventually reconsidered after further thought.[20] Although Sharp and McVie were initially worried that Ferrone's playing was too "slick" and "sophisticated" for the project, they changed their minds after he ran through two songs with the band.[15][19]: 33:55–34:31
Recording
[edit]The majority of the album was recorded at Mountain Studios, where McVie had asked her manager, John Courage, to book her.[3] Located in Montreux, Switzerland, the studio was at the time owned by Queen and operated by engineer David Richards, who had been highly recommended by Arif Mardin.[16] Richards was also the one in charge of recording the town's famous Jazz Festival.[3]
McVie and her collaborators went into Mountain Studios on 26 July 1983, with the plan to be there for six weeks and cut basic tracks.[15] Before going to Switzerland, McVie and Sharp had had already done an important amount of preliminary work,[13] recording a series of demos on a Teac four-track machine in her music room.[21] Sharp later commented that they "breezed through the record" as a result of their preparations.[19]: 34:37–34:43 Since the group had already done "eight songs in ten days", they decided to "forge ahead and stay there to finish the record."[15] The album's recording process lasted three months, with additional work taking place in the UK.[13][16]
The recording facility itself was a multi-purpose building that contained, among other things, a casino and a coffee shop.[16] Basic tracking took place in a large hall where the Montreux Jazz Festival was held.[16] The drums were positioned in the center of the room, which resulted in some "great live drum sounds" according to McVie.[16]
Following two weeks of initial recording in Switzerland, the band took a brief break while also fleshing out some lyrics.[22] Around this time, McVie reached out to Steve Winwood and asked him to collaborate on a song with her, to which he agreed.[22][23] She and Sharp traveled to his home studio in Gloucester, where they stayed for over a week, and worked on what became "Ask Anybody".[16][19]: 36:07–36:20 McVie then invited Mick Fleetwood to come over and play drums on the track.[23][24] This was the only song on the album not tracked live; instead, Fleetwood overdubbed some tom-toms over a LinnDrum pattern, which he then replaced with full drums.[15]
Due to time constraints, a second recording session with Winwood was later arranged, during which he added keyboards to "Ask Anybody", while McVie and Sharp worked on additional background vocals for the song.[16] Winwood also expressed interest in singing on "One in a Million", and at McVie's suggestion, took the second verse.[16] Although the song was not initially conceived as a duet, McVie felt "it worked out really nicely."[23] During this session, Winwood also contributed Prophet synthesizer "fills" to "The Smile I Live For".[16]
After the first session with Winwood, McVie and Sharp traveled to London and spent an afternoon at Olympic Studios to work with Eric Clapton.[22][19]: 36:32–38:00 McVie had asked him to play the guitar solo on "The Challenge",[16] and he recorded his part in roughly an hour.[22] Ray Cooper came into the studio the day after to overdub percussion.[22] McVie had to miss the session and was unable to meet him.[16]
Both Lindsey Buckingham and John McVie visited Montreux when the album was being recorded.[23] John, who was on vacation with his family, did not play on the album as all bass parts had already been completed.[23] Buckingham, meanwhile, was in London in search of a producer for his upcoming Go Insane album, and accepted McVie's invitation to visit the studio.[23] She wanted him to "hear everything" and although she invited him for a vacation, he "couldn't stay away from the studio" and contributed guitar and vocal parts,[23] including a solo on "The Smile I Live For" and harmonies on "Who's Dreaming This Dream".[16]
Finally, the album was then mixed in New York City by producer Russ Titelman and Elliot Scheiner, a process which took around two weeks.[16][22]
An MTV Christine McVie Special was broadcast in January 1984 which, as a presentation, took a "behind-the-scenes look at the recording of Christine McVie's solo album."[25]
Outtake
[edit]"Too Much is Not Enough", was recorded as a studio jam during the recording sessions, but was not ultimately included in the album.[13][26] McVie explained that, although it was a "really good and raunchy rock and roll" track, she was not satisfied with the vocals.[13] She added that, if she had re-recorded it, she might have considered releasing it as a B-side.[13] No other unused songs were recorded, as McVie said: "We didn't over-record like some bands do; we were very compact."[13]
"Too Much is Not Enough" was performed in some of the live shows from her 1984 tour.[27] Jeremy Spangler of Deseret News described it as "exciting" and thought that it was a "promising indication that more traditional McVie love songs may be soon forthcoming."[27]
Writing and composition
[edit]It was not until 1982's Mirage that McVie started to collaborate with other songwriters on her compositions,[16] as her previous work had mostly been written alone.[13][28] She chose to continue this approach for her solo album, as it gave her writing a different direction and seemed to "lift" her out of her insecurities.[16] McVie also explained that an entire record of her own songs might have become "tiresome"[16] and emphasized that she valued "exciting and innovative" content over having it be solely hers.[13] This led her to co-write half of the album's songs with guitarist Todd Sharp, who also contributed three other tracks.[4] Reflecting on the experience, she said:
"It was fun co-writing with someone. I knew that Todd Sharp was the guitar player I wanted, but I wasn't aware when I made that decision that I might do as much writing with him as I actually did. We are very compatible writers, and I think the songs are refreshing. To me, it's an exciting record even bearing in mind that it's just me singing throughout it."[13]
The album's two main singles, "Got a Hold on Me" and "Love Will Show Us How" were written by McVie and Sharp. McVie later revealed that "Got a Hold on Me" was totally fictional, saying: "at the time I wrote it no one did have a hold on me."[13] McVie wrote some of the lyrics to "Ask Anybody" three years prior, about her relationship with Dennis Wilson,[13] but the song lacked a melody.[29] According to McVie, Steve Winwood "found just the right ambiance, the right vibes, for the words." McVie later recalled of her collaboration with Winwood that:
"At first, we were both very edgy and nervous about working together so we went down to the pub and socked back a few pints, and then we went to his studio. The song really came easily. We just got about six different ideas together and chose the best one."[13]
"The Challenge" according to McVie, was a song "about life and remorse and rejection",[30] that she named after her ex-husband's, John McVie's, boat.[16] Since John and Eric Clapton had played in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers together, she decided to give Clapton the guitar solo on the song as it was a "nice connection."[16]
Danny Douma, who had opened for Fleetwood Mac during the Tusk Tour,[31] came up with the title of "Who's Dreaming This Dream", which he co-wrote with Sharp.[22] "I'm the One" was solely written by Sharp and presented to McVie, who agreed to record the song.[22] Sharp later remembered that that she "really liked it and was very encouraging to me at that time with my writing".[22] "Keeping Secrets" was a co-write with Sharp and Alan Pasqua, who first met Sharp while doing session work.[32] Pasqua recalled that he gravitated toward Sharp's songwriting and vocals, which compelled him to collaborate on a song together.[32] Sharp brought the song to McVie, she liked it and they recorded it. Sharp also co-wrote "So Excited" with McVie and future Fleetwood Mac member Billy Burnette, a track which featured guitar work by Buckingham.[4]
McVie's sole solo composition on the album, "The Smile I Live For", was written in Montreux during the break between the two sessions with Winwood.[13][22]
Release
[edit]Christine McVie was released on 28 January 1984,[2] and was promoted with four singles. The album's two main singles, "Got a Hold on Me" and "Love Will Show Us How" both reached the top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at numbers 10 and 30, respectively.[33] "Got a Hold on Me" also spent four weeks at number 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart.[33] Music videos were made for both of these singles: the one for "Got a Hold on Me" was filmed in a studio in London,[13] produced by Jon Roseman and directed by Mike Brady,[34] while the one for "Love Will Show Us How" featured Paul Bartel as a "symbolism-crazed director."[10] "I'm the One" was released as the album's single but did not chart.[1] Billboard described the song as a "punchy, percussive tune" that expressed interpersonal dissatisfaction.[35] "One in a Million" also reached the top thirty on the Mainstream Rock chart in February 1984.[36]
The album was reissued and digitally remastered in 1997 as part of the promotion for Fleetwood Mac's The Dance album and its accompanying North American tour.[37] In 2022, remixes of "The Challenge" and "Ask Anybody" were included on McVie's Songbird (A Solo Collection).[29] On 12 July 2023, for what would have been McVie's 80th birthday, Rhino Entertainment announced their plans to re-release Christine McVie and In the Meantime later that year.[38][39] Subsequently, on November 3rd, a remastered version of Christine McVie was issued on CD, LP, and a cola-bottle clear vinyl edition.[38][39]
Cover
[edit]The album's cover photograph was taken two hours away from London, in Wiltshire (a county partly famous for Stonehenge).[16] McVie remembered that the place looked "gorgeous" but that it "was so cold that the frost was about an inch thick on the trees."[16] The group had to be there at six in the morning and wait for the optimal lighting, which did not happen until three in the afternoon. That day, studio shots were also done for the single sleeves.[16]
Jeanette Leech of Dig! commented that the length of the photo-shoot was a "good metaphor" for the album, as it was "the product of a patient artist waiting for the perfect time."[26]
Live performances
[edit]McVie did not initially intend to tour, but changed her mind when work on Fleetwood Mac continued to be put on hold by other members' solo work.[40] She assembled a live band with some of her collaborators from the album, that consisted of: Todd Sharp on guitars, Steve Ferrone on drums, George Hawkins on bass, and Stephen Brunton on rhythm guitars,[41][42] along with guitarist Billy Burnette and McVie's then-boyfriend and keyboardist, Eddy Quintela.[13][23]
The tour took place between April and June of 1984,[23] scheduled with 34 stops, and featured The Baxter Robinson as the opening act.[43][27] The setlist included all but one of the songs from Christine McVie in addition to some of her Fleetwood Mac favorites, featuring "deep cuts" like "Just Crazy Love" (from 1973's Mystery to Me) and "Spare Me a Little of Your Love" (from 1972's Bare Trees).[40] An unreleased track from the recording sessions, "Too Much Is Not Enough", was also sometimes performed.[27]
Talking about the tour, McVie commented that it was "very different" from the Fleetwood Mac ones, stating:
"It's a lot smaller scale. We're not doing the limousine treatment this time around. This is something I haven't done in a while, playing in small places. This is a bit like the old days, actually. It's quite fun to do. However, it's nothing I'd take on as a career."[40]
MTV Concert
[edit]In December 1983, an MTV concert featuring Christine McVie was recorded at the Los Angeles Country Club.[34][44] This marked the first time, since joining Fleetwood Mac, that she performed as a solo artist and with her own band, and it primarily showcased material from her then upcoming album.[34][44] Attendance at the event was by invitation only, and a large portion of the tickets were given away through a local MTV contest.[34] The recorded concert aired on 28 January 1984.[34]
Critical reception
[edit]Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [45] |
People | B[46] |
Rolling Stone | [47] |
Robert Christgau | B+[48] |
Sounds | [49] |
Lexington Herald-Leader | 9/10[50] |
On 11 February 1984, Billboard commented that while Christine McVie "inevitably" shared Fleetwood Mac's "current melodic thrust," the material and musicians opened up a "persuasive platform".[51] The magazine highlighted how McVie flexed "her R&B muscles" on "One in a Million", simmered "midtempo blues rock", and delivered "several sweetly moody ballads."[51] The next day, Stephen Holden of The New York Times argued that since McVie's "charm lies in her beguilingly enigmatic calm", her debut album as a "solo rock star" fell "flat" in comparison to Stevie Nicks' career.[52] He found "So Excited" to be the energetic high point of the album, but thought it was due to Titelman's production rather than McVie's "friendly understated singing."[52] Furthermore, he considered the "blandness" of the songs to be a key problem of the album, which "describing typical cat-and-mouse romantic games in the terse, cliched vocabulary of late 70's Los Angeles pop", did not let McVie "meditate quietly in acoustic folk-blues settings."[52] On February 26, Rick Shefchik of the Lexington Herald-Leader gave the album a 9 rating, writing that its songs were "every bit as catchy" as anything Fleetwood Mac had recorded and that McVie's "romantic moods" were not "constantly interrupted" in it, as collaborator Todd Sharp seemed to share her "sturdy" songwriting style.[53]
The next month, on March 15, Don Shewey of Rolling Stone gave the album a two-star rating, arguing that a "long, uninterrupted stretch" of McVie singing solo tended to get "pretty boring."[47] Shewey thought her voice was "limited" in range and expressiveness and found that in the record a "rather mundane, midtempo" love song gave way to another.[47] He concluded by saying that the "sameness" of the material and of McVie's singing drove the record into a "very dull rut."[47] A few days later, People gave the album a B, writing that there was a "loose, good-time feeling" to it, with "tunes that are snappy and full of rhythmic rock and roll hooks."[46] However, they commented that the "subtle harmonic skills" that made McVie a "peerless ensemble singer and musician" with Fleetwood Mac did not necessarily translate into a solo act.[46] The magazine selected "One in a Million" as the album's "most striking track" and found that, at times, her singing was "colorless" and her keyboard work was "overshadowed by her sidemen."[46]
John Swenson of Creem wrote in May of that year that the album was less of a departure from McVie's "current day job than her first record was from Chicken Shack."[54] Swenson described McVie's songs as "eloquent and personal an account of her love life" as Joni Mitchell's, but without the "unseemly exhibitionism."[54] In relation to Steve Winwood's contributions, he said that the "opus-de-funk" "One in a Million" was a "dramatic vocal trade-off" between McVie and Winwood that "reminds you just how good a blues singer Christine is", and argued that "Ask Anybody" was McVie's "most moving vocal performance on the record" because her "gentler, introspective tone" was supported "superbly" by Winwood's "brilliantly understated" keyboard and backing vocals.[54] He concluded by stating that Christine McVie was "the finest Fleetwood Mac spinoff solo album yet."[54]
Music journalist Robert Christgau gave the album a B+, describing the songs as "unimpeachably sensible and unfailingly pleasant" and saying that, except for "The Smile I Live For", they pace "proudly by in full confidence" and "set you humming."[48] He agreed that the "proceedings" were "somnolent", but argued that it was because the "deep satisfactions" of McVie's voice were better appreciated in the company of "brighter and flightier" ones and on a "drummer who isn't Mick and a bassist who isn't John."[48]
In general, the album received mixed reviews from critics upon its release. McVie addressed these criticisms in a 1987 interview with Larry Katz, saying:
A lot of people suspected it [sounded] more like Fleetwood Mac than Fleetwood Mac. I couldn't understand for the life of me why that would be so wrong since I felt that I contributed a lot of the hit songs. Part of Fleetwood Mac's sound was mine.[55]
In a retrospective review, AllMusic reviewer Stephen Thomas Erlewine called Christine McVie "a collection of soft rock/pop and ballads that are pleasantly melodic and ingratiating."[45] However, he commented that the album suffered a "rather predictable fate" since it was a "little too sweet and laid-back to be consumed in one sitting" and thought that its songs would sound better if they were balanced by Buckingham's "insular, paranoid genius" and Nicks' "hippie-folk mysticism."[45]
Track listing
[edit]No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Love Will Show Us How" | 4:13 | |
2. | "The Challenge" |
| 4:39 |
3. | "So Excited" |
| 4:04 |
4. | "One in a Million" |
| 5:00 |
5. | "Ask Anybody" |
| 5:26 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Got a Hold on Me" |
| 3:52 |
2. | "Who's Dreaming This Dream" |
| 3:35 |
3. | "I'm the One" | Sharp | 4:03 |
4. | "Keeping Secrets" |
| 3:32 |
5. | "The Smile I Live For" | McVie | 5:05 |
Total length: | 43:48 |
Personnel
[edit]Adapted from the album's liner notes.
The Band
- Christine McVie – lead vocals, backing vocals, keyboards, percussion
- Todd Sharp – guitars, backing vocals
- George Hawkins – bass, backing vocals
- Steve Ferrone – drums, percussion
Additional musicians
- Lindsey Buckingham – backing vocals (2, 7, 10), guitar (3, 6), lead guitar (10)
- Eric Clapton – lead guitar (2)
- Ray Cooper – percussion (2, 3, 5, 10)
- Mick Fleetwood – drums (6)
- Eddy Quintela – additional keyboards (10)
- Steve Winwood – lead vocals (4), backing vocals (4, 5), synthesizers (4–6, 10), piano (6)
Production
- Russ Titelman – producer
- David Richards – engineer
- Thomas P. Price, Jr.; Nobby; Toby Ellington; Larry Frank – second engineers
- Elliot Scheiner – mixing (at A&R Recording Studios, New York City)
- Ted Jensen – mastering (at Sterling Sound, New York City)
- Chris Kable; Mary Melia; Kimberly Boyle – production coordinators
- John Courage – manager
- Patrick Byrne – equipment manager
- Larry Vigon – art direction, cover design
- Jeffrey Kent Ayeroff – art direction
- Brian Griffin – cover photography
- Sam Emerson – inner sleeve photography
Chart positions
[edit]Chart (1984) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[56] | 67 |
Canadian Albums (RPM)[57] | 39 |
Dutch Albums Chart[58] | 49 |
Swedish Albums Chart[59] | 19 |
Swiss Albums Chart[60] | 25 |
UK Albums Chart[61] | 58 |
US Billboard 200[62] | 26 |
Chart (2023) | Peak position |
---|---|
Hungarian Physical Albums (MAHASZ)[63] | 39 |
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- ^ a b c d Shewey, Don (15 March 1984). "Christine McVie". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 9 October 2007. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
- ^ a b c Christgau, Robert. "Christine McVie". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
- ^ Tibet (18 February 1984). "Vinyl Overload". Sounds. p. 30.
- ^ Shefchik, Rick (26 February 1984). "McVie is at top of list of new British rock stars". STEVIE NICKS INFO. Retrieved 29 November 2024.
- ^ a b "Album Reviews" (PDF). Billboard. 11 February 1984. p. 70. Retrieved 26 November 2024 – via World Radio History.
- ^ a b c Holden, Stephen (12 February 1984). "Pop Disks Contrast Romantic Styles". The New York Times. p. 25. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
- ^ Shefchik, Rick (6 February 1984). "McVie is at top of list of new British rock stars". STEVIE NICKS INFO. Retrieved 29 November 2024.
- ^ a b c d Swenson, John (May 1984). "ALBUM REVIEW: Christine McVie (1984)". STEVIE NICKS INFO. Retrieved 29 November 2024.
- ^ Larry Katz (1987). "Interview with Christine McVie, English singer, songwriter, keyboardist and member of band Fleetwood Mac". The Katz Tapes (Podcast). Event occurs at 20:03. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
- ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 187. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
- ^ "RPM Top 100 Albums - March 17, 1984" (PDF).
- ^ "dutchcharts.nl Christine McVie – Christine McVie" (ASP). dutchcharts.nl. MegaCharts. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
- ^ "swedishcharts.com Christine McVie – Christine McVie" (ASP). Sverigetopplistan. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
- ^ "Christine McVie – Christine McVie – hitparade.ch" (ASP). Retrieved 1 May 2011.
- ^ "Christine McVie > Artists > Official Charts". UK Albums Chart. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
- ^ "AllMusic: Christine McVie : Charts & Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
- ^ "Album Top 40 slágerlista (fizikai hanghordozók) – 2023. 45. hét". MAHASZ. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
External links
[edit]- Christine McVie at Discogs (list of releases)
- Why Christine McVie’s Self-Titled 1984 Album Was “More Sophisticated” Than Fleetwood Mac at Dig!
- How Christine McVie Finally Completed a ‘Real’ Solo Debut at Ultimate Classic Rock
- Christine McVie (1984) at STEVIE NICKS INFO (contemporary articles and reviews related to the album)