Album Reviews

Fleetwood Mac: Mirage (Expanded Reissue)

Fleetwood Mac

Fleetwood Mac
Mirage (Expanded Reissue)
(Warner Brothers/Rhino)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

Often considered the belated follow-up to 1977โ€™s mega platinum Rumours, 1982โ€™s Mirage was a clear retreat from the somewhat abrasive, occasionally commercial avant-pop of the controversial Tusk. While that album has, over the decades, come to be respected as Lindsey Buckinghamโ€™s creative zenith, it appears Warner Brothers was less enthusiastic about their star actโ€™s detourย into the artsy abyss. Perhaps Mac were tired of it themselves, because the slick, glossily produced Mirage seems a capitulation to an audience who might have found the dense, inconsistent, but bold Tuskย a musical and drug-fueled bridge too far.

While Mirage was no Rumours, its dozen sophisticated pop songs include such near-classics as โ€œLove in Store,โ€ โ€œGypsy,โ€ and โ€œHold Me,โ€ the latter two appearing on most subsequent Mac hits packages. But there are other, often unappreciated gems here too. Selections such as Buckinghamโ€™s folksy โ€œCanโ€™t Go Back,โ€ Stevie Nicksโ€™ surprisingly effective foray into country โ€œThatโ€™s Alright,โ€ the frisky pop/rock and sumptuous harmonies of โ€œThe Eyes of the Worldโ€ and the closing โ€œWish You Were Here,โ€ one of the always dependable Christine McVieโ€™s more affecting and least appreciated pieces, are well worth reexamining.

Itโ€™s not a great album but itโ€™s a good one, especially for Macโ€™s avid pop fans, and ripe for rediscovery on this newly remastered and expanded edition. A second disc with 20 previously unreleased rarities includes early, stripped down demos, alternate arrangements and outtakes of nearly every tune, plus some that didnโ€™t make the final cut, and is well worth the price of admission. The no-frillsย versions are a welcome contrast to the finished productโ€™s often over-produced slickness, and such oddities as a four minute in-studio jam on drummer Sandy Nelsonโ€™s 1959 instrumental โ€œTeen Beatโ€ with Buckingham at his most frazzled and unhinged is a major find.

But the real excitement is relegated to the pricey โ€œdeluxeโ€ package that includes not only a 5.1 surround audio-only DVD of the album and a remastered vinyl reproduction, but a live show from the โ€˜82 Mirage tour. This 74-minute concert catches the bandย on a particularly inspired and improvisation filled night in LA as Mirage was ensconced atop the Billboard charts. It kicks off with a propulsive seven-minute โ€œThe Chainโ€ that smokes the studio take into oblivion and features extended performances of two Tusk tracks with a nearly 10-minute โ€œNot That Funnyโ€ along with another 8 minutes of โ€œSisters of the Moon,โ€ closing with an unplugged emotional โ€œSongbirdโ€ all in front of a clearly engaged audience.

Whether thatโ€™s worth dropping nearly $90 is up to you, but this is an invigorating presentation. It captures these five musicians (before they added an unnecessary backline to bolster the live sound) bouncing energy off each other and feeding from the crowd with exhilarating results.