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"Everywhere" has been widely acclaimed by music critics. In The Guardian, Alexis Petridis dubbed it "peerless" and "bulletproof pop songwriting." [8] Ivy Nelson from Pitchfork claimed "Everywhere" to be the best song on Tango in the Night, writing that the tune "responds with warmth, empathy, and buoyancy, describing a kind of devotion so deeply felt that it produces weightlessness in a person."
"Everywhere" (Tim McGraw song), title track from the album "Everywhere" (Fleetwood Mac song), 1987 "Everywhere" (Michelle Branch song), 2001; Everywhere (Maaya Sakamoto album), 2010 "Everywhere", the first of three discs from Lupe Fiasco's forthcoming album LupE.N.D. "Everywhere", a song by Niall Horan from his 2020 album Heartbreak Weather
Christine McVie's piano playing was stripped down to block chords and John McVie's bass guitar was brought down in volume. Fleetwood recorded individual parts on a kick drum and snare drum and overdubbed some hand percussion. Cymbals and tom-toms were also recorded, although Buckingham instructed Fleetwood to scrap these parts.
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50 Years – Don't Stop is Fleetwood Mac's most recent career-spanning collection. It features liner notes by veteran music writer David Wild. [4] The Belfast Telegraph said of the album, "The 50-track compilation is the sound of a band pulling themselves apart, and putting themselves back together, over the course of half a century."
"Seven Wonders" is a song by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac from their fourteenth studio album, Tango in the Night (1987). Stevie Nicks sang lead vocals on the song, and it was written by Sandy Stewart, with additional lyrics by Nicks. In the song, the singer remembers a love affair from her past.
Madison Blues – Live & Studio Recordings (or just Madison Blues) is a compilation album by British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac, released in 2003.It is a compilation of BBC session tracks and live concert material from the band's second post-Peter Green lineup, none of which had previously been officially released.
They also ranked the song number six on their list of the 50 greatest Fleetwood Mac songs. [5] When Nicks performed the song live, she often introduced it as "a song about an old Welsh witch." [6] During 1975–1982, Fleetwood Mac's live performances of "Rhiannon" took on a theatrical intensity not present on the FM-radio single. The song built ...