About Time by Fleetwood Mac Album
No | Song Title | Artist | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Talkin' To My Heart | Fleetwood Mac | 4:56 |
2. | Hollywood (Some Other Kind Of Town) | Fleetwood Mac | 5:45 |
3. | Blow By Blow | Fleetwood Mac | 4:27 |
4. | Winds Of Change | Fleetwood Mac | 4:28 |
5. | I Do | Fleetwood Mac | 4:27 |
6. | Nothing Without You | Fleetwood Mac | 3:08 |
7. | Dreamin' The Dream | Fleetwood Mac | 3:45 |
8. | Sooner Or Later | Fleetwood Mac | 5:41 |
9. | I Wonder Why | Fleetwood Mac | 4:29 |
10. | Nights In Estoril | Fleetwood Mac | 4:47 |
11. | I Got It In For You | Fleetwood Mac | 4:10 |
12. | All Over Again | Fleetwood Mac | 3:36 |
13. | These Strange Times | Fleetwood Mac | 7:08 |
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Seriously this is really bad. The spoken word/poem thing at the end is really awful. Oy veh, it's bad.
The Christine McVie songs are pretty good, but the others just lack the magic of Nicks and Buckingham. The best track on this album has to be “All Over Again.”
Not a good time for the band. By this time, both Lindsey and Stevie were gone. Just shortly after released they broke up. I do love Christine’s songs, especially “All Over Again.”
This album shouldn't even be under the name Fleetwood Mac. Besides a couple decent songs, this is just a complete waste of time and money, and the same goes for that disaster tour to support this album. I'm glad this lineup didn't last. Pour Chris and the rhythm section couldn't even save this. There really isn't anything in this album worth buying. I say listen before buying, but don't expect anything to surpass Rumours, Mirage, or even Behind The Mask.
In one of the reviews here is says that Buckingham was replaced by Mason and Burnette. This is not accurate. He was replaced by Rick Vito and Burnette. Then after one album, Dave Mason replaced Vito. (All the rest of this info can be found on Wikipedia.) But, back to the album: there are some great songs on here. Christine McVie’s Sooner or Later is one of her best ever. Also, Blow by Blow and I Wonder Why, penned and with lead vocals and guitar by Mason are among the stronger songs in Mac history. (This guy is not in the RR HOF for no reason. And for those who don’t know, he rose to fame with Traffic, a band including Steve Winwood.) In any event, the backing vocals by Bekka Bramlett on Blow by Blow have got to be heard to be believed. Crazy good! In short, this album is not supposed to be any kind of follow up to Rumours, so please don’t take it as such. Just take it for what it is: a great album by some great, legendary musicians.
Christine McVie's songs, and Mick Fleetwood's vocals on "These Strange Times" are the saving grace of the album. McVie's "Hollywood (Some Other Kind Of Town), "Sooner or Later", and "Nights in Estoril" are all really solid songs. And "All Over Again" is one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard. Mick finally gives us vocals on a song. And it's great. "These Strange Times" is haunting as hell. It's hands down the best song on the Album. just to let you know though, he doesn't sing. Dave Mason is pretty good. He really brought something new to the table. His song "Blow By Blow" is probably the best non-McVie song on the album (aside from "These Strange Times")and "I Wonder Why" is a really great song too. And last but not least: Bekka Bramlett and Billy Burnette are what makes the star count so low. (which is weird because I thought Billy was pretty good on the Behind The Mask album) The song "I got it In For you" is a pretty fun song, but it took me like 10 times listening to it the whole way through to get it to even begin to grow on me. and I liked Talkin' to my heart for a little while, but after listening to it about 30 times (and not in a row), I got bored of it very soon after. Plus Bekka Bramlett CANNOT SING, she really can't. Her terrible raspy voice on the song "Nothing Without You, is so annoying, it's almost painful to listen to. The only song that her voice isn't completely unlistenable is in the song "Dreamin' The Dream" and even then it's still pretty bad. as for the song "Winds of Change", The voice may be somewhere in between the other two, I hold it in even lower regards than "Nothing Without You" Because it wasn't even written by her, or her parents like 'Nothing without You" was. Plus whoever this Kit Hain is, didn't even do that great of a job writing the song. I am convinced that Bekka's horrible singing voice is a Big reason that this album never went even went Gold. If Bekka Bramlett were not on this album, and Stevie was, even if She wasn't, I garentee you the album would've made Gold if not Platinum. Overall fairly decent album. It's not terrible, but it's not great either. In fact it actually one of their worse albums. Not THE worst though (That would be Penguin. I'd review that one too but iTunes has nothing Fleetwood Mac from Then Play On-Heroes Are Hard to Find). Bekka just kills it for me. Christine saves it, but not entirely. 4 stars for Mick & McVie. 3.7 Stars for Mason 2.35 Stars for Billy and half a star For Bekka (and thats being generous). Overall 2.75 stars. Best songs: These Strange Times, Sooner or Later, Hollywood(SOKOT) Worst song: Winds of Change, Nothing Wihout You
Change is so hard for people. After Peter Green left, the band was finished - kaput. Mick and company made some fine music in the interim, then he roped in Buckingham-Nicks. A new set of fans see this version as the definitive band and when Buckingham, then Nicks left, the band was finished - kaput. Oh Well.
This album is the ugly red headed step child of the Fleetwood Mac album family. But like most ugly red headed step children, they aren't all bad once you get to know them. This album gets 3 stars, because it's the only post 1971 Mac album that I don't listen to in full. That's thanks to Bekka and Billy's songs. I just don't care for their tunes. However, even Rumours era fans can still enjoy time. First off, it has 5 Christine songs on it! They are all solid songs. Other familiar members? How about Mick Fleetwood! Yes, he actually has a "vocal" on the impressive closing track These Strange Times. Most people hate him, but I love Dave Mason's songs on this album. He has a super powerful voice, so what's not to like? Blow By Blow & I Wonder Why should not be over looked! So while I don't care for everything on this album, there has to be something for everyone on here when there are a handful of different singers. Don't bash it til you've gave it a listen!
In my opinion, this is one of the better Fleetwood Mac albums. The beauty of Fleetwood Mac as a band is that each album is as unique as its contributing members. Fleetwood Mac, as a whole, and in parts, throughout their entire decades long progression as a band with all of the ups and downs, and line-up change-ups, (minus this one, plus that one, etc.) is that each album is unique having a distinctly "different" sound and feel, while carrying at its core the essence of the band. I don’t understand why such negative reviews (now or then). This album is excellent. If the negative feedback is based solely on the lack of the presence of Stevie and Lindsey on this album, please let me remind you that Fleetwood Mac was a band (and a successful one at that) long before those two joined, and continued to be a band without them. (No offense to either one intended as I am a big fan of each/both). This album has an entirely different vibe than previous albums that didn't include those two either (such as "Bare Trees" (which is one of my all-time favourite FM albums), “Mystery To Me,” (another excellent album) “Future Games,” “Then Play On” “Penguin” et cetera.) “Time” has more of a country feel then the typical blues or rock vibe that the majority do have, albeit some songs off of various albums which do include both Lindsey and Stephanie, do have that same “country feel” to them also. Bekka Bramlett did a terrific job with her vocals on this album. Dave Mason and Billy Burnette were good also; however it is that core three, of Mick, John and Christine who carry this album from start to finish. There really isn’t a song on this album that I dislike; however, my favourite tracks off of this album are, “Nothing Without You,” “Sooner or Later,” “Winds of Change,” “Blow By Blow,” “I Wonder Why,” and of course, “These Strange Times” is excellent as well. I agree with WayneInSF (who provided an excellent review) – This truly is one of the better Fleetwood Mac albums. It is definitely a “must have” for any true Fleetwood Mac album collection.
This album doesn't get the credit it deserves, despite the numerous Christine McVie songs that truely show off her amazing singing voice. I love putting this album on shuffle!
Released in 1995, "Time" was recorded by an incarnation of Fleetwood Mac that didn't include Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks. Buckingham had left the group after "Tango In the Night," and was replaced by Dave Mason and Billy Burnette. Nicks had left in 1990 after a dispute with Mick Fleetwood (he wouldn't allow her to include "Silver Springs" on her Greatest Hits album). The result was a commercial flop: Neither "Time" nor its sole single, "I Do," charted in the United States - the first time that had happened since 1968. Commercial viability aside, this stands as one of Mac's best albums. Christine McVie turned in some of her best-penned tunes (this would be her last studio album for the group before retirement), as does Dave Mason. Mick Fleetwood and John McVie are in top form, and Brekka Bramlett does some great vocal work. Best cuts: "Talkin' to My Heart," "Sooner or Later," "Winds of Change," "These Strange Times"
a fleetwood mac album without stevie and lindsey is like trying to bake a chocolate cake without any chocolate and flour. not one cut on this album is worth a listen.
As a fan from long before the Buckingham-Nicks merger, it didn't matter much to me that the 2 were gone, but my expectations were still low, sort of like entertaining a house guest who's stayed too long. Pleasant surprise, it was better than I imagined. Although Dave Mason is superfluous, Bekka Bramlett actually turned in the gem of the entire album with "Dreamin' the Dream" and all of Christine McVie's tunes are good quality -- "Hollywood" in particular. The problem is really that it seldom sounds like Fleetwood Mac even during the good bits. Mick Fleetwood phoned in his drum parts, and John McVie, while giving some beautiful bass lines, suffers from the uninspired mixing at the hands of Ken Allardyce. It's like eating cream of wheat. "Time" needs Lindsey, basically.
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Time is the continued sequence of existence and events that occurs in an apparently irreversible succession from the past, through the present, and into the future. It is a component quantity of various measurements used to sequence events, to compare the duration of events or the intervals between them, and to quantify rates of change of quantities in material reality or in the conscious experience. Time is often referred to as a fourth dimension, along with three spatial dimensions. Time is one of the seven fundamental physical quantities in both the International System of Units (SI) and International System of Quantities. The SI base unit of time is the second, which is defined by measuring the electronic transition frequency of caesium atoms. General relativity is the primary framework for understanding how spacetime works. Through advances in both theoretical and experimental investigations of spacetime, it has been shown that time can be distorted and dilated, particularly at the edges of black holes. Throughout history, time has been an important subject of study in religion, philosophy, and science. Temporal measurement has occupied scientists and technologists and has been a prime motivation in navigation and astronomy. Time is also of significant social importance, having economic value ("time is money") as well as personal value, due to an awareness of the limited time in each day and in human life spans.
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