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  1. Mar 11, 2016 · Eric Clapton released 'Behind the Sun,' his initial collaboration with friend Phil Collins, on March 11, 1985. ... (including several members of Toto, Lindsey Buckingham and Lenny Castro, among ...

  2. Even when local nut Lindsey Buckingham shows up on rhythm guitar on “Something’s Happening,” his contribution is negligible. ... Behind the Sun is a party album compared with the return of ...

  3. Feb 7, 2024 · One particular song that has resonated with me is “Try for the Sun” from his 2008 album, Gift of Screws. This article aims to explore the meaning behind the song and share my personal experiences with it.

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  5. Mar 11, 2022 · The most engaging of these is Something’s Happening, which featured some interesting guest appearances: Fleetwood Mac’s Lindsey Buckingham played rhythm guitar on the track; the synthesisers were played by James Newton Howard, a noted film composer who has received nine Oscars nominations (after Behind The Sun, Howard went on to score ...

    • "I'm So afraid," Fleetwood Mac
    • "Never Going Back Again," Rumours
    • "The Chain," Rumours
    • "Tusk," Tusk
    • "Trouble," Law and Order
    • "Holiday Road," National Lampoon's Vacation Ost
    • "Big Love," Tango in The Night
    • "Underground," Gift of Screws
    • "Love Is Here to Stay," Lindsey Buckingham Christine McVie
    • "On The Wrong Side," Lindsey Buckingham

    Buckingham originally wrote this hard-rock song, atypical of Fleetwood Mac's style at the time, for his album with then-girlfriend and creative partner, Stevie Nicks. "We'd been in LA only for like a year and a half," he explains. "Things happened pretty fast. The album came out, and it didn't really connect and we were working material for a secon...

    "I was getting back in touch with the finger-picking style I had used on the Buckingham-Nicks album," Buckingham says of this acoustic classic. "Once the first wave of rock & roll started to ebb, folk music became a really big part of my style. It was another reason I never really got into using a pick. [This song] was a manifestation of that style...

    Written by the entirety of Fleetwood Mac, this track has become a signature opener for the band. Buckingham used what's called a "dropped D," tuning the low E-string down a key. "It gives you a more bluesy landscape to draw from in terms of what you're doing with the left hand," he explains. Buckingham's climactic guitar solo spilled out as an expr...

    The distinctive, pounding melody line of "Tusk" was actually Buckingham's rehearsal riff, which Mick Fleetwood encouraged him to turn into a song. "I expounded on that once we were in the studio," he says. "The [USC Trojan] marching band was the completion of the song by a long shot. It made the whole thing come together as a unique piece." Bucking...

    "Trouble" marked the first single off Buckingham's debut solo effort. The album was a direct result of Fleetwood Mac's decision to pivot away from the more experimental sound he loved. "I realized the only way for me to keep exploring the more esoteric side of where the art lived more for me was to start making solo albums," he explains. "In Fleetw...

    Buckingham wrote this single for the 1983 film National Lampoon's Vacation, and it went on to become one of his best-known tracks. "I'd never written a song for a movie and I didn't really have a set of reference points for it and wasn't sure if I even had the skillset for it," he says. "I was just trying to do something catchy and something that w...

    Originally an ensemble piece with everyone in Fleetwood Mac playing, Buckingham evolved this 1987 cut through live performance over the years, turning it into a guitar feature. "'Big Love' started off as a completely different song," he says. "The track was still based around that finger-picking part, but it wasn't focused in such a clear-cut and s...

    Buckingham dropped solo albums in 2006 and 2008 while taking some time off from Fleetwood Mac. This track, off the latter, came from a mounting frustration with his record label. "They never really knew what to do with my solo stuff," he says. "Fleetwood Mac was the priority...By the time I got to doing Gift of Screws, it felt like their interest i...

    This album, a collaboration between Buckingham and Christine McVie, was a bit of creative happenstance. "Christine sent me maybe three songs that she had very rough, and I worked on them in my studio," Buckingham recalls. "I got a chance to craft them in a way she hadn't foreseen. Then I said, 'Look, I've got tracks that I have worked on, rough mel...

    The second single off Lindsey Buckingham, this track signals the album's alignment with his duet project with McVie and a heavier pop influence, which is more indicative of his work with Fleetwood Mac. "I realized that I was, subconsciously at first, wanting to make it more of a pop album than what I had done before," he says of his new record. "Yo...

  6. Dec 10, 2018 · Lindsey Buckingham Reveals Stories Behind His Solo Songs And Whether He’ll Ever Rejoin Fleetwood Mac. Interviews December 10, 2018 2:52 PM By Scott Lapatine. “It certainly has been … a...

  7. The lyrics to "Red Sun" were inspired by a trip McVie took to Africa, during which she wrote the words "When the red sun kisses the sea" on a beach. McVie then combined these lyrics with a chord progression and melody that Buckingham created.