Tuesday 13 September 2011

Behind The Mask



After a rather quiet eighties for releases, Fleetwood Mac's fifteenth studio album, Behind the mask, came out in April 1990 and went straight to #1 in the UK (although it did sell considerably less than Tango in the night and didn't produce any top forty singles). The band now comprised of Stevie Nicks (for the last time until 1997's The Dance), Billy Burnette, Rick Vito, Christine McVie, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood. Lindsey Buckingham did play acoustic guitar on the Behind the mask song though.

Skies the limit (Christine McVie, Eddy Quintela) is the first track and a pleasant enough pop song which was a single, unfortunately not a charting one though. It's a positive feeling track for the band that suggests new beginnings, but does not compare to Christine's tracks on Tango in the night and should really have remained an album track. Love is dangerous is a joint composition by Rick Vito and Stevie Nicks (there aren't many solo compositions on here) and Rick eases his way into the band's sound with a country infused rock piece where Stevie takes joint lead on the vocal front. It's a world away from the sound of Lindsey Buckingham and takes on more of an Eagles sound.

Billy Burnette debuts with In the back of my mind, which is a track he co-wrote with David E. Malloy, and another one that was released as a single. It did slightly better than Skies the limit and reached #53 in the UK (the same position as lead single Save me). At seven minutes long it takes a couple to get going and is probably the least commercial track on the album, but with Stevie and Christine adding their vocals to this epic rock piece it all works very well. Christine and Billy team up to co-write the next track, Do you know, where the pair's vocals merge together nicely to make a nice strong rock ballad.

Probably the catchiest song on here is Save me, a Christine McVie classic that she wrote with her then husband, Eddy Quintela. At the time I was expecting it to be a massive hit, so was quite disappointed when it didn't even make the top fifty, although in the US it was the band's last top twenty hit. By now Christine has found a knack of writing the perfect infectious pop song with gorgeous melodies and this would have sat nicely on their previous Greatest Hits album.

Stevie Nicks delivers a quality tune on Affairs of the heart, a grower of a soft rock track that would have sat well on her The other side of the mirror album which came out the year before. Then we get a tinge of fifties rock and roll vibe on When the sun goes down, co-written by Burnette and Vito. It has a real Everly Brothers feel and makes for one of the best songs on the album. Actually it wouldn't have sounded completely out of place on Kiln House.

Christine's only solo composition on here is the title track, Behind the mask, and is another corker. It is a hauntingly brilliant ballad which is made even better by Lindsey's acoustic guitar. Stand on the rock (written by Rick Vito) is another catchy track that you could imagine the Eagles doing if they went experimental. Then Billy Burnette and Jeff Silbar bring us the fantastic Hard feelings, a nice simple ballad with such a strong melody that it could easily have been the lead single and is definitely one of my very favourite tracks on here.

Freedom (Stevie Nicks, Mike Campbell) is a rockier song but equally catchy and another that could have been a single. When it comes to love, written by Burnette with the aid of Simon Climie (of Climie Fisher fame) and Dennis Morgan, is another one that I really like. Christine and Billy harmonise well on here and the pace is nice and steady. Finally we come to The Second time, which was written by Stevie and Rick and seems to be almost universally hated on the web. I don't actually think it's that bad, it just doesn't really go anywhere as a ballad. Vocally it isn't Stevie's strongest performance either but as the album closer it does it's job OK. That said it is definitely the weakest track on the album.

So then, Behind the mask works for me as a Fleetwood Mac album. It may be a world away from anything they've done before but isn't that what they've always been about, trying new things? Billy and Rick slot nicely into the space left by Lindsey and find their own comfortable soft country rock style that works well with both Christine and Stevie. There are definitely some tracks on here that deserve far more recognition than they get, namely Save me, Hard feelings, Freedom, Affairs of the heart, Behind the mask and When the sun goes down, which could all have been singles. It's definitely worth a purchase if you're a fan - just don't expect it to sound like Rumours or Tango in the night because it's a different kettle of fish entirely.