Fleetwood Mac Tango In The Night Deluxe Download

The Shake the Cage Tour, by the Anglo-American rock group Fleetwood Mac, began on September 30, 1987 in Kansas City, Missouri, and ended on June 28, 1988 in Manchester, England. It was their first tour since 1974 without Lindsey Buckingham, who left the band in August 1987.

The
  1. Fleetwood Mac - Tango In The Night (Deluxe). Download your purchases in a wide variety of formats (FLAC, ALAC, WAV, AIFF.) depending on your needs. Listen to your purchases on our apps. Download the Qobuz apps for smartphones, tablets and computers, and listen to your purchases wherever you go.
  2. Listen to Tango In The Night (Deluxe Edition) songs Online on JioSaavn. English music album by Fleetwood Mac 1. Big Love (2017 Remaster) - Fleetwood Mac, 2. Big Love (Extended Remix) 2017 Remaster - Fleetwood Mac, 3. Down Endless Street (2017 Remaster) - Fleetwood Mac, 4. Big Love (House on the Hill Dub) 2017 Remaster - Fleetwood Mac, 5.
  3. Listen free to Fleetwood Mac – Tango in the Night (Deluxe) (Big Love - Remastered, Seven Wonders - Remastered and more). 39 tracks (178:20). Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.fm.
  4. Artistically and commercially, the Stevie Nicks/Lindsey Buckingham/Mick Fleetwood/Christine and John McVie edition of Fleetwood Mac had been on a roll for over a decade when Tango in the Night was released in early 1987. This would, unfortunately, be Buckingham's last album with the pop/rock supergroup - and he definitely ended his association with the band on a creative high note.
Shake the Cage Tour
Tour by Fleetwood Mac
Start dateSeptember 30, 1987
End dateJune 28, 1988
Legs2
No. of shows69
Fleetwood Mac concert chronology
  • Mirage Tour
    (1982)
  • Shake the Cage Tour
    (1987-88)
  • Behind the Mask Tour
    (1990)

Fleetwood Mac Tango In The Night Poster

Tango in the Night is the fourteenth studio album by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac. Released on 13 April 1987, it is the fifth and to date last studio album from the band's most successful line-up of Lindsey Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood, Christine McVie, John McVie and Stevie Nicks, as Buckingham left the band later that year. Tango In The Night (Deluxe) 2017. Pop Rock; Soft Rock; Mirage (Deluxe) 2016. Pop Rock; Soft Rock; Tusk (Deluxe Edition) 2015. Art Rock; Pop Rock; Country Rock; Rumours (Deluxe Edition) 2013. The Very Best of Fleetwood Mac. Pop; Soft Rock; Pop/Rock; Blues Rock; The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions: 1967-1969.

History of the tour[edit]

Although the album Tango in the Night included Lindsey Buckingham, the guitarist quit at a band meeting to discuss the tour. 'We'd signed the contracts,' Stevie Nicks noted. 'We couldn't call in and say, 'Oh, we can't do the tour.' We had to do it, or Fleetwood Mac would have been sued forever.' [1]

Buckingham was replaced by rockabilly singer and guitarist Billy Burnette and lead guitarist and session musician Rick Vito. The former contributed to Mick Fleetwood's solo album I'm Not Me, as a member of Mick Fleetwood's Zoo. Nicks, recently recovered from cocaine addiction, was prescribed a heavy duty tranquilizer, to which she became addicted until the mid 90s.

Mac

The band played at the Rock am Ring Festival in Nürburg, Germany, on June 4, 1988. The crowd in attendance was 80.000.[2]

This tour was filmed during the San Francisco shows (December 12–13) and released on VHS as Fleetwood Mac:Tango in the Night. Cruzados and The Adventures were the opening act of the tour.[3]

Set list[4][5][edit]

  1. Don't Let Me Down Again(Buckingham Nicks cover)
  2. Has Anyone Ever Written Anything for You?(Stevie Nicks song)
  3. Stand Back(Stevie Nicks song)

Encore:

Tour dates[6][7][8][edit]

DateCityCountryVenue
North America
September 30, 1987Kansas CityUnited StatesKemper Arena
October 1, 1987AmesHilton Coliseum
October 3, 1987East TroyAlpine Valley Music Theatre
October 5, 1987IndianapolisMarket Square Arena
October 6, 1987LouisvilleFreedom Hall
October 8, 1987LandoverCapital Centre
October 9, 1987Chapel HillDean Smith Center
October 10, 1987ClemsonLittlejohn Coliseum
October 13, 1987RichfieldRichfield Coliseum
October 14, 1987PittsburghCivic Arena
October 16, 1987CincinnatiRiverfront Coliseum
October 17, 1987DetroitJoe Louis Arena
October 19, 1987TorontoCanadaMaple Leaf Gardens
October 20, 1987MontréalForum de Montréal
October 23, 1987HartfordUnited StatesHartford Civic Center
October 24, 1987East RutherfordMeadowlands Arena
October 25, 1987UniondaleNassau Coliseum
October 28, 1987PhiladelphiaThe Spectrum
October 30, 1987BostonBoston Garden
October 31, 1987
November 1, 1987ProvidenceProvidence Civic Center
November 4, 1987TallahasseeLeon County Civic Center
November 6, 1987Pembroke PinesHollywood Sportatorium
November 7, 1987TampaUSF Sun Dome
November 10, 1987New OrleansLakefront Arena
November 12, 1987HoustonThe Summit
November 13, 1987AustinFrank Erwin Center
November 15, 1987DallasReunion Arena
November 17, 1987MurfreesboroMurphy Center
November 19, 1987RosemontRosemont Horizon
November 20, 1987St. LouisSt. Louis Arena
November 27, 1987DenverMcNichols Sports Arena
November 28, 1987Salt Lake CitySalt Palace
December 1, 1987AustinFrank Erwin Center
December 3, 1987PhoenixCompton Terrace Amphitheatre
December 4, 1987ParadiseThomas & Mack Center
December 6, 1987InglewoodThe Forum
December 7, 1987
December 8, 1987San DiegoSan Diego Sports Arena
December 10, 1987FresnoSelland Arena
December 12, 1987San FranciscoCow Palace
December 13, 1987
December 17, 1987PortlandPortland Memorial Coliseum
December 18, 1987SeattleSeattle Center Coliseum
Europe
May 14, 1988BirminghamEnglandNational Exhibition Centre
May 15, 1988
May 18, 1988LondonWembley Arena
May 19, 1988
May 21, 1988
May 22, 1988
May 24, 1988
May 25, 1988
May 28, 1988GothenburgSwedenScandinavium
May 29, 1988StockholmSwedenHovet
May 31, 1988Bad SegebergGermanyFreilichtbühne
June 3, 1988NürembergFrankenhalle
June 4, 1988NürburgNürburgring

(Rock am Ring Festival)

June 6, 1988MunichOlympiastadion
June 9, 1988BerlinWaldbühne
June 11, 1988DortmundWestfalenhalle
June 12, 1988OffenburgOrtenauhalle
June 14, 1988RotterdamNetherlandsRotterdam Ahoy Sportpaleis
June 15, 1988
June 18, 1988LondonEnglandWembley Arena
June 19, 1988
June 21, 1988
June 25, 1988DublinIrelandRDS Arena
June 28, 1988ManchesterEnglandMaine Road

Personnel[edit]

Fleetwood Mac Tango Album

  • Mick Fleetwood - drums, percussion
  • John McVie - bass guitar
  • Christine McVie - Hammond B3 organ, Yamaha KX88, piano, maracas, vocals
  • Rick Vito - lead guitar, vocals
  • Billy Burnette - rhythm guitar, vocals
  • Stevie Nicks - vocals, tambourine

Additional Personnel

  • Dan Garfield - keyboards, samples
  • Isaac Asanté - percussion
  • Lori Perry-Nicks - backing vocals
  • Elisecia Wright - backing vocals
  • Sharon Celani - backing vocals

References[edit]

  1. ^Elliott, Paul (October 2013). 'Eye of the hurricane'. Classic Rock #189. p. 60.
  2. ^'FM - Tango In The Night'. Buckingham Nicks Info. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  3. ^'STEVIE NICKS. HER MUSIC: Tour Archive 1987-1988'. Retrieved 2017-07-19.
  4. ^'Fleetwood Mac Setlist at The Forum, Inglewood'. setlist.fm. Retrieved 2017-07-19.
  5. ^'STEVIE NICKS. HER MUSIC: Tour Archive 1987-1988'. Retrieved 2017-07-19.
  6. ^'Search for setlists: tour:(Shake the Cage) | setlist.fm'. www.setlist.fm. Retrieved 2017-07-19.
  7. ^Mac, Fleetwood. '1980s - Everything Fleetwood Mac'. www.fleetwoodmac.net. Retrieved 2017-07-19.
  8. ^Deer5001InConcert 2 (2017-01-12), Fleetwood Mac - Live at Nassau Coliseum - 1987-10-25, retrieved 2017-07-19

Fleetwood Mac Tango In The Night Deluxe Download Free

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shake_the_Cage_Tour&oldid=949530250'

The music of Fleetwood Mac could fairly be said to define the 1970s – in all its style, tumult, and excess. Where did that leave the union of Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, Christine McVie, Stevie Nicks, and Lindsey Buckingham once a new decade emerged? 1982’s Mirage found Fleetwood Mac trying to recapture the magic of 1977’s epochal Rumours, and succeeding in large part. Yet Mirage felt as if it firmly had one foot planted in the previous decade. With its belated follow-up, 1987’s Tango in the Night, the band embraced the 1980s and created an album for all time. In true Mac fashion, the group was also dissolving in the process. Now, Tango in the Night is the fourthof theiralbums to receive a multi-format reissue campaign from Warner Bros. Records and Rhino including a slipcased 3-CD/1-DVD/1-LP Deluxe Edition box set.

The tango, is of course, a dance characterized in part by “stylized body positions” per Merriam-Webster – or an “interaction marked by a lack of straightforwardness.” Both of those definitions have bearing on the Mac’s nocturnal dance, as producer-arranger Buckingham and longtime co-producer Richard Dashut crafted a stylish and beguiling set of textured, varied soundscapes that could hardly be called straightforward; note even the lurking, ominous eyes in the otherwise-tranquil, Henri Rousseau-inspired cover artwork. The productions embraced the technological advances of the late 1980s and the prevailing, synthesized radio-friendly sound, while crucially never ignoring that Tango in the Night was a “band” record. It may not be as conceptual as Rumours or as boldly experimental as Tusk, but Tango remains a potent collection nonetheless.

Seven of the twelve songs on Tango were, in full or in part, penned by Lindsey – betraying its roots as a solo album. The pulsating opener “Big Love” is quintessential Buckingham, with the band offering taut accompaniment to his vocals, guitar and Fairlight sampler. Both utterly contemporary and appropriately edgy, with Buckingham providing the provocative male and female utterances that are a key part of the track’s rhythm, it became one of Tango‘s six (!) singles and made it all the way to the top five of the Hot 100. “Caroline” is an impressionistic and mysterious ode to, or warning about, a captivating woman, driven by its thick, heavy and percussive drum sound. Title track “Tango in the Night” captures Buckingham’s mastery at creating a sonic atmosphere as it shifts from calm to restive, a soft ‘n heavy mélange of rumination. “Family Man” is a gentler composition with its simple lyric statement of “I am what I am/A family man…”

Three tracks were co-written by Buckingham and McVie, who are currently preparing for the release of their first joint album, simply entitled Lindsey Buckingham Christine McVie. Their swooning “Mystified” is a gentle, lightly tropical oasis on Tango, while the rocker “Isn’t it Midnight” (co-written with Eddy Quintela, McVie’s then-husband) is a cool depiction of a roguish figure. The gleaming, uptempo “You and I (Part II)” has sweetness and longing in equal measure. (Part I of the song was released on a non-LP single; while that edited version isn’t present on the Deluxe Edition, the combined full version of Parts I and II can be found on Disc Two.)

Mac

In David Wild’s typically excellent liner notes to this reissue, Stevie Nicks notes that “Christine is the hit songwriter in Fleetwood Mac.” Indeed, McVie penned the album’s two chart-topping and arguably most enduring hits: the shimmering romantic declaration “Everywhere” (No. 1 AC/No. 14 Pop) and the bittersweet, insistent “Little Lies” (No. 1 AC/No. 4 Pop). The latter was also penned with Quintela. Both songs proved undoubtedly that Fleetwood Mac, a decade post-Rumours, were still indisputably a force with which to be reckoned.

Stevie Nicks’ three major contributions to Tango all showed different aspects of her strong personality despite the fact that she wasn’t closely involved with the album’s creation. “Seven Wonders,” predominantly written by her friend Sandy Stewart, is a wistful reflection with a big hook, given a strong pop-rock sheen in Buckingham and Dashut’s production. Nicks brought Gone with the Wind imagery to “Welcome to the Room…Sara,” a personal account of her stay at the Betty Ford Center. Though the lyrics are typically enigmatic, the emotional underpinning shines brightly. The tender “When I See You Again” boasts both gravitas and intimacy as a duet performed by famous ex-lovers Nicks and Buckingham.

An entire disc of Demos, Alternates, and B-Sides is available as part of the Deluxe Edition or the 2-CD iteration, and as per usual in this series, these rarities are exceptional finds. All of the tracks are previously unreleased other than the B-sides: Tango yielded four unique flipsides including Buckingham’s “Down Endless Street,” Buckingham and Nicks’ “Book of Miracles,” and Buckingham and McVie’s “You and I (Part I)” and “Ricky.”

“Book of Miracles” is Lindsey’s instrumental arrangement of Stevie’s “Juliet,” which subsequently appeared in a different, full version with lyrics on her 1989 solo album The Other Side of the Mirror. “Juliet” itself is heard in a raw, rocking run-through version, too, as well as a demo of Nicks’ “Ooh My Love,” which would also find its way to The Other Side. Listen for Stevie’s effusive in-studio chatter following “Juliet” for an extra bit of fun.

Of the alternate versions, an early take of “Seven Wonders” is compelling even in embryonic form, while two versions of “Mystified” – an instrumental, and a lo-fi vocal version – in tandem offer a window into the song’s creation. The rather fully-produced demos included here are real treats, as well. “Tango in the Night” is radically different than the completed version. There are a couple of never-before-released songs, too. Buckingham’s “Special Kind of Love” is a slice of buoyant pop, and his and McVie’s “Where We Belong” has an in-progress feel that leads one to wonder how it would have developed had the band continued refining it. Nicks’ “Joan of Arc,” also mooted for Tango, is not among the still-generous array of selections here.

The Deluxe box also boasts a third disc of fourteen 12-inch remixes sure to please completists. These reinterpretations by Arthur Baker and John “Jellybean” Benitez of five Tango tracks (“Big Love,” “Seven Wonders,” “Little Lies,” “Family Man” and “Everywhere”) don’t supplant the originals, of course, but capture a particular time and place – that of the late-1980s dance/pop scene. Their inclusion is mightily welcome on this set. Unlike previous releases in this series, no live concert has been included, likely because Lindsey Buckingham departed the group before the tour supporting Tango.

The Deluxe Edition’s DVD has the album’s five era-defining music videos, and a pristine 24/96 stereo version of the album. (No surround mix was available this time around.) For listeners with the capabilities to enjoy it, this high-resolution version is the preferred way to experience Tango in the Night. A vinyl LP of the original album only rounds out the package. A gatefold houses the LP as well as a slots for each of the discs in a unique sleeve.

Fleetwood Mac Tango In The Night Deluxe Download Torrent

The various components of Tango in the Night have been optimally remastered by Dan Hersch, while the previously unreleased material has been lovingly mixed by Brian Kehew with Bill Inglot, who produced the set with Steve Woolard. David Wild provides the essay in the 12-page LP-sized booklet, drawing on fresh and revealingly candid (and often humorous!) quotes from Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, and Mick Fleetwood. Mick marvels at the “strange but true” story of the band, but one thing is clear listening to this revitalized Tango in the Night – that these rock-and-roll survivors could put aside their differences to come together and create something vital. This Tango is as mysterious and beguiling as ever.

Tango in the Night is available now in various formats at the below links:

Fleetwood Mac Tango In The Night Deluxe Edition

3CD/1DVD/1LP: Amazon U.S. / Amazon U.K. / Amazon Canada
2CD: Amazon U.S. / Amazon U.K. / Amazon Canada
1CD: Amazon U.S. / Amazon U.K. / Amazon Canada