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| John Mcvie |
| Background information |
| Birth name |
John Graham McVie |
| Born |
November 26, 1945 (1945-11-26) (age 61)
Ealing,
London |
| Genre(s) |
Rock, Blues |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician |
| Instrument(s) |
Bass |
| Years active |
1963 - Present |
| Label(s) |
Reprise, Blue Horizon |
Associated
acts |
Fleetwood
Mac (1967 - Present)
John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers (1963-1968) |
John Graham McVie (born November
26, 1945) is
a British
bass
guitarist best known as a member of the rock group Fleetwood
Mac. He joined Fleetwood Mac shortly after
its formation by guitarist Peter Green in
1967, and, along with Mick Fleetwood, is the only original
member still with the band. In 1968 he married blues pianist and singer Christine
Perfect, who became a member of Fleetwood
Mac two years later. John and Christine McVie divorced,
however, in 1977, about the time the band recorded the album Rumours,
a major artistic and commercial success, and which borrowed its title
from the turmoils in McVie's and other band members' marriages and
relationships.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life
- 2 Early
Music
- 2.1 John
Mayall Bluesbreakers
- 2.2 Peter
Green and Mick Fleetwood
- 3 Fleetwood
Mac
- 3.1 Christine
Perfect
- 3.2 International
success and personal life
- 4 Discography
- 4.1 With
Fleetwood Mac
- 4.2 With
John Mayall's Bluesbreakers
- 4.3 Solo
Albums
- 5 References
- 6 External
links
|
Early life
John Graham McVie was born on November 26th, 1945, in Ealing, West
London, United Kingdom to Reg and Dorothy
McVie and attended Walpole Grammar School. Aged 14, McVie began playing
the guitar in local bands covering songs by The
Shadows.
However, he soon realized that all of his friends were learning to play
lead guitar, so he decided to play the bass guitar instead. Initially,
he just removed the top two (E and B) strings from his guitar to play
the bass parts. When his parents became aware of his musical abilities,
his father bought him a pink Fender bass guitar.
Incidentally, this model was the same The Shadow's bass player and
McVie's major early musical influence, Jet
Harris, had played.
Soon after leaving school at 17, John started training to be a
tax inspector,
which also coincided with the start of his musical career.
Early Music
John McVie’s first job as a bass player was in a band called
the "Krewsaders", formed by boys living in the same street as McVie in
Ealing, West London. The "Krewsaders" played mainly at weddings and
parties covering songs from the The Shadows.
John Mayall
Bluesbreakers
Around the time of McVie’s tenure as a tax inspector, John
Mayall began forming a Chicago-style Blues band, John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers. Initially Mayall wanted to recruit bass player Cliff
Barton of the Cyril Davies All Stars for the rhythm section of his new
band. Barton declined, however, but gave him John McVie's phone number,
urging Mayall to give the talented young bass player a chance in the
Bluesbreakers..
Mayall contacted McVie, and asked him to audition for his band. Soon
thereafter, McVie got offered to play bass in the Bluesbreakers. McVie
accepted while still holding down his daytime job for a further nine
months before becoming a musician full time.
Under Mayall's tutelage, McVie, not having had any formal training in
music, learnt to play the blues mainly by listening to BB King
& Willie Dixon records given to him by
Mayall.
Peter Green and Mick
Fleetwood
In 1967, a young Peter Green was
asked to join Mayall's Bluesbreakers as the band's new lead guitar
player, after Eric Clapton, the original
guitar player, had left the band. The arrival of Peter Green to the
Bluesbreakers coincided with the joining of Mick
Fleetwood as new drummer, replacing Aynsley
Dunbar.
Green, Fleetwood, and McVie quickly forged a strong personal
relationship, and when John Mayall gave Green some free studio time for
his birthday, Green asked McVie and Fleetwood to join him for a
recording session. Produced by Mike Vernon, they recorded
three tracks together, "Curly", "Rubber Duck", and an instrumental
called "Fleetwood Mac".
Later the same year, Eric Clapton decided to rejoin the Bluesbreakers,
and Peter Green opted to form his own band, which he called "Fleetwood
Mac" after his preferred rhythm section (McVie and Fleetwood). Mick
Fleetwood immediately joined Green's new band, having been dismissed
earlier from the Bluesbreakers for drunkenness. However, McVie
initially was reluctant to join Fleetwood Mac, not wanting to leave the
security and well-paid job in the Bluesbreakers, forcing Green to hire
a temporary bassist named Bob Brunning. A few weeks later McVie
changed his mind, however, as he felt that The Bluesbreakers musical
direction were shifting too much towards jazz, and he joined Fleetwood Mac on bass in
December 1967.
Fleetwood Mac
With McVie now in Fleetwood Mac, the band
recorded its first album, the self-titled Fleetwood Mac
in the following months. The album was released in February 1968, and
became an immediate national hit, establishing Fleetwood Mac as a major
part in the English Blues movement.
Fleetwood Mac started playing live gigs in blues clubs and pubs
throughout England, and became a household name in the national blues
circuit. In the next three years, the band scored a string of hits in
the UK
and also enjoyed success in continental Europe.
Christine Perfect
John McVie with wife Christine, 1972
While on tour, Fleetwood Mac would often share venues with
fellow blues band Chicken Shack. It was on
such occasion that McVie met his future wife, the lead singer and piano
player of Chicken Shack, Christine Perfect.
Following a brief romance of only two weeks, McVie and Perfect got
married with Peter Green as best man. With the couple being unable to
spend much time together because of the constant touring with their
bands, Christine (now McVie) quit Chicken Shack to become a housewife
to spend more time with John.
However, following the departure of Peter Green from Fleetwood Mac in
1969, McVie successfully persuaded Christine McVie to join him in
Fleetwood Mac.
International success
and personal life
In the years to follow, Fleetwood Mac went through several
different line-ups, which occasionally became the source of friction
and unease within the band. In addition, frequent touring as well as
John McVie’s heavy drinking began to put some strain on his marriage to
Christine. In 1974, the McVies, along with the other members of
Fleetwood Mac, moved to Los Angeles, where they lived briefly with John
Mayall.
In 1975, Fleetwood Mac achieved enormous worldwide success after
recruiting American singer-songwriter duo Stevie
Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham. However, on
the heels of the band's success followed serious marital problems for
the McVies, and in 1977, during the recording of Rumours, John
and Christine McVie’s marriage unravelled and the couple divorced the
same year. As way to put behind the hurt and final dissolution, several
of Christine's songs on this album were about John McVie, particularly
"Don't Stop"
John McVie remarried in 1978 to Julie Ann Reubens, but still
continued to drink heavily. An alcohol-induced seizure in 1987 finally
prompted him to kick the habit, and he has been sober ever since. In
1989, McVie’s wife gave birth to their first child, a daughter, Molly
McVie. In his spare time, McVie is a sailing enthusiast, and he nearly
got lost at least once on a Pacific voyage.
A naturally reclusive man, his involvement with Fleetwood Mac has been
constant but notably low-key, despite the fact that the band takes the
'Mac' part of its name from him. He received co-writer credits for a
very small number of tracks throughout the band's existence, including
"Station Man" and "The Chain".
Compared with many bass players of the British music scene of
the Sixties, such as John Entwistle, Jack
Bruce, and Paul McCartney, John
McVie’s contribution to rock music in general, and Fleetwood Mac in
particular, has often been somewhat overlooked. His bass playing is
characterized by a warm, full tone, slightly offset with Mick
Fleetwood’s beat, and brief melodic and exquisitely phrased runs. His
contributions provide an invaluable solid rhythmic-harmonic basis for
all of Fleetwood Mac’s songs many of which, such as ‘’Don’t Stop’’ and
‘’Rhiannon’’ went on to become notable international hits. Thanks to
his unique feel for melody and tempo, and his soulful phrasing, McVie's
bass playing has left an indelible and profound mark on Fleetwood Mac's
artistic legacy.
Discography
With Fleetwood Mac
| Year |
Album |
US |
UK |
Additional
information |
| 1968 |
Peter
Green's Fleetwood Mac |
198 |
4 |
Featured the
only Fleetwood Mac album track without John on bass - "Long Grey Mare" |
| 1968 |
Mr.
Wonderful |
- |
10 |
- |
| 1969 |
Then
Play On |
192 |
6 |
John wrote the
instrumental "Searching For Madge" |
| 1970 |
Kiln House |
69 |
39 |
John co-wrote
"Station Man" |
| 1971 |
Future
Games |
91 |
- |
- |
| 1972 |
Bare Trees |
70 |
- |
The cover photo
was taken by John |
| 1973 |
Penguin |
49 |
- |
- |
| 1973 |
Mystery
To Me |
68 |
- |
John co-wrote
"Forever" |
| 1974 |
Heroes Are Hard to Find |
34 |
- |
- |
| 1975 |
Fleetwood
Mac |
1 |
23 |
- |
| 1977 |
Rumours |
1 |
1 |
John wrote the
bass progression for the- "The Chain" |
| 1979 |
Tusk |
4 |
1 |
- |
| 1980 |
Live |
14 |
31 |
- |
| 1982 |
Mirage |
1 |
5 |
- |
| 1987 |
Tango
in the Night |
7 |
1 |
- |
| 1988 |
Greatest
Hits |
14 |
3 |
- |
| 1990 |
Behind the Mask |
18 |
1 |
- |
| 1995 |
Time |
- |
47 |
- |
| 1997 |
The
Dance |
1 |
15 |
John featured
on background vocals on "Say You Love Me" |
| 2003 |
Say
You Will |
3 |
6 |
- |
With John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers
| Year |
Album |
US |
UK |
Additional
information |
| 1965 |
John
Mayall Plays John Mayall |
|
|
Live At Klooks
Kleek |
| 1966 |
Blues Breakers with
Eric Clapton |
|
|
- |
| 1967 |
A Hard
Road |
|
|
- |
| 1967 |
Crusade |
|
|
- |
Solo Albums
| Year |
Album |
US |
UK |
Additional
information |
| 1992 |
John
McVie's Gotta Band with Lola Thomas |
- |
- |
- |
References
-
"De Gitarist (04/1998), Fleetwood Mac's John
McVie didn't stop Blue Letter Archives.
URL last accessed 2007-02-20"
-
"De Gitarist (04/1998), Fleetwood Mac's John
McVie didn't stop Blue Letter Archives.
URL last accessed 2007-02-20"
-
"John McVie Q&A", The
Penguin. URL last accessed 2007-02-20
-
"De Gitarist (04/1998), Fleetwood Mac's John
McVie didn't stop Blue Letter Archives.
URL last accessed 2007-02-20"
-
Insight BBC Interview
-
"Bassplayer (05/06/1995), A life with
Fleetwood Mac - John McVie", Blue Letter Archives.
URL last accessed 2007-02-20
-
"Melody Maker (05/24/1969) No Domestic
Oblivion For Christine", Blue Letter Archives.
URL last accessed 2007-02-20
-
"Rolling Stone (06/07/1984), From British
blues with Chicken Shack to soft rock with Fleetwood Mac", Blue
Letter Archives. URL last accessed 2007-02-20
-
Brunning, Bob .(2001). Rumours And Lies: The Fleetwood Mac
Story. ISBN
978-1844490110. Retrieved January 2, 2007.
External links
| v • d • e Fleetwood Mac |
| Current members:
John McVie -
Mick Fleetwood - Stevie
Nicks - Lindsey Buckingham |
| Former members:
Christine McVie - Peter Green - Jeremy
Spencer - Bob Brunning - Danny
Kirwan - Bob Welch - Bob Weston - Dave
Walker - Billy Burnette - Rick Vito - Dave
Mason - Bekka Bramlett |
| Discography |
|
Studio albums: Fleetwood Mac
(1968) - Mr. Wonderful
(1968) - English Rose
(1968) - Then Play On
(1969) - Kiln House (1970)
- Future Games
(1971) - Bare Trees (1972)
- Penguin
(1973) - Mystery to Me
(1973) - Heroes Are Hard to Find
(1974) - Fleetwood Mac
(1975) - Rumours
(1977) - Tusk (1979) - Mirage
(1982) - Tango in the Night
(1987) - Behind the Mask
(1990) - Time
(1995) - Say You Will
(2003)
|
|
Key Singles/Songs: "Black
Magic Woman" - "Albatross" - "The
Green Manalishi" - "Rhiannon" - "Landslide"
- "Go Your Own Way" - "Dreams" - "Don't Stop" - "The Chain" -
"You Make Loving Fun" - "Gold
Dust Woman" - "Tusk" - "Gypsy" - "Big Love" -
|
|
Compilations and box sets: The Pious Bird of Good
Omen (1969) - Black Magic Woman
(1971) - The Original Fleetwood Mac
(1971) - Greatest
Hits (1971) - Greatest
Hits (1988) - 25
Years - The Chain (1992) - The
Vaudeville Years (1998) - The Complete Blue
Horizon Sessions (1999) - Original
Fleetwood Mac: The Blues Years (2000) Show-Biz
Blues (2001) - The Best Of
Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac (2002) - Jumping
at Shadows: The Blues Years (2002) - The Very Best of
Fleetwood Mac (2002) - Men
of the World: The Early Years (2005)
|
|
Live albums: Fleetwood
Mac in Chicago (1969) - Live
(1980) - Live at the Marquee, 1967
(1992) - Live at the BBC
(1995) - The Dance
(1997) - Masters: Live London '68
(1998) - Live in Boston
(1998) - Shine '69 (1999) -
Live in Boston
(2004)
|
| Related
articles |
|
Say You Will Tour
|