Kai Widdrington is hand in hand with Nadiya Bychkova before embracing Nikita Kuzmin as Professionals Tour continues TOWIE's Joey Turner exposes his chest through a tiny leopard-print jacket and trousers as he celebrates his 21st birthday Lizzie Cundy stuns in a backless red gown with a bardot neckline and sweeping train as she steps out to host Victoria's Promise charity fundraiser Ryan Thomas and supportive daughter Scarlett, 13, are in the mood to celebrate as they arrive at The Games wrap party with a huge boombox Supermodel Catherine McNeil eyes catwalk comeback as she finds love with NBA star - after disappearing for 'personal reasons' The Games winner Wes Nelson is hand in hand with girlfriend Lucciana Beynon as he joins busty Christine McGuinness at show wrap party Jessica Simpson slips into busty skintight top to showcase her VERY trim frame after losing 100lbs for a THIRD TIME
Love Island producers 'sign up England Knights rugby ace Jacques O'Neill for new series as he sets his sights on finding romance in Mallorca' It’s no wonder Fleetwood Mac were so keen to overcome the tribulations and finish a record with some of the catchiest, most intriguing songs of the Seventies.Ĭhris Kamara shares picture from an oxygen chamber as his 'recovery continues' from health woes that forced him to quit Soccer Saturdayĭavina McCall exhibits her toned frame in a white vest top and blue leggings as she leads stars running in the Lady Garden 5K or 10K Challenge Less impressive are the jam sessions on the deluxe edition, while the live songs from 1977 don’t add anything.īut the real joys are to be found by listening again to the original, 39-minute album. Of the alternate versions of album tracks, the picks are an early incarnation of Dreams and a new version of I Don’t Want To Know. The bonus material is strong - especially the songs left off the original album. It was a shame we had to break up but we got Go Your Own Way and Dreams out of it all. We were couples who couldn’t make it through the perils of fame but we still looked on each other with a lot of respect. He was mad with me at the time but he played it and looked up at me and smiled.
'I walked in and handed a rough cassette to Lindsey. Stevie once told me: ‘What I remember aren’t the bad nights when we weren’t speaking to one another but the night Dreams was written. The rollicking Don’t Stop remains a radio staple while The Chain is the BBC’s theme tune for its Formula 1 coverage. The songs pushed founder members Mick and John away from their roots in British blues to something that sounds contemporary even today. Rumours won a Grammy for album of the year in 1978. The sleeve features Herbert Worthington’s black-and-white photo of Stevie Nicks and soon-to-be-lover Mick Fleetwood. chart for 31 weeks - and has now sold 40 million copies worldwide. Echoes of the album’s radio-friendly hooks and harmonies can now be heard in modern bands like The Pierces and Haim. So how does it all stand up three-and-a-half decades on? Very well indeed.
For Mac maniacs, a ‘deluxe’ edition, close to £50, is bolstered by further outtakes, a DVD and copy of Rumours on vinyl. The landmark album is being re-issued in two packages with bonus material, out-takes and live recordings to mark the band’s reunion tour (UK dates are expected to be in late September).Ī three-CD version, selling at around £12, contains the original album, bonus tracks and the live material. On Monday - 35 years after its original release - Rumours is back. Keyboardist Christine McVie described the sessions as a ‘nightly cocktail party’ while drummer Mick Fleetwood said they were ‘crucifyingly difficult’.īut the Anglo-Americans pressed on to finish ‘the most important album we ever made’. Classic: Rumours, by the British-American rock band Fleetwood Macįleetwood Mac’s 1977 album Rumours wasn’t so much a rock record as a fully fledged soap opera.įuelled by drugs and tangled romances, it chronicled the five members’ raw emotions with classic songs like Don’t Stop, Go Your Own Way and Dreams.