Christine Anne McVie. - 1943 -2022 šŸ•Š šŸ¤ Fleetwood Mac ā€¢ #stevienicks #christinemcvie songbird

. . . . . . .Christine Anne McVie -məkĖˆviĆ©e Perfect; 12 July 1943 ā€“ 30 November 2022) was an English musician and songwriter. She was principally known as a vocalist and keyboardist with the band Fleetwood Mac. A member of several bands on the mid-1960s British Blues scene, notably Chicken Shack, she began playing with Fleetwood Mac in 1968, initially as a contract session player, before formally joining the band in 1970. By 1971, she started to emerge as a songwriter, with her first compositions appearing on her fourth album with the group, Future Games. She would remain with the band through many lineup changes for the next several decades, generally writing and performing lead vocals on about half of the tracks on all of their subsequent studio albums (though she had partially retired in 1998, and only appeared as a session musician on the bandā€™s last studio album, Say You Will). She also released three solo studio albums. Steve Leggett of AllMusic described her as an ā€œunabashedly easy-on-the-ears singer/songwriter, and the prime mover behind some of Fleetwood Macā€™s biggest hitsā€œ.[4] Eight songs written or co-written by her, including ā€œDonā€™t Stopā€œ, ā€œEverywhereā€œ and ā€œLittle Liesā€œ, appeared on Fleetwood Macā€™s 1988 Greatest Hits album. In 1998, as a member of Fleetwood Mac, McVie was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and received the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to same year, after almost 30 years with the band, she opted to leave and lived in semi-retirement for nearly 15 years. She released a solo album in 2004. In September 2013 she appeared on stage with Fleetwood Mac at the O2 Arena in London, before rejoining the band in 2014 prior to their On with the Show tour.
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