Fleetwood Mac
Tusk
Label:  Warners Brothers 
Date:  1979
Length:  0:00
Format:  2LP
Genre:  Rock; Classic
  Category:  rock
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Over & Over    
      2.  
      Ledge    
      3.  
      Think About Me    
      4.  
      Save Me a Place    
      5.  
      Sara [Edit]    
      6.  
      What Makes You Think You're the One    
      7.  
      Storms    
      8.  
      That's All for Everyone    
      9.  
      Not That Funny    
      10.  
      Sisters of the Moon    
      11.  
      Angel    
      12.  
      That's Enough for Me    
      13.  
      Brown Eyes    
      14.  
      Never Make Me Cry    
      15.  
      I Know I'm Not Wrong    
      16.  
      Honey Hi    
      17.  
      Beautiful Child    
      18.  
      Walk a Thin Line    
      19.  
      Tusk    
      20.  
      Never Forget    
    Additional info: | top

      A liner portrait of the big Mac, then coming off the commercial bonanza of Rumours, shows them looking anxiously at guitarist, singer, songwriter, and de facto auteur Lindsey Buckingham, a moment given weight by the sprawling ambitions behind this 1979 double album. Buckingham's superb sense of pop craft had catapulted the once blues-based rockers into multiplatinum ubiquity, and he responded not with a safe return to form but with an invitation for his songwriting partners to chase their respective muses. Comparisons to the Beatles' White Album abounded and remain apt: Stevie Nicks twirls dreamily through extended variations on her crystal visions, Christine McVie turns in a reliably fine set of sunny pop-rock cruisers and tender ballads, and Mick Fleetwood and John McVie sustain their reputation as one of rock's most powerful yet deft rhythm sections. Buckingham provides the wild cards, in largely self-recorded plunges into his own skittish psyche, culminating in the massive title song, beefed up by the University of Southern California's marching band, but more cannily in dreamy music-box exercises ("That's All for Everyone") and sudden bursts of gonzo, fuzz-toned rock ("That's Enough for Me"). Better than its detractors thought upon release, Tusk was a brave platinum "failure" that actually charts where subsequent Mac and Buckingham projects would go. --Sam Sutherland