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#18 (permalink) | ||
Groupie
Join Date: Feb 2013
Posts: 21
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I really feel like both incarnations of the band were in the upper echelons of what they did, which was two completely different things. But in terms of Peter Green's playing, I actually listen to John Mayall's A Hard Road more, which was the precursor to Fleetwood Mac. Peter & John McVie were both Bluesbreakers at the time, & Aynsley Dunbar did most of the drumming but Mick is credited as a guest artist. Paul Butterfield is on there, too, & Mayall's harmonica is second to none. I think when the Sotch/Irish immigrated to the U.S. during the mid/late 19th century famine, that heavily influenced what would become American folk music, & that's the banjo connection. I'd never really thought about it before, but while Lindsay's Fleetwood Mac was easily the more "modern" sounding incarnation, Lindsay's playing was a style that long predated the blues that Peter was interpreting. It's also interesting that Peter was playing a style that was geographically closer to Lindsay, & Lindsay was playing a style that was geographically closer to Peter.
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