Tango in the Night

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tango in the Night
Studio album by
Released13 April 1987
RecordedNovember 1985 – March 1987
StudioRumbo Recorders and the Slope (Los Angeles, California)
Genre
Length44:28
LabelWarner Bros.
Producer
Fleetwood Mac chronology
Mirage
(1982)
Tango in the Night
(1987)
Greatest Hits
(1988)
Singles from Tango in the Night
  1. "Big Love"
    Released: March 1987[1]
  2. "Seven Wonders"
    Released: June 1987[1]
  3. "Little Lies"
    Released: August 1987[1]
  4. "Everywhere"
    Released: November 1987 (US)[1]
  5. "Family Man"
    Released: December 1987 (UK)[1]
  6. "Isn't It Midnight"
    Released: June 1988[1]

Tango in the Night is the fourteenth studio album by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, released on 13 April 1987. As a result of Lindsey Buckingham's departure later that year, it is the fifth and final studio album with the band's most successful lineup of Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood, Christine McVie, John McVie, and Stevie Nicks,[1] though Christine McVie would make guest appearances on the band's 2003 album, Say You Will. This lineup was not seen again until 1997's live album The Dance.

Produced by Buckingham with Richard Dashut, Tango in the Night began as one of Buckingham's solo projects, but in 1985, the production had morphed into Fleetwood Mac's next record. It contains several hit singles, including four US top 20 hits: "Big Love" (No. 5), "Seven Wonders" (No. 19), "Little Lies" (No. 4), and "Everywhere" (No. 14). Two additional songs, "Family Man" (No. 90) and "Isn't It Midnight", were released as singles to lower chart success. Tango in the Night has sold over 15 million copies worldwide.[2][3] In March 2017, remastered deluxe editions of Tango in the Night were released, the first a double-CD set and the second a 3CD/1DVD/1-LP boxset.[4]

The cover art for the album is a painting by Australian artist Brett-Livingstone Strong that was hanging in Buckingham's home. The painting is an homage to the 19th-century French painter Henri Rousseau, emulating his colourful jungle theme works such as The Snake Charmer and The Repast of the Lion. The painting was also used as the cover art for "Big Love", the album's lead single.

History[edit]

After the completion of the Mirage Tour in 1982, four members of Fleetwood Mac released five solo albums, with varying degrees of success. Mick Fleetwood, Christine McVie, and Lindsey Buckingham each released one, while Stevie Nicks issued two.[5]

In 1985, Christine McVie was asked to record a cover of Elvis Presley's "Can't Help Falling in Love" for the soundtrack of the movie A Fine Mess. Richard Dashut, who had engineered and produced Rumours, Tusk, and Mirage, was brought in to assist with the song's production. Buckingham, Fleetwood, and John McVie were enlisted to supply the instrumentation. Greg Droman, a relatively new producer at the time, was also asked to engineer the song after an encounter with Dashut at a recording studio owned by Captain & Tennille.[6] A few weeks later, Droman worked with Buckingham on "Time Bomb Town" for the Back to the Future film soundtrack. Buckingham retained Droman to engineer what was intended to be his third solo album, although the project eventually morphed into a Fleetwood Mac album once other members got involved.[6]

Fleetwood Mac originally planned to work with an outside producer and first worked with Nile Rogers, but the collaboration fell through. Record producer Mo Ostin then paired the band with Jason Corsaro, who had worked with the Power Station. The band then booked Studio One and rehearsed for a week without Stevie Nicks, who was in Australia touring with Tom Petty and Bob Dylan.[7] Nothing came of these sessions, so Fleetwood Mac instead used the production team of Buckingham and Dashut, with Droman as an engineer.[8][9]

Composition[edit]

Some of Buckingham's compositions on Tango in the Night, including "Big Love" and "Family Man", were originally developed for his shelved solo album. These songs were mostly complete by the time Buckingham presented them to the band, although "Family Man" was "sweetened up" during the mixing process. The band also sifted through Buckingham's demos and selected "Caroline", which he had written a few years prior.[10]

Three songs on the album were co-written by Buckingham and Christine McVie.[11] McVie remarked that even though the two "didn't sit down at a piano and decide the chords together", she believed that the creative process during the Tango in the Night sessions was more collaborative than their past efforts.[12]

Recording[edit]

After the release of Mirage, John McVie had spent much of his time sailing the Caribbean island of Saint Thomas and barely played bass in the years leading up to the making of Tango in the Night. In an attempt to be more productive in the studio, he quit drinking cold turkey, though this proved to be unsuccessful, and he grew concerned that he had lost his ability to play.[7] Mick Fleetwood stated that his cocaine use during the recording of Tango in the Night was worse than the Rumours sessions; Buckingham placed a Winnebago in his driveway for Fleetwood and his friends when their drug use impeded productivity in the recording studio.[13]

Dashut and Droman recalled that the album's recording sessions were particularly tedious, even by Fleetwood Mac standards. The band recorded certain parts in half-speed to find suitable textures. This would double the song's duration, which made for "a brutal ten minutes to listen to", according to Droman. By recording parts in half-speed, they managed to make each song sound "open and airy". "When you record something really slow and you speed it up, all the harmonics get shifted up. You end up with this high end, this tinkly little high end, that wouldn't exist [otherwise]. There's not another way you could get that, at least back then."[6]

Although the record took eighteen months to complete, Stevie Nicks spent a total of two weeks in the studio with the band. She was promoting Rock a Little throughout this period, so she sent the band demos to work on while she was on tour. One of those songs, "Welcome to the Room... Sara", was inspired by her thirty-day stay at the Betty Ford Center to overcome her cocaine addiction in October 1986 (Nicks used the pseudonym "Sara Anderson" when she checked into the facility).[14]

When Nicks did go to the studio, she often felt unmotivated: "I can remember going up there and not being happy to even be there... I didn't go very often". Vocal sessions took place in Buckingham's master bedroom, where Nicks frequently recorded her parts for Buckingham and McVie's songs under the influence of alcohol; Buckingham deleted most of Nicks' vocals after she left the studio. "I'm not blaming him for that because I'm sure they totally sucked. Vocals done when you're crazy and drinking a cup of brandy probably aren't usually going to be great".[15][16]

Buckingham recorded some of the vocals using a Fairlight, an early sampling synthesizer.[17] On "When I See You Again", he re-assembled separately recorded takes of Nicks, explaining, "I had to pull performances out of words and lines and make parts that sounded like her that weren't her".[18] "That was in my estimation when everybody in the band was personally at their worst. By the time we did Tango in the Night, everybody was leading their lives in a way that they would not be too proud of today".[19]

Release[edit]

With pressure on Buckingham to keep the project focused and moving forward, things came to a head shortly after the release of Tango in the Night. At a band meeting at Christine McVie's house to discuss the accompanying tour, he announced his departure, which infuriated Nicks. She physically attacked Buckingham, and the ensuing fight between the ex-lovers spilled into the street.[20]

Fleetwood noted that the album "was well received. Somewhat sadly, the kudos of that was never really fully attributed to Lindsey because he wasn't present... He was coerced and persuaded to do that album—mainly by me. And, to his credit, he put aside everything that he'd dreamt of doing, including making his own album, for Fleetwood Mac, but then realised that he'd made a mistake... Lindsey was not being heard. We just didn't get it".[21] Buckingham partially attributed his decision to leave Fleetwood Mac to the rigors of touring, which he believed would have exacerbated the interpersonal turbulence experienced in the studio. "Compared to making an album, in my experience, going on the road will multiply the craziness by times five. I just wasn’t up for that."[22]

Following Buckingham's departure, guitarists Rick Vito and Billy Burnette were hired to replace him on the subsequent tour.[19]

Critical reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[23]
Blender[24]
Chicago Sun-Times[25]
The Guardian[26]
Los Angeles Times[27]
Mojo[28]
Pitchfork8.7/10[18]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[29]
The Village VoiceB+[30]

Tango in the Night has mostly received positive reviews. Alex Henderson of AllMusic praised Buckingham's contributions to the album, saying that his "thoughtful use of synthesizers were a major asset" and that he "consistently [brought] out the best in his colleagues on this superb album."[23] Steve Hochman of the Los Angeles Times also singled out Buckingham's production work, saying that "even relatively conventional material as McVie's straight rocker, 'Isn't It Midnight' and Nicks' dreamy 'When I See You Again' benefit from the subtly bizarre undercurrents Buckingham creates."[27] MOJO described the album as "a perfect Mac showcase for McVie and Buckingham's musical partnership."[31]

Alexis Petridis of The Guardian wrote that the album "seems even more deserving of the 'flawed masterpiece' tag than Tusk."[26] Ivy Nelson of Pitchfork was complimentary of Buckingham and McVie's songs but reserved some criticism for Nicks, saying that "her voice, invariably hoarse after years of cocaine abuse, often warps or fails the already incomplete material."[18] Robert Christgau thought that the album was an improvement over Mirage but failed to live up to the quality of the band's 1975 eponymous release and Rumours.[30]

Commercial performance[edit]

Tango in the Night is the band's second-biggest-selling studio album[32] after the phenomenally successful Rumours, which was released ten years earlier. The intervening albums, Tusk (1979) and Mirage (1982), although big sellers in key territories, had not matched their predecessor's huge success. Tango in the Night was a worldwide hit, with several singles becoming popular all over the world. Christine McVie's "Little Lies" and "Everywhere" in particular appear on several 1980s compilation albums.[33]

The album was a success in the United States, where it peaked at No. 7 on the Billboard 200 for three weeks, spending more than seven months within the top 20 and more than ten months within the top 40. It was certified 3× Platinum in October 2000 for selling three million copies in the US.[34] Four singles from the album reached the Billboard top 20: "Big Love" (No. 5), "Little Lies" (No. 4), "Everywhere" (No. 14), and "Seven Wonders" (No. 19).[1] The album was particularly successful in the UK, where it reached no. 1 three times during 1987–88 for a total of five weeks and spent more than eight months within the top 10 of the UK albums chart. It is the seventh-biggest-selling album of the 1980s in the UK, being certified 8× Platinum (2.4 million copies),[35] and it is still currently one of the UK's top 100 best-selling albums of all time.[32] Three singles were top 10 hits in Britain: "Big Love" (No. 9), "Little Lies" (No. 5), and "Everywhere" (No. 4). A total of six singles were eventually taken from the album over a period of fifteen months.[1] The album spent 115 weeks in the top 75 of the UK Albums Chart.[36]

"Big Love", "Seven Wonders", "Little Lies", "Family Man", and "Everywhere" were all released as extended 12" remixes in most territories.[1]

Outtakes[edit]

Four songs from the Tango in the Night sessions did not make the final album cut and subsequently became B-sides. "You and I (Part I)" was the B-side to the single release of "Big Love".[1] "Seven Wonders" was released with the Stevie Nicks-penned instrumental track "Book of Miracles" as its B-side. This eventually became the song "Juliet" on Nicks' 1989 solo album, The Other Side of the Mirror. McVie's "Ricky" was the B-side to "Little Lies" and Lindsey Buckingham's "Down Endless Street" was issued as the B-side to "Family Man".[1] Nicks also contributed three additional songs that failed to make the final cut. "What Has Rock & Roll Ever Done for You?" was considered, but it was replaced by "When I See You Again".[7] "Ooh My Love", like "Juliet", eventually made its way onto Nicks' solo album, while "Joan of Arc" remains unreleased. "I still want to record it", she explained. "The song has its really good moments but it's not good enough to go out as that version".[15]

Two additional tracks, both co-written by McVie and Buckingham, also failed to appear on the final product: "Where We Belong", which incorporates Buckingham's "folksy fingerpicking" and McVie's "brilliant pop simplicity" was written as a duet, but was later abandoned in favor of other songs.[37] The other, "Special Kind of Love", was described by Pitchfork as a "completely developed Buckingham song".[18] Both tracks subsequently appeared on the deluxe edition of Tango in the Night.[4]

Deluxe edition[edit]

A deluxe edition of Tango in the Night was issued in 2017. Included in the set were three discs, a vinyl LP, and a DVD, the latter of which contained a high-resolution stereo mix of the album. The second disc included both halves of "You and I", released and combined for the first time. Multiple remixes of "Big Love", "Seven Wonders", "Little Lies", "Everywhere", and "Family Man" were featured on the third disc.[4]

Track listing[edit]

No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocalsLength
1."Big Love"Lindsey BuckinghamBuckingham3:37
2."Seven Wonders"Nicks3:38
3."Everywhere"Christine McVieC. McVie3:48
4."Caroline"BuckinghamBuckingham3:50
5."Tango in the Night"BuckinghamBuckingham3:56
6."Mystified"
  • C. McVie
  • Buckingham
C. McVie3:08
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocalsLength
1."Little Lies"
  • C. McVie
  • Eddy Quintela
C. McVie3:40
2."Family Man"
Buckingham4:08
3."Welcome to the Room... Sara"NicksNicks3:37
4."Isn't It Midnight"
  • C. McVie
  • Quintela
  • Buckingham
C. McVie4:06
5."When I See You Again"NicksNicks with Buckingham3:49
6."You and I, Part II"
  • Buckingham
  • C. McVie
Buckingham2:40

Personnel[edit]

Fleetwood Mac

Production

  • Lindsey Buckingham – producer, arrangements, additional engineer, cover concept
  • Richard Dashut – producer, cover concept
  • Greg Droman – engineer
  • Stephen Marcussen – mastering at Precision Lacquer (Hollywood, California)
  • John Courage – studio coordinator
  • Roy Hopper – studio crew
  • Ray Lindsey – studio crew
  • Steve Matteucci – studio crew
  • Brett-Livingstone Strong – cover painting
  • Greg Gorman – cover photography
  • Jeri Heiden – art direction

Charts[edit]

Certifications and sales[edit]

Certifications and sales for Tango in the Night
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[82] 4× Platinum 300,000[2]
Australia (ARIA)[83]
video
Gold 7,500^
Canada (Music Canada)[84] 5× Platinum 500,000^
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[85] Gold 10,000
Germany (BVMI)[86] 2× Platinum 1,000,000^
Hong Kong (IFPI Hong Kong)[87] Gold 10,000*
Italy 100,000[88]
Netherlands (NVPI)[89] Platinum 100,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[90] Platinum 15,000^
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[91] Platinum 100,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[92] Platinum 50,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[94] 8× Platinum 2,500,000[93]
United States (RIAA)[34] 3× Platinum 3,000,000^
United States (RIAA)[95]
video
Gold 50,000^
Summaries
Worldwide 15,000,000[2][3]

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

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  95. ^ "American video certifications – Fleetwood Mac – Tango in the Night". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 4 June 2020.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.</ref>