Это видео недоступно.
Сожалеем об этом.

Mick Fleetwood on the Lesser-Known History Behind 'Black Magic Woman' | At Home and Social

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 фев 2023
  • Mick Fleetwood talks about the lesser-known history behind the song "Black Magic Woman," how it became a smash hit for Carlos Santana, the interesting connection between Santana's "Supernatural" album and seminal Fleetwood Mac member Peter Green, and more on At Home and Social!
    Watch the full interview: • Mick Fleetwood Talks T...
    Catch more episodes of At Home and Social: • At Home and Social
    Subscribe to AXS TV for more great music content: www.youtube.co...
    More from AXS TV:
    The Winery Dogs' Richie Kotzen on New Album, "III" | Now Listen: • The Winery Dogs' Richi...
    The True Stories Behind Iconic Queen, Jimi Hendrix, and The Beatles Photographs | Rock My Collection:
    • The True Stories Behin...
    REO Speedwagon's Kevin Cronin on Why He Now Loves Singing 'Can't Fight This Feeling': • REO Speedwagon's Kevin...
    #mickfleetwood #fleetwoodmac #santana

Комментарии • 61

  • @bryanmannoia8410
    @bryanmannoia8410 Год назад +23

    Peter Green was one of the best guitarists ever. magic hands.

  • @worldkeeponturning
    @worldkeeponturning Год назад +18

    Peter Green is, and will always be, the best guitarist of his generation. He made fleetwood mac with the idea of leaving one day and his friend Mick would have a band. Mick never forget that and takes every opportunity to sing his praises just as he should 👍

    • @elvislives-gl4rv
      @elvislives-gl4rv Год назад +1

      Only if Jeff Beck isn't in his generation. cheers.

  • @sirfrancisdrake2398
    @sirfrancisdrake2398 Год назад +8

    Notice the “Then Play On” painting behind Mick

  • @RaysDad
    @RaysDad Год назад +8

    I went to a Fleetwood Mac concert after Peter Green had left and Bob Welch was the lead guitarist. The venue was a converted old movie theater on Ocean Blvd. in Long Beach, California and tickets were $1.25. Before the band played Black Magic Woman, Welch acidly pointed out that Santana had taken their song and made it a HIT. As he said HIT Fleetwood played a short, loud drum sting. It was really funny and the audience applauded wildly.

    • @omnipop4936
      @omnipop4936 5 месяцев назад +3

      That's so Mick. 😄

  • @johnglady3261
    @johnglady3261 Год назад +5

    This is for Mick Fleetwood, you guys were doing a concert at the Richfield coliseum in Cleveland Ohio. I ran into u after the concert in downtown flats. It was an eye opening experience you told me my money was no good. My name is Dale , I was tending bar that night you stopped in to have a drink. That's a memory I will never forget.

  • @renodavid
    @renodavid Год назад +5

    Impressive knowledge of early Fleetwood Mac shown by Katie. Now I’ll have to watch the whole thing. I just wish I could crawl into Mick’s brain and experience the memories he has of being in the studio with Peter. Peter of course was at the top of his game for only a few years, but every song he was writing in the late sixties was so original. The Supernatural, Albatross, Oh Well, The Green Manalishi…i could go on. Where the heck were they coming from? I suppose that’s the mark of a great song.
    Oh, and I guess that’s the original painting that they used for the cover of Then Play On on the wall behind Mick. Love it.

  • @user-zx8qq1so7j
    @user-zx8qq1so7j Месяц назад

    Man, to have been around those guys during the British revolution would have been magical, all the wonderful artists that came and went back when all they had was their instruments a few cheap amps and a whole lot of heart, life was much simpler and honest and folks actually supported each other, what a glorious time to be alive indeed..

  • @SidBonkers51
    @SidBonkers51 9 месяцев назад +1

    I knew that Peter had written Black Magic Woman as Im a life long fan of Peter Green, Carlos Santana and Fleetwood Mac but had not picked up on the Supernatural connection before. Cool interview.

  • @maistora
    @maistora Год назад +7

    Not sure if Greenie had heard of Gabor Szabo and his 1966 original 'Gypsy Queen' but Santana definitely based his version of BMW on that, and it perfectly fits - hence the hit success. The original Szabo tune came from an album called 'Spellbinder' - talk of 'Supernatural'? 😉

    • @brucesmith3740
      @brucesmith3740 Год назад +1

      Bmw is very different from gypsy queen. Santana spliced gq on to bmw. Santana bmw would have been a hit without gq. Santana imo did improve on gq. Bmw original had a shuffle section which imo hurt it.

    • @maistora
      @maistora Год назад +1

      @@brucesmith3740 Of course it's different, Santana more than 'spliced' it (which implies a mechanical stitch-together). He used conceptual parts of GQ as intro, but also infused much of that spirit into the entire arrangement (not least - the rhythm/percussion, which he already had made a trademark in his other work)...
      The shuffle part in the original can only irritate people who heard the Santana version first (or who weren't into blues in the 60s) 😜

    • @earthlingjohn
      @earthlingjohn Год назад +1

      And then there is Santana's note-for-note rip off of the original Oye Como Va

  • @LionelMessi-vl1iw
    @LionelMessi-vl1iw Год назад +3

    Black Magic Woman for me will ALWAYS be a Fleetwood Mac song. It’s an almost perfect song. A blues masterpiece with a mysterious almost latin feel. The solo is impeccable. And that beat! The feel is sublime. YES! Listen to The Supernatural and tell me Santana wasn’t influenced by Peter Green. Peter played with an understated beauty, an eloquence that was simply captivating. Santana’s playing on the other hand is heavy and forced.

    • @jamesjameson4303
      @jamesjameson4303 8 месяцев назад

      Dead on! Absolutely! Peter did that long sustain with tons of reverb and harmonics on The Supernatural before Santana made it his signature. Santana was also influenced by Gábor Szabó who also experimented with feedback. All great musicians with their own styles.
      I don't believe in "The Best" unless its in the room for context. But an absolute best is making mockery of many great musicians.
      Peter was great though and one can see that his music is still magical to this day. As is Santana and many other great players.

  • @JSTNtheWZRD
    @JSTNtheWZRD Год назад +6

    Peter G - every solo album he did was GENIUS. He extended psychidelic music so subtly into the future without anyone realizing it. I'm surprised he wasn't praised in the states like at all. By music aficionados, sure, but not by regular people. He wasn't blues, or classifiable as a genre - he was an artist, and a few of his albums are like listening to moonlight through waves at a beach electrified. The same with John Mayall. The Brits didn't ever truly capture the blues, nobody white could in the traditional way - but they made something totally unique from it, and not very British either, as Fleetwood Mac would do a great job too as well, not very British but like from another place - another world beyond - like how the blues is very otherworldly......

  • @leighfoulkes7297
    @leighfoulkes7297 Год назад +2

    Is that the original painting for the album "Then Play On" cover?! Love to have that!

  • @robertmcdougall3166
    @robertmcdougall3166 Год назад +6

    Pity the inspiration behind the song was not mentioned. It was named after Sandra Elsdon, Peter’s girlfriend, whom he referred
    to as Magic Mama. This was not the only song he wrote for her, the other being I Loved Another Woman. Sandra I think
    later became Sandra Elsdon-Vigon. Round about 2014 there was an interview with Sandra, I wonder what ever became of her.

    • @dwaynemcallister7231
      @dwaynemcallister7231 Год назад

      Good point Robert, few ask about this.

    • @Jahnink
      @Jahnink 10 месяцев назад +1

      He write Sandy Mary for her too? Another great song.

    • @robertmcdougall3166
      @robertmcdougall3166 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Jahnink Indeed, forgot about that one, it had some unusual lyrics I recall like ‘She got
      those bony bare looks enough to drive a vegetarian insane’. She must have been some lady. Well remembered, you memory must be a lot better than mine.

    • @Jahnink
      @Jahnink 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@robertmcdougall3166 Man, that was great! I always wondered about that verse. Thanks. I love that song. Peter had a funny sly way with his lyrics. And the groove is right there. She had to be flattered, kinda'.

    • @robertmcdougall3166
      @robertmcdougall3166 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Jahnink After reading your comment I went back and listened to the track, after the first verse all the others tend to have just three words. It is a wee gem.

  • @phillpearson7531
    @phillpearson7531 Год назад +3

    Peter was as good as if not better than all the more famous guitarist from that period. It should also be said that Micks drumming was superior as well.

  • @gnlout7403
    @gnlout7403 Год назад +1

    Micks restaurant in Maui is outstanding

  • @harmono8766
    @harmono8766 Год назад +3

    I like Fleetwood Mac's version more because it has that trippy chord in it. Santana just strums a chord. I think Peter played Harmonics or played with the volume knob.

  • @sosmra
    @sosmra Год назад +1

    I heard it after I heard the Santana version first and then discovered the Mac version afterwards , which is good but obviously the Santana version was the big hit.

  • @Roy-xe9is
    @Roy-xe9is 5 месяцев назад +1

    Carlos owes EVERYTHING to the Green God.

  • @ronnyvonallmen6892
    @ronnyvonallmen6892 Год назад

    “The Supernatural”….Is one of, if not the Greatest Songs ever….

  • @neilphelan145
    @neilphelan145 Год назад +3

    I was listening to Peter Greens' Fleetwood Mac from the beginning! Another one, Oh Well, also dug into my soul. When the band reformed in the 70's I was not impressed in the least with the new music they were doing. To me it was an insult to the original line up. They were really good at what they did but I believe they should have changed the name to reflect the sound they created.

    • @chriscoughlin9289
      @chriscoughlin9289 Год назад +1

      Reformed?
      To which period /incarnation are you referring?
      With Greeny's departure, FM carried on seamlessly under Danny Kirwan's leadership with the release of Kiln House. Christine (Perfect) McVie assumed her role as a full time member of the band during these sessions
      Future games and Bare Trees followed with the addition of Bob Welch.
      Danny was fired prior to 'Heroes..' and Bob Weston came on board as second guitarist to replace him for Penguin and Mystery To Me.
      All of these personnel shakeups were marked by an accompanying evolution away from the band's blues signatures. But you can still hear sly traces of the shuffle lifted from Lazy Poker Blues and inserted into Mick's work behind the kit on 'Don't Stop...' almost ten years after the original's release.
      It would be stretching things to suggest that the arrival of Buckingham/Nicks in 1975 represented much of a 'reforming' at all - since the last vestiges of the old Freddie King styled fire of the original band was already morphing into something else by the time 'Then Play On' was released in 1969-70.
      I never cared for the 'Rumours' era myself - having been a devoted Greeny fanatic first and foremost from the start. That said, I belatedly have come to truly love the contribution that Danny made to the band's sound when he assumed the helm from Peter. Today, 'Station Man' 'Jewel Eyed Judy 'and 'Dust' stand solidly alongside the best work of Peter's tenure in my opinion - with entirely their own set of memorable hooks and soloing.

    • @neilphelan145
      @neilphelan145 Год назад

      @@chriscoughlin9289 I'm referring to the album Rumors and everything since then. For me they completely changed their style. I give them absolute credit for the professional and talent they brought to the table but I didnt care for the direction they took. Even though 3 of the members were in the band I didn't care for the sound that they created thereafter.

    • @scrathness
      @scrathness 7 месяцев назад

      ⁠​⁠@@chriscoughlin9289…. Thank you for setting the guy straight.
      Kiln House, after Peter left was a good record. Bare Trees was also a good record. I personally kind of liked a lot of the stuff ( not really Bob Welsh, sorry) and accepted Stevie and Lyndsey.
      But the band with Peter and Danny was the best by far. The 3 live at The Boston Tea Party albums were incredible.
      Peter was great with Mayall and then the band he formed.
      There was a god awful double CD of Peter songs called “Rattlesnake Shake” ( except for Rory Gallagher’s 2 songs)
      The best tribute by far is “Blues For Greeny” by Gary Moore playing Peter’s old guitar which was basically almost given to him by Peter. If you haven’t heard it do yourself a favor and check it out. ( and Gary ignored the “hits” which made it even better.
      RIP Peter, Gary and Rory

  • @michaelwebster8389
    @michaelwebster8389 Месяц назад +2

    I always preferred Fleetwood Mac's version.

  • @caelachyt
    @caelachyt Год назад +2

    I knew who wrote it because I bought the English Rose album.

    • @chriscoughlin9289
      @chriscoughlin9289 Год назад +2

      I have to admit that I find the interviewers gee whiz approach to the subject pretty darned grating and more than a little over the top.
      This is not some forgotten, arcane slice of Rock and Roll history.
      Carlos himself was pointedly given the role of presenting Greeny and the other FM members with their induction into the Hall of Fame - and followed that by urging Peter onstage for a rendition of BMW.
      To be honest, it actually came off like a manufactured pretext for the interview - akin to excitedly gushing to a septuagenarian Peter Gabriel that she just discovered Supper's Ready, Cinema Show and Lamb Lies Down on Broadway after a lifetime of listening to 'Sledgehammer' and 'In Your Eyes.'
      Possible, I suppose - but it doesn't do much credit to her alleged career as an YT audiophile/pop historian with a reputation to uphold as a person who's serious about their craft.
      To say nothing of giving the artist just cause to entirely doubt the interviewer's sincerity in their supposed appreciation for HIS nearly 60 year career.

    • @caelachyt
      @caelachyt Год назад

      @@chriscoughlin9289 Yeah, most people are pretty superficial these days, and the chick simply reflects the lack of depth we see everywhere. Idiocracy is right around the corner, lol.

    • @xoxb2
      @xoxb2 Год назад +2

      I agree - it's not in any sense a lesser-known backstory. I thought the secret was going to be something about how it was written or who it was about. And yes, cringey interviewer.

  • @jasonvegan5761
    @jasonvegan5761 Год назад +2

    Premieres in 6 days?? 🤦🏻‍♂️ Come on axs, it better be at least a 30 min video

  • @tonykemp3432
    @tonykemp3432 Год назад +2

    Peter green and Danny kirwan composed "black magic woman"

    • @tetrahedron1000
      @tetrahedron1000 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not true. Danny Kirwan joined the band later. His masterpiece was "Something Inside of Me", although he also played on the hits "Albatross", "Man of the World" and "Oh Well, Part 1", as well as on the album "Then Play On" with Peter Green.

    • @tonykemp3432
      @tonykemp3432 11 месяцев назад

      @@tetrahedron1000 well in my opinion, kirwans greats were "sands of time, and about half the stuff off future games and the bare trees albums...... not forgetting"Dust "

    • @chazchuckyboyz4733
      @chazchuckyboyz4733 14 дней назад

      The true essence of black magic woman is to listen to the dual guitars intertwine the moods and blues of G&K. Not a solo effort by San who thought he was the man.

  • @ronnyvonallmen6892
    @ronnyvonallmen6892 Год назад +1

    I prefer the Peter Green/Fleetwood Mac Version….

  • @Daniel-hn7nd
    @Daniel-hn7nd Год назад

    Tough transition for the glam/hair metal crowd. They stop at Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, and Led Zeppelin for the most part.

  • @Jahnink
    @Jahnink 10 месяцев назад

    Read the song credits, girl. Always do that. Then listen to the original. Nothing better than Peter's version. Santana gussies it up way too much. Too loud. No spaces. Listen to Peter Green. You will feel better.

  • @larryburns7225
    @larryburns7225 Год назад

    Hi Katie I like Pink Floyd .you know Roger Waters is doing Dark Side of the Moon over I wonder If he will refresh the cover with something more futuristic and is it the same reason Taylor Swift Redone some of her music. And Mick I just wanted to say what an amazing two sided DVD I bought of the concert the dance Played the 5.1 surround side and what an amazing concert and sound you can tell they really cared about the acoustics in the venue and Micks delicate touch at the end of the songs. you can tell they really wanted to put out a quality DVD. thank You.

  • @christophersteer505
    @christophersteer505 11 месяцев назад

    Mick fleetwood talks like a small fish, minus the s ,what is he like, bless. RS London boy.

  • @kevingill648
    @kevingill648 Год назад

    There's only 1 Peter Green! sorry Carlos.

  • @perryjohnson8213
    @perryjohnson8213 Год назад +1

    Great guy, way overrated drummer.

    • @godfreydaniel6278
      @godfreydaniel6278 Год назад

      What a silly thing to say - he's an AMAZING and unique drummer, very much responsible for millions of recording sales and butts in seats for live performances. In his own way, he's as singular as Ringo...

    • @cmet8280
      @cmet8280 Год назад +1

      His playing suited the song, what more can you ask from a drummer.

    • @tw364
      @tw364 Месяц назад

      Not so great a guy, after Bob Welch literally kept FM going in the early 70's, Green stopped paying royalties to him and disallowed him to be placed into the RRHOF with the band. He's been very lucky to be surrounded by better talent than himself. His drum solos are laughable.

  • @drrettner
    @drrettner Год назад

    Original story I heard was that Santana's wife was black and he wrote it for her.

    • @tw364
      @tw364 Месяц назад

      bullshit

  • @muffinman4353
    @muffinman4353 Год назад +1

    Never liked the song, no matter who performed it.

  • @dh3279
    @dh3279 Год назад +2

    Mick seems like one of those guys you’d love to hang with for a few hours in a living room.

    • @tetrahedron1000
      @tetrahedron1000 11 месяцев назад

      I'd much rather have hung out with Danny Kirwan or Peter Green. Sadly they are no longer with us and it is a shame that Danny tends to be forgotten about.