Christine Perfect | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1970 | |||
Recorded | 1969–1970 | |||
Genre | ||||
Label | Blue Horizon | |||
Producer | Mike Vernon, Christine McVie; Danny Kirwan on "When You Say" | |||
Christine Perfect chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Christine Perfect is the 1970 debut solo album by English keyboardist and singer Christine Perfect, later known as Christine McVie. The album was released just after Perfect had left British blues band Chicken Shack, but before she joined Fleetwood Mac. Released in 1970, the album was originally meant to be titled I'm on My Way as evidenced on copies of the pre-LP single release "I'm Too Far Gone (To Turn Around)". [2] The album was re-released in 1976 as The Legendary Christine Perfect Album, and in 2008 as Christine Perfect – The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions. Despite its name, the 2008 reissue is missing one song, her cover of "I'd Rather Go Blind", although it does also include several bonus tracks. [3] [4]
Most of the songs on the album were performed by the Christine Perfect band, which included Top Topham and Rick Hayward on guitars; Martin Dunsford on bass, and Chris Harding on drums. Fleetwood Mac's Danny Kirwan and John McVie perform on "When You Say", Christine's cover of Danny Kirwan's 1969 song from Then Play On . The album also contained an interpretation of the Etta James song "I'd Rather Go Blind", which had earlier been a hit single for Chicken Shack. Since both Chicken Shack and Perfect were on the same record label, Blue Horizon, the exact same Chicken Shack recording of "I'd Rather Go Blind" was included on her solo album.
The entire album (with the exception of "I'd Rather Go Blind") and the rest of the Christine Perfect sessions while on the Blue Horizon label were made available on the CD compilation Christine Perfect – The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions (2008). This compilation included an album outtake "Tell Me You Need Me" written by Perfect. The compilation also included three tracks recorded on November 24, 1969, for the BBC Dave Lee Travis Sunday Show. "Hey Baby" (originally recorded with Chicken Shack during the O.K. Ken? sessions), "It's You I Miss" and "Gone Into the Sun". These recordings for the BBC were made while finishing the debut solo album and therefore were aired before the albums release in 1970.
In a 1980 interview with Contemporary Keyboard , McVie expressed embarrassment about the album's existence and felt that some of the songs lacked the artistic maturity she believed came during her time in Fleetwood Mac. "When I made that record, I wasn't really sure about my talent, or about what direction I wanted to go in musically. There were people all around who were trying to make me into this kind of a singer or that kind of a singer. Mike Vernon was a great help in many ways – I'm playing music now partly because of what he did to get me started – but even he was pushing me into becoming sort of a black-style English singer. I didn't really feel artistically together until I joined Fleetwood Mac." [5]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Crazy 'Bout You Baby" | Little Walter | 3:03 |
2. | "I'm on My Way" | Deadric Malone | 3:10 |
3. | "Let Me Go (Leave Me Alone)" | Christine Perfect | 3:35 |
4. | "Wait and See" | Perfect | 3:14 |
5. | "Close to Me" |
| 2:40 |
6. | "I'd Rather Go Blind" |
| 3:20 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
7. | "When You Say" | Danny Kirwan | 3:14 |
8. | "And That's Saying a Lot" |
| 2:58 |
9. | "No Road Is the Right Road" | Perfect | 2:49 |
10. | "For You" | Perfect | 2:46 |
11. | "I'm Too Far Gone (To Turn Around)" | 3:26 | |
12. | "I Want You" | Tony Joe White | 2:23 |
Chart (1976) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Billboard 200 [6] | 104 |
Fleetwood Mac are a British-American rock band formed in London in 1967 by guitarist and singer Peter Green. Green named the band by combining the surnames of drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie, who have remained with the band throughout its many lineup changes. Fleetwood Mac have sold more than 120 million records worldwide, making them one of the world's best-selling bands.
Christine Anne McVie was an English musician and singer-songwriter. She was the keyboardist and one of the vocalists and songwriters of Fleetwood Mac.
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Stanley Frederick Webb is an English musician who is the frontman and lead guitarist with the blues band Chicken Shack.
Daniel David Kirwan was a British musician and guitarist, singer and songwriter with the blues-rock band Fleetwood Mac between 1968 and 1972. He released three albums as a solo artist from 1975 to 1979, recorded albums with Otis Spann, Chris Youlden, and Tramp, and worked with former Fleetwood Mac colleagues Jeremy Spencer and Christine McVie on some of their solo projects. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Fleetwood Mac in 1998.
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Michael William Hugh Vernon is an English music executive studio owner and record producer from Harrow, Middlesex. He produced albums for British blues artists and groups in the 1960s, working with the Bluesbreakers, David Bowie, Duster Bennett, Savoy Brown, Chicken Shack, Climax Blues Band, Eric Clapton, Fleetwood Mac, Peter Green, Danny Kirwan, John Mayall, Christine McVie and Ten Years After amongst others.
Blue Horizon Records was a British blues independent record label, founded by Mike Vernon and Neil Slaven in 1965, as an adjunct to their fanzine, R&B Monthly, and was the foremost label at the time of the British blues boom in the mid to late 1960s.
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Jeremy Cedric Spencer is a British musician, best known for playing slide guitar and piano in the original line-up of the rock band Fleetwood Mac. A member since Fleetwood Mac's inception in July 1967, he remained with the band until his abrupt departure in February 1971, when he joined the "Children of God", a new religious movement now known as "The Family International", with which he is still affiliated. After a pair of solo albums in the 1970s, he continued to tour as a musician, but did not release another album until 2006. He released further solo albums from 2012 onwards and has also recorded as part of the folk trio Steetley. As a member of Fleetwood Mac, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.
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