Red Rover (song)

Last updated
"Red Rover"
Song by Fleetwood Mac
from the album Say You Will
Recorded1995–2002
Studio
Length3:58
Label Reprise
Songwriter Lindsey Buckingham
Producers Lindsey Buckingham
Rob Cavallo

"Red Rover" is a Fleetwood Mac song written and sung by Lindsey Buckingham. It first appeared as the sixth track on the band's 2003 studio album Say You WIll after initially being recorded for one of Buckingham's solo albums. Buckingham has since performed the song live on tour both as a solo artist and a member of Fleetwood Mac.

Contents

Background

Buckingham wrote "Red Rover" with the idea of creating a song with "one guitar doing all the work, with some edges on it." [1] He aimed to create a guitar part that would "cover so much ground" and underpin the entire track. Commenting on "Red Rover", Buckingham said that there was "a lot of stuff going on, but it's not too loud. It's kind of a rumble underneath. It's all about letting the guitar part have so much presence and melodicism on its own that I just let it do its thing and then find a melody to go over that." [2]

Buckingham remarked that the song was "probably sped up a little" and that "people either like that or they don't." [3] He doubled the acoustic guitar track, slowed the guitars down, and then bounced the audio to a different track, where he oscillated the part with a fader in time with the rest of the music. Buckingham compared the sound he achieved to gated effects found on 1980s records. He also wanted the guitars to supplant the role that a drum kit would otherwise provide, adding that he "had to slow the tape machine way down to get the rhythmic manipulations as precise as possible." [4] The song's refrain of "red rover/we come to take you over" is a modification of a phrase found in the children's game of Red Rover." [5]

Buckingham listed "Red Rover" as his favorite track from the Say You Will album in a 2004 interview with The Sunday Mail , saying that it was "about a simple guitar part doing the work of the whole rhythm track to a great degree. That's the kind of thing that interests me at the moment." [6] He also identified "Red Rover" as one of the songs on Say You Will that was "more adventuresome than anything we've ever done." [7] When asked by Devon Ivie of Vulture to name the nerdiest song in his discography, Buckingham cited "Red Rover" as one example. [8]

Critical reception

Julian Cole of The Yorkshire Evening Press called "Red Rover" a "lovely, frantic" song that was "one of the standout tracks" on Say You Will. [9] Barney Hoskyns of Uncut felt that the song's "heady melodicism and thrilling hyper-syncopation" were "really intoxicating." [10] Writing for Tulsa World , Thomas Conner described "Red Rover" as "an eerie but compelling song" with "tinny" guitars that "sounded as if they're being transmitted from the netherworld." [11] In their review for Say You Will, Tom Moon of The Philadelphia Inquirer said that the song was "perhaps this too-long album's masterwork". He highlighted the song's "choppy, percussively strummed guitar chorale" with a "soaring refrain unlike anything in the Mac canon." [5]

Live performances

"Red Rover" was one of the songs played on the final leg of the band's Say You Will Tour. [12] During this tour, Buckingham would preface "Red Rover" by saying that the song was written from the perspective of polytheistic deities who are observing mankind in dismay from Mount Olympus and determining whether it was "time to pull the plug" on their experiment. [13] [14]

He had rehearsed the song with Fleetwood Mac in 2003 and mentioned that the song was "interesting to do live. We've got three guitar players running through this vibrato on/off thing, and the on/off is tied into a specific click. And we have to play to that click or the timing's all off, so we're working it all out and it's pretty trippy." [1] Buckingham encountered issues with the guitar tuning during the band's performance at the Meadows Music Theatre, which required him to restart the song. [15] Buckingham played "Red Rover" during his Soundstage performance in 2005. [16] The performance was later issued on DVD the following year, [17] , which featured Buckingham's performance of "Red Rover". [18] He also included the song in the setlist for his 2007 tour promoting his Under the Skin album. [19]

References

  1. 1 2 Lanham, Tom (June 2003). "Mac Daddy". Guitar One . Vol. 6, no. 6. Archived from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via The Blue Letter Archives.
  2. Zollo, Paul (October 2003). "Taken by the Wind". Acoustic Guitar . Archived from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via The Blue Letter Archives.
  3. Rotondi, James (June 2003). "Back in Mac!". Guitar World Acoustic . No. 59. Archived from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via The Blue Letter Archives.
  4. Thompson, Art (April 2003). "Guitar Player - The Eternal Return". Guitar Player. Archived from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via The Blue Letter Archives.
  5. 1 2 Moon, Tom (10 May 2003). "'Say You Will' meets promise of 'Rumours'". Tulsa World . p. D4. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.
  6. Yorke, Ritchie (8 February 2004). "Lindsey's Top Mac Tracks". The Sunday Mail . Archived from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 14 November 2025 via The Blue Letter Archives.
  7. Selvin, Joel (15 April 2003). "Buckingham gets back into 'that thing' of Fleetwood Mac". SFGATE. Retrieved 15 November 2025.
  8. Ivie, Devon (24 November 2021). "Lindsey Buckingham on the Most Fulfilling and Dysfunctional of His Career" . Vulture . Archived from the original on 29 November 2021. Retrieved 14 November 2025.
  9. Cole, Julian (1 May 2003). "Mac's back". The Yorkshire Evening Press . p. 20. Retrieved 14 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.
  10. Hoskyns, Barney (May 2003). "Fleetwood Mac: Say You Will (Reprise)" . Uncut . Retrieved 15 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.
  11. Conner, Thomas (10 May 2003). "The Mac is back with muscular, long record". Tulsa World . p. D4. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.
  12. "The Say You Will Tour". Archived from the original on 21 March 2007. Retrieved 15 November 2025.
  13. Roubin, Olivier; Ollivier, Romuald (1 April 2025). Fleetwood Mac: All The Songs. New York: Black Dog Leventhal Publishers. p. 566. ISBN   978-0-7624-8630-4.
  14. Buckingham, Lindsey (8 September 2015). Fleetwood Mac - Red Rover (Jones Beach, 2004) . Retrieved 15 November 2025 via YouTube.
  15. Pencek, David (10 June 2004). "Nicks, Buckingham carry Fleetwood torch". The Bulletin . p. D2. Retrieved 14 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.
  16. "Prime-Time Highlights". The Times . 8 September 2005. p. 7D. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.
  17. "Lindsey Buckingham - Soundstage Presents (Universal)". Telegraph-Journal . 1 March 2006. p. D1. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.
  18. "Soundstage Presents Lindsey Buckingham". AllMusic . Retrieved 15 November 2025.
  19. Morast, Robert (28 June 2007). "Creative Buckingham transforms nostalgia into compelling show". Argus Leader . p. 3A. Retrieved 15 November 2025 via Newspapers.com.