Mick Fleetwood
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Mick Fleetwood | |
|---|---|
| Background information | |
| Birth name | Michael John Kells Fleetwood |
| Born | June 24, 1947 Redruth, Cornwall, United Kingdom |
| Genre(s) | Blues Blues-Rock Rock |
| Occupation(s) | Musician |
| Instrument(s) | Drums, Percussion |
| Years active | 1964 - present |
| Label(s) | Reprise |
| Associated acts |
Fleetwood Mac John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers Mick Fleetwood's Zoo The Zoo |
| Website | http://www.mickfleetwood.com |
Michael John Kells "Mick" Fleetwood (born June 24, 1947) is a British musician best known for his role as the drummer with the blues/rock and roll band Fleetwood Mac. His name, combined with that of John McVie was the inspiration for the name of the originally Peter Green-led Fleetwood Mac. Besides his work as a drummer, he also helped form the different incarnations of his band Fleetwood Mac. In 1974, he met and invited Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks to join Fleetwood Mac. Although Buckingham and Nicks deserve credit for contributing to much of Fleetwood Mac's later commercial success, Mick Fleetwood's determination to keep the band together was essential to Fleetwood Mac's longevity as a band and their lasting international success. He is known for his distinctive height; Fleetwood stands at 6 ft 6 inches (197cm).
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He was born to Mike Fleetwood and Bridgit 'Biddy' Brereton. The early childhood years saw young Mick Fleetwood and his family follow his father, a Royal Air Force fighter pilot, initially to Egypt where the family stayed for about six years. Later his father was posted to Norway, permitting Mick Fleetwood to acquire fluency in the Norwegian language while attending school there. However according to his autobiography Fleetwood - My Life and Adventures with Fleetwood Mac academically Mick Fleetwood had an extremely difficult and trying time throughout his school years, many of which he spent at English boarding schools such as Sherborne. He performed very poorly in exams which he himself attributed to his persistent inability to commit facts to memory. He dropped out of school aged only 15 and in 1963 moved to London to pursue his interest in starting up a career as a drummer.
Keyboard player Peter Bardens gave Fleetwood his first gig in Bardens' band The Cheynes, thus seeding the young drummer's musical career. It would take him from The Cheynes to stints in the Bo Street Runners, Peter Bs, Shotgun Express (with Rod Stewart), and John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers. After being dismissed from the Bluesbreakers for repeated inebriety during gigs Mick Fleetwood was asked a few months later by singer and guitar player Peter Green to join him along with bass player John McVie in his new band Fleetwood Mac.
Since then more than fifty albums have been released under the name Fleetwood Mac - by far the most popular being the two mega-platinum sets the group put out in the late seventies - Fleetwood Mac and Rumours.
Apart from his work with Fleetwood Mac Mick has led a number of side projects. 1981's The Visitor featured heavy African stylistics and a rerecording of "Rattlesnake Shake" with Peter Green. In 1983 he formed Mick Fleetwood's Zoo which recorded the album I'm Not Me featuring a minor hit with the Mac-ish "I Want You Back" and a cover version of the Beach Boys' 'Angel Come Home'. A later version of the group featured Bekka Bramlett on vocals and recorded 1991's Shaking the Cage. Fleetwood's most recent solo work to date is "Something Big", released in 2004.
Fleetwood also has a secondary career as a TV and film actor, usually in minor parts. His roles in this field have included a resistance leader in The Running Man and as a guest alien in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode Manhunt. Fleetwood was also a co-host along with Samantha Fox of the 1989 BRIT Awards, which contained numerous gaffes and flubbed lines. In the wake of this public mishap, the Brit awards were routinely pre-recorded for the next 18 years, which was changed only recently, in 2007, and the awards are now again broadcast live to the British public.
He is the author of Fleetwood - My Life and Adventures with Fleetwood Mac, his memoirs of his life, especially with Fleetwood Mac, published in 1990. Included in the book are his experiences with other musicians including Eric Clapton, members of The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, and a romance with Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac. Fleetwood also discusses his addiction to powdered cocaine and his personal bankruptcy after earning millions of dollars and pounds from his drumming career. In 1979, Mick Fleetwood was diagnosed with diabetes, after having suffered recurring bouts of hypoglycemia during several live shows. [1]
His sister was the late actress Susan Fleetwood.
He is the only drummer in the semi-fictional (originally intended to be a spoof) band Spinal Tap to survive in the fictional story.
Mick Fleetwood became a US citizen on 22 November 2006 in Los Angeles, CA.
Drums: Collector's Series Maple Drums in Natural Lacquer over Exotic Quilted Maple with 24k Gold hardware
- 18"×22" bass drum
- 6"×10" snare
- 6"×14" snare
- 8"×10" rack tom
- 9"×12" rack tom
- 11"×14" floor tom
- 13"×16" floor tom
Cymbals: (from left to right)
- Zildjian 15" K Mastersound Hi-hat
- Zildjian 20" A Custom Flat Top Ride
- Zildjian 22" A Custom Ride
- Zildjian 17" A Custom Crash
- Zildjian 17" A Custom Crash
- Zildjian 22" K Ride
- Zildjian 22" K Constantinople Medium Ride
- Zildjian 18" FX Oriental China Trash
| Year | Album | US | UK | Additional information |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1968 | Fleetwood Mac (Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac) | 198 | 4 | - |
| 1968 | Mr. Wonderful | - | 10 | Fleetwood featured on the cover art |
| 1969 | Then Play On | 192 | 6 | Fleetwood was credited with the instrumental "Fighting For Madge" |
| 1970 | Kiln House | 69 | 39 | Fleetwood co-wrote "Station Man" |
| 1971 | Future Games | 91 | - | - |
| 1972 | Bare Trees | 70 | - | - |
| 1973 | Penguin | 49 | - | - |
| 1973 | Mystery To Me | 68 | - | - |
| 1974 | Heroes Are Hard to Find | 34 | - | Fleetwood featured on the cover art |
| 1975 | Fleetwood Mac | 1 | 23 | - |
| 1977 | Rumours | 1 | 1 | Fleetwood wrote the drum parts for the - "The Chain" |
| 1979 | Tusk | 4 | 1 | - |
| 1980 | Live | 14 | 31 | - |
| 1982 | Mirage | 1 | 5 | - |
| 1987 | Tango in the Night | 7 | 1 | - |
| 1988 | Greatest Hits | 14 | 3 | - |
| 1990 | Behind the Mask | 18 | 1 | - |
| 1995 | Time | - | 47 | Fleetwood co-wrote "These Strange Times" |
| 1997 | The Dance | 1 | 15 | - |
| 2003 | Say You Will | 3 | 6 | - |
| Year | Album | US | UK | Additional information |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1981 | The Visitor | 43 | - | Featured two Fleetwood Mac remakes - "Rattlesnake Shake" & "Walk A Thin Line" |
| 1983 | I'm Not Me | - | - | Billed as "Mick Fleetwood's Zoo" |
| 1992 | Shakin' The Cage | - | - | Billed as "The Zoo" |
| 2004 | Something Big | - | - | Billed as "The Mick Fleetwood Band" |
- Mick Fleetwood article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki
- Biography from The Penguin
- AMG Entry for Mick Fleetwood
- Peter Green-Fanpage Deutschland/Germany
- Official website for Mick Fleetwood
- Five interview segments with Mick Fleetwood