It’s rare for an album to keep rewriting its own history, but this 1977 rock blockbuster is doing exactly that nearly 50 years on.
Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours continues to break records by hitting a stunning milestone on Billboard’s Catalog Albums chart. The LP sat at No. 1 on a 2025 year-end ranking list that tracked a comprehensive catalog of popular music at least 18 months old. Currently, Rumours ranks at No. 5 on that same list.
But its chart placement only tells part of the story. What keeps Rumours in constant rotation is the way it continues to draw in new listeners while never really leaving longtime fans behind.
The LP still resonates. Nearly 50 years later, it hasn’t just stayed relevant; it’s become a beloved collection of songs that remains as fresh and new today as it was when Rumours was first released in 1977.
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Ken Caillat, the album’s producer, admitted in an interview for the official Grammy website that Fleetwood Mac’s personal chaos helped craft a cohesive collection of songs that defined its legacy.
As recording the LP commenced, married bandmates John McVie and Christine McVie split, and Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks ended their relationship. Mick Fleetwood’s marriage likewise came to an end around the same period.
“What I liked about Rumours is that [it was] a really sweet journey with a bunch of naive people just trying to hold it together. It’s really the great American story,” Caillat explained.
“We had no idea what we had. We were so tired,” he added. “Most weeks, we worked seven days a week. You never know when you’re going to do something great.”
He concluded that the members of Fleetwood Mac “worked as this great team, and they almost thought as one. And I got to see it all.”
McVie explained to Rolling Stone in 1977 that there was an overwhelming push to “carry on” despite the group’s internal drama. “Everybody was pretty weirded out. Somehow, Mick was there, the figurehead: ‘We must carry on… let’s be mature about this, sort it out.’ Somehow we waded through it.”
Buckingham later told Rolling Stone in 1984, “When Rumours went crazy, I just couldn’t bring myself to feel strongly about the album. At some point, all the stuff surrounding it started to become the main focus.”
Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours continues to pick up chart milestones nearly 50 years after its release, securing its status as one of the most enduring albums of all time.
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