When people think of Fleetwood Mac, they often think first of the turbulent relationships that inspired Rumours or the magnetic stage presence of Stevie Nicks. But Christine McVie, who would have turned 83 on July 12, quietly became the band’s emotional center, writing many of its warmest, most enduring songs.
After first working with Fleetwood Mac as a session musician, McVie officially joined the band in 1970 as its keyboardist, songwriter and one of its lead vocalists. Over the next three decades, she penned classics including “Over My Head,” “Say You Love Me,” “Don’t Stop,” “You Make Loving Fun,” “Songbird,” “Hold Me,” “Little Lies” and “Everywhere.” Eight of her songs ultimately appeared on Fleetwood Mac’s 1988 Greatest Hits compilation album, a testament to how central her writing was to the band’s success.
Unlike many of Fleetwood Mac’s most famous songs, McVie’s work rarely dwelled on bitterness. In a tribute published shortly after her death in 2022, NPR observed that she consistently brought “deep, romantic optimism” to the band’s music, describing her songs as grounded in “romance and warmth” even when they acknowledged life’s uncertainties. The outlet noted that while Fleetwood Mac became famous for songs about heartbreak, McVie specialized in hope.
That perspective wasn’t accidental. Speaking to Guitar World years earlier (as cited by NPR), McVie summed up her approach simply: “I’m a pretty basic love-song writer. Pretty basic relationship writer.”
She added with characteristic modesty, “I’ve been told that I have a way of saying the obvious in a non-obvious way.”
Her bandmates knew just how indispensable she was. Mick Fleetwoodwrote in the 1991 book “Fleetwood: My Life and Adventures in Fleetwood Mac” that after Peter Green’s departure, “Christine became the glue [that held the band together]. She filled out our sound beautifully.”
Even after leaving Fleetwood Mac in 1998 because of a fear of flying, McVie couldn’t stay away forever. She surprised fans by joining the band onstage in London in 2013 before officially returning the following year. The reunion reminded audiences just how much of Fleetwood Mac’s signature sound came from her piano, soulful contralto and understated songwriting.
When McVie died in November 2022 at age 79, the tributes reflected not only her musical gifts but also the affection she inspired. Nicks called her “my best friend in the whole world,” while Lindsey Buckinghamdescribed her as “a musical comrade, a friend, a soul mate, a sister.” Rolling Stone later shared Mick Fleetwood’s eulogy for McVie where he said she “gifted so much to millions around the world” and believed she would have been “truly amazed at all the attention and celebrations of her music around the world.”
Perhaps McVie herself explained her legacy best. In a 2017 interview with Las Vegas Weekly reflecting on Fleetwood Mac’s songwriting balance, she said, “My contribution is the romance and the warmth. The love songs.” NPR noted that those qualities became the band’s emotional anchor, allowing her songs to shine through every era of Fleetwood Mac’s remarkable career.
More than two years after her death, that warmth still resonates every time listeners hear “Songbird,” “Everywhere” or “Don’t Stop.” Quietly, almost effortlessly, Christine McVie wrote some of the most beloved songs in rock history, and they’re every bit as timeless as the band that recorded them.
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