Bob Welch, whose mysterious and mystical Fleetwood Mac songs Bermuda Triangle,
The Ghost and Hypnotized helped pave the way for his replacement, Stevie
Nicks, and the group's greatest success after his departure, has died at age
65 of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Welch's body was found by his wife in their Nashville home Thursday
afternoon, the Associated Press reported. He left a suicide note, and had been
struggling with unspecified health issues.
His death seemed sadly foreshadowed by a lifetime of small victories and
bitter disappointments. The singer/guitarist with the mellow voice and
sophisticated air led Fleetwood Mac from 1971 until 1974 and, with Christine
McVie, sang lead on most of the band's material during that period.
His songs on albums like Bare Trees, Penguin and Mystery to Me,
especially Sentimental Lady and the FM-radio classic, Hypnotized, helped
establish Fleetwood Mac in the United States. Prior to joining the band as a
replacement for iconic guitarist Peter Green, the group was known as a premier
blues act in England in the late 1960s.
By 1969, Fleetwood Mac was outselling the Beatles and the Rolling Stones
abroad with Green's songs Black Magic Woman (a hit later for Santana), Oh Well
and the instrumental Albatross.
But in America Fleetwood Mac was largely unknown and its brand of
authentic blues was not in tune with easy-listening pop acts like Elton John,
the Carpenters and Carole King.
Welch's sound -- polished, radio-friendly yet moody and bewitching on
songs like Sentimental Lady, Future Games and Emerald Eyes -- allowed the band to
sell a steady 250,000 copies per album, good enough to keep the members signed
and on the college touring circuit. More importantly, Welch helped Fleetwood
Mac develop its distinctive male-female vocal blend that would prove
formidable when Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham replaced him on New Year's Eve
1975, after he quit.
In that respect, Welch joined Pete Best as rock's unluckiest man. Best,
of course, was the Beatles' original drummer who toiled in obscurity with the
pre-Fab Four before Ringo Starr's arrival. Within a year of Welch's departure,
Fleetwood Mac hit No. 1 in America in 1976 with an eponymous album.
From that Fleetwood Mac LP, Nicks' signature smash Rhiannon, which she
always introduced on stage as "a song about a Welsh witch," was a clear
extension of Welch's fascination with the otherworldly -- UFOs, strange
disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle off the coast of Key Biscayne and
ghosts.
Nicks agreed to join Fleetwood Mac, she said, only after listening to
Welch's albums with the group and finding a common mystical thread that she
could hear herself fitting into.
Fleetwood Mac's next album, Rumours in 1977, went on to become one of the
best-selling releases in history. At the same time, Welch had formed Paris, a
heavy metal band. It went nowhere.
His fortunes rose, however, when Mick Fleetwood became his manager later
that year and Welch enjoyed an initially popular solo career.
His first solo album, French Kiss in late 1977, featured a remake of his
1972 Fleetwood Mac song Sentimental Lady, and it sailed into the Top 10. The
more buoyant version was produced by Buckingham and also featured McVie and
Fleetwood as guests. Welch also had Top 40 hits with vEbony Eyes, Hot Love
Cold World and the quasi-disco Precious Love through 1979.
Welch also continued his penchant for the bizarre by tapping into some
South Florida lore. His second album in 1979, Three Hearts, featured The Ghost
of Flight 401, an atmospheric tune about the aftermath of the Eastern Airlines
flight that crashed in the Everglades in December 1972. Nicks lent her
trademark wails to another song on the album that sounded like a Rumours
outtake, Devil Wind.
"I had many great times with him after Lindsey and I joined Fleetwood
Mac," Nicks said in a statement to the Associated Press. "He was an amazing
guitar player -- he was funny, sweet -- and he was smart. I am so very sorry
for his family and for the family of Fleetwood Mac -- so, so sad."
Welch's fame was short-lived. Subsequent albums didn't sell, and he had a
falling out with Fleetwood, later suing his old band mates for back royalties.
Welch believes this was one reason for his omission from the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame in 1997 when Fleetwood Mac members who were in the band before
and after him were inducted.
"The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame thing hurt my feelings, naturally," Welch
said in a 1999 online interview. "Mick (and John McVie and Chris) associate
Peter Green with the high flying glory days of their youth, when FM was first
breaking out in Europe. They associate Stevie and Lindsey, naturally enough,
with the most glamorous, successful and exciting period in FM's history. They
associate my five years with the band, in contrast, with a very difficult time
emotionally, which it was. Even though the band survived because of what we
went through in that period, it's not pleasant to think about for them, and so
they don't think about it and pretend it doesn't exist."
Yet Welch would never escape the connection. His final album, recorded in
2006, was titled His Fleetwood Mac Years and Beyond Too. The set featured
re-recordings of songs he originally recorded with the band -- and, ever
out-there in the misty world of the supernatural, a cover of Nicks' Rhiannon.
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News Column
Former Fleetwood Mac Member Commits Suicide
June 8, 2012
Howard Cohen
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Source: (c) 2012 The Miami Herald
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