Penguin (album) explained

Penguin
Type:studio
Artist:Fleetwood Mac
Cover:Penguin (album).jpg
Released:March 1973
Recorded:January 1973
Studio:Rolling Stones Mobile Studio, Benifold, Hampshire
Genre:
Length:35:46
Label:Reprise
Producer:Fleetwood Mac & Martin Birch
Prev Title:Bare Trees
Prev Year:1972
Next Title:Mystery to Me
Next Year:1973

Penguin is the seventh studio album by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, released in March 1973. It was the first Fleetwood Mac album after the departure of Danny Kirwan, the first to feature Bob Weston and the only one to feature Dave Walker.

The penguin is the band mascot favoured by John McVie. His fascination with the birds originated when he lived near London Zoo during the early days of his marriage to Christine McVie. He was a member of the Zoological Society and would spend hours at the zoo studying and watching the penguins.[1]

Background

After Kirwan was fired following an altercation with the other band members during the Bare Trees tour, the band added guitarist Bob Weston and vocalist Dave Walker (formerly of Savoy Brown and The Idle Race) in September 1972. Weston was well known for playing slide guitar and had known the band from his touring period with Long John Baldry. Fleetwood Mac also hired Savoy Brown's road manager, John Courage. Rather than record Penguin in a London studio, they hired the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio and brought it to Hampshire in order to record their next album within the domestic atmosphere of Benifold, their communal house. The album was subsequently mixed at AIR Studios in London.

The album's artwork was painted by Chris Moore and the gatefold photo was shot on location at Ludshott Common and Waggoners Wells in Hampshire, according to Dave Walker in an online Q&A interview.[2] For the first time on a Fleetwood Mac album, Mick Fleetwood was credited in the album's liner notes with playing both drums and percussion, even though he did both on previous albums, although uncredited.

The subsequent tour seemed to go well, and Penguin was the highest charting Fleetwood Mac album in the US at the time, clawing its way into the Top 50. However, during the recording of their next album, Mystery to Me, it was mutually agreed upon that Walker's vocal style and attitude "did not fit in" with Fleetwood Mac and by June 1973 he had left. If anything was ever recorded by Walker for Mystery to Me it was not used.

Walker was featured on only two tracks on Penguin in the end, namely his own composition "The Derelict" and a cover of Junior Walker's hit "(I'm a) Road Runner" on which he also played harmonica solos.

Track notes

Personnel

Fleetwood Mac

Additional personnel

Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The McVie Story. www.fleetwoodmac.net. 2015-06-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20160309024204/http://fleetwoodmac.net/penguin/themcvies.htm. 2016-03-09. dead.
  2. Web site: Dave Walker Q&A Session, October 2000. www.fleetwoodmac.net. 2015-06-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20161031113234/http://www.fleetwoodmac.net/penguin/qa/davewalker_qa1.htm. 2016-10-31. dead.
  3. Web site: Bob Welch Q&A Session, November 1999. www.fleetwoodmac.net. 2017-12-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20171026115815/http://www.fleetwoodmac.net/penguin/qa/bobwelch_qa2.htm. 2017-10-26. dead.
  4. Web site: Music Legends. Dave Walker Interview. 6 May 2013. 30 December 2011. Saulnier. Jason. 6 October 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131006223626/http://musiclegends.ca/interviews/dave-walker-interview-black-sabbath/. dead.
  5. Web site: Bob Welch, August 4 - 17, 2003. The Penguin. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20190103113107/http://www.fleetwoodmac.net/penguin/qa/bobwelch2_qa1.htm. January 3, 2019. October 5, 2019.