Rhino Factoids: Peter Green Leaves Fleetwood Mac

THIS IS THE ARTICLE FULL TEMPLATE
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
THIS IS THE FIELD NODE IMAGE ARTICLE TEMPLATE
Rhino Factoids: Peter Green Leaves Fleetwood Mac

47 years ago today, Fleetwood Mac founding member Peter Green announced in New Musical Express that he was leaving the band.

Although Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac featuring Jeremy Spencer may have had a slightly unwieldly name when they first started out, once they shortened it, they quickly found success with such singles as “Black Magic Woman” (later to become a much bigger hit when covered by Santana), “Albatross,” “Oh Well,” “Man of the World,” and “The Green Manalishi (With the Two Prong Crown),” with “Oh Well” and “Man of the World” both hitting #2 in the UK and “Albatross” actually topping the UK Singles chart. Unfortunately, Green was not handling the band’s success well.

Taking large doses of LSD on an all-too-regular basis, Green grew a beard, started wearing robes and a crucifix, and was starting to get a little freaked out about the amount of money that the band was earning, recommending to his bandmate Mick Fleetwood that they should give it away. (Fleetwood has said that he responded to Green, “Well, you can do it, I don’t wanna do that, and that doesn’t make me a bad person.”) After attending a party at a commune in Munich, Germany in late March 1970, Green refused to leave the commune, and it took Fleetwood and two of the Mac’s roadies to retrieve him.

Given these changes in Green, his announcement of his imminent departure from Fleetwood Mac was somewhat less surprising than it might otherwise have been. In the NME interview, he cited his predominant reason for leaving as a desire for change, explaining, “I want to change my whole life, really, because I don’t want to be at all a part of the conditioned world and as much as possible I am getting out of it,” said Green.

He had another complaint on deck as well: the change in the musical dynamic within the band. “I was cut down by being a third of the group’s front line,” he said. “That was quite fun when it started, but after a while I felt I couldn’t get into anything because after a couple of numbers I would have to step back to let the others have their chance. I want to get 100 percent into music. I want to do lots of jamming with different groups and musicians.”

That plan didn’t come to fruition as well as Green might have intended, unfortunately: aside from a few moments here and there, including appearances on Pete Bardens’ solo album THE ANSWER, the jam album THE END OF THE GAME, and a few other moments of note here and there, Green’s life was mostly overwhelmed by his drug use and his mental illness, which would soon come to be diagnosed as schizophrenia.

Thankfully, Green eventually managed to make somewhat of a comeback, returning to music and playing with a variety of individuals as well as forming his own band, the Peter Green Splinter Group, and while he has not been tremendously prolific in terms of releasing music, he’s continued to play live into the 2010s.