Now Here You Go Again You Say You Want Your Freedom

1977 single in the Rumours album

"Dreams"
Fleetwood Mac - Dreams.png

German vinyl single

Single by Fleetwood Mac
from the album Rumours
B-side "Songbird"
Released 24 March 1977
Recorded 1976
Studio Record Constitute, Sausalito; Wally Heider Recording, Hollywood
Genre Soft rock[1]
Length 4:18
Label Warner Bros.
Songwriter(s) Stevie Nicks
Producer(s)
  • Fleetwood Mac
  • Ken Caillat
  • Richard Dashut
Fleetwood Mac American singles chronology
"Go Your Own Way"
(1977)
"Dreams"
(1977)
"Don't Stop"
(1977)
Fleetwood Mac British singles chronology
"Don't Finish"
(1977)
"Dreams"
(1977)
"You Make Loving Fun"
(1977)
Rumours track listing

11 tracks

Side 1
  1. "2d Mitt News"
  2. "Dreams"
  3. "Never Going Back Over again"
  4. "Don't Stop"
  5. "Go Your Own Way"
  6. "Songbird"
Side ii
  1. "The Concatenation"
  2. "You Make Loving Fun"
  3. "I Don't Want to Know"
  4. "Oh Daddy"
  5. "Gilt Dust Woman"
Audio sample
  • file
  • help
Official sound
"Dreams" (2004 Remaster) on YouTube

"Dreams" is a vocal past British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac from their eleventh studio album, Rumours (1977). In the United states, "Dreams" was released as the second unmarried from Rumours on 24 March 1977, while in the United Kingdom, the song was released as the tertiary unmarried in June 1977.[2] A stage operation of "Dreams" was used equally the promotional music video.

In the US, "Dreams" sold more than than 1 million copies and reached the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100,[3] the ring'south just number-one single in the land. In Canada, "Dreams" also reached number one on the RPM Height 100 Singles chart.[four]

In late 2020, the song experienced a widespread resurgence in popularity every bit a event of a viral TikTok video created by Nathan Apodaca. The vocal subsequently re-entered national music charts in certain countries and likewise entered the Spotify and Apple Music charts in sure countries.[5] "Dreams" was ranked number nine on Rolling Stone'due south 2021 listing of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[half dozen]

Background and composition [edit]

The members of Fleetwood Mac were experiencing emotional upheavals while recording the Rumours album. Mick Fleetwood was going through a divorce. Christine McVie and John McVie were separating, while Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks were catastrophe their 8-year relationship. "Nosotros had to get through this elaborate do of denial," explained Buckingham to Blender magazine, "keeping our personal feelings in one corner of the room while trying to be professional person in the other."[7]

Stevie Nicks wrote the song in early on 1976 at Tape Plant studio in Sausalito, California. "One twenty-four hours when I wasn't required in the main studio," remembers Nicks to Blender magazine, "I took a Fender Rhodes piano and went into some other studio that was said to belong to Sly Rock, of Sly and the Family unit Rock. Information technology was a black-and-ruby room, with a sunken pit in the eye where at that place was a piano, and a big black-velvet bed with Victorian drapes."[7]

"I sat downwardly on the bed with my keyboard in front end of me," continues Nicks. "I constitute a pulsate design, switched my trivial cassette player on and wrote 'Dreams' in about 10 minutes. Right away I liked the fact that I was doing something with a trip the light fantastic vanquish, because that made it a piffling unusual for me."[vii]

When Nicks played the song to the rest of the grouping, "They weren't nuts most it. But I said 'Please! Please record this vocal, at to the lowest degree try information technology.' Because the mode I play things sometimes... you really accept to listen." The band recorded it the post-obit twenty-four hours. Only a basic track was recorded at Sausalito, with Nicks playing the Rhodes piano and singing. Recording assistant Cris Morris remembers how "all (they) kept was the drum track and live vocal from Stevie – the guitars and bass were added later in Los Angeles."[vii] Christine McVie described the vocal as having "merely three chords and one note in the left hand" and "wearisome" when Nicks played a crude version on the piano. McVie changed her mind later Buckingham "fashioned three sections out of identical chords, making each section sound completely different. He created the impression that there's a thread running through the whole thing."[vii]

Buckingham, in an interview with Nile Rodgers, said "In gild to take a song of hers, like 'Dreams', which needed and so much construction around it to take those aforementioned two chords and make them evolve from department A to section B to section C. And the love and the choice to do the right matter and to have the integrity to do that. It comes at a price sometimes, you lot know? It comes at the toll of having your defences come up, and sometimes over a period of fourth dimension, information technology'southward hard to become those down."[8]

Reception [edit]

Cash Box said that "a softly droning bass backs Stevie Nicks' alluring atomic number 82 vocal" and "subdued in comparison to the previous 'Go Your Own Way' this record has its own subtly building intensity."[9]

Chart performance and legacy [edit]

In the U.s.a., "Dreams" reached the number-one spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on eighteen June 1977, and held it for one week. On the Adult Gimmicky nautical chart, "Dreams" was Fleetwood Mac's highest-charting single during the 1970s where it reached number 11.[10] In the U.k. Singles Nautical chart, "Dreams" went to number 24, staying in the top twoscore for 8 weeks.

Since its initial release, "Dreams" has re-entered the charts on diverse occasions. It picked up ii additional weeks on the UK charts in 2011 following the airing of the Glee Rumours episode. In 2018, "Dreams" returned to the Billboard Hot Rock Songs chart at number fourteen, re-popularized by a viral tweet.[11] The vocal as well returned to the New Zealand charts for one calendar week in 2019 at number xl. The song then re-entered the New Zealand charts on 5 October 2020 at number 28, and has since spent 71 consecutive weeks in the height 40, whilst also reaching a new height of three consecutive weeks at number 6.[12] The same year, it also entered the Irish gaelic charts for the offset fourth dimension.

In Oct 2020, the song reached number i on the Billboard Rock Digital Song Sales chart as a result of a viral TikTok video of Nathan Apodaca lip syncing to the song while skateboarding down a highway drinking Bounding main Spray cran-raspberry juice.[5] [13] Following the popularity of the video, "Dreams" besides placed amid the Tiptop fifty most-streamed songs on Spotify and Apple Music in the US, the UK, Australia, and New Zealand, re-entering the ARIA in Australia (where information technology reached a new peak)[fourteen] and the Britain Official Charts.[15] "Dreams" also re-entered the Billboard Hot 100 at number 21 on 17 October 2020, giving the band its highest placement on the Hot 100 since twenty February 1988, when "Everywhere" charted at number 17. "Dreams" and so rose to number 12 the following week.[16]

Personnel [edit]

  • Stevie Nicks – lead vocals, bankroll vocals
  • Christine McVie – Fender Rhodes electrical piano, organ, vibraphone[17] backing vocals
  • Lindsey Buckingham – electric and acoustic guitars, backing vocals
  • Mick Fleetwood – drums, congas
  • John McVie – bass guitar

Charts and certifications [edit]

The Corrs version [edit]

"Dreams"
TheCorrsDreams.jpg
Unmarried by the Corrs
from the anthology Talk on Corners
Released May 1998 (1998-05)
Length 4:18
Label
  • 143
  • Lava
  • Atlantic Records
Songwriter(s) Stevie Nicks
Producer(s) Oliver Leiber
The Corrs singles chronology
"What Can I Practice"
(1998)
"Dreams"
(1998)
"So Young"
(1998)
Music video
"Dreams" on YouTube

Irish gaelic ring the Corrs originally recorded "Dreams" for Legacy: A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac's Rumours, the 20th ceremony album of embrace versions which as well featured "Don't Finish" by Elton John, "You Make Loving Fun" by Gem and others from the Goo Goo Dolls and the Cranberries. The cover version was originally recorded similar to the original song until Oliver Leiber transformed the recording into a dance track mixed with a violin and tin whistle hook. Information technology was then remixed past Todd Terry for single release and became the offset big hit for the Corrs in the Uk, reaching number half-dozen on the UK Singles Chart and staying on the nautical chart for x weeks. The video also won the "Best Adult Gimmicky Video" award from Billboard magazine in 1998. The Corrs' second studio album, Talk on Corners, was so re-released with "Dreams" added.

The Corrs performed "Dreams" with Mick Fleetwood from Fleetwood Mac in their concert at the Royal Albert Hall on St. Patrick's Day, 1998 (which was also Caroline Corr'southward 25th birthday).

Critical reception [edit]

Larry Film from Billboard wrote, "The Corrs bring an interesting Celtic season to the showtime pop single from Legacy: A Tribute To Fleetwood Mac's Rumours. Although it's hard to let become of the intense drama of the original recording, the act's earnest delivery is to be commended and appreciated. In an try to better connect with the kids of crossover radio, club icon Todd Terry has been enlisted to remix the song with a more forceful disco audio. It was a wise motility that gives this single a fighting chance in cartoon the positive attention of the popular masses."[62] Daily Record said the cover version is "superb".[63] British newspaper Sunday Mirror stated that "Republic of ireland's iii most cute women and their brother should finally crack it over here with this Todd Terry remix."[64]

Music video [edit]

A music video was made to back-trail the song, directed by British music video manager and editor Dani Jacobs.[65] Information technology was published on YouTube in September 2009. By November 2020, the video has been viewed over 21.5 million times.[66] The video for the Todd Terry Remix was published in March 2014. In 2020, it has got over i 1000000 views.[67] The music video won the "Best Adult Contemporary Video" award from Billboard magazine in 1998.

Rails list [edit]

  • CD
  1. "Dreams" (radio edit) – 4:18
  2. "Dreams" (Tee'due south Radio) – 3:53
  3. "Dreams" (Tee's New Radio) (Todd's Henry St. Mix) – 3:52
  4. "Dreams" (TNT Pop extended mix) – seven:40
  5. "Dreams" (Tee's Social club) – 7:39
  6. "Dreams" (Tee's in House mix) – 4:32

Charts and certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

Deep Dish version [edit]

Nicks contributed new vocals to a remake of "Dreams" by DJ and house music duo Deep Dish. The song appears on their anthology George Is On, and was a top-twenty UK Singles Chart hit and climbed to number 26 on the US Hot Dance Society Play chart. An edited version of the vocal is included on Nicks' 2007 album Crystal Visions – The Very Best of Stevie Nicks. In the music video, directed past Honey, model and extra Winter Ave Zoli plays every bit the protagonist.[ citation needed ]

Charts [edit]

Release history [edit]

Nathan Apodaca TikTok [edit]

In 2020, afterward his truck broke down, an Idaho man named Nathan Apodaca filmed himself riding his skateboard to work while drinking Ocean Spray cran-raspberry juice and lip-syncing to "Dreams".[107] [108] The video went viral, garnering over 50 million views around the world.[109] As a event, "Dreams" skyrocketed in popularity, reappearing on many worldwide music charts.[110] [111] [112] Mick Fleetwood, Lindsey Buckingham, and Stevie Nicks released responses to Apodaca's video on TikTok, with Nicks donning a pair of roller skates while performing the song.[113] Subsequently, Sea Spray gave Nathan a make new pickup truck after Ocean Spray received unexpected publicity when the video went viral.[114]

Jolyon Petch version [edit]

In 2021, the New Zealand-born, Australian-based DJ, Jolyon Petch[115] [116] released a version of the vocal that became a Number 1 rails on the ARIA Meridian l Lodge Tracks chart.[117] The cover, featuring an uncredited vocal from the reality Idiot box star Reigan,[118] [119] [120] also became a number 3 striking on the ARIA Tiptop 20 Australian Singles Nautical chart and peaked at number 16 on the primary Australian singles chart.[121] [122] The single went on to be nominated in the category of All-time Dance Release at the 2021 ARIA Music Awards, but lost out to "Alive" past Rüfüs Du Sol.[123] [124] [125]

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  118. ^ Ross, Isabella (25 November 2021). "Reigan Derry has been played on the radio thousands of times. She says she hasn't earned a cent". Mamamia.com.au . Retrieved vi December 2021.
  119. ^ "UPDATED: Did vocalizer Reigan Derry actually tell Jolyon Petch she didn't want credit on Dreams cover?". Themusicnetwork.com. 24 November 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  120. ^ "Jolyon Petch is receiving death threats after Reigan Derry stoush". Themusicnetwork.com. 25 November 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
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  123. ^ "ARIA Awards 2021 Nominees". Aria.com.au . Retrieved half dozen December 2021.
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  125. ^ "Here are all the winners from the ARIA Awards 2021". Nme.com. 24 November 2021. Retrieved vi December 2021.

External links [edit]

  • Puschak, Evan (23 Dec 2017). "How Fleetwood Mac Makes A Song". Nerdwriter1. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 – via YouTube.
  • Fleetwood Mac - Dreams on YouTube

finkbrinnowere1990.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreams_%28Fleetwood_Mac_song%29

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