Early life
Christine Anne Perfect was born on July 12th, 1943. Her father, Cyril, was a college professor and concert violinist, and mother Beatrice (called Tee) was a medium, a psychic and a faith healer. Her grandfather had played the organ in Westminster Abbey. Although Christine had been introduced to the piano at age four, she didn't really take to music until she was 11. She continued taking classical music lessons until the age of 15, when her older brother, John, brought home a Fats Domino songbook which transformed her musical interest from classical music to rock n' roll. Other early influences include The Everly Brothers and The Beatles.
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Early Music
Christine studied sculpture at an art college in Birmingham, England for 5 years, with the goal of becoming an art teacher. During that time she met a number of budding musicians in England's blues scene. During her time at college Christine joined a small blues band called "Shades Of Blue" in which she played bass, also in her spare she would sing with Spencer Davis. After 5 years Christine graduated from art college with a teaching degree. She moved to London, where she worked briefly as a department store window-dresser.
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Chicken Shack
In 1968 she met up with her friends Andy Sylvester & Stan Webb, and they invited her to play keyboards/piano and sing background vocals in their band Chicken Shack, a blues band which had difficulty finding mainstream success. Christine stayed with Chicken Shack for 2 albums and together they scored the top 10 British hit "I'd Rather Go Blind" with Christine on lead vocals. She was also given a Melody Maker award for female vocalist of the year, and she was lauded for having one of the "top 10 pairs of legs in all of Britain". Christine left Chicken Shack in 1969 after meeting Fleetwood Mac bassist John McVie.
Fleetwood Mac
Christine was a big fan of Fleetwood Mac at the time and while touring with Chicken Shack the two bands would often run into each other. Encouraged to continue her career, she recorded a solo album, Christine Perfect, which she does not feel is among her better works. As Christine McVie, she joined Fleetwood Mac in 1970, just after marrying Fleetwood Mac bass guitarist John McVie. She had already contributed backup vocals, played keyboards, and painted the cover for Kiln House. The band had just lost founding member Peter Green and its members were nervous about touring without him. McVie had been a huge fan of the Peter Green-era Fleetwood Mac, and since she knew all the lyrics to their songs, she went along. McVie quickly became an essential member of the group, and the author of some of its finest songs, a position she would continue to hold for nearly 25 years.
The early '70s was a rocky time for the band, with a revolving door of musicians, and only the albums Mystery To Me and Bare Trees scoring any successes, not to mention that a group impersonating Fleetwood Mac was touring the United States without their permission. John McVie's alcohol drinking became unbearable; Christine had an affair with a music producer, and she nearly left John and the band to make a solo album with her lover. However, he went back to his spouse, so she did the same.
In 1974, Christine McVie reluctantly agreed to move with the rest of the band to the US and make a fresh start. Within a year, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham of Buckingham Nicks joined the band. They breathed new life into the music. Their first album together, 1975's Fleetwood Mac, had several hit songs, with McVie's "Over My Head" and "Say You Love Me" both reaching Billboard's top-20 singles chart.
In 1976, McVie began an on-the-road affair with the band's lighting director, which inspired her to write "You Make Loving Fun", a top-10 hit on the landmark smash Rumours, one of the best-selling albums of all-time. Her biggest hit was "Don't Stop", which climbed all the way to #3 and has become identified forever as the song Bill Clinton played on the Presidential campaign trail and at his 1993 Inaugural Gala (McVie and the others performed there, as well as at the Super Bowl a few days later).
By the end of the Rumours tour, the McVies had divorced. The 1979 double album Tusk produced three more top-20 hits ("Tusk," "Sara," and "Think About Me"), but it was considered a disappointment since practically nothing could top the success of the Rumours album. The group reunited three years later to record Mirage, which contained the top-5 hit "Hold Me". "Hold Me" was also the band's first music video; McVie's inspiration for the song was her tortured relationship with Beach Boys member Dennis Wilson. Wilson drowned in an accident a few years later, breaking McVie's heart.
In 1984, McVie decided to take a risk and to record a solo album, as most of the other band members had done. She created hits with the songs "Got a Hold on Me" (Top 10 pop and #1 adult contemporary) and "Love Will Show Us How". The synthesizer-heavy tracks were viewed by some as somewhat jarring in contrast to the crisp and clear singing tones of McVie. Nevertheless, McVie is quoted in The Billboard Book of Number One Adult Contemporary Hits as saying of her solo album, "Maybe it isn't the most adventurous album in the world, but I wanted to be honest and please my own ears with it."
She also met keyboardist Eddy Quintela (12 years her junior), whom she married in October 1986. They divorced a decade later. In the meantime, they wrote several songs together, two of which, "Little Lies" and "As Long As You Follow," became hits for Fleetwood Mac.
After covering the Elvis Presley standard "Can't Help Falling In Love With You" for the Howie Mandel film A Fine Mess, she rejoined Fleetwood Mac to record the Tango in the Night album. Her voice had never been better and she had one of her hits, and one of the more widely played songs of the era, "Little Lies".
In 1990 the band, minus Lindsey Buckingham, recorded Behind the Mask, but the sales were sluggish and the singles were only marginally successful. McVie had always been reluctant to go on concert tours, preferring to stay close to home with friends and family. Upon the death of her father, Cyril Perfect, that year, during the Behind The Mask tour, McVie made the decision to retire from touring altogether. Despite the departure of Stevie Nicks, McVie remained loyal to Mick Fleetwood and her former husband, recording five songs for the band's 1995 effort Time. The album, which suffered from a lack of publicity and was created by a lineup unfamiliar to the public, was a flop.
The members of the band seemed to have gone their separate ways until Christine McVie, John McVie, Mick Fleetwood, and Lindsey Buckingham got together again for one of Lindsey Buckingham's solo projects. They persuaded Christine to record and tour with them one last time. The live album, 1997's The Dance, went to #1 on the charts. McVie complied with their touring schedule, and then performed for the group's 1998 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as well as the Grammy Awards show, and the Brit Awards. Thereafter, she retired from Fleetwood Mac altogether.
In the years after The Dance, Christine McVie stepped out of public view almost completely. In 2000 she did, however, appear in public to receive an Honorary Doctorate in Music from the University of Greenwich, England. Some years later, in December 2003, she went to see Fleetwood Mac's last UK performance on the Say You Will tour in London, but did not join her former bandmates on the stage.
Mid-2004 saw the release of McVie's new solo album, "In the Meantime", her third in a career spanning five decades. Recorded in her converted barn in Kent, England, McVie worked on the project with her nephew, Dan Perfect, who contributed guitar-playing, back-up vocals, and songwriting. There was no tour to accompany this album, though McVie consented to a limited number of press interviews in the UK and the USA. Prior to her death on 30 November 2022 at the age of 79 (after a short illness), McVie lived in the south of England and rarely left her countryside home.
RIP 2022
Christine McVie, singer and keyboardist for classic rock icons Fleetwood Mac, died at the age of 79 on Nov. 30, 2022. Her family issued a statement saying she "passed away peacefully at hospital... following a short illness." McVie and Steve Nicks were a powerful one-two vocal punch for the prolific hitmakers during the 70's and 80's.
The band had this to say about McVie's passing: "There are no words to describe our sadness at the passing of Christine MCVie. She was truly one-of-a-kind, special and talented beyond measure. She was the best musician anyone could have in their band and the best friend anyone could have in their life. We were so lucky to have a life with her. Individually and together, we cherished Christine deeply and are thankful for the amazing memories we have. She will be so very missed. - Fleetwood Mac."
liar
Christine McVie Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
With promised on your sweet lips
With lies on your honeyed tongue
And magic in your fingertips
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
In which you played the shining knight
I'm turning from your heart of darkness
Into the light
You're the Jack of Hearts
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
Just another old dirty game
You're shuffling the cards
You think you've got the winner darlin'
But I'm the one who truly stars
Never thought I was a gambler
Never thought I could be your clown
But with one roll of the dice baby
My walls came tumbling down
Lost in the world of your illusions
In which you played the shining knight
I'm turning from your heart of darkness
Into the light
Never thought I was a gambler
Never thought I could be your clown
But with one roll of the dice baby
My walls came tumbling down
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
Liar
Christine McVie's song "Liar" is a bitter and angry take on a failed relationship. In the opening lines, McVie sings about how the lover in question "cruised into my life with promises on your sweet lips" before revealing that these promises were actually lies. She acknowledges his charm and skilled manipulation, claiming that he has "magic in your fingertips" despite his deceitful nature.
The song then turns to a more confrontational tone, with McVie calling out her former lover as the "Jack of Hearts" and a "liar". She sees right through his illusions, acknowledging that he played the part of the "shining knight" in a world of his own creation. However, McVie refuses to be taken in by his tricks any longer, declaring that she's "turning from your heart of darkness into the light".
As the song draws to a close, McVie admits that she never saw herself as a "gambler" or "clown" but was still taken in by the charm of her ex-partner. However, she ultimately triumphs, declaring that "with one roll of the dice baby, my walls came tumbling down".
Line by Line Meaning
Well you cruised into my life
You entered my life without invitation
With promised on your sweet lips
You made sweet promises to me
With lies on your honeyed tongue
Your promises were all lies
And magic in your fingertips
You had a way with words
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
You are a deceitful person
Lost in the world of your illusions
You live in a fantasy world of your own making
In which you played the shining knight
You pretended to be a hero
I'm turning from your heart of darkness
I'm leaving your toxic influence
Into the light
I'm moving towards a better future
Just another old dirty game
You've played this game before
You're shuffling the cards
You are manipulating me
You think you've got the winner darlin'
You think you are going to win me over
But I'm the one who truly stars
I am the one in control of my life
Never thought I was a gambler
I never thought I would take risks like this
Never thought I could be your clown
I never thought I would be fooled by you
But with one roll of the dice baby
In one moment, everything changed
My walls came tumbling down
My defenses were weakened by you
Liar, you're the Jack of Hearts
You continue to be dishonest
Liar
I cannot trust you
Lyrics © Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.
Written by: Christine McVie, Dan Perfect, George Hawkins
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
Terry Frazho
From the get go when I first heard her with Chicken Shack, I knew she was a class act...Many years have passed and she remains a class act....
tanukishady
Genius in this; true old-school rock and roll greatness. Nice guitar from the nephew, too.
Maggie G
Always had been a class act!!! After the collapse of Fleetwood Mac I followed her solo music. There's has always been just something hypnotizing about her voice. So many didn't give her credit in FM. She wrote so many of their hits.
44JohnH44
Thanks for all of these, I've followed Christine right back from the Chicken Shack days. I remember (well, as best as might be possible - given the circumstances!!!) seeing CS at the King's Head Blues Club in Romford in the sixties. They were awesome - Stan with his extended guitar lead (no wireless back then) working his way through the audience to the bar at the rear of the hall, getting a pint...playing all the time - what a showman! Christine was really good too - happy days...
ladybluetexan
Voice of an Angel....
9 Errante
Wow i love her !
Wild1995
Amazing!
MizzMaria
Just listened to some of her songs from the 60s with Chicken Shack, and now this....quite a transition over the years
Debbie Watkins
Christine your muzik is most beautiful peaceful ever ❤️❤️🙏🙏 Love you beautiful sweet songbird ! God bless & peace out ✌️💗💗🙏🙏🌺🌸🌼🏵️💐🍀💛❤️💙💚🇺🇸🇩🇪 Christine you will live on thru your Muzik !:Your muzik plays everyday in my heart & home 💕💕🙏🙏
jaime sanchez
her sex appeal and talents are unequaled, great post, thanks!