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Wish I Didn't Know Now - 35 Biggest Hits by Toby Keith
35 Biggest Hits | Toby Keith
Durée
3:27
Durée
3:27
Surrounded - Surrounded - Single by Koe Wetzel
Surrounded - Single | Koe Wetzel
Durée
3:08
Durée
3:08
Coming Home Soon - Coming Home Soon - Single by High June
Coming Home Soon - Single | High June
Durée
4:45
Durée
4:45
Not Ready to Make Nice - Taking the Long Way by The Chicks
Taking the Long Way | The Chicks
Durée
3:57
Durée
3:57
The Stone - Castle Rock by Jason Scott & The High Heat
Castle Rock | Jason Scott & The High Heat
Durée
3:34
Durée
3:34
Zombie - Stars: The Best of the Cranberries 1992-2002 by The Cranberries
Stars: The Best of the Cranberries 1992-2002 | The Cranberries
Durée
5:06
Durée
5:06
Stop Draggin' My Heart Around (with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers) - Bella Donna (Deluxe Edition) by Stevie Nicks
Durée
4:04
Durée
4:04
Edge of Seventeen - Bella Donna (Deluxe Edition) by Stevie Nicks
Bella Donna (Deluxe Edition) | Stevie Nicks
Durée
5:29
Durée
5:29
Leather and Lace - Bella Donna (Deluxe Edition) by Stevie Nicks & Don Henley
Bella Donna (Deluxe Edition) | Stevie Nicks & Don Henley
Durée
3:45
Durée
3:45
I Will Run To You (Remastered) - The Wild Heart (Deluxe Edition) by Stevie Nicks & Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
The Wild Heart (Deluxe Edition) | Stevie Nicks & Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
Durée
3:21
Durée
3:21

Récemment ajouté

Greatest Hits
Greatest Hits
Roxette
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
Stars: The Best of the Cranberries 1992-2002
Stars: The Best of the Cranberries 1992-2002
The Cranberries
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
Castle Rock
Castle Rock
Jason Scott & The High Heat
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
Taking the Long Way
Taking the Long Way
The Chicks
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
Coming Home Soon - Single
Coming Home Soon - Single
High June
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
Surrounded - Single
Surrounded - Single
Koe Wetzel
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
Disarray - Single
Disarray - Single
Noah Bowman
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
Life Lessons
Life Lessons
Wyatt Flores
Morceaux
2
Morceaux
2
Cigarettes and Alcohol - EP
Cigarettes and Alcohol - EP
Logan Ryan Band
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1
These Days
These Days
Tanner Usrey
Morceaux
1
Morceaux
1

Recommandations

Favorites Mix - The songs you love. The more you use Apple Music, the better the mix. Refreshed every Tuesday.
Favorites Mix
The songs you love. The more you use Apple Music, the better the mix. Refreshed every Tuesday.
Get Up! Mix - Whether it’s a weekday morning or Saturday night, get going with this personalized mix of upbeat music. Refreshed every Monday.
Get Up! Mix
Whether it’s a weekday morning or Saturday night, get going with this personalized mix of upbeat music. Refreshed every Monday.
Chill Mix - Songs to help you relax and unwind. Updated every Sunday.
Chill Mix
Songs to help you relax and unwind. Updated every Sunday.
New Music Mix - Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
New Music Mix
Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
Heavy Rotation Mix - The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
Heavy Rotation Mix
The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
Fleetwood Mac Essentials - Tension can be a great motivator for a band, and no group has put that maxim to the test quite like Fleetwood Mac, a ’60s British blues-rock outfit that—through a series of lineup changes, stylistic shifts, and rocky internal romances—became the paragons of ‘70s Californian pop. Since the band’s formation in London in 1967, drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie have served as both the rhythmic and spiritual anchors for a group that has hosted a revolving-door procession of outsized personalities, starting with Peter Green, the budding guitar god responsible for early hits like “Black Magic Woman” (famously covered by Santana) and the tranquil instrumental “Albatross” (which The Beatles admittedly aped on their <I>Abbey Road</I> track “Sun King”). <br>
After Green quit in 1970, the band cycled through different frontmen—Danny Kirwan and Bob Welch among them—while their keyboardist, McVie’s wife Christine, emerged as a female vocal foil. After a relocation to L.A., they welcomed singer/songwriter Lindsey Buckingham and his musical/romantic partner Stevie Nicks into the fold, heralding Fleetwood Mac’s transition into soft-rock hitmakers on their 1975 self-titled effort. But Nicks’ star turns on “Rhiannon” and “Landslide” revealed a darker mystique at the core of their easy-breezy sound and, as sudden success caused the long-term relationships within the band to disintegrate, their next release effectively invented a new genre: rock album as couples therapy. On 1977’s <I>Rumours</I>, Fleetwood Mac dressed up the bitterest break-up songs in the smoothest, sultriest arrangements to the tune of over 40 million copies sold; the album’s appeal is so universal that it’s been both cited by Courtney Love as an influence and used to soundtrack Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign. <br>
But the band were eager to play against pop-star type—1979’s double-album colossus <I>Tusk</I> betrayed Buckingham’s affinity for post-punk, and though it was deemed a commercial disappointment at the time, it has since been embraced as a cult classic by discerning indie rockers. And even as more streamlined ‘80s efforts like <I>Mirage</I> and <I>Tango in the Night</I> reasserted their pop panache, Fleetwood Mac have remained a cauldron of drama and intra-band acrimony, the principal members seemingly coming and going without warning. In the wake of Buckingham’s departure in 2018, the group enlisted Crowded House singer Neil Finn and Tom Petty sideman Mike Campbell. Christine McVie, who wrote some of the band’s biggest songs, including “Don’t Stop,” “You Make Lovin' Fun,” and “Over My Head,” died in November 2022 at the age of 79.
Fleetwood Mac Essentials
Tension can be a great motivator for a band, and no group has put that maxim to the test quite like Fleetwood Mac, a ’60s British blues-rock outfit that—through a series of lineup changes, stylistic shifts, and rocky internal romances—became the paragons of ‘70s Californian pop. Since the band’s formation in London in 1967, drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie have served as both the rhythmic and spiritual anchors for a group that has hosted a revolving-door procession of outsized personalities, starting with Peter Green, the budding guitar god responsible for early hits like “Black Magic Woman” (famously covered by Santana) and the tranquil instrumental “Albatross” (which The Beatles admittedly aped on their <I>Abbey Road</I> track “Sun King”). <br> After Green quit in 1970, the band cycled through different frontmen—Danny Kirwan and Bob Welch among them—while their keyboardist, McVie’s wife Christine, emerged as a female vocal foil. After a relocation to L.A., they welcomed singer/songwriter Lindsey Buckingham and his musical/romantic partner Stevie Nicks into the fold, heralding Fleetwood Mac’s transition into soft-rock hitmakers on their 1975 self-titled effort. But Nicks’ star turns on “Rhiannon” and “Landslide” revealed a darker mystique at the core of their easy-breezy sound and, as sudden success caused the long-term relationships within the band to disintegrate, their next release effectively invented a new genre: rock album as couples therapy. On 1977’s <I>Rumours</I>, Fleetwood Mac dressed up the bitterest break-up songs in the smoothest, sultriest arrangements to the tune of over 40 million copies sold; the album’s appeal is so universal that it’s been both cited by Courtney Love as an influence and used to soundtrack Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign. <br> But the band were eager to play against pop-star type—1979’s double-album colossus <I>Tusk</I> betrayed Buckingham’s affinity for post-punk, and though it was deemed a commercial disappointment at the time, it has since been embraced as a cult classic by discerning indie rockers. And even as more streamlined ‘80s efforts like <I>Mirage</I> and <I>Tango in the Night</I> reasserted their pop panache, Fleetwood Mac have remained a cauldron of drama and intra-band acrimony, the principal members seemingly coming and going without warning. In the wake of Buckingham’s departure in 2018, the group enlisted Crowded House singer Neil Finn and Tom Petty sideman Mike Campbell. Christine McVie, who wrote some of the band’s biggest songs, including “Don’t Stop,” “You Make Lovin' Fun,” and “Over My Head,” died in November 2022 at the age of 79.
Rumours
Fleetwood Mac
Morceaux
11
Morceaux
11
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Morceaux
11
Morceaux
11
Tusk (Remastered)
Fleetwood Mac
Morceaux
20
Morceaux
20
Morceaux
35

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