
Dan kirwan fleetwood mac albums mac#
It was one of those 'ah-ha' moments when you realise the answer is right there in front of you." Kirwan's arrival expanded Fleetwood Mac to a five-piece with three guitarists. In the end, we just invited him to join us. It was clear that he needed to be with better players. įleetwood said, "Danny was an exceptional guitar player. He would see us every chance he got, usually watching in awe from the front row." Kirwan would often turn up at gigs during the afternoon, help to carry the gear in and jam with Green after the soundcheck. "Which is how Danny Kirwan came into our lives," Fleetwood recalled. Green had wanted to move Fleetwood Mac away from pure blues and needed a new musical collaborator and backing guitarist to work with. Kirwan's reaction was described as "astonishment and delight." Although the rest of the band were not entirely convinced, Fleetwood invited Kirwan to join the band in August 1968. The band's drummer Mick Fleetwood, previously a member of John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers (as were Peter Green and bass player John McVie), suggested that Kirwan could join Fleetwood Mac. Fleetwood Mac had been constituted as a quartet, but Green had been looking for another guitarist to share some of the workload because slide guitarist Jeremy Spencer did not contribute to his songs. Over 300 hopefuls were said to have applied but none was deemed good enough, so another solution was found. Green briefly took a managerial interest in Boilerhouse, but Stevens and Terrey were not prepared to turn professional, so an advertisement was placed in the weekly music paper Melody Maker to find another rhythm section to back Kirwan. He had a guitar style that wasn't like anyone else I'd heard in England." Kirwan's band played support slots for Fleetwood Mac at London venues such as John Gee's Marquee Club in Wardour Street and the Nag's Head in Battersea, which gave Kirwan and Green the opportunity to jam together and get to know each other. He played with an almost scary intensity.

Vernon was impressed by Kirwan's guitar playing and subtle vibrato and thought he sounded like blues player Lowell Fulson.

Kirwan is said to have persuaded Fleetwood Mac's producer Mike Vernon to watch Boilerhouse rehearse in a South London basement boiler-room, after which Vernon informed Fleetwood Mac founder Peter Green of his discovery. Kirwan was 17 when he came to the attention of established British blues band Fleetwood Mac in London while fronting his first band, Boilerhouse, a blues three-piece with Trevor Stevens on bass guitar and Dave Terrey on drums. He was influenced by Hank Marvin of the Shadows, Django Reinhardt, Jimi Hendrix, and particularly by Eric Clapton's playing in the Bluesbreakers. He began learning guitar at the age of 15 and became an accomplished self-taught guitarist and musician. Kirwan's mother was a singer and he grew up listening to the music of jazz musicians such as Eddie Lang, Joe Venuti, Belgian gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt and 1930s–40s groups such as the Ink Spots. Early career Musical influences and first band

Kirwan left school in 1967 with six O-levels and worked for a year as an insurance clerk in Fenchurch Street in the City of London. His mother, Phyllis Rose Langran, married Aloysious J.
