Meanwhile, Rumors and Fleetwood Mac charm with their biggest tracks (“Dreams”, “Don’t Stop”, “Go Your Own Way”, “Landslide”, and “Rhiannon”) and arguably deeper cuts (“Say You Love Me” and “I’m So Afraid”). Obviously, Tusk is represented considerably via heartfelt ballads like “Over & Over” and “Sara”, not to mention the aridly rowdy “Not That Funny”. The original 90-minute show is still immensely delightful, as the group wastes no time launching into a well-paced and enthusiastically performed journey through major hits and lesser-known (but no less enjoyable) album selections. Thus, this updated rendering of Live looks and sounds better than ever, making it a must-own commemoration of Fleetwood Mac’s stellar first live collection. Plus, the “Super Deluxe Tour Edition” bundle (not provided for review) comes in a 12×12 slipcase and adds a bunch of awesome and worthwhile tchotchkes (such as an in-depth booklet and a replica backstage pass, button, sticker, ticket, and advertisement). In addition to the album itself, the package includes more than an hour of unreleased tunes. Unsurprisingly, it sold quite well, which is partially why Rhino is now celebrating its 40 th anniversary with a newly remastered and expanded 3-CD/2-LP version of Live. Comprised mostly of material from the 1979 – 1980 Tusk tour (as well as a few pieces from the preceding Rumors and Fleetwood Mac tours, of course), it contained virtually every song you could possibly want to hear from their most recent records. Naturally, the greatness of that trilogy meant that the band’s debut concert recording, 1980’s Live, was as highly anticipated as it was enormously satisfying. Of course, 1977’s Rumors was even bigger, while 1979’s experimental double album, Tusk, continued their creative prosperity (despite being considered a commercial failure at the time). Sure, they’d been going strong for roughly a decade by then however, it was the inclusion of Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham (following the departure of Bob Welch) on 1975’s self-titled tenth LP that took their mainstream appeal to the next level. Almost no other rock band was bigger than Fleetwood Mac in the mid-to-late 1970s.