On an offbeat video-sharing platform in an upload quality so trashy it looks and sounds as if it’s been exhumed from an ancient VHS video tape run over by a bin lorry, there exists the only semi-watchable version I can find of the long-lost 1980 Fleetwood Mac documentary known as The Making of Tusk. It’s a one-hour film which the 120-million selling Anglo-American rock band would seem to prefer disappeared altogether.
Melding studio and live footage with a faintly Spinal Tap-esque air of ridiculousness, it depicts the making of the Mac’s legendarily expensive, ill-fated, and faintly deranged 12th album – released exactly 40 years ago this month, and set to be reissued in late November on silver vinyl.
Following the stunning success of Rumours, this was the Mac at their most imperious and decadent – arenas of screaming fans, huffing from oxygen tanks backstage, a marching band on the title track, an unlimited recording budget and a perma-drunk bassist in John McVie.
Looming large but unseen throughout the film is the elusive but highly influential sixth member of classic Fleetwood Mac: cocaine
Guitarist Lindsey Buckingham – who dominated sessions for Tusk, determined to make the band feel relevant in the post-punk era of The Clash and Talking Heads – rattles around the studio like a bag of loose marbles. At one point he stuffs his face with a large bag of crisps while admitting he hasn’t phoned his mother in months. Looming large but unseen throughout the film is the elusive but highly influential sixth member of classic Fleetwood Mac: cocaine.
The band’s blizzardly intake of white powder during the late 1970s is much-storied, and its presence, while concealed, is repeatedly suggested. Be it during an interview sequence in which blabbering drummer Mick Fleetwood, oddly enough sat next to his evidently easygoing mum, does a lot of suspicious rubbing of his nose.
Or in the countless sequences of hairy hirsute men hunched over a mixing desk getting inordinately animated about things like the sound of a snare drum. And above all during scintillating live sequences, as the Mac hurtle perspirantly and explosively through performances at about 72bpm above tempo.