Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac & USC Trojan Marching Band
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac & Lindsey Buckingham & Peter Green
Fleetwood Mac
[Chorus]
Counting on my fingers
Counting on my toes
Slipping thru your fingers
Watching how it grows
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
Someone oughta tell you what it's really all about
[Verse 1]
Do you ever wonder
Do you ever hate
Six feet under
Someone who can wait
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
Someone oughta tell you
Oughta tell you what it's really all about
You're never gonna to make it baby
Oh I guess I'm gonna make you crazy
Make it babe
Make it babe
Make it babe
[Chorus]
Counting on my fingers
Counting on my toes
Slipping thru your fingers
Watching how it grows
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
Someone oughta tell you what it's really all about
[Verse 2]
Buy another fixture
Tell another lie
Paint another picture
See who's surprised
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
Someone oughta
Someone oughta tell you what it's really all about
You're never going to make it baby
Oh you're never gonna make it crazy
Oh you're never gonna
Make it babe
Make it babe
Make it babe
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
[Outro]
Someone oughta someone oughta
Someone oughta someone oughta
Someone oughta someone oughta
Someone oughta someone oughta
You can love me baby but you can't walk out
Someone oughta tell you
Oughta tell you what it's really all about
The Ledge was written by Lindsey Buckingham.
The Ledge was produced by Ken Caillat & Richard Dashut & Fleetwood Mac.
Fleetwood Mac released The Ledge on Fri Oct 12 1979.
Lindsey Buckingham shared in the album liner notes:
About as far from ‘Over & Over’ as it’s possible to go. I was trying to find things that were off the radar. I took a guitar and turned it way down, in the range of the higher notes of a bass, not like a baritone guitar, where it’s correct, bu...
Rolling Stone named it the #47 greatest Fleetwood Mac song, saying:
‘Lindsey was really making a stand,’ Nicks
said of Tusk. And never so much as on ‘The Ledge,’ a happily demented leap into post-punk primitivism and noise for its own sake. He
recorded the song alone, turning his guitar down until...