DNFing this at 28%. I think if you're a musician yourself or at least into music theory this book would work for you. If not, like me, it's dry and largely incomprehensible once the author starts dissecting tracks. I am refraining from rating it as I am not the correct audience here and don't feel as though I can accurately assess the content.
There were many passages I enjoyed but found myself skimming large chunks to the point where it didn't make sense to continue.
There are some lovely quotes which I've noted:
"Her music reflects and refracts desire, need, and regret; the most beloved tracks attest to an artist of profound knowing, unapologetic instinct, and much hard won wisdom."
"In her ballads, she's often the truth-teller capable of transgressing boundaries, honouring that part of herself that hurts the most and forming from that acute act an intense bond with her audiences."
"Nick’s songs ultimately trouble the tales of women as muse, lover, ingenue, accessory by insisting on the importance of her own imagination”
"Fleetwood Mac profited from and then become prisoners of its own melodrama. The musicians have never really escaped the love-hate songs of their twenties and thirties”