Adaptation of Fleetwood Mac-inspired “Daisy Jones & The Six” an entertaining, attraction-soaked rock ride

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Sometimes the first track on a rock album just doesn’t grab you.

Neither does the second.

By the third, though, you’re beginning to absorb what the artist is putting out. You’re starting to dig it.

Soon you’re hooked, and by the time the record is done spinning — or the sequence of digital files has run its course — you’re sorry to see the experience end.

But you’re thankful for that bit of nourishment for your soul.

That’s roughly the case with “Daisy Jones & The Six,” a Prime Video limited series debuting this week that’s based on the 2019 novel of the same name by Taylor Jenkins Reid.

A 10-track affair — the story of a 1970s rock band that rocketed to superstardom based not just on their songs but also on the obvious mutual attraction of their lead vocalists — is inspired by the saga of Fleetwood Mac even if myriad differences exist with the tale of this fictional act. (Reid writes about how, as a child of the 1990s, she came to be interested in Fleetwood Mac during the band’s “The Dance” reunion in a post for the website of the show’s production company, Hello Sunshine.)

Will Harrison and Suki Waterhouse appear in a scene from
Will Harrison and Suki Waterhouse appear in a scene from “Daisy Jones & The Six.” (Lacey Terrell, Amazon Studios)

Riley Keough’s enchanting-but-self-destructive Daisy Jones, with her flowing dresses and heavy drug use, is a fine stand-in for Mac vocalist Stevie Nicks, while Sam Claflin’s strong-willed and selfish singer-guitarist Billy Dunne works well as the show’s answer to Lindsey Buckingham. And although less crucial to the equation, Suki Waterhouse’s keyboardist Karen Sirko gives off some serious Christine McVie vibes, especially in the character’s later years — a time when the band members are interviewed for a documentary about the meteoric rise and spectacular fall of Daisy Jones & The Six.

In October 1977, Daisy Jones & The Six played a sold-out show at Chicago’s massive Soldier Field. However, they would never perform together again. In the two decades that pass, members of the band and its inner circle have said little about what happened. That is changing as they open up to a probing documentarian.

And so, via this flashback-heavy format, the series goes back in time to the band’s beginnings, minus Daisy, in Pittsburgh, when they were called the Dunne Brothers, as well as to Daisy’s attempts to get noticed as a singer-songwriter.

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