| | Rolling Stone : Law And Order : Review (Site not responding. Last check: ) |
 | | Based on the evidence of Law and Order, however, Lindsey Buckingham's biggest contribution to Fleetwood Mac has been his unabashed fondness for pop music at its most hokey and hooky not just sculpting vocal harmonies but carefully designing each phrase to tickle some pleasure center, no matter what the lyrics happen to say. |
 | | Throughout the album, Buckingham's vocal harmonies are inspired by the Beach Boys songbookhe seems to have all of their ranges in his voicewhile some of the mixes, like the left and right drum fills in "Mary Lee Jones," echo the goofy stereo of early Beatles records. |
 | | On side one of Law and Order, he acts like Nick Lowe or the Barry Manilow of "Copacabana," couching his skepticism in smiley vocals and lyrics that merely hint at mayhem. |
| www.rollingstone.com /reviews/album/_/id/216825 (1119 words) |