Archive for the 'Fleetwood Mac' Category

Fleetwood Mac will tour in 2009

Fleetwood Mac are definitely reforming for live dates to take place next year, the band’s guitarist Lindsey Buckingham has said.

The legendary band will reform for a tour in early 2009, their first since 2003, and they are also planning on making a new studio album too, once they have played together for a while.

Buckingham has said in an interview with US publication Billboard.com: “I think maybe there was even a sense that we would make a better album if we went out and hung out together first on the road …Maybe even sowing some seeds musically that would get us more prepared to go in the studio rather than just going in cold. It takes the pressure (off) from having to go in and make something cold.”

As previously reported here on uncut.co.uk, Buckingham has enlisted the help of Fleetwood Mac members Mick Fleetwood and John McVie for two tracks on his forthcoming solo album ‘Gift of Screws’, due for release on September 16.

Lindsey Buckingham to deliver ‘Gift’ during fall tour

By Tjames Madison / LiveDaily Contributor

Lindsey Buckingham has added a pair of dates to the upcoming tour behind his latest album, “Gift of Screws,” which now has a release date set for later this year.

The Fleetwood Mac singer/songwriter kicks off the run Sept. 7 in Saratoga, CA, with the new additions both coming in October: an Oct. 7 show in Hamilton, Ontario, and an Oct. 12 appearance in Lebanon, NH. In all, Buckingham will now hit 29 cities on the headlining trek. Dates are below.

Buckingham recorded “Gift of Screws,” due in stores Sept. 16, with members of his touring band, along with longtime Fleetwood Mac bandmates Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, who both appear on several tracks. “I’d say this album distills several periods of time,” Buckingham said in a press statement about his newest studio creation, which follows 2006’s “Under the Skin.”

“It has false starts to make albums, songs that go back a number of years that took a while to find a home, and brand-new songs,” he added. “I wanted to bring it all together in one place. As an artist I’m still, for better or worse, clinging to my idealism and to my sense that there is still much to be said. This album is a culmination of that.”
The singer has also told various interviewers in recent months that he hopes Fleetwood Mac will mount a tour behind a new studio album next year.

Earlier this year, Buckingham released “Live at the Bass Performance Hall,” a live DVD documenting his performance last year at the Fort Worth, TX, venue. The package is available in a bonus set that includes more than 45 minutes of behind-the-scenes footage, and an accompanying audio CD with the same track listing as the DVD.

[Note: The following tour dates have been provided by artist and/or tour sources, who verify its accuracy as of the publication time of this story. Changes may occur before tickets go on sale. Check with official artist websites, ticketing sources and venues for late updates.]

September 2008
7 - Saratoga, CA - Mountain Winery
9 - Seattle, WA - Moore Theatre
10 - Portland, OR - Newmark Theatre
12 - Lake Tahoe, CA - Harrah’s Casino
13 - San Francisco - Venue to be announced
14 - Los Angeles, CA - Royce Hall @ UCLA
16 - San Diego, CA - Humphrey’s Concerts By the Bay
18 - Phoenix, AZ - The Orpheum Theatre
19 - Anaheim, CA - The Grove of Anaheim
20 - Las Vegas, NV - The Joint
22 - Salt Lake City, UT - The Depot
24 - Denver, CO - Opera House
26 - Tulsa, OK - Brady Theatre
28 - Kansas City, MO - Uptown Theatre
29 - St Louis, MO - Pageant

October 2008
1 - Cleveland, OH - House of Blues
2 - Chicago, IL - House of Blues
4 - Milwaukee, WI - Pabst Theatre
5 - Indianapolis, IN - Eygptian Theatre
7 - Hamilton, Ontario - Hamilton Place Theatre
8 - Toronto, Ontario - Music Hall
10 - Reading, PA - Sovereign Performing Arts Center
11 - Atlantic City, NJ - Trump Taj Mahal
12 - Lebanon, NH - The Lebanon Opera House
14 - Northampton, MA - Calvin Theatre
15 - Ridgefield, CT - Ridgefield Play House
17 - Boston, MA - Berklee Performing Arts Center
18 - Glenside, PA - Keswick Theater
19 - New York, NY - Nokia Theatre

Fleetwood Mac Plots Return — With Or Without Crow

Fleetwood Mac Plots Return — With Or Without Crow

Billboard
March 25, 2008, 2:25 PM ET

Gary Graff
Detroit
Fleetwood Mac — with or without Sheryl Crow in tow — is planning to be active again.

Singer/guitarist Lindsey Buckingham — who’s just released a new concert DVD, “Live at the Bass Performance Hall,” from his 2006-07 solo tour — tells Billboard.com that the group is “looking at the idea of touring sometime in the first half of 2009,” possibly with some new material to play.

In recent weeks Crow, who’s friendly with Mac’s Stevie Nicks, has talked about joining the band, which Buckingham acknowledges is a possibility, though he adds, “I don’t think anything is written in stone yet.”

“I think we were all a little surprised (Crow) was announcing that to the world with such certainty,” Buckingham says with a laugh. “We have talked about the possibility of bringing another woman into the scene to kind of give Stevie a sort of foil and shake it up a little bit. (Crow) was certainly a name that has come up. We’ll have to see.”

Nicks has been the group’s sole female member since Christine McVie retired from the band in the late ’90s. Buckingham says that he has “a ton of new stuff” that could be used for a new Fleetwood Mac album, though he adds that he might want to step back from the production role he’s had in the band.

“I don’t think I want to produce again ’cause it takes so much,” he explains. “Whatever happens we’ll all sit in a room and make something work as a group. a little more like we used to, sort of try to open it up and get everyone sharing the activity a little more.”

Buckingham, meanwhile, is also planning another solo album — the follow-up to 2006’s “Under the Skin” — for this summer. Recorded with members of his touring band as well as Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, it “has a little more of a rock feel to it” than “Under the Skin,” according to Buckingham. “It’s just another group of tunes that hopefully will translate to stage, and hopefully we can get some more (solo) dates this summer.”

Formerly signed to Reprise, Buckingham says he’s a “free agent” now, without a label deal as a solo artist. “We’re gonna figure out who wants to put it out,” he says of the as-yet untitled album. “I’m keeping an open mind. People need to hear the music and we’ll see what they think and what the best situation for it will be.”

Originally posted on Billboard.com

Stevie Nicks: Rock Follies

The Independent (UK)
Published: 06 October 2007

Stevie Nicks, the singer-songwriter and other-worldly star of Fleetwood Mac, is one of pop’s great survivors. Now 59, she talks to Andrew Gumbel about her music, her famously turbulent love-life and the importance of not doing heroin

stevie-independentoct2007.jpg stevie_indenpendentoct2007-2.jpg

Stevie Nicks is telling a story about the first time in her professional career that she felt completely out of control. Strangely, it is not a story about the complex web of fiery love affairs that, on several occasions, threatened to blow her and her Fleetwood Mac band members apart.

Nor is it about the cocaine she snorted her way through in the Seventies and early Eighties, or the painkillers that blackened her moods, bloated her body and killed her creativity for years at a stretch. Somehow, like the other lucky rockers of her generation who have lived to tell the tale, she managed to survive all that.

This is a story about something ultimately more central to both her work ethic and her enduring popularity as one of the most reliably thrilling live performers on the US music circuit – her determination to control her performance on stage down to the tiniest detail.

It was 1975, and Nicks was about to go on her first tour with Fleetwood Mac, which she had just joined with her then-boyfriend and fellow singer-songwriter, Lindsey Buckingham. Six months earlier she had been poverty-stricken, living with Buckingham in Aspen, Colorado, and wondering if it wasn’t time to get out of the music business for good. (She captured the mood of that fraught moment in her much covered song “Landslide”, which appeared on her first album with Fleetwood Mac.)

It never occurred to her to dream up a costume for that first tour. “In my head I was still totally poor. I just went to my closet and picked out my own stuff,” she said. “Then, when I got out on stage, it was a nightmare. Every night we were on tour, I realised my stuff was not going to cut it.”

Musically, the tour was a success, but Nicks was miserable. And she vowed she would never again let an oversight like this creep into her work. So she invented a whole look for herself: the “English Dickensian waif in a shabby, raggedy black chiffony skirt and heavy boots”. “I thought, if I’m going to take this really seriously I’m going to plan this all out,” she said. “I had my hair a certain way, my make-up a certain way. I wanted it to be a complete package.”

Her single-mindedness paid huge dividends. It wasn’t just that she was thinking up a stage costume. She was dreaming up an image for herself that she intended to last until she was old enough to draw a pension. “Right then I thought – since I plan to do this when I’m 60, I want to make sure that what I wear now I can still wear when I’m 60.”

It was, in many ways, the birth of Stevie Nicks as the world has come to know her, the moment when the dreamy, mystical, other-worldly quality she brought to her songwriting became incarnated in her on-stage image. She had become, in her own words, “the airy-fairy person” of the group.

The others developed their own stage personas, of course. “The idea was that we would all sort of be going to the same party,” Nicks said. “Sometimes we were, sometimes we weren’t.” Christine McVie, who wrote “Don’t Stop” and “You Make Loving Fun”, gave herself a tailored look with velvet jackets and mini skirts and high boots. Mick Fleetwood, the British drummer who was part of the group’s original line-up as far back as 1967, developed a fondness for waistcoats with fob watches.

But it was Nicks who appeared truly to inhabit her imaginary world of witches and night birds and gypsies and gold-dust women – prompting rumours down the years that she was herself some kind of witch. In real life, she couldn’t be more different. For all the craziness she has experienced, she is a remarkably prosaic, grounded person – with a healthy dose of self-deprecating humour – who knows what she wants and pursues it with unswerving single-mindedness. Her stage costumes, which she developed with the help of a Californian designer called Margi Kent, were inspired not by black magic so much as rugged practicality.

“What I went with was simple, precise, like a uniform,” she says. “I kitted myself out like a ballerina, with a leotard, a skirt, boots and various throws … It’s made my life so easy.”

Nicks is now 59 – just one year shy of that distant, twilight year she imagined all those decades ago – and she’s still very much in the business of managing every aspect of her public image. When I met her at her large, improbably traditional house up a canyon overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Los Angeles, she’d been up two nights running to scrutinise a new batch of publicity photographs. She could have invited press photographers to do the job – snapping her among her blood-red velvet wingback armchairs, perhaps, or on her back terrace with a view over Santa Monica towards the ocean – but she preferred to hire the photographer herself and endure a 17-hour shoot to obtain the exact effects she wanted.

Now, though, she wasn’t happy, complaining that she couldn’t properly judge the texture and tone of the digital pictures. “I don’t know why this isn’t in focus,” she told her manager. “I can’t tell if I’m smiling or not smiling.”

Nicks wasn’t catty or unreasonable about it, just very exacting. “When you get to be my age,” she says, “you get protective of your image. I can either be involved or there will be no picture at all.”

It’s an attitude that has only hardened as Fleetwood Mac, and Nicks herself, have waned as recording artists and come to rely increasingly on their live shows to keep going. She’s been alternating solo tours and band tours for the past quarter-century, along with special double-act gigs with the likes of Don Henley of the Eagles – a musical partner and ex-boyfriend – and Chris Isaak.

And she is very, very good at it. The key to everything is her voice, which is still as rich, textured and rough-edged as ever. When she tours alone, she also has a topnotch band – 10 players, usually, although she has been known to perform with a full symphony orchestra.

Together, they never fail to breathe energy and life into her old hits – “Rhiannon”, “Landslide”, “Dreams”, “Gold Dust Woman”, “Edge of Seventeen” and many more. When she appeared at an outdoor arena in the LA suburbs recently, Nicks showed her age in the way she moved: her leg kicks showed unmistakable signs of stiffness, and she dashed off stage at one point for an unscheduled costume change. But she looked great with her capes and her black stovepipe hats framing her flowing blonde hair. And her voice was dynamite.

“New artists can’t do what we do – they don’t get the support from their record companies,” she says, to explain it all. “We just stayed on the road. We’ve done it so long we could be half dead and still do a great show with one day of rehearsal.”

In other words, they just don’t make super-groups like they used to. Fleetwood Mac are not quite unique in the fact that the key members are all still alive and still – give or take a defection or two – playing together. The Eagles, a group not a million miles away in style or audience appeal, share the same distinction. And that’s quite an achievement given the mountains of cocaine both groups sniffed their way through, along with the millions of dollars they burned, when they each made their own puffed-up, self-important, top-heavy would-be masterpieces at the end of the 1970s. (In Fleetwood Mac’s case, it was the double album Tusk; for the Eagles, it was The Long Run.)

Nicks had as rough a time of it as anyone. She took enough drugs to be forced into rehab, complained of chronic fatigue syndrome, became addicted to the painkiller Klonopin, had a miserable time weaning herself off it after her weight ballooned to almost 11 stone, and suffered horrific after-effects from a boob job she later reversed and always deeply regretted.

Her love life was no less turbulent. When she came into Fleetwood Mac, she was going out with Lindsey Buckingham, with whom she always had an explosive relationship. She subsequently had affairs with Mick Fleetwood and two members of the Eagles, Joe Walsh and Henley.

Somehow, though, everyone held it together – musically, and medically. And she still looks back fondly on those heyday years in the late 1970s and early 1980s. “It was fun, it was a party,” she insisted. “Everyone was partying. It was dangerous, but it was fun. They were fantastic, tragic times.”

The secret to their survival was simple: “None of us ever did heroin. Right there, that’s why we are alive. We were careful – we didn’t die. But we could have.”

She was lucky, too, that among her tendencies to addiction was a propensity to overwork. That too, she now thinks, was a life-saver. “We worked so hard, and toured constantly. We’d unpack from one tour and go right to work on the next record… We all worked at a very high level of excellence, always strove to be the best we could be – always ….

“So there were scary moments, but they were followed by sensible moments. If all else failed, we’d get back on the road and clean things up.”

It seems miraculous, given the tentacular knot of love affairs and broken relationships, that there wasn’t more obvious tension within the group. There were blow-ups – most notably over the group’s failure to include the Nicks song “Silver Springs” on the Rumours album, a bone of contention and source of ownership disputes for decades to come. The nastiest moment came in 1987 when Buckingham announced he was leaving – apparently because he couldn’t stand working with Nicks any longer – chased her through the house, threw her against a car and almost strangled her. But, somehow, all was later forgiven and Buckingham returned to Fleetwood Mac a decade later.

Nicks attributes the group’s endurance to two things. One is the primacy of the work. When she got frustrated at the backlog of her unused songs in the late 1970s, she broke out with a solo record called Bella Donna which made her a star in her own right – at least in the United States. From that moment on, Fleetwood Mac was more or less at her mercy – waiting for her to finish her own albums, or her own tours, before returning to the fold. “The rest of Fleetwood Mac got a vacation while I did my albums,” she said. “They were always waiting.” She almost ran herself into the ground in the process, but musically, at least, it worked.

The other thing, for want of a better term, was the feminine touch. She and Christine McVie brought a gender balance uncommon in major rock bands at the time. They were also major players because they wrote songs as well as performed them. If they clubbed together, they could exercise a veto over the rest of the band – and they did, frequently. “We became the mums,” they said. “There were times when we literally said, ‘OK, we’re going to have to fix this situation’. We did it many times. What can I say? Women are the caretakers. We can see a mess coming before they [the men] can.”

Unlike the Eagles, who had a notorious knockdown fight at a political fundraiser concert in California in 1980, and who then vowed never to play again “until hell freezes over” – actually, about 14 years – Fleetwood Mac kept even the worst of their disputes private so the band could play on. As Nicks put it: “How important is having a stupid-ass fight on stage next to breaking up a band?”

Nicks remains a huge figure in the United States, in ways that are hard to appreciate in Europe. Sure, we all can hum the tunes from Rumours – thanks in part to Bill Clinton, who used “Don’t Stop” as his campaign song in 1992 – but on our side of the Atlantic, Nicks’s solo career has gone largely unnoticed. That, said her manager, Sheryl Louis, was in large part because of the very tight promotional schedule for the hugely successful debut solo album Bella Donna, which includes a great duet with Tom Petty, “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around”, and her meditation on the death of John Lennon, “Edge of Seventeen”, now the show-stopping closer to all her live shows. The album went multi-platinum in the United States, but barely registered in Britain. It was a similar story with her follow-up hits, “Stand Back” and “Rooms on Fire”, which don’t stand the test of time nearly as well because they are infused with an almost risibly dated Eighties vibe.

In the States, Nicks has never gone out of fashion, and never failed to sell out a tour. She is, in fact, by some distance the most successful solo artist ever to break out from a major band – outselling Mick Jagger, Robert Plant, Don Henley and even Phil Collins, who comes closest to matching her.

Her live shows are deservedly celebrated. Just the opening guitar riff from “Edge of Seventeen” is enough to set any audience alight – its effect enhanced, the night I saw her, by an extended drum solo leading into the chaka-chaka-chaka-chaka rhythm on the bass guitar. Nicks deserves considerable credit, too, for refusing to get bored by her own material after all these years.

She and Fleetwood Mac have thought about reworking their old numbers, but it has never worked. “We’ve tried,” she said. “We’ve gone into rehearsal for three months to rework our old songs, but it goes over like a lead balloon. You know the audience isn’t happy. You always start with the record. You can make the middle longer, and you can extend the end – add an orchestral section, or something. But you can’t change the skeleton. You can’t change something that people love.”

It’s been a while since Nicks wrote songs with anything like the energy that she once had. Even her well regarded 2001 album, Trouble In Shangri-La, relied heavily on unused material from the 1970s, including a terrific song called “Sorcerer”, pairing her up with Sheryl Crow.

Rather, she has taken her determination in new directions. For the past three years – ever since she accepted a generic invitation during a tour stopover in Washington – she has been visiting wounded soldiers at the Bethesda Naval Hospital and the Walter Reed Army Medical Center. What began as a hesitant enterprise – “I cry really easily and I hate hospitals” – has turned into a mission and a charity foundation, entitled Stevie Nicks’ Band of Soldiers.

Her brilliant idea is to give every soldier she meets an iPod filled with her favourite music – a big mix of slow jazz, rap, R&B and music closer to her own style. It started out, in fact, as her 16-year-old niece’s iPod list, and has now grown to a selection of 937 songs.

“I realised I wanted to do something, but what can you do?” she said. “A little tiny iPod is perfect. They are too ill to be downloading music. What better can I give them than music?”

She makes sure she gets to Washington every few months – in between touring and moving house, her other big project at the moment. She’s in the process of selling up the home she has owned for years in Paradise Valley, outside Phoenix, Arizona. And she has decided to get rid of her implausibly traditional house in LA, too.

She knew from the moment she moved in two-and-a-half years ago that she didn’t belong there, because she was just too far away from the ocean to hear the waves at night. “I will get old and bored here,” she said. “It’s too big for me – a family should live here instead.”

She and her goddaughter, who lives in a separate house on her property, feel they’d be more at home in a beach-front penthouse, the sort musicians are supposed to live in. And that’s what they will do – just as soon as Nicks can find a good home to store her grand pianos, including a 9ft Steinway grand once played by Billy Preston and Leon Russell. On the edge of 60, Stevie Nicks still feels rebellious, and restless, and ready to rock and roll.

‘Crystal Visions … The Very Best of Stevie Nicks’ is out now

Stevie Nicks: A Survivor’s Story

Daily Telegraph (UK)
Telegraph Magazine
12:01am BST 08/09/2007

Thirty years after she sold her soul to the devil and, with Fleetwood Mac, set new records for rock’n'roll overindulgence, Stevie Nicks has somehow lived to tell the tale - and what a tale it is. Now if only she could remember where she lives… Interview by Mick Brown. Photograph by Neal Preston

Telegraph Magazine CoverStevie at her home

During the 10 or so years that she was addicted to cocaine - back in the days when Fleetwood Mac’s album credits would include a ‘thanks’ to their dealer - Stevie Nicks estimates that she must have spent more than $1 million on the drug. ‘At $100 a pop - that’s a gram - and we were the ones who were buying it for everybody else; not only us, but all our friends.’ Nicks thinks about this. ‘Actually, I would say millions.’

Stevie Nicks: ‘My life is very cloistered really. Because I don’t go anywhere by myself, you know what I mean?’
It all came to end in 1986, when a plastic surgeon advised her that if she wanted her nose to remain on her face she should stop snorting coke immediately. (The legacy was a hole in her septum the size of a five cent piece.) So it was off to the Betty Ford Clinic in Palm Springs, which was like ‘the army’ - meetings from six in the morning until nine at night. ‘Tammy Wynette was there, and one of James Taylor’s backing singers.’ After 30 days she had an epiphany, and that was it for the cocaine.

She hunches forward in her chair, sipping at her tea, which is about the strongest stimulant she indulges in these days. The dying afternoon sun is slanting through the window behind her, casting a halo around the blonde curls that tumble past her shoulders. ‘So when I left Betty Ford, I felt that I was fine. But my world was terrified that I was not fine.’

Your world? ‘The powers that be, the people around me. They were terrified I was going to start doing it again. I think everybody knew I wasn’t an alcoholic, because I’m not; but I drank. And every-body thought I should go to AA, and in order to get out of that the next best thing in everybody else’s eyes was for me to go see a shrink. I really didn’t want to go. But I finally just said all right in order to get all of you off my back…’

The psychiatrist, she says, put her on a tranquilliser called Klonopin - ‘he said to calm my nerves a little. I didn’t want to do it. He said, “You’re nervous.” And I was nervous; I’m a nervous person. So I finally just said, all right.’ Klonopin, Nicks says, is a member of the Valium family. ‘It’s a tranquilliser, right? And you think, what does tranquilliser mean? It tranquillises you!’ Particularly when, as Nicks claims, the drug is radically oversubscribed. After a year, she realised she was beginning to put on weight and lose interest in her work. ‘And the saddest thing, I did an interview in England, and somebody had sent the article to my mother and she read it to me over the phone. And it said, you could see Stevie Nicks in there, but she was very sad and very quiet and she was just a shadow of her former self. And that article broke my heart.

‘And after that, it got worse, because he kept upping my dose. 1988 into ‘89, I’m now not even writing songs any more. I was living in a beautiful rented house in the Valley, and just pretty much staying home. Ordering take-in and watching TV. And I’ve gained 30lb and I’m 5ft 1in tall, and I’m so miserable. And I started to notice that I was shaking all the time, and I’m noticing that everybody else is noticing it too. And then I’m starting to think, do I have some kind of neurological disease and I’m dying?’

So 1993 comes rolling round, and Stevie Nicks is finally convinced that the protracted high dosage of Klonopin might be killing her. So she does exactly what you or I might do. She instructs her personal assistant, Glenn, to take her daily dose - just to see what effect it has.

‘I said, it won’t kill you, because it hasn’t killed me, but I just want to see what you think. Because Glenn was terribly worried about me - everybody was. So I was taking two in the morning, two in the afternoon and two more at night. At that point if I could find a Percoset, because I’m so miserable, I’d take that, or I’d take a Fiorocet - anything.

‘So Glenn proceeds to take all my medicine. He was setting up a stereo in the living-room. Well, after half an hour he was just sitting there. And he said, “I can’t fix the stereo and I don’t think I can drive home.” And I said, “Well, good - just stay there, because I’m studying you.” And he was almost hallucinating. It was bad. And I called up my psychiatrist, and I said, “I gave Glenn every-thing you’ve prescribed for me.” And the first words out of his mouth were, “Are you trying to kill him?” And the next words out of my mouth were, “Are you trying to kill me?” ‘

Nicks admitted herself to the Daniel Freeman Memorial Hospital in Venice Beach. It took her 47 days to detox. ‘Dallas Taylor, the drummer for Crosby, Stills and Nash, was there the whole time. I nearly died. I moulted. My hair turned grey. My skin started to completely peel off. I was in terrible pain.’ She shivers at the memory. ‘I think it’s very good to talk about this to get the message out into the world about addiction to this particular drug. That was the worst period of my life. They stole my forties. It was eight completely wasted years of my life.’ Here’s the irony, she says: the ‘powers that be’ had sent her to the psychiatrist in order to keep her working, but the ‘treatment’ he gave her made work almost impossible. ‘It’s very Shakespearean. It’s very much a tragedy.’

But what happened to Glenn?

Nicks throws back her hair. ‘Glenn was OK, because it was just for one day.’

Stevie Nicks lives in a large, extremely beautiful house built in the 1930s in the American colonial style, situated in the hills behind Santa Monica. She is in a meeting when I arrive, and I am shown into the library - a wood-panelled room, the walls hung with pre-Raphaelite miniatures and tapestries. On the bookshelves are volumes about the Kabbalah, Madame Blavatsky and Arthurian legend; a copy of The Johns Hopkins Consumer Guide to Drugs sits beside Luxury Hotels of the World.

At length Nicks appears and leads me down the hall, past a store room filled with travel wardrobes - her stage costumes - and into a spacious sitting-room. There is a velvet chaise-longue draped in silk, Persian carpets, carved tables. Home recording equipment, keyboards and a couple of guitars stand in one corner. Nicks moves among the collection of colourful Art Deco lamps that stand on every surface, carefully orchestrating the ambient light. ‘That’s the famous blue lamp that’s been in lots of photos; that’s a Tiffany,’ she says. ‘And so is that one. I don’t know about the others.’

Even though she is now 59, as Stevie Nicks puts it, ‘I still look very much like me’, which is to say unreconstructed fantasy flower-child: kohl-eyed, bee-stung lips, wrapped in a muted symphony of rustling satin and chiffon, legs encased in pointed heel, knee-high black suede boots. In Fleetwood Mac’s heyday in the late 1970s Nicks was ‘the mystical one’ whose ethereal appearance, love of gothic romances and songs about witches, gypsies and dreams lent her a certain evanescently wistful air. ‘Sweet, fragile, airy-fairy,’ she says with a laugh. ‘That was this person on drugs.’

Nobody survives in the rock’n'roll business for 30 years by being ‘airy-fairy’, however, and there is a palpable vein of toughness under the cordial, disarmingly confessional manner. Nicks is delightful company; but you wouldn’t want to cross her.

Nicks was married once, fleetingly, but she has no children and no permanent partner. She shares the house with her god-daughter, who is in her early twenties, and who lives in the guesthouse above the garage. Nicks has lived here for two years, and it was a mistake, she says, from day one. So she is moving to a penthouse apartment on the beach and the house is on the market.

‘I saw it, and there was this big family living here that obviously loved it. So there was a vibe here. And something in me thought, maybe I can have that. I was not here three days before I thought, what the hell do I here? I was too shallow and stupid to realise that it wasn’t the house I’d fallen in love with but the mom and the dad and the four kids, and the smells of the cooking.’ She sighs. It is, she reflects, a house ‘for adults. And even though I’m pushing 60 I don’t feel that I’m that old yet.’

Does she see beauty when she looks in the mirror? ‘Sometimes I still think that I’m looking OK. And other times I look at myself and I go, “Oh, my God, you’re so old.” ‘

She pulls a face and laughs. ‘I wrote a song once called The Prettiest Girl in the World, and that was a long time ago. But when you’ve been the prettiest girl in the world - and I don’t mean the most beautiful girl; I just mean a really pretty girl, a really talented girl, a girl who writes really good songs. When you’ve been all that and you’re a lot older, it is hard. You see the lines’ - Nicks runs her fingers along the thickening curve of her jaw - ‘and you start to see this happening; and even though I’m thinner than I was a long time ago, you see your body changing and you go, well maybe this is not age-appropriate and I shouldn’t wear the chiffon scarf any more; and then you go, but if I’m going to change the whole thing it’s not me any more.’ She shakes the thought to one side. ‘I’m just terribly excited to get into my rock’n'roll penthouse and out of here. I feel old here.’

I don’t know if Stevie Nicks’s passport describes her as ‘rock’n'roll star’, but it is the term she uses to describe herself, completely unselfconsciously, as if rock’n'roll star were a vocation, or a destiny embodied in the genes.

Nicks’s father was a business executive - a vice-president of Greyhound Buses, the president of a food company - whose work took the family on a journey across the south-west of America - Arizona, Los Angeles, New Mexico, El Paso, Salt Lake City, San Francisco. The elder of two child-ren (she has a brother, Christopher), as a young girl she was fixated on two things - dressing up and singing. Her teenage heroines were Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane and Janis Joplin. In high school she met another aspiring rock star, Lindsey Buckingham. They became a couple and moved to Los Angeles, performing together as a duo, both singing and songwriting. In 1975 they recorded an album, Buckingham Nicks, that led to them being invited to join Fleetwood Mac. A British blues band that had transplanted to America, Mac had already enjoyed a distinctly chequered history with one founding member, Peter Green, succumbing to LSD psychosis, and another, Jeremy Spencer, leaving to join the religious cult the Children of God.

The addition of Buckingham and Nicks brought a pop sensibility and a clutch of exhilarating songs that rejuvenated the group. An eponymous album went to number one in America; the follow-up, Rumours, released in 1977, became a phenomenon. By then, Nicks and Buckingham were breaking up after five years together. The seven-year marriage of the band’s bass player, John McVie, and pianist, Christine McVie, was coming to an end. The drummer, Mick Fleetwood, was in the midst of divorce proceedings with his wife. Rumours fastidiously chronicled this tangled and incestuous emotional mess - made more tangled still when Fleetwood and Nicks began a surreptitious affair that ended when Fleetwood switched his affections to Nicks’s friend Sara Recor - the inspiration for Nicks’s song Sara. Nicks, meanwhile, embarked on an affair with Don Henley of the Eagles.

Rumours went on to sell more than 30 million copies around the world (it remains one of the biggest-selling records of all time), launching the group into the realm of imperious self-indulgence more commonly associated with dictators of small African countries. During the group’s Tusk tour in 1979, Nicks insisted that each hotel room she stayed in should be painted pink and equipped with a white piano. I remember being present at a photo-shoot for the group in LA the following year. A certain tension permeated the air, and at one point a crisis loomed when one of the group discovered that the champagne that had been provided was not of the preferred vintage; a minion was dispatched to fetch more. The shoot took less than two hours. But enough gourmet food had been provided to feed Burkina Faso. ‘And nobody ate a bite, right?’ Nicks says with a knowing shake of her head. ‘If we’d just counted the meals that we ordered and were never eaten it was probably a million.’

Between the cocaine and the banquets, the sports cars and the Hollywood mansions, Mick Fleetwood went bankrupt - twice. ‘Because Mick didn’t write songs, so he didn’t make the publishing money that Christine and Stevie and Lindsey did,’ Nicks says. ‘But Mick spent just as much money. Millions. So if Mick Fleetwood could go back right now and change that, he would.’

Nicks and Buckingham were more careful, retaining an independent business management firm to handle their affairs when they joined Fleetwood Mac. ‘So even though we spent a lot of money, a lot of it was invested.’

What was it invested in?

‘I have no idea.’

Fame, and the privilege and separation it brings, has a way of incapacitating people, insulating them not only from other people, but from the practicalities of life. When I ask Nicks for her zip code she admits she has no idea what it is. Or her house number, or her telephone number. Her driving licence ran out in 1978, and she has never renewed it. ‘My life is very cloistered really,’ she says. ‘Because I don’t go anywhere by myself, you know what I mean? I’m very, very famous, and I walk in somewhere and people are, like, “Oh, my God!” And I love it, and it’s sweet and I sign autographs. But on the other side of that, my assistant and I get in the car and go to the mall; I’m certainly not going to give up shopping. But I would seldom get in a car all by myself.’

When she and Buckingham were living together and struggling, before Fleetwood Mac, Nicks did everything: she kept house, worked as a waitress and a cleaner. ‘I made the money that supported Lindsey and me, and I paid for the apartment and the car and everything. And I loved that.’

A few years ago she went to see a psychologist - she was having a ‘horrible’ menopause, she says, and wanted to talk to an older woman about it - ‘and she said to me that in a way the saddest day of your life was the day you joined Fleetwood Mac, because that was when you ceased to be caretaker and became somebody that everybody else took care of. And she was absolutely spot on. Because I’m very much… if my family’s coming here for Christmas, I’m the one who’s making the house ready and fixing the beds. I don’t have people around to do that kind of stuff for me.

‘The people that I have gone out with will tell you that I’m a great girlfriend. I want to make sure that you have the llama hot-water bottle, and the perfect cashmere blanket and the exact perfect pillow. I know about all that stuff.’

Nicks recorded her first solo album, Bella Donna, in 1981, and has released eight albums in the years since. Her fortunes dipped radically in the mid-1990s, when she was struggling with her addiction to Klonopin, but her last studio album, Trouble in Shangri-La, released in 2001, went multi-platinum, giving her her greatest success in two decades. At the same time she continued to play a part in the ongoing soap opera that has been Fleetwood Mac. She formally left the band in 1993, but rejoined in 1997. The last album by the band, Say You Will, was recorded in 2003, but Nicks shows scant enthusiasm for the prospect of another reunion. Christine McVie retired from touring in 1998, and Nicks says she has no interest in working with the group unless McVie returns. ‘I don’t like it as the boys’ club. We could make millions and millions of dollars touring again. But I just don’t know if I want to go again without Chris.’

This dedication to her career has not been without cost. Nicks ‘pretty much sold my soul to the devil a long time ago’, as she puts it, so that ‘I could follow this dream fully and completely, and not be wrapped up in children and husbands and boyfriends and all of that. I chose not to have child-ren.’ Her brief marriage in 1983, she says, ‘doesn’t count’. It was an odd episode. That year her best friend Robin died of leukaemia three days after giving birth to a son, Matthew. A grieving Nicks convinced the bereaved husband, Kim Anderson, that they should marry and raise the child together. ‘Completely crazy.’ She shrugs. ‘We were all in such insane grief, just completely deranged. The families were just outraged at what we were doing; in a lot of people’s eyes it was very blasphemous. But I didn’t care. All I cared about was that little boy, Matthew.’ The marriage lasted only a few weeks, before Nicks made the decision to bring it to an end. ‘I said, “You have to take the baby and go back to Minnesota”, where he was from, where he had family, “because, Kim, I’m a rock’n'roll star. It’s what I do, it’s who I am.” ‘ She didn’t see Matthew for the next eight years, but she is now putting him through college in Atlanta.

There are the great loves of your life, she says, then there are the loves of your life, and then there are the companions of your life - ‘there’s all the different kind of love affairs that you have. But all the great loves of my life wouldn’t have been any better at settling down than me.’

And who has been the greatest love of her life?

‘My great, great love was Joe Walsh.’

Joe Walsh? Of the Eagles? I struggle to keep the note of surprise out of my voice.

‘It’s crazy, isn’t it?’

I am no expert on Nicks’s romantic adventures, but I’ve done my research. Her affairs with Buckingham, Fleetwood, Don Henley, the record executive Jimmy Iovine - all are well chronicled. But nowhere have I found a single reference to Joe Walsh.

‘1983 to 1986,’ Nicks says crisply. ‘I don’t know - why do you love somebody? Why do you love them so much that when they walk in the room your heart jumps out of your chest? I don’t know. But I fell in love with Joe at first sight from across the room, in the bar at the Mansions Hotel in Dallas. I looked at him and I walked across the room and I sat on the bar stool next to him, and two seconds later I crawled into his lap, and that was it.

‘We were probably the perfect, complete, crazy pair. He was the one that I would have married, and that I would probably have changed my life around for…’ She pauses. ‘A little bit. Not a lot. But he wouldn’t have changed his life either.’

The reason they broke up, she says, is that they were both ‘really seriously drug addicts. We were a couple on the way to hell.’

The relationship finally ended when Walsh got on a plane and went to Australia ‘to get away from me, basically. He thought - or so I’m told by my friends that Joe told - that one of us was going to die, and the other person would not be able to save them. And I did think I was going to die, absolutely. It took me a long, long time to get over it - if I ever got over it. Because there was no other man in the world for me. And it’s the same today, even though Joe is married and has two sons. He met somebody in rehab and got married. And I think he’s happy.’

Oddly enough, Nicks once said very much the same thing about Lindsey Buckingham, telling one journalist that Buckingham was ‘my first love and my love for all time. But we can’t ever be together. He has a lovely wife, Kristen, who I really like… I look at him now and just go, “Oh, Stevie, you made a mistake.” ‘

Nicks shoots me a look when I mention this. ‘Well, he was my great musical love, and that’s very different. Lindsey and I both loved each other not just because we loved Lindsey and Stevie, but because we loved what Lindsey and Stevie did. And that is definitely what kept Lindsey and me together for as long as we did stay together. It’s not that he’s not a great love - he is a great love. And I write songs about him to this day. I don’t know why. But whenever we’re together we fight - to this day.’

Nicks thinks on this. She doesn’t want people to think that she thinks love doesn’t exist, she says, or that she has given up on finding it for herself.

‘It’s not that. It’s just that I am fine without it because it’s like I’m involved in a love affair all of the time with my music and what I do. But if the right man walked into my life today and said, “Will you go out to dinner with me tonight?” and I felt that thing, I would absolutely do it. But I love what I do so much that I’ve never sat around and worried about it.’

She has always tried to be a good person, she says. ‘I’ve tried very hard to use my fame, and my money and my power to do good things.’ Last year she established her own charity project, the Stevie Nicks Soldier’s Angel Foundation, which aims to use music in the rehabilitation of US servicemen and women wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. The idea for the foundation came to Nicks after a visit to the Walter Reed military hospital in Washington in 2005. (’I walked into Walter Reed today a single woman with no children,’ she wrote on her website journal. ‘I walked out a mother, a wife, a girlfriend, a sister, a daughter, a nurse, a patient’s advocate - a changed woman. What I saw today will never leave my heart.’)

‘And believe me, talk about feeling old.’ Nicks laughs. ‘I go in and some of these kids don’t even know who I am. So of course I tell them.’

The foundation has provided hundreds of iPods to injured servicemen and women. ‘In my estimation music is the best thing you can possibly give to them, because it’s the only thing that’s going to get them up out of the bed,’ Nicks says. ‘So I try to do good things - things that I can make happen that maybe the next person couldn’t make happen. I don’t think I’m a prima donna at all. I was the same person when I was a waitress and cleaning people’s houses.’

Her life has long followed a pattern. She rises sometime around midday, and goes to bed between three and 4am: ‘My favourite time is midnight.’ She writes songs and listens to music and goes on tour. ‘If you asked me, “What’s your idea of a good time?” I’d say a fantastic grand piano, overlooking the ocean if possible; or going to a studio and being able to record; to write a new song and listen back to something I wrote yesterday and really put it together.’

She is working on a new project now, inspired by The Mabinogion Tetralogy, by the American author Evangeline Walton, and its connection to what is probably Nicks’s most famous song, Rhiannon. The Tetralogy is an epic retelling of stories from the Welsh Mabinogi - a collection of myths and legends that are believed to date from the 12th century. Nicks had never heard of Walton or the Mabinogion when she wrote Rhiannon in 1973.

‘I’d read another novel about two sisters, Branwen and Rhiannon. I wrote the song about Rhiannon, and bought an Afghan hound and named her Branwen. So it could have been the other way around, you know.’

In 1978, after a fan had introduced her to the Tetralogy, she contacted Walton and visited her at her home in Tucson. ‘She was living in this little tract home, and you went inside and it was all, like, gothic and curtains. And right on the mantelpiece was a big stone lion inscribed with the words “Song of Rhiannon”. I thought, this is so wild - the world is small somehow, you know? If you look at the dates, it was kind of like Evangeline’s work ended on Rhiannon, and mine began. It’s almost like this has been laid out to me, by the gods - or whomever - that this will be the next 20 years of my life.’

Three years ago Nicks and a couple of girlfriends spent three months in Hawaii brainstorming the Tetralogy with a view to translating it into a musical work. ‘It could be a movie. It could be a record. It could be a couple of records. It could be a mini-series. It could be an animated cartoon. There is no end to what this could be, because the stories are fantastic. We started in that totally scholarly, you-are-a-student-of-Welsh-mythology place. And then I got a call from my manager saying, “I need you to come to Vegas right now because Celine Dion and Elton John are playing back to back at the Caesar’s theatre, and they want you to do a week there. It’s really good money and you don’t have to travel very far.” And I’m, like, “Howard, I am on a spiritual quest here; I really cannot come to Vegas.” And he’s, like, “Stevie, you have to, please, just come tomorrow.” ‘

So what did she do?

Stevie Nicks throws back her head and laughs.

‘We went to Vegas.’

‘Crystal Visions… The Very Best of Stevie Nicks’ is released on September 24

Picture Scans provided by trackaghost

Verbatim: Lindsey Buckingham

US Airlines In Flight Magazine
September 2007

verbatim_image.jpg

Merging an affinity for splendid and soaring melodies, a playful sensuality, and a musical undergirding built on equal parts across-the-pond blues and stateside decadence, Fleetwood Mac was arguably the quintessential pop band of the 1970s. Though the band had enjoyed some moderate success in the late ’60s and early ’70s, it was the arrival of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks in 1975 that gave the band a new sound, a new image, and Beatlesque chart success. During his tenure with Fleetwood Mac, Buckingham penned and produced some of the most resonant and hummable pop songs of the ’70s and ’80s, including “Go Your Own Way,” “Big Love,” “Tusk,” and “Don’t Stop.”

Today, Buckingham, who previously seemed a tortured virtuoso in a disposable pop landscape, emanates serenity, genuine gratitude, and no shortage of musical wit. Perhaps the new calm is because Buckingham has taken on the roles of husband (he married girlfriend Kristen Messner in 2000) and father (the youngest of his three children was born in 2004) over the last decade. Perhaps it’s that, after a 14-year delay, he’s just released his fourth solo album, the largely acoustic, deeply intimate Under the Skin. Regardless, Buckingham is an artist for the ages, always reaching and searching, never shying away from documenting his journey — and perhaps that of an entire generation — in memorable, personal tunes.

The success of Fleetwood Mac has given you the freedom to be more experimental in your solo career. But with fourteen years between solo albums, you’re like the Thomas Pynchon or Terence Malick of pop music. Why so long?
One is, I tend to work slowly. Beyond that, there’s a broader pattern that has to do with being in a mainstream group and wanting to be a member in good standing. In that situation, you’re always walking a tightrope of trying to meet your own needs and serving the needs of the collective. It’s hard for me to just say, “No, go away” to Fleetwood Mac. There were several times in those fourteen years where the [solo project] intention was there and the work was underway, but Fleetwood Mac came calling. We did a live album, an extensive tour, a studio album, and another round of shows. That’s my list of excuses. [Laughs.]

Between solo albums, in your fifties, you also married for the first time and became a father. How has starting a family later in life changed you?
Well, it answered an awful lot of questions that had been hanging out there for me for a long time. And of course, it brings up a lot of questions about the path that I had been on: What is that path? Why had I been doing that for so long? Was it a noble path, or not? I think it’s all a mixed bag.

This is the best time of my life, musically and in every other way, but everything that got me to where I am musically came from the past. Yet here I am in a brand-new situation, faced with the challenges of striking a new balance. I think Under the Skin is about searching for that balance. The Fleetwood Mac experience was living in a state of denial in a lot of ways, in order to get through some of that drama. With Under the Skin, I’m writing with a clarity and directness, in a very open, autobiographical way that I don’t think I’ve ever done before — even though a lot of people thought Mac albums like Rumours were entirely autobiographical. We never saw it that way until years later. It was like, “Oh, yeah. I guess that’s how I was feeling.”

A Fleetwood Mac show is as much about the music as a time machine as anything else, which is why you currently see an epidemic of bands reuniting.
There are rumors Fleetwood Mac will reunite next year.

[Laughs.] It’s a little hard to say, exactly. But I would be surprised if we weren’t sort of kicking around in rehearsals by, I don’t know, maybe the fall of 2008. We’ll see.

This year will witness the reunion of several major bands from the Fleetwood Mac era: Genesis, The Police, Van Halen, Eagles. Thirty years later, what do these bands, most of them fronted by Baby Boomers, mean in the history of rock and roll?
I think the legacy of bands that are doing what Fleetwood Mac was doing, and for as long as we were doing it, has not been written just yet. It’s still not clear yet what these bands really mean in the long run. The cliché is that rock ’n’ roll was always for people under thirty. The ridiculous saying “Never trust anyone over thirty” is so indicative of a perspective that the Baby Boomers had at the time, when everyone saw a sense of corruption and selling out and compromise coming into one’s life around that age…. Well, there may be some truth to that. [Laughs.] But it’s up to each one of us to define ourselves in our own ways. It is difficult to do that. It’s certainly been difficult for my generation to do that.

Is there artistic merit to these reunions, or is it merely a cash-in for bands and a time warp for fans?
People who come to a Fleetwood Mac show want to hear all the songs that will propel them back to the seventies. It’s as much about the music as a time machine as anything else, which is why you currently see an epidemic of bands reuniting. It’s not at all inappropriate for audiences to be granted that experience, or for bands to be able to honor their bodies of work in that way.

You’ve been at the frontline of the music business for over thirty years. How has the industry changed over time?
There are really two kinds of artists. There’s the band that, continually, from project to project, is looking for the right producer and the right situation to re-create what they became famous for, and they’re probably almost always disappointed. And then there are other artists who just do what they want to do. I think it’s always been like this. I went through a little of this with Warner Brothers Records while I was making Under the Skin, because they did want me to put out a quote-unquote “normal” album, with more rock tunes on it. But I don’t make Green Day records, you know? [Laughs.] It was very difficult for me to get them to see they were missing the point. I think at this stage in the game I might have earned the right to make the records I want to make.

People sometimes forget that before Rumours sold tens of millions of copies, Fleetwood Mac had released a lot of albums that at best enjoyed only modest success. Would a band like Fleetwood Mac survive in today’s music industry?
Most of the albums in the band’s early years, before I joined, were non sequiturs — [there were] a lot of revolving band members, not a lot of consistency, not a lot of hits, but the band kept making music. And Mo Ostin, a legendary guy who was running Warner Brothers Records at the time, was strong or brave or crazy enough to go, “Well, we’re not making any money on this, and I have no idea what it all means or where it’s going, but I’m just going to keep them on the label. I think there’s something there.” Just on instinct, right? Then look what happened in 1975: Fleetwood Mac becomes one of the biggest bands in the world. In today’s climate, there’s very little room for instinct.

There’s not a lot of nurture for bands today, which is not to say there are not lots of good guys running labels, but not one of them is allowed to run a label on instinct or passion anymore. I think we may be missing a lot of great bands because of it. There never would have been a Fleetwood Mac [without it], I know that.

In between the Fleetwood Mac reunions and tours, a lot of the band’s music has been co-opted by various aspects of pop culture, most famously in 1992, when Bill Clinton adopted “Don’t Stop” as his inauguration theme song. How do you feel about your songs being “borrowed” in those ways?
The Bill Clinton thing was such an out-of-context thing. I didn’t feel all that great about going out to do that. It was just so bizarre. But in retrospect, I was fine with supporting him, especially given what we have now. [Laughs.] If you don’t want to be overly snobby about it, you can say, “It’s great that the music has worked its way into the fabric of consciousness in such a way that somebody wants to interpret it for some other kind of agenda.” As long as it’s a worthy agenda. [Laughs.] There’s not too much you can do about that kind of thing. You can’t spend too much time worrying about it.

The song “Go Your Own Way” has also had many lives. In fact, you re-recorded it for the new album. How has that song changed for you over the years?
That song is such a live capper. It gets the audience involved in a big way at the end of a show. It’s a lot of fun, that song. But I still think about those lyrics. That was a very clear message to Stevie [Nicks], when I wrote that.

It’s very hard to be objective about your own work, or to get much of a sense of the ways it may work itself into the cultural fabric. I always go back to when I first presented that song to the band — how well it was first received; the acoustic guitar part, which was put on at the eleventh hour in the studio; about a major DJ in L.A. saying, “Gee, I don’t think I like that” because he couldn’t find the beat. It’s an anthem. I guess it’s a song that can transcend its original meaning. And to some degree, when I think about the road that I’ve traveled, which has been on its own terms, it reflects the life I’ve lived, even though the verses are very specific about a relationship I once had. There’s a less painful quality to that song, with time. It’s become more uplifting or joyful for me through the years. It might be a celebration now, which it definitely was not at the time.

What makes a great pop song?
I don’t know what makes a good pop song. It’s very hard to put it down, to use a set of criteria. Sometimes I’ll disparage people from the record company who sit and listen to only thirty seconds of a song and pass judgment, but there is a truth to that. If [it’s] a good song, that is all you need to hear. It has you or it doesn’t, and a lot of it comes down to magic — it moves you or it doesn’t. And I just don’t know. It’s a mystery. [Laughs.] If I knew more, I’d write more hits.

Original Group

Line-up changes are an inevitable part of any rock band’s existence. But arguably no major band weathered so many comings and goings while maintaining a steady musical output as Fleetwood Mac did from the time it formed in 1967 until the arrival of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks in 1975. Here’s a look at the musicians who helped shape Fleetwood Mac’s early sound, as well as the ones who helped the band transition from its blues-based roots into one of the most successful pop bands of all time.

Bob Brunning
Bassist
Tour of Duty: 1967
The Story: When Fleetwood Mac was formed, Brunning was tabbed as bass player — with the understanding he would relinquish the job if John McVie ever left John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers. Mcvie did just that a few weeks after Fleetwood Mac played its first live concert, so Brunning moved on to British blues stalwarts Savoy Brown, where he recorded only one single before putting his performing career on the back burner in order to focus on teaching.

But he never gave up his love of the blues. Since 1968, he has been recording and playing on a part-time basis, mainly in The De Luxe Blues Band.

Peter Green
Guitarist, vocalist
Tour of Duty: 1967–1970
The Story: If there had been no Peter Green, it’s unlikely there would have been a Fleetwood Mac. After receiving accolades as Eric Clapton’s replacement in John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers, Green formed Fleetwood Mac in 1967; the lineup on the eponymous debut album included Green, Jeremy Spencer on slide guitar, Mick Fleetwood on drums, and John McVie on bass. (When guitarist Danny Kirwan joined the band after the release of its second album, Fleetwood Mac became one of the first “three-guitar attack” bands in the world.)

Green’s blues-infused guitar work defined the early Fleetwood Mac sound, but despite having founded the band and recruiting all the players, Green called it quits in 1970. The move was due in large part to his increasingly irrational behavior that even he admitted could be traced to his heavy use of LSD. Green began recording sporadically in the late 1970s, but was never able to consistently re-create the success of his early career. He did, however, appear for his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998 as a member of Fleetwood Mac. He even treated viewers to a performance of “Black Magic Woman” with Carlos Santana — a Green composition which appeared on Fleetwood Mac’s 1969 compilation album English Rose.

Jeremy Spencer
Guitarist, vocalist
Tour of Duty: 1967–1971
The Story: Peter Green was searching for a second guitarist to give Fleetwood Mac a more fuller sound during live performances, and he found one in Jeremy Spencer. Spencer’s specialty was slide guitar: He was heavily influenced by Elmore James, a Mississippi bluesman dubbed “King of the Slide Guitar.” He also had a knack for mimicry and imitations, doing fairly convincing vocal takes of icons like Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly.

After Peter Green left the group, the band soldiered on with Spencer and Kirwan on guitars and McVie and Fleetwood manning the rhythm section. But during a U.S. tour in February, 1971, Spencer vanished on the day of a scheduled gig at Whiskey A Go Go in Hollywood; it was discovered a few days later he’d joined the highly controversial Children of God religious movement (some consider it a full-blown cult). Although Spencer recorded a few albums after joining the Children of God, now called The Family International, his decision resulted in an extended vacation from the rock ‘n’ roll mainstream. He was, however, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998, and in 2006 he released Precious Little to favorable reviews.

Danny Kirwan
Guitarist, vocalist
Tour of Duty: 1968–1972
The Story: Danny Kirwan was just 18 years old when Peter Green asked him to become the third guitarist in Fleetwood Mac (mainly because Green felt slide guitarist Jeremy Spencer was not pulling his weight as a backing musician). With Kirwan’s arrival, Spencer took more of a sideline role. Green and Kirwan penned all the songs on 1969’s Then Play On, considered one of the best Fleetwood Mac albums of the Peter Green era.

Kirwan saw considerable changes in the Fleetwood Mac lineup during his tenure with the band, with Peter Green and Jeremy Spencer leaving the group and Bob Welch and Christine McVie joining it. The latter lineup released two albums (Future Games and Bare Trees) before Kirwan’s volatile temperament and prodigious alcohol consumption finally pushed things to a breaking point: After an argument with Welch over a guitar tuning, Kirwan rammed his head into a wall, smashed his guitar to bits, and refused to go onstage. As a result, in the summer of 1972 Kirwan became the first person to ever be fired from Fleetwood Mac.

After releasing three solo albums between 1975 and 1979, Kirwan vanished from the public eye and reportedly went through several years of homelessness before settling into a more stable lifestyle. He too was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Fleetwood Mac in 1998.

Bob Welch
Guitarist, vocalist
Tour of Duty: 1971–1974
The Story: When Jeremy Spencer went AWOL during Fleetwood Mac’s 1971 tour, the band pleaded with Peter Green to rejoin the group in order to finish up some tour dates, which Green agreed to do. But Green obviously wouldn’t reunite permanently with the group, so the band recruited California native Bob Welch to fill Spencer’s slot. With Welch’s arrival, the band began to move away from its bluesy roots and more into the realm of pop-rock.

In the three years he was with the band, Welch managed to record more albums (five) than any of his guitarist predecessors. He also achieved something no other Fleetwood Mac refugee had yet done: score major chart success after leaving the band. His 1977 album French Kiss yielded hits like “Sentimental Lady” (originally recorded on the Fleetwood Mac album Bare Trees) and “Ebony Eyes.”

Though Welch’s presence helped hold the band together during turbulent times, things apparently weren’t all sweetness and light: Welch sued the band in 1994, claiming he was shortchanged on royalties (an out-of-court settlement was eventually reached). His latest album was 2006’s His Fleetwood Mac Years and Beyond 2.

Bob Weston
Guitarist
Tour of Duty: 1972–1973
The Story: Guitarist Bob Weston was on the road with R&B singer Long John Baldry when he met Fleetwood Mac and was asked to step in as a replacement for Danny Kirwan in 1972. He recorded two albums with the band, Penguin and Mystery to Me, both of which were released in 1973. Both albums performed moderately well (the former reached No. 49 on Billboard’s Pop Album chart, while the latter peaked at No. 67), and the group hit the road to support the releases. The tour, too, was going along swimmingly — until Mick Fleetwood found out that his wife, Jenny, was having an affair with Weston. (This wasn’t the only marital rift going on at the time: Christine McVie was having an affair with producer Martin Birch.) Not wanting to be the reason for the disruption of the tour, Fleetwood attempted to carry on with Weston still in the band, but by October of 1973 he simply couldn’t handle it anymore and Weston was summarily dismissed.

But the strangest part was yet to come. When Bob Welch called Fleetwood Mac’s manager Clifford Davis and explained that the tour would have to be cut short, Davis claimed to own the rights to the name “Fleetwood Mac” and hastily assembled a replacement band that would go down in history as “Fake Mac.” The ensuing lawsuit kept Fleetwood Mac out of action for nearly a year.

Weston went on to release three solo albums, the most recent being 1999’s There’s a Heaven.

Dave Walker
Vocalist
Tour of Duty: 1972–1973
The Story: Bob Brunning, the first member to leave Fleetwood Mac, signed on with Savoy Brown after his departure; Dave Walker, on the other hand, joined Fleetwood Mac after recording three albums with Savoy Brown. And while Walker’s stint with Fleetwood Mac wasn’t as ephemeral as Brunning’s, it was still a mere blip in the band’s history.

Part of the reason Walker might have been tagged for vocal duties is that he hailed from Christine McVie’s hometown of Birmingham, England. What’s more, during his tenure with Savoy Brown he had worked with three members of her former band, Chicken Shack. But when the time came to record Penguin, it was clear that Walker was the odd man out. His contributions were minimal, and the one Walker-penned song on the album, “The Derelict,” was never properly finished in terms of production. During the recording of Mystery to Me, Walker was asked to leave the band.

Walker found himself back in the spotlight when he was asked to front Black Sabbath after Ozzy Osbourne left the band in 1977. Before the group could record new material with lyrics written by Walker, however, Ozzy rejoined the group and Walker was once again on his own. In 1986, he reunited with Savoy Brown, eventually recording three more albums with them.

He began living in Montana in the 1990s and was out of the limelight for over a decade. In 2004, Dave Walker and the Ambulators released Mostly Sonny: A Tribute to Sonny Boy Williamson, to positive user reviews.

— Steven Poole

Originally posted online here

The Diamond: Fleetwood Mac - Rumours

By: Patrick McKay
Published on: 2007-08-14

The Diamond is an apt name for albums certified for 10 million + sales by the Recording Industry Association of America. The hardest substance on earth: insoluble, impervious to penetration, secure in itself. “The formation of natural diamond requires very specific conditions,” Wikipedia says. The aim of this feature is to define what made Cracked Rear View, Come On Over, Boston and The Lion King soundtrack not just sales benchmarks of their respective artists’ careers, but inexplicable loci at which shrewd marketing and the inscrutability of mass market taste met to produce high-quality entertainment no one breathing could escape. This column will also study why artistic peaks like Rumours, Born in the U.S.A., Thriller, Can’t Slow Down, and Hysteria deserved their sales. Each entry in this series will pose the question: why should we separate art from commerce?

By 1977 all the longhairs who’d lived through the Summer of Love were over thirty. They’d traded their painted vans for station wagons, left their communes for a split-level in the suburbs, and watched their free-love idyll end in divorce. The hippies had matured into yuppies. They had money to spend and hi-fi stereos to show off. They’d grown up during the golden age of rock, but it was the height of punk, and they weren’t going to listen to “God Save the Queen.” So instead, they listened to Fleetwood Mac.

Since its release in February 1977, Rumours has sold 19 million copies in the United States. Since the U.S. population has just passed 300 million, it’s not an exaggeration to say that nearly seven percent of America has probably owned a copy of Rumours at some point in their life. Not counting compilations or double albums, this makes it the fifth bestselling long player of all time. And unlike many of its fellow diamond-certified records that earned their status after decades of steady catalogue sales (Billy Joel’s Greatest Hits, Volume I and II, Legend), this one was a blockbuster from the first, topping the charts for an astounding 32 weeks. Though it spun off four top ten singles “(Dreams,” “Don’t Stop,” “Go Your Own Way,” and “You Make Loving Fun”), every track earned airplay on AOR radio, making standards out of album cuts like “Gold Dust Woman” and “The Chain.” By 1979, it’d sold thirteen million copies. This was much more than a hit record—this was a phenomenon.

Rumours’ success is all the more surprising considering that in the early-‘70s, Fleetwood Mac barely functioned as a band at all. Original frontman Peter Green left the group in 1971, leaving only the rhythm section of John McVie and Mick Fleetwood, who were forced to bring in McVie’s wife Christine, among others. Only later did they persuade folk-rock duo Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks to join, the result being the Mac Mach II. Their first record, 1975’s Fleetwood Mac, had been a smash in its own right, but the commercial triumph of Rumours launched them into superstardom, a feat they never managed to top, even if its immediate follow-up, the messy, idiosyncratic Tusk, is the more accomplished artistic statement.

Thirty years later, it’s important to remember the atmosphere Rumours was borne into: 1977 was the year punk rock broke on both sides of the Atlantic. Johnny Rotten said “fuck” on the BBC while Patti Smith performed songs like “Piss Factory” at CBGB’s. The sun-baked optimism of groups like the Beach Boys and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young had long since soured, and a coke-fueled disco inferno was right around the corner (1977’s other smash hit? The Saturday Night Fever soundtrack).

To pop music fans, Fleetwood Mac must have seemed like a safe middle ground between Richard Hell and Barry Gibb. Even critics bought into the act: in The Village Voice’s year-end Pazz & Jop poll, Robert Christgau wrote that “rock and roll is supposed to be about pleasure as well as all the heavy stuff, and I’m glad that in this year of the punk Fleetwood Mac [is] here to remind us of that.”

Christgau makes a crucial distinction: appearances to the contrary, this is not soft pop, but rock and roll. By 1987’s Tango in the Night, Fleetwood Mac had morphed into VH1-friendly easy listening, but Rumours still leans heavily on the blues-rock foundation built by Peter Green. McVie’s “You Make Loving Fun” and Nicks’ “I Don’t Want To Know” impress with their pop melodies, but are driven by a rhythm section as insistent as Watts and Wyman. “Dreams” and “The Chain,” ostensibly ballads, are built around thick drum patterns and churning bass lines.

The up-tempo material—Buckingham’s “Second Hand News” and McVie’s “Don’t Stop”—moves as fast as anything Dylan put to vinyl in the “Tombstone Blues” era. The cocaine-bright, oh-so-‘70s production finds room for Moog washes, rattling tambourines, rich Brian Wilson-esque vocal arrangements, and even the odd guitar flourish—see the tasteful solo announcing the fade-out to “Second Hand News,” or the gorgeous guitar break at the heart of “The Chain,” which could fit in fine on a Zeppelin record.

All good rock albums rely on rhythm sections, deep production, and fretwork. What distinguishes Rumours—what makes it art—is the contradiction between its cheerful surface and its anguished heart. Here is a radio-friendly record about anger, recrimination, and loss. Much has been made of the intra-band relationship problems that produced these songs—the McVies were divorcing, and Buckingham and Nicks had suffered a bitter split—but this is not a typical breakup album, like Blood on the Tracks or Sea Change, which find their respective authors looking back on heartbreak from a safe distance.

Rumours is the sound of a breakup in progress. Nine of the album’s eleven songs employ the not-so-ambiguous pronouns “I” and “you,” and usually prefer direct address to rumination: “I’m never going back again,” “I never meant any harm to you,” “You know you make me cry,” “You can go your own way.” This puts Fleetwood Mac in a grand tradition, stretching from Gershwin to the Supremes, of sad songs that sound happy. In this way, Rumours was as much a return to earlier forms as punk rock: the Ramones wanted to be the Beach Boys but twice as fast; Fleetwood Mac wanted to be a girl group, only slower.

It’s also worthwhile to note the record’s sheer consistency. Unlike Tusk, which spreads the work of Mac’s three songwriters over twenty songs in eighty-five minutes, Rumours’ eleven songs in forty minutes leave little room for self-indulgence. To these ears, the record’s only dud is McVie’s somnolent “Songbird,” which closes out the otherwise-flawless side one with a whimper instead of a bang. Some of the strongest tracks are seeming throwaways like Buckingham’s lovely “Never Going Back Again” or Nicks’ bouncy “I Don’t Want to Know,” and the major statements—“Dreams,” “Go Your Own Way”—retain their power even after decades of constant rotation on classic rock radio.

Unlike, say, the Beatles, where the work of each songwriter is strikingly distinct, the songs on Rumours sound like the work of one shared voice—an ironic effect, considering that the band came together out of circumstance. Heard in sequence, “Don’t Stop,” McVie’s attempt to cheer up an ex who can’t move on, and “Dreams,” Nicks’ kiss-off to a restless lover, almost sound like two different phases of the same relationship. The druggy egotist torn to shreds in Nicks’ “Gold Dust Woman” (a self-portrait?) could be the same woman to whom Buckingham became “Second Hand News” when she discovered a new lover. This is a portrait of a make-love-not-war generation that hit its thirties only to learn the hard way that sex kills, that love isn’t all you need.

While the Clash and the Sex Pistols renewed rock with a shot of youthful danger, Rumours allowed for the possibility that rock could age gracefully, and take on subjects of an emotional complexity unavailable to a teenager. This may have begat adult contemporary, VH1, and Phil Collins, but at least with Rumours, Fleetwood Mac wasn’t trying to soften rock, but to blunt its edge, to create something more expansive in effect and broader in appeal. The consequence was a career spent in the shadow of that peak; the reward was a receptive audience—of 19 million and counting.

http://www.stylusmagazine.com/articles/diamond/fleetwood-mac-rumours.htm

California Dreaming - Stevie in Mojo Magazine

By Sylvie Simmons
Mojo Magazine (UK)
September 2007

Living in “heavy obscurity,” Stevie Nicks was a just a humble waitress with a failed debut album to her name. Then she joined Fleetwood Mac. Cue instant superstardom and its attendant lifetime of sex, drug and suspended reality. But what of her biggest regrets? “Curse the day I did cocaine!” She tells Sylvie Simmons…

The living room is dimly lit, cosy. At one end of the floor, propped against a wall, are some paintings—works-in-progress—that could pass as illustrations for children’s books. At the other end is an open fireplace with logs blazing, the California sunset having given way to a chilly ocean breeze. Two tiny dogs, neither much bigger than a hairball, one of them clad in a little pink overcoat, skitter between the stiletto-booted feet of a small woman dressed in a floaty chiffon top and tight black pants, her loose blond hair hanging down to her waist. The expression on her face is unguarded and, as always, a little bit stunned. She looks less like a major rock star who’s one year off turning 60 than someone who just fell out of a little girl’s drawing and hadn’t quite got her bearings yet. She looks, in fact, inarguably and utterly Stevie Nicks-ian.

In 1985, when Nicks was in the Betty Ford Clinic being treated for addiction to cocaine, she was set some homework: to write an essay on the difference between being Stevie Nicks real-life human, and “Stevie Nicks” rock icon. She says it was the hardest thing she’s ever had to do. It prompts a story about going to her fortieth high school reunion last month. One of the group of girls she used to hang with in her teens told her, “You know what? You haven’t changed a bit. You are still our little Stevie girl.” She cried on the way home. “It was the nicest thing anybody had said to me,” she smiles. “That I’m still the same. Because I’ve tried very hard to stay who I was before I joined Fleetwood Mac and not become a very arrogant and obnoxious, conceited bitchy chick, which may do. I think I’ve been really successful.”

She says all of this guilelessly. For someone who’s served nearly 40 years in the crazy world of rock, more than 30 as a major star and indulging in her fair share of the sex and drugs, it’s innocence more than experience that comes across. As her close friend Tom Petty (with whom she completed a five-month US tour as unpaid guest singer in 2006) said of her, affectionately, “It’s like when you’ve got a sister in the family that nobody want to talk about much.” Meaning someone you love but who’s, well, different. “Stevie,” he added, “does not live in the real world.”

She scoffs, “Tom lives in the same world that I do. Because both of us became huge successes very young, we made lots of money, and that changes your life immediately—and those thing change for you, you don’t even try to change them. They take you out of the real world, but they don’t need to change who you are.”

But who exactly is she? Besides being one of the most successful women in rock, juggling two careers—solo and with Fleetwood Mac—for more than three decades, she is also one of the most mythologised. Having made MOJO and herself steaming mugs of Earl Grey tea, Stevie Nicks settles in an armchair by the fire as we prepare to find out.

Stevie Nicks has kept a diary every day since she joined Fleetwood Mac—New Year’s Eve 1974. The rest has been committed to memory; like her performances at age four with her grandfather, A.J. Nicks, an eccentric would-be-country musician who lived in a trailer in the desert. He bought Stevie “a little cowgirl outfit with guns and boots and vest” and took her on-stage with him in Arizona bars. Her parents finally put a stop to it, but “it didn’t stop me singing. I sang all the time—to the radio, to anybody, until we moved to San Francisco and I did my own music.”

The timing was perfect. It was the mid-‘60s; Stevie was in her mid-teens. She was writing songs (her first: I’ve Love And I’ve Lost And I’m Sad But Not Blue) and singing with her girlfriends in Mamas & Papas-type harmony bands. Lindsey Buckingham went to the same high school, and the pair met when she saw him singing California Dreamin’ at a social evening and joined in, uninvited, on harmony. Almost two years later he formed a band, Fritz, remembered her and asked her to join. So by day she studied speech communication at college, by night she sang with Fritz.

The group was no great success. At the urging of producer Keith Olsen, they disbanded and Nicks and Buckingham moved to Los Angeles. Lindsey stayed home and wrote, while Stevie paid the bills working at Burger King, waitressing at restaurants, even cleaning Olsen’s house. The producer helped broker a deal with Polydor, who released their debut, Buckingham Nicks, in 1973. A mellow slice of well-produced California rock, nevertheless it flopped.

Meanwhile, Mick Fleetwood, who’d moved his band to L.A., was shopping for a studio and producer. He met Olsen, who played him Buckingham Nicks as a demonstration of his sound and got the job. Fleetwood was also looking for a guitar player—a regular occurrence, what with the band’s habit of losing them, often in unfortunate circumstances (Bob Welch left citing exhaustion; Danny Kirwan was fired for refusing to go on stage and was later admitted to psychiatric hospital; Peter Green and Jeremy Spencer both left as a result of drug-related trauma and alter joined religious cults). The offer of a job was extended to Buckingham, who agreed, if Stevie could come too.

“I know for a fact I was simply being hired as extra baggage,” says Nicks, today, “that they only wanted Lindsey and couldn’t get him without me. They already had a girl singer [Christine McVie], they didn’t need another one who didn’t really play anything. They’re not going to say, “You stand ou there and be the star and we’ll just play.” But I so wanted to be part of it, I thought I could be their secretary or something, anything, and they understood I felt this way and never made me feel unwanted.”

Quite what McVie made of Stevie in the beginning hardly bears thinking about. Five years older than Nicks, Christine Perfect, as she was before marrying Fleetwood Mac bassist John McVie, had a distinguished musical pedigree; classically trained, lead singer and keyboard player on Chicken Shack’s sole Top 10 hit, I’d Rather Go Blind, she’d topped Melody Maker’s Best Female Vocalist poll in 1969, the year before she joined her new husband in Fleetwood Mac.

Stevie nods, “I’m sure there were times when I’m flying around the stage in my gossamer chiffon where she had to think to herself, Wow, what’s this? Fairy school? But never once did she make me feel like that, never one comment to the effect of, ‘I could really have done without you.’ Because she knew from the beginning that I was real sensitive and that anything she’d say to me would cut like a knife.”

Nicks herself had “no hesitations” about giving up Buckingham-Nicks for Mac. “They were an established band and our album had flopped, we were bankrupt. And when I met them they were very dry and English and I loved them straight away. They didn’t audition us or anything, it was like ‘Right, rehearsal starts in four days.’ Then we started getting paid: $200 a week apiece for four weeks when we were rehearsing, and $400 a week apiece when we actually started recording. Basically, I’d been scraping together to make $300 a month waitressing to pay our rent, our food and our car, and all of a sudden we were making almost $4,000 a month overnight. I was washing hundred dollar bills and hanging them up with clothes pins! As a member of Fleetwood Mac for two weeks, I was still working at the restaurant because I’d given them notice. I didn’t just want to walk in there and say, ‘I’m going to be a famous rock star so I quit and I never liked your food anyway.’ It makes you feel bad later, and I like tying up loose ends. So Fleetwood Mac plucked us straight out of heavy obscurity. It was hysterical how fast it all happened.”

Fleetwood Mac, released in spring 1975, featured three songs Nicks had written, including the hit single Rhiannon, originally planned for the non-existent Buckingham Nicks II. The new line-up’s first album together sold five million copies. It was quite a turnaround, not just for Nicks and Buckingham, but for the band too. Months earlier, Mac had been battling in court to keep their name—their manager had put a bogus Mac on the road after Mick Fleetwood pulled out of a tour, having learned that their guitarist Bob Weston, was having an affair with his wife. Now here they were with their first US Number 1.

They were heady days as Nicks describes them—the excitement of going into the studio, the speed with which they made the album, how thrilled everyone was at how it came out. Lindsey was happy, their relationship was going great. “But by the time we came off the road, which was probably three or four months after the record came out, our relationship was not doing that well.” And by the time they started the follow-up, Rumours, John and Christine McVie were in the same boat. “It wasn’t another woman or another man, it was just the situation. The whole hugeness of it all had really hit everybody very hard. And the biggest thing is Chris and I got a lot attention, because we were the girls, and the boys didn’t like that. They didn’t like it then; they don’t like it now.”

Fleetwood Mac’s “Soap Opera” years, in which the members’ love lives came under constant public scrutiny, would overlap with the “Marie Antoinette” years of excess. Says Stevie, “I went to see that film the other night and it reminded me a lot of myself and the people surrounding me when we first started with Fleetwood Mac. The clothes and the champagne and how young they all were—and it really touched me. Because we were young too and there was a tragedy for all of us also, just in what it did to all of our lives and taking them out of ‘the real world’, as Tom Petty would say.”

Dogged by tension and extravagance and distracted by sex and drugs, Rumours took the best part of a year to record. But the lyrics aside—Christine McVie would later comment that everyone was writing about each other—the cracks didn’t show on the record’s supple ensemble playing and smooth harmonies. This was classic California pop—the band’s British blues element as good as one—featuring songs like Christine’s catchy Don’t Stop and You Make Loving Fun alongside Stevie’s darker cocaine song Gold Dust Woman and the wistful Dreams. Rumours hit Number 1 on both sides of the Atlantic, becoming one of the biggest-selling rock albums of all time. And the band, of coruse, went back on the road, with the new ???? of various members variously hating various other members’ guts. So how did someone of Stevie’s famed sensitivity manage?

Mostly because I, like everybody who was in Fleetwood Mac, loved Fleetwood Mac the entity, and nobody wanted to leave. People would be, ‘You leave, I’m not leaving.” Lindsey didn’t want to quit, I didn’t, John didn’t, Chris didn’t and Mick certainly didn’t; he just sat back and watched it. So you went up on-stage and tried to keep your problems off that stage and then went back to separate dressing rooms and hotels and didn’t go to the bar after the show, because you didn’t even want to take a chance of having a run-in in front of people. So we stayed very cloistered, especially Chris and I, because the boys could go out but Chris and I couldn’t, so we hung out together, drank tea and watched movies and stayed away from the rest of the guys.”

It didn’t always work. On-stage in New Zealand once, Buckingham got mad at Nicks… “I think I aws singing through one of his solos or something, and he walked across the stage and kicked me and then went back to his microphone and we just sort of went on with the show. Me being pretty much the ultimate professional, I’m like, OK that didn’t just happen, it was just a joke everybody. Then he threw his guitar at me, wwwosh! I saw it coming and ducked. And he would have killed me if it had hit me; a Les Paul weighs about 30lbs. When the song was over he raced of the stage but Chris was so mad she was at the dressing room two seconds after he got there. And she grabbed him—then the bodyguards came in and dragged us all apart.”

But the show, as they say, had to go on. “Let’s just say he was told by everybody, from tour manager to everybody involved, if you ever throw anything at her or kick her again, the crew will attack you and kill you, so you’d better think about it. It never happened again.” She pauses a moment. The wind is whipping up now; through the large window you can see it bullying the trees hung with fairly lights in her garden. She continues, “But Lindsey and I have had many thing happen on-stage that’s not a long time ago. We have a very hard time with each other, and he has a very hard time with me because he didn’t go after a solo career and I did. He should have and he didn’t and it’s not my fault. But he blames me.”

The idea for Nicks’ solo career was cemented during talks with Eagles manager Irving Azoff while Mac were recording Tusk, reputedly the most expensive rock album ever made. There was plenty of time to set up a label for her records, Modern, during the 13 months Tusk took to make. “That’s a long time to go into one room every day, six days a week, but it happened. And it happened because everybody was so busy doing drugs that nobody was organized, and you do things that you would think were just marvelous and the next day you’d come back in and it wasn’t, so you’d have to do it again.”

Bella Donna, her 1981 solo debut, with its mix of earthy and ethereal (the sexiness of Edge of 17) and After The Glitter Fades; the chiffon delicacy of How Still My Love and After the Rain) was in contrast “very quick, because we rehearsed for months and really knew our stuff when we went into the studio.” “We” being Stevie and the two women who still sing with her, Sharon Celani and Lori Perry, with guest appearances by Tom Petty, Don Felder and members of the Heartbreakers and Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band. “It only took three months. Then I did 12 shows, about a month and the last show at the Beverly Wilshire Theatre, which is on the DVD, you can kind of see in my face that it was over, and I didn’t really know if I would ever be able to come back to my solo career. I went scurrying back to Fleetwood Mac as fast as I could.” By her own reckoning, her solo career, chronicled on the forthcoming Crystal Visions CD/DVD retrospective, has actually helped Fleetwood Mac to stay together, her sabbaticals allowing the Mac to take a holiday and keep off the punishing album-tour-album treadmill while also providing her with a needed outlet.

“When you’re in a band with three writers and you do a record ever two or three years, and for somebody that writes as much as me that’s not very much.” And she does appear to write all the time—if not songs then poetry, short stories, fairytales, her diary. She refers to that as her “sanity life,” of which, frankly, there didn’t seem a lot in period that led to her going into rehab in 1985: an affair with Mick Fleetwood; a short-lived marriage to Kim Anderson, the widower of her best friend, Robin Anderson, who had died of leukaemia; a coke habit that “ate away my nose. I curse the day I ever did cocaine.”

She says she was the first in the band to go to the Betty Ford Clinic, and possibly one of the first L.A. rock stars. “I don’t know many other people that went because Betty Ford is not Malibu Promises. It’s boot-camp. I adore Betty Ford, the lady, because she saved my life, but her facility is very tough. They couldn’t give a shit that you are a rock star. In 28 days I gave up a 10-year coke habit and I could feel myself just coming back to myself. I also felt, I will never have to come back to rehab for cocaine.

Mention that she later spent 47 days in hospital to treat an eight-year addiction to prescription tranquillisers, and it’s the only time MOJO sees her bristle. After Betty Ford’s everyone encouraged her to join Narc Anon or at least see a doctor. When she finally gave in, the man she chose turned out, she claims, to be a “rock star groupie”. “I can forgive all the miserable cocaine dealers because they were completely screwed up and trying to get enough money to buy food, but this guy was rick and had no reason except that he wanted to keep me coming to his office a couple of times and tell him about what was going on in Hollywood. And I’m lucky to be sitting here today. I could have OD’ed on anything, being that bleary. I could have been Anna Nicole Smith! I don’t hate anyone, but I hate him.”

Hate is not a word that surfaces very often during a conversation with Nicks. She admits the simmering tension that exists between Buckingham and herself, but there appear to be no hard feelings towards ex-lover Mick Fleetwood. An argument over her decision to use her song Silver Springs on her 191 solo retrospective Timespace, and not, as he wanted, on Fleetwood Mac retrospective The Chain, blew over…but then, both were massive sellers. In fact, Stevie’s initial Best Of featured a new song, Desert Angel, dedicated to the American military serving in Operation Desert Storm, which resulted in another turning point in her life.

In 2004, a Washington DC Army hospital approached her to ask if she’d be willing to make personal visits to the bedsides of young veterans injured in the war on Iraq. Stevie’s eyes light up when she talks about it. She’s set up a fund, she says, and planned her whole solo tour around being able to go back as often as she can. Wasn’t she nervous about getting so closely involved—after all, didn’t she once attract a stalker who was convinced she could cure him of homosexuality with mystical spells? She looks puzzled. “I’ve never heard that one. But you know people keep the really weird stuff away from me, so a lot of that stuff I don’t really hear.”

Yet she seems aware enough, in general, of the myths that surround her, of people’s fantasies of who “Stevie Nicks” is. If in the past she might have played into those fantasies of the ethereal Californian pop enchantress, you sense there are limits now. She declares, for instance, that she “won’t have a face lift”. “The idea of looking like a caricature of myself is horrible,” she winces. “I feel that if you stay animated from within, that people don’t see the age, so I try to forget about it. I deal with it by just being me.” And she has been used to being “me” for quite some time, her short-lived marriage aside, she says she “never had children [because] I didn’t want to compromise my art.”

As a parting shot, she also admits to being happy as a workaholic. “I do have this crazy world where I pretty much continually work all the time,” she smiles. “I can break real easily if I don’t get back a little bit of the love that I try to put out but I’m happiest when I’m working. The other stuff I try to laugh about. Sometimes I’ll wake up and I’ll go, So what is going on in the fabulous life of Stevie Nicks today? And when I do find myself getting tired or complaining, I get really mad at myself and say, You have no right to complain, Stevie. You’re a lucky, lucky girl.”

Crystal Visions: The Very Best of Stevie Nicks (Warner Bros CD & DVD) is out in the UK on September 24.

SIDEBAR
A Tonic for the Troops

In 2004, a US military hospital invited Stevie Nicks to visit its woulded young soldiers. She’s been going ever since. Here she explains why.

“We were playing Washington DC and my manager said Walter Reed Army Medical had asked if I would like to visit. What could I say? I was there from two in the afternoon until almost one o’clock that night. Basically you go in—and believe me, I never thought that this would be anything I would ever do—and you put on a gown and gloves and they say, Well this guy’s name is