Rolling Stone October 30, 1997 Issue 772 by Fred Schruers
Fleetwood Mac were the lovingest, fightingest, druggingest
band of the '70s. Twenty years later, the psychodrama continues . . .
Twenty minutes after coming offstage in Burbank, Calif., Stevie Nicks and
Christine McVie look just a touch stunned in the unsparing light of a trailer
that's serving as their ad hoc lounge. A film of sweat fights it out with their
foundation makeup. They've just played 90 minutes' worth of what was meant
to be Fleetwood Mac gems. Tonight's show wasn't entirely to their liking:
Nicks muffed the first verse of "Dreams" while crane-mounted TV cameras
cruised and snooped, and McVie simply seemed to be hoarding strength for
the next taped show - Friday evening, 19 hours from now. They have the
wide-eyed graciousness of party givers who can't get their guests to leave as they
politely shake hands and slump back beside a zealously beaming Winona Ryder, who rises
to depart with a fervent observation: "Weren't they amazing?"
You can see on the ladies' faces that they don't feel that amazing tonight, but
they're
glad for Ryder's dewey-eyed vote of confidence. When a man is tired of London, said the
essayist, he is tired of life; and if you tire of this rejuvenated band, you are tired
of, well, classic rock. You could feel both audience and band rediscovering that in the
first few measures of the first number, "The Chain": Mick Fleetwood's peaty bring-out-
your-dead opening drumbeats; Lindsey Buckingham's astringent guitar; Christine McVie,
Nicks and Buckingham's baleful harmony - "Listen to the wind blow/Watch the sun rise .
. ."; and John McVie's darkly muttering bass combined to pretty well blow the dust off
the legacy and bring you forward in your seat - this is as bleakly intoxicating as what
the trade magazines call pop music can get. By the time Buckingham was squeezing out an
anguished "And if you don't love me now/You will never love me again," he had
reclaimed, at 47, the title of angriest dog in rock. Fleetwood's face, which in repose
is capable of a kind of distracted, off-putting gravity that wouldn't be out of place
in an old German vampire movie, creased happily as he patted the song to a close.
It's from 1977's Rumours, of course, the only cut on which all five shared the
writing credit.
It's also the band's old and new testament to its own tortured togetherness, because it
perfectly captures the ominousness of that chain letter warning you of loneliness and
loss: "I can still hear you saying/You must never break the chain."
As we know, this band did individually suffer - whether because it broke the chain
or
because it really could not - a string of woes including but not limited to heartbreak,
enmity, alcoholism, cocaine addiction, penury, divorce, carpal tunnel syndrome and, as
Fleetwood tried to pound the body back to life, being sandwiched on a nostalgia package
tour, in 1995, between REO Speedwagon and Pat Benatar. In place of Buckingham and
Nicks, that Mac iteration featured such unlikely figures as one-time Traffic operative
Dave Mason and Bekka Bramlett, daughter of the redoubtable '70s rock duo Delaney and
Bonnie.
It was Buckingham, of course, who left the gate open for the imposters with his
repeated
walkouts on the band, but he is also the creative linchpin of the fivesome. Nicks had
her solo hits like "Edge of Seventeen" and a pair of great duets with Tom Petty;
Christine McVie is a viable solo artist with (like Nicks and Buckingham) a label deal
at the Mac home base of Warner/ Reprise; and Fleetwood and bassist John McVie are
always employable as what Fleetwood calls "gigsters" - but Buckingham is the tormented
genius you could lift out of '70s rock and set down, with his fierce chops and raging
vocals, anywhere you like. Among the mixes for his next solo album, which is on hold as
the band tours, is a cut that takes its title from the last word of the lyric "Think of
me, sweet darlin', every time you don't come" and features a honking guitar workout
that should serve as a do-ya-feel-lucky-punk invitation to any doubting arrivistes who
haven't replaced their six-strings with samplers. Buckingham's back-to-back
performances of "Big Love" and "Go Insane" (the latter of which shows up only on the
long-form, costs-money video version of the band's new live album, The Dance) made the
audience in Burbank stand up peering midway through the generally sedate tapings, like
a crowd watching stock cars flip over.
The wall chart of the Mac's fortunes goes in its rough strokes by 10-year jumps, at
least in the Buckingham-centric view of things: from 1967, their founding as an English
blues band; to 1977, when Buckingham and Nicks invigorated the band's 25
million-selling Rumours; to 1987, when, after the torturous Tango in the Night sessions
at Buckingham's house, he balked at touring and was sent away; and now to 1997, when
Buckingham has been persuaded to join up again and co-produce The Dance. The question
that hangs over the entire enterprise is whether the current U.S. sweep of 43 dates in
major cities will turn into a world tour. And while Nicks and Christine McVie hint that
they may yet opt out of the larger plan, it's really Buckingham's call to make.
"You know," says Nicks, who still wears chiffon but is a good deal more
battle-hardened
(and speaks a bit deeper) than the hippie priestess of one's former imaginings,
"Lindsey made a whole lot more money than everybody else did because he produces. The
producers get paid first. And he probably didn't spend nearly as much money as
everybody else did; he lives way simpler. So he didn't have to do this for money, you
know. The rest of us would all like to put something away for, you know, our golden
twilight years. But he has to want to do it, or we don't want to do it either."
If Buckingham is the brains of the operation, Fleetwood is the heart and viscera,
keeping
the beat going in every sense. Picture him just a few years ago, Rumours money
squandered, brandy bottle near, coked out and lying in a borrowed bed in a damp cellar
watching soap operas, and you know this is a heart through which hard times and bad
habits could not drive a stake.
The reunion may have been inevitable from the moment that Buckingham invited
Fleetwood to
help with his solo album. "I had some ambivalence about Mick," Buckingham says. "He was
clearly into my album, and yet I knew he was to a substantial degree instigating this
whole band thing. I couldn't be mad at him, because Fleetwood Mac is his life's blood,
really. He's spent his whole life trying to keep this ship afloat.
"Everyone has said to me, 'This is going to be a good thing for you,' and, of
course, you kind
of are suspicious of their motives, too. I'm a suspicious guy. I'm working on that."
Lindsey Buckingham was born to relative privilege in Palo Alto, Calif., and raised
nearby in
Atherton. His father, Morris, ran a coffee plant ("Small and slowly not doing so well
and eventually went under"); two older brothers were golden, suburban jock types -
brother Greg won a silver medal for swimming in the '68 Olympics. Lindsey was a high
school junior singing California Dreamin' at somebody's house when transfer student
Stephanie Nicks, a senior, saw him. Two years later, she was the chick singer and he
the bassist in a post-high school band called Fritz. It was understood that none of the
guys would hit on her. But when Nicks and Buckingham migrated to Los Angeles to shop
the band's demo (he was on guitar by now), they were tapped by the Polydor label -
without their band mates. In Nicks' room at the Tropicana Motel, confusion was sown,
innocence lost. "Why it happened between me and Lindsey was because we were so sad that
we had to tell the three guys in the band that nobody wanted them, only us" she says.
Once they'd broken up with the band and their respective steadies, "our relationship
was
great," says Nicks. "We had other problems: didn't have a lot of money, alone in L.A.,
didn't have our families, no friends, didn't know anybody. But we had each other."
"I knew that we were going to be somebody," says Nicks. "I think that he had a
little bit less
belief in the fact that we would really make it big. I always knew."
This particular crystal vision did have to wait. When Buckingham got mononucleosis,
they
moved back north, short on cash. Nicks continued college but often stayed with the
Buckinghams in their living room. The two cut tracks, working nights in a spare room at
the gloomy coffee plant. "It was scary there," says Nicks. "Good acoustics, though."
Working with a four-track Ampex tape machine, they built songs one channel at a time,
the old Beatles way. The tracks would form the basis for their 1973 album,
Buckingham-Nicks, but the musical idyll was interrupted by his father's heart illness
and death, at age 54. "His dad died within a year, as we watched, and it was awful,"
Nicks says. "I picked up the phone and had to hand it to Lindsey the morning his father
died. Devastating. Changed all of our lives."
The singing duo set up shop in a slightly beat section of L.A. with engineer Keith
Olsen and
another musician friend, and despite the occasional passed-out sessionman on the floor,
Nicks and Buckingham grew domestic. "From '71 through '75," says Nicks, "I lived with
Lindsey all those years. We were absolutely married. In every way [but for the ring], I
cooked, I cleaned, I worked. I took care of him."
Buckingham-Nicks, made with credentialed studio players like Jim Keltner, had an
almost
Delaney and Bonnie Southern twang and even got a pocket of rabid fans in Birmingham,
Ala. This aberration may have been what led to an odd New York meeting with a Polydor
A&R type who told them, "I think you'd be better off, you know, if you did something
more like this," and put a 45 on his office turntable - Jim Stafford's crackerbilly hit
"Spiders and Snakes." They had a tenuous spec deal to make a second record, but even as
the advisers "were trying to glom us off on the steakhouse circuit, the one-way ticket
to Palookaville," as Buckingham says, Fleetwood was making his legendary visit to
Olsen's studio and hearing "Frozen Love," from the duo's LP. A week later, when Bob
Welch left the band that Fleetwood had been nurturing since 1967, Buckingham got the
call, and within days, the newly minted Mac were in rehearsals.
What would become a sturdy friendship between Nicks and Christine McVie took
immediately, in a let's-see coffee-shop meeting. By contrast, John McVie, who still
missed the band's original but now acid-damaged guitar god, Peter Green, found
Buckingham - who began by advising him to play "simpler" - brash.
John McVie, a man of wry and placid, not to say mournful, aspect, misses Green
(now embarked on a low-key comeback) to this day. He distinctly recalls the fateful
trip to Germany where Green went astray. "We had been selling more records than the
Beatles," he says. "It was an amazing time," Then, one night at a gig, came "German
jet-set kids, hippies with money, and they had a whole ploy. They dangled a carrot in
the shape and form of a beautiful young German model in front of him, and they got him
away for two or three days in a studio in a basement. And if I ever meet those bastards
. . . because what they did is unforgivable."
"Somebody gave him some bad acid," says Christine McVie, who was married to John but
not yet in the band, "and it freaked him out. I saw one Peter Green leave and a
completely different one come back - pale, wan, depressed. A little mad, really."
This was far from the end of sex, drugs and rock & roll for this most tumultuous
of bands,
but the fivesome's honeymoon produced 1975's Fleetwood Mac, with its suitably goofy
cover art and, despite its pop accessibility, curiously dour demeanor. Christine
McVie's "Say You Love Me" thrummed irresistibly; Nicks' "Rhiannon" was an obvious FM
classic, and her "Landslide," written in Aspen, Colo., during a bitter-sweet moment in
relations with Buckingham, seemed to herald the arrival of a rock goddess just spooky
enough for a generation's second stoned decade.
With the abruptly successful band trapped between its new hordes of hangers-on and
its own
romantic troubles (not just the couples: Fleetwood's marriage had been running
erratically ever since his wife, Jenny, briefly ran off with his pal, lead guitarist
Bob Weston, from two lineups previous), Commander Fleetwood mandated that the record
would be cut in the slightly remote outpost of Sausalito, just north of San Francisco.
What they did there is one of the legendary blood-and-glory tales of rock-album making.
"We had a good time, bad time, fun time, sad time," says John McVie. "Something great
came out of it." Twenty-five million records later, Rumours carries its own bona fides;
among its many attributes, it would seem to be the most inescapable album of its era.
Nicks and Christine McVie encamped in a pair of nearby condos. "All we had was each
other,
really," says McVie. "We certainly weren't getting on with our respective husbands or
boyfriends." Meanwhile, says John McVie, "we lads had our thing, too." In a residence
that was part of the studio complex, the boys set up shop - "with parties going all
over the house," says John. "Amazing. Terrifying. Huge amounts of illicit materials,
yards and yards of this wretched stuff. Days and nights would just go on and on. It was
very loose."
It got to the point where the craziness seemed normal. "In those days," Christine
McVie says, "it
was quite natural to walk around with a great old sack of cocaine in your pocket and do
these huge rails, popping acid, making hash cookies." Oddly enough, Nicks' "Gold Dust
Woman" had been written several years before, when she had little experience with
cocaine. By the time she cut the song, she still wasn't fully wise to the drug. Even
singing, "Take your silver spoon and dig your grave," she says, "we did not realize how
scary cocaine was. Everybody said it was OK, recreational, not addictive. Nobody told
you that you may end up with a hole through your nose the size of Chicago."
The steady drugging, combined with the pressures of recording under the band's
highly
collaborative system, tore at the already weak fabric of the couples' relationships.
Though she'll hint that Buckingham was at least somewhat possessive and controlling,
Nicks says, "I don't even remember what the issues were; I just know that it got to the
point where I wanted to be by myself. It just wasn't good anymore, wasn't fun anymore,
wasn't good for either of us anymore. I'm just the one who stopped it."
She remembers the day quite vividly: "In Sausalito, up at the little condominium.
Lindsey and
I were still enough together that he would come up there and sleep every once in a
while. And we had a terrible fight - I don't remember what about, but I remember him
walking out and me saying, 'You take the car with all the stuff, and I'm flying back.'
That was the end of the first two months of the recording of Rumours."
Back in L.A., in a Sunset Strip recording studio, Buckingham added the vocal to his
"Go Your
Own Way," an outburst of a song to which Nicks dutifully added backup vocals. "I very,
very much resented him telling the world that 'packing up, shacking up' with different
men was all I wanted to do," she says. "He knew it wasn't true. It was just an angry
thing that he said. Every time those words would come out onstage, I wanted to go over
and kill him. He knew it, so he really pushed my buttons through that. I was like,
'I'll make you suffer for leaving me.' And I did. For years. Lindsey immediately got
girlfriends. I never brought men around, because I wasn't going to tick him off any
more than I had already." Back and forth it went. When Nicks wrote a song, she'd bring
it to him, and he'd ask, "Who is that about?" "You don't really want to know," she
would say. "So I'm not going to tell you. It's just about nothing." Even so, without
Buckingham's help, some of those songs she was scrawling in her notebooks never quite
got finished. Her productivity plunged. "That's where the double-edged sword came,"
Nicks says, "whether he wanted to help me or not: 'So, you don't want to be my wife, my
girlfriend, but you want me to do all that magic stuff on your songs. Is there anything
else that you want, just, like, in my spare time?' "
Meanwhile, Christine McVie remembers, "Mick was sort of holding everything together.
But the
music was, also. The music was very rewarding. It was very powerful to be there
recording these songs." Somehow, amid the emotional devastation, her signature tune,
"Songbird," arrived gift- wrapped. "I wrote it in half an hour," she says. "Just stayed
up late one night. I think I just was thinking of all the band members - 'God, wouldn't
it be nice just to be happy?' "
There was little chance of that, as she reluctantly prepared to split with John. "I
dare say,
if I hadn't joined Fleetwood Mac," she says, "we might still be together. I just think
it's impossible to work in the band with your spouse. Imagine the tension of living
with someone 24 hours a day, on the road, in an already stressful situation, with the
added negativity of too much alcohol. It just blew apart."
"John," says Nicks, "drinks too much. And that's why Chris and John aren't together.
Period.
And John knows that he needs to quit, but you know none of us are going to go over
there and nail him to the wall. So hopefully it will all be OK. You know, I pray every
day, 'Please, God, just take care of John.' "
From the time that "Rumours" was released and had its quick, massive success until
Buckingham ducked out, in 1987, Fleetwood Mac were imprisoned by their own near-mythic
popularity. Behind the tinted glass, things could get ugly. "It was just having to be
together and being so unhappy," says Nicks. "You don't want to sit in the same room, be
on a plane after a show, with somebody who hates you. It was not fun."
As frontman for the band, Lindsey Buckingham gave performances that were more like
exorcisms; toward the end of the U.S. leg of the 1977 Rumours tour, he collapsed in the
shower in a Philadelphia hotel room and was later diagnosed as having a mild form of
epilepsy. By then, Fleetwood and Nicks had a serious flirtation cooking - despite his
marriage and her relationship with a record executive. On the band's Pacific tour that
fall, after a show in New Zealand, they went back to her room and began a covert affair
that moved from there through Australia and back to the U.S.
"Mick and I," says Nicks, "were absolutely horrified that this happened. We didn't
tell
anybody until the very end, and then it blew up and was over. And, you know, Lindsey
and I have never, never talked about Mick. Ever."
That wasn't the only psychodrama Australia would see; one evening, as Nicks
performed
her patented witchy dance on "Rhiannon," twirling under her hooded poncho, Buckingham
wrenched his jacket over his head and began dancing in a crude, crowlike imitation of
her. "Lindsey was angry - just mad at me," recalls Nicks. "That wasn't a one-time
thing. Lindsey and I had another huge thing that happened onstage in New Zealand. We
had some kind of a fight, and he came over - might have kicked me, did something to me,
and we stopped the show. He went off, and we all ran at breakneck speed back to the
dressing room to see who could kill him first. Christine got to him first, and then I
got to him second - the bodyguards were trying to get in the middle of all of us."
"I think he's the only person I ever, ever slapped," says Christine McVie. "I
actually might
have chucked a glass of wine, too. I just didn't think it was the way to treat a paying
audience. I mean, aside from making a mockery of Stevie like that. Really
unprofessional, over the top. Yes, she cried. She cried a lot."
Without quite denying such incidents, Buckingham looks genuinely a bit puzzled to
hear them
played back. "What I do remember," he says, "is a show where I purposely sang much of
the set out of tune. We got offstage, and everyone was irate, obviously. They were
talking about firing me and getting Clapton. Very well founded, because it was not a
professional thing to do."
Ultimately, the guitarist's voluntary departure, in 1987, stopped the toxic brawls.
In fact, except
for a couple of weeks in the studio when the band cut Tango in the Night, in 1986,
Nicks says she spent little time in the '80s around Buckingham "and his insane kind of
going-insane thing."
Nicks had her own battle to wage - against the cocaine that had become her key
companion during her solo years. "I haven't done cocaine since 1985," she says,
"when somebody advised me to go and see a plastic surgeon. He said to me, 'The
next toot that you do could be your last. The tissue in your nose is very delicate. It
could go straight up to your head, and then you could drop to the floor and die a
lousy, two-hour death.' So what I did was finish my tour. I had to be very careful -
just a tiny little bit, very careful."
Nicks came off the road and packed her bags for 28 days of rehab at the Betty Ford
Clinic. "They are hard-nosed," she says. "They're harder on you if you're famous - 'Oh,
if it isn't Miss Special.' It's awful. But it works. Now, I don't do things that make
me feel bad, 'cause I have way too much work to do. When they told me that my brain
might blow up, it was very easy to quit."
For Fleetwood, the warnings would take longer to arrive. His marriage to Jenny Boyd
was in trouble, his father was dying of cancer before his eyes, and he was spending the
$3 million he'd already made from Rumours on cocaine and real estate. And despite, or
almost because of, his cash influx, Buckingham, "our chief architect and creator," was
under the spell of the Clash and other Brit-punk bands, and intended to kick the next
album well to the left of Rumours. Buckingham told Fleetwood that he felt stifled by
the band format and wanted to record some of his tracks at his home studio; further, he
was sick of pouring his best musical ideas into the others' songs.
Yet there were plenty such songs, and the band was ready to make the double album
that
would be named Tusk, after Fleetwood's slang for an erect male member. ("We just liked
the sound of the word in the abstract," he later lied to People.) His father died, in
the summer of 1978. In the life reassessment that followed, Fleetwood confessed to
Jenny about the now-cooling Nicks affair; Jenny went back to England for good soon
after. By year's end, he had taken up with Nicks' pal, model Sara Recor, who happened
to be married.
The band was making new music: Buckingham's plaintive "Walk a Thin Line" ("I said,
'Stay
by my side'/But no one said nothing' ") and lurching "What Makes You Think You're the
One" and "Not That Funny"; Nicks' "Sara" (where the libidinous Fleetwood appears "just
like a great dark wing"); Christine McVie's poppy "Think About Me." The title track was
recorded with the USC marching band. The persisting joke is that Warner Bros. execs
heard the scattershot, challenging two-record set and saw their Christmas bonuses fly
out the window. To make the battle more uphill, Warner Bros. issued it in September
1979 with a price of $16, about three bucks more than was typical. Fleetwood Mac
survived another wearying world tour - the ailing Buckingham undergoing a diagnostic
spinal tap that left him on all fours in pain and caused the cancellation of a gig for
80,000 people in Cleveland - and fetched up back in L.A. so worn out that Buckingham
impulsively told a crowd that it would be a long time before anyone saw the band again.
Within days, after the four other band members told Fleetwood that they wanted more
professional counseling than his Seedy Management could offer, the band agreed to take
nine months off.
Fleetwood flew to Ghana to make a record with some pals and the local hot-shot
players. He
drummed all day and led sprees all night. On one, grousing about poverty, he took off
his $8,000 Rolex President and smashed it to bits with the heel of a beer bottle.
Buckingham immortalized the expedition in his sardonic solo song "Bwana." "We all have
our demons/And sometimes they escape," he wailed. "The jungle cries for more."
Fleetwood's demons were definitely about. He bought a house in the same L.A. canyon
as
Don Henley and Barbra Streisand, dubbed it the Blue Whale and made it the clubhouse of
his Zoo band - many musicians, too much coke. Making payments on two sizable homes,
running the parties, he was finally forced to declare bankruptcy. Christine McVie
remembers the sad epoch when Big Daddy became Little Daddy: "Everything about him
became little. He wasn't walking with his shoulders straight like he always used to. It
was sad to see that. He didn't seem happy, didn't know how to function unless he was
high. He would just sleep the whole time - just hooked on drugs, about as low as he
could get. I remember him telling me he was living in somebody's basement with a damp
carpet. The carpet was soaking wet, and the bed was damp, and he used to lie in bed
watching soap operas all day long."
For the recording of 1987's Tango in the Night, Fleetwood was functional enough to
play the
drums. Buckingham, encouraged by the band's willingness to come to his home studio,
labored long and hard to produce the album's rich sonic sheen. His own unfettered "Big
Love" featured overlapping sex moans (Buckingham's voice equalized into something many
thought was Nicks'). Christine McVie's "Everywhere" took the band's vocal formula to a
teeth-achingly pretty extreme. But Buckingham had put off his third solo record - for
17 months - and torn his favorite songs out of it for Tango. Here's how he remembers
those era-closing sessions: "I think the final snapshot I have is from that period of
time, making Tango up at my house. We had a Winnebago parked in front because we didn't
want the whole house to be used for a lounge, so to speak. I had a girlfriend then who
was very threatened by the whole situation, and that didn't really work very well,
either. But the snapshot would be us trying to get things done in an atmosphere where
there was just a lot of crazy stuff going on and not a lot of focus, and not a lot of
unity and certainty. And no sense of us wanting to do this for . . . for the reasons we
originally got into it for. That's my last snapshot of 1987. And then a little 10-year
vacation.
The night after it amazed Winona Ryder, the band reconvened for another show. Once
again,
the invited 400 seemed to want the Mac thing very much. Brought to attention by "The
Chain," stroked by "Everywhere," almost chastened by the rigors of "I'm So Afraid," the
band settled in during the deceptively peaceful opening strains of "Silver Springs."
But Nicks, who had shown a good deal of power the previous night, was clearly going for
the whole enchilada this time. "Time cast a spell on you, but you won't forget me/I
know I could have loved you, but you would not let me," chanted all three singers as
Nicks gathered herself, then gripped the mike and turned toward her ex-lover with every
semblance of smoldering anger and hurt: "You'll never get away from the sound of the
woman that loved you."
By the time Nicks was virtually shouting, "Was I just a fool?" and "Give me just a
chance,"
Buckingham was peering sideways as he sang his part, eyes guarded behind whatever
masking his guitar and mike could afford him. "'Silver Springs' always ends up in that
place for me," says Buckingham later, "because she's always very committed to what
those words are about, and I remember what they were about then. Now it's all irony,
you know, but there is no way you can't get drawn into the end of that song."
It's four months later as night settles in outside Stevie Nicks' L.A. house, and a
couple of
dozen candles stacked around the room flicker in the breeze coming through the open
French doors. "At night the ocean gets really loud," Nicks says. "And then you realize
how close you are to it." An oversize original print of her and Buckingham
bare-shouldered, as they appeared on Buckingham-Nicks, sits nearby, awaiting shipping
to a museum. She's discussing her performance of "Silver Springs" that will be seen in
a few days on MTV. "I never did that before," she says of her fervent, face-off reading
of the song. "I left that for Friday night. The earlier shows were good. I just paced
myself. They weren't the show I wanted to leave behind for posterity, just in case
Fleetwood Mac never did another thing."
"I think," says Buckingham, "some people are probably getting the impression that we
are
back together or something along those lines. Which is certainly not true. Not yet,
anyway. You never know. I don't foresee that at all. But, you know things . . . "
Stevie Nicks sits up very straight when she hears that notion. "Over my dead body.
See,
I don't want to be part of that darkness. He knows that. When we're up there singing
songs to each other, we probably say more to each other than we ever would in real
life. If you offered me a passionate love affair and you offered me a high-priestess
role in a fabulous castle above a cliff where I can just, like, live a very spiritual
kind of religious-library-communing- with-the-stars, learning kind of existence, I'm
going to go for the high priestess."
Mick Fleetwood has invited Lynn, his wife of two years, to come out on the road and
see a
few shows - just not the early ones. "Lynn and I were talking to someone who is new to
this whole thing called Fleetwood Mac," he says. "And she said, "What you've got to
understand is that these people have something in between them that is extraordinarily
theirs. And you will never know. It is you and them, but you have to get used to it,
because when these people are together, there is an unspoken thing that absolutely
exists."
"You know, this whole thing is not happening as a bunch of corporate decisions. The
celebration
that Stevie and Lindsey are now able to have is interesting to watch. It's good - an
understanding of where they've come from. I would hate to see anyone walking away or
something going wrong, because now they're at the point in their lives where they can
relate to the fact that they did come as a couple - first as a couple musically, then
they joined this thing called Fleetwood Mac. And then they went to hell and back,
basically. And now they are able to talk about that. It's also a celebration for me and
John - I sometimes go, 'Wow, this man has been standing next to me for 30 damn years.'
Christine, too. It's something to be proud of."
Christine McVie, singing a couple of songs at stage front for the first time, says
she occasionally
feels "like I've stood up in an airplane that's in turbulence." But back behind her
keyboards, she thinks of history, too. "I do have flashbacks occasionally. The beast
might have had its nails clipped a bit - I don't know. We're certainly not as dangerous
for each other. Wouldn't that be a nice way for things to turn out?"
Thanks to Sylvia Priwo for sending this article to The Nicks Fix.
|