DAVID GIAMMARCO
From 29-03-2003 Globe and Mail
Los Angeles
It'll be,
better than before,
yesterday's gone,
yesterday's gone.
"Don't Stop, 1977
The Santa Ana winds are blowing in from the desert, and from Stage 9 at Culver
City Studios, the mystically melodic strains of Dreams drifts onto the warm
afternoon breeze. "Now here I go again, I see the crystal visions," swirls the
unmistakable raspy vocals of rock's gypsy priestess, Stevie Nicks. And for a
moment it sounds ... it feels ... like summer, 1977.
That year, Fleetwood Mac's album Rumours seized the airwaves, volleying a
stream of superbly crafted hits to the top of the charts and unspooling an
irresistible inescapable soundtrack for many people's lives.
But alas, this is not a dream. It's spring, 2003, and the famed members of
Fleetwood Mac the reigning dysfunctional family of 1970s rock royalty are
hunkered down in this cavernous sound stage, rehearsing classic tunes and
rehashing classic tensions that originally tore the supergroup apart amidst
epic indulgences during their hedonistic heyday. Stevie Nicks, guitarist
Lindsey Buckingham, bassist John McVie, and percussionist Mick Fleetwood have
reunited for a much-anticipated concert tour only the second such occurrence
in 21 years all in support of an equally remarkable feat: the "classic"
Mac's first studio album in 16 years.
Say You Will due for release April 15 is 18 tracks of exuberant melodies
and alluring lyrics, brazenly fused with an instrumental aggression recalling
the sprawling innovation of the band's 1979 double-album Tusk.
But while the sound is vintage Fleetwood Mac, the substances fuelling it are
not.
In the 1970s and 1980s, copious amounts of cocaine and cognac stoked their
frequently stormy sessions. These days, Mick Fleetwood still carries around a
plastic baggie, but it's full of trail mix.
These last crucial weeks of preparation before the tour launch finds Nicks
fretting needlessly, it seems over the road-readiness of the band.
"We just literally finished this record, and now we're trying to quickly flip
over from recording mode into touring mode in a very compressed period of
time," sighs Nicks, explaining that even some of the most renowned Fleetwood
Mac tunes need to be relearned for the tour. "Not for me, because I never
stopped doing a song like Dreams over the last 2,500 years," she grins, "but
Fleetwood Mac hasn't done Dreams since 1997, and that was only briefly for
three months on "The Dance" tour.
"Most of these songs I've done on every single one of my tours since I started
my solo career in 1982. I've never stopped touring, whereas Lindsey and
everyone else haven't played in front of audiences since 1997 ... I think
they're much more nervous about the old stuff than I am."
Buckingham, however, doesn't seem to be sweating it. Rather, the consummate
musician is still ruminating the "epic effort" of birthing a new Fleetwood Mac
album, something no one least of all himself imagined happening after his
acrimonious departure following 1987's Tango in the Night. "After leaving the
band, I was really able to push the envelope on my own ... so that this coming
together really started to make sense in terms of what I could give back,"
reflects Buckingham, 53, who also engineered and produced Say You Will. But
somehow this wouldn't be a true Fleetwood Mac reunion without some expected
unease between Buckingham and ex-paramour Nicks.
"I think Stevie is seeing part of this record through some dark colours right
now," hints Buckingham later in the afternoon, "only because towards the end
we had some conflicts about running order and some other things, and she
hasn't quite been able to come out the other end and say, 'Wow, this is really
something!'
"I think it's hard for her to feel the catharsis that I'm feeling, and that
Mick is feeling ... it's been hard for her to turn and say, 'Gee, nice job,
Lindsey thanks for working on my songs for an entire year.' But having said
that, which really only speaks of maybe how difficult it got near the end, the
whole thing was pretty great."
A perplexed smile then spreads across Buckingham's face. "I must admit," he
says, shaking his head, "there did seem to be a weird sense of destiny to all
of this."
To fully understand rock n' roll's sudsiest, longest-running soap opera, you
must rewind through Fleetwood Mac's private but mostly musically documented
record of inner-group marriages, divorces, affairs, animosities, band
defections, drug abuse and alcoholism, back to 1967. That's when Fleetwood and
McVie first formed alongside guitarists Peter Green and Jeremy Spencer
what was originally a British blues band that gained fame for their hits such
as Albatross and Black Magic Woman (which would be re-recorded in 1971 by
Carlos Santana to greater success in the U.S.).
By then, however, the first of many odd occurrences began afflicting Fleetwood
Mac: In 1970, Green descended into madness after a bad acid trip and left to
become a roving religious zealot, while shortly thereafter, Spencer
mysteriously disappeared into the Children of God cult. Keyboardist Christine
Perfect then joined the band, becoming McVie's wife and infusing their sound
with a more pop sensibility. A string of temporary musicians would come and go
(including one fired after an affair with Mick Fleetwood's wife) until
Fleetwood, having transplanted the band to Los Angeles in 1974, stumbled upon
a record by little-known California folk-rock duo Lindsey Buckingham and
Stevie Nicks. He soon invited the romantically linked pair to join the band,
andthen everything coalesced for Fleetwood Mac.
The new lineup's eponymous 1975 album featured a rejuvenated direction into a
winsome rock, pop and blues blend that yielded Top 20 singles Over My Head,
Say You Love Me, Landslide and, what would become Nicks's signature song, the
bewitching Rhiannon. The album soared to No. 1 and sold over five million
copies, but that unexpected triumph would be dwarfed by the monster lurking
just around the corner.
In 1976, Mick Fleetwood marshalled the troops up the California coast to
Sausalito, where over the course of a year-long stint at the Record Plant, the
blood and guts of their romantic meltdowns spilled into the recording studio.
John and Christine McVie divorced, Buckingham and Nicks split and Fleetwood
separated from his wife.
"Usually when you have a bad breakup, you aren't still locked up together all
day," says Nicks, dressed in her trademark Dickensian attire of wispy lace and
flowing chiffon. "It was so intense every day, so heavy ... it was like being
in the army. I was never as exhausted in my whole life as when we were doing
that album." That album was, of course, Rumours, named by McVie as a nod to
the scandals surrounding the band, which arrived like a hurricane in February,
1977, to spend 31 weeks at No. 1.
To date, Rumours has sold over 30 million copies worldwide, making it the
second biggest-selling album of all time. Ironically, that made the path
between then and now an even rockier road for Fleetwood Mac, faced with having
to match that mammoth success. The band was next spurred on largely by
Buckingham in 1979 to record a complete about face: the wildly experimental
double album Tusk. But despite selling millions of copies, Tusk was deemed a
commercial failure.
Virtually imprisoned by near-mythic expectations and vastly deteriorating
relations, the band still soldiered on throughout the decade to record two
more albums: 1982's Mirage and 1987's Tango in the Night. By then, however,
both Nicks and Buckingham had branched out into successful solo careers, and
the band slowly eroded despite Fleetwood's best efforts to keep everyone
together. "Sometimes I wish I played another instrument, but I'm a drummer, so
I inherently need to have a band to play with and I'm relatively useless
without that," explains Fleetwood with a shrug. " I was always playing the
mediator and trying to make things work and keep everyone happy at a great
cost to my private life, my marriage, my time with my children."
Neatly attired in a crisp white shirt, jeans and with now short gray hair,
Fleetwood looks far more distinguished than in his "eccentric Keith Moon days"
and he partially blames himself for the disintegration of his beloved band.
"During the 'crazy' times towards the end of the eighties, my life was so
involved in alcohol and drugs and just having a good time, that my managerial
skills were completely blunted out," he admits.
"Stevie and Lindsey both know that I'm not a maniac any more," adds Fleetwood
with a laugh. "That feels good."
The undeniable propellant of Fleetwood Mac has always been the potent
chemistry between Buckingham and Nicks often taking the form of vicious
lyrical battles as when Buckingham jabs in Go Your Own Way: "Packing up,
shacking up is all you want to do." Though they each have indeed gone their
own way personally (Buckingham is recently married with two young children),
it's apparent there still exists some unresolved heartache for the pair, who
have known each other since high school. "It's a curse," Nicks admits quite
candidly. "And if I really was a witch, you know that's the first thing that I
would make stop. But there's been nothing I could ever do to fix that."
"Yeah, I'm sure Stevie and I still have a few conversations to have," concedes
Buckingham, who also figures those old demons probably helped spark the
vitality heard on Say You Will. "There was certainly a period of time during
the making of this album where it felt like we were really going at it through
the music. You can really feel the energy between us ... I don't think that's
ever going to go away."
How such tensions could produce such exquisite harmonies remains one of the
most enduring and endearing enigmas surrounding Fleetwood Mac. "People say
that to me all the time," admits Nicks with a smile. "They'll say stuff like,
'I'm sorry that you guys had to be so miserable and suffer so much, but we're
really glad that you did because otherwise, we wouldn't have these songs.' So
it's all been a real Catch-22 situation."
Though Buckingham feels Say You Will represents the "healing" of Fleetwood
Mac, there is one valuable link missing: Christine McVie. The elegant songbird
opted out of the rock 'n' roll lifestyle after briefly tasting it again on
"The Dance" tour in 1997, and the band decided that she couldn't do the record
if not prepared to tour. In hindsight, Buckingham feels it was maybe for the
best.
"One of the things that made this album as strong as it is, oddly enough, is
the fact that Christine was absent," he says. "Because on a musical level, you
have more room for Mick, John and myself to manoeuvre. And on an emotional
level, the absence of Christine gave John an opportunity to be a little more
down in himself, a little grittier, and not so on his guard. Because the
occasional button might have gotten pushed being around Christine."
What originally started off as Buckingham's fourth solo album, Say You Will
evolved into a Mac reunion when a regime change at Warner Brothers forced
Buckingham to reconsider releasing his project amidst the corporate
uncertainties. While waiting for the dust to settle, Buckingham invited
Fleetwood and McVie to help lay down some tracks, and from there, "the gravity
of Fleetwood Mac just sucked me in," he smiles. "It was just like old times."
Once Nicks became involved, Buckingham had already rented a house in Bel Air
to record, which he says further helped to provide a revived communal spirit
for the band. And according to Fleetwood, the experience helped erase some of
their painful past. "It was very different," he laughs. "I mean, there was no
drug abuse, no alcohol abuse, no romances falling apart, no midnight creeping
from door-to-door and sleeping with each other ... we're all very different
people now."
Originally posted at the Globe and Mail Online Archive
Thanks to Michelle from the Stevie Nicks Chain for bringing this to my attention