People Magazine
February 1982
David
Sheff
Solo albums marked the beginning of the end for the Beatles. So when
Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks recorded her album Bella Donna and Mick
Fleetwood himself made The Visitor, the music world buzzed with
speculation. Was the Big Mac disintegrating into a bunch of McNuggests?
Rumors heated up again last fall when the band's artistic wellspring,
Lindsey Buckingham, 32, released his own first LP, Law and Order. Many
wondered if the title of his Top 10 single meant what it suggested
Trouble.
The answer seems to be: Not yet. Fleetwood Mac has long been rock's
turbulent version of The Young and the Restless, and Buckingham swears
it's all just a harmless way of blowing off a little creative steam.
"With the band," he explains, "there are five distinct
personalties, lots of second guessing, and it's tough to get from point A
to point B." (Neither of the other two band members, John McVie and
his ex-wife, Christine, has gone solo since joining Fleetwood Mac.)
Buckingham is generally credited with transforming the blues-rock band
into a commercial powerhouse. If praised for the 16 million sale of 1977's
Rumours, though, he also shouldered much of the blame for Tusk, a double
disc white elephant that was critically acclaimed but peaked at
"only" four million in 1980. After a 76 city world tour, the
band decided in needed time off. "John went on a cruise,"
recounts Lindsey. "Christine just layed out in the sun. But three
weeks off and I go nuts. Working makes me happy."
He began his solo project in a studio in his garage. It was a singular
undertaking indeed. Buckingham sang, played drums, guitar and keyboards,
and supervised the recording. "It was like a painter working on a
canvas," he says. "When I work with Fleetwood Mac it's more like
making a movie." Artistic independence does have its price, though.
"Doing all the production and playing nearly all the
instruments," he says, "you begin to lose your objectivity as to
what's good." (Lindsey eventually called in Fleetwood Mac engineer
Richard Dashut to co-producer in the studio.) Of the album's title, he
says, "Rock is usually about escapism, lack of discipline and
promiscuity. Law and Order is about the sense of personal order in your
life. If there are songs about a special, stable relationship, it's
because that's what I have."
He means his five-year romance with Oklahoma-born Carol Harris, 28, a
part-time fashion model. They met in a Los Angeles recording studio in
1976 where Carol was a receptionist, and they moved in together the
following year.
Buckingham's previous paramour, of course, was Nicks. Their celebrated
breakup took place in the mid-'70s at the same time the McVies were
divorcing. Having gotten through "years of pain," Lindsey says
he and Stevie are able to maintain a stable working relationship. After
the Tusk session, though, Nicks complained that it was "like being a
hostage in Iran and, to an extent, Lindsey was the Ayatollah." Says
Buckingham with a smile, "I did have definite ideas." On their
relationship outside the studio, he reflects, "I don't think we'll
ever be good friends. There was a lot of passion, but not a lot of
camaraderie." Is he bothered by the fact that Stevie's solo album has
sold two million copies? "It's easy to feel envious of someone who
gets as much fan mail and sells as many records as Stevie," he
confesses. "Obviously my stuff is a little more off the wall, but I
like my album better than hers."
One of three sons of a coffee company executive father, Lindsey grew up in
the San Francisco suburb of Atherton. "I was one of the tons of guys
who ran out and got a guitar when Elvis came along," he recalls. As a
junior in high school he met Nicks, who was a senior. A year later they
started playing in a band called Fritz, became lovers and soon split off
to make one album as a duo, Buckingham Nicks.
Though the LP died in the market, it caught the ear of Fleetwood, who had
founded Mac in 1967. Looking for someone to replace the just-departed Bob
Welch, he invited both Nicks and Buckingham to join in 1975. "I guess
it was a good thing," understates Lindsey. His tunes, such as Monday
Morning and Go Your Own Way, helped Mac become one of the best-selling
groups of all time.
Today Lindsey and Carol live in a three-bedroom house in L.A.'s starry Bel
Air. They're obviously taking their time about setting a wedding date;
Lindsey says only, "We've discussed it." As he finishes mixing
the next all Mac album, scheduled for release this spring, Lindsey is
planning a brief solo tour of small clubs and will then join Mac for a
national tour. He is optimistic. "Now that we have these other
outlets, it's easier to do things as a group," he says. "I
wouldn't be surprised if we stay together a long while."