Losing sweet Christine was catastrophic | MOJO

MOJO
Aug 2024

Are Fleetwood Mac really finished, Bob Mehr asked Mick Fleetwood

FOR MICK FLEETWOOD – the one constant figure and unwavering force during the entire 57-year journey of Fleetwood Mac – the last few years have been, by his own admission, a personal and professional challenge.

When the most recent incarnation of Fleetwood Mac – Fleetwood, John McVie, Christine McVie and Stevie Nicks, aided by Neil Finn and Mike Campbell – played the last show of a year-long world tour in November 2019, the drummer didn’t think it would be a final farewell.

“There was a full intention, without waiting too long, that we’d go and pick things back up,” says Fleetwood. “That we’d play stadiums, big shows and festivals….. and then at that point it was heading towards us saying goodbye.”

However, in early 2020 – just after Fleetwood led an all-star concert tribute to late Mac founder Peter Green at the London Palladium – lockdown scuttled further touring plans.

An even bigger blow to the future of Fleetwood Mac came in November of 2022, with the death of Christine McVie.

Though Fleetwood is open to the idea of adding a final chapter to the band’s story (see main piece), he is mostly resigned to the fact that Fleetwood Mac, or as he puts it “the mothership”, may be harboured permanently.

“It’s been a strange time for me,” admits Fleetwood. “Losing sweet Christine was catastrophic. And then, in my world, sort of losing the band too. And I [split] with my partner as well. I just found myself sort of licking my wounds.”

Continue reading Losing sweet Christine was catastrophic | MOJO

Journey of The Sorceress, Stevie Nicks | MOJO

MOJO
Aug 2024

Bereft of Christine, and broken with Lindsey (or so it seems) for good, Stevie Nicks soldiers on, her Hyde Park show in July a testament to the power of her personality. Fifty years since she joined the band that made her name and wrote songs that gave them new life, it’s time to do something for herself. “I can do anything I want now,” she tells Bob Mehr, “and not have to worry about going back to Fleetwood Mac.

IN 1959, WHEN STEVIE NICKS WAS 11 YEARS OLD, HER MOTHER BOUGHT HER a gift – a new doll introduced by toy maker Mattel, designed to be the very embodiment of glamorous American womanhood.

“My mom gave me the first Barbie,” recalls Nicks, “and she was a tall, beautiful girl in a bathing suit with blonde hair, black eyeliner and heels. And I looked at Barbie and I looked at myself, tiny little thing that I was, and I thought, God, I’ll never be her.”

Sixty-five years later, Barbie has become Stevie Nicks – quite literally. Last fall, Mattel rolled out a new version of the iconic toy modelled after the singer, down to her signature black chiffon clothing, tambourine and feathered coif. 

“I love her,” says Nicks of her mini-me. “I’m always taking pictures of her. I talk to her. I think she’s real.” Nicks laughs: “People are like, ‘Stevie, we’re getting a little worried about you.’”

It’s a late spring night in Los Angeles and Nicks is in an expansive mood as she considers the cosmology of her remarkable life and career. In a sense, the Barbie story perfectly encapsulates the way in which the world has bent to her will for nearly 50 years.

As a member of Fleetwood Mac – which she joined in 1974 – she’s come to define and, in many ways, dominate the group. At the height of the band’s multiplatinum peak, she would venture off into a solo career with an equally successful debut, Bella Donna, eventually earning distinction as one of the only women elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice. 

These days, multiple generations of stars – including the biggest contemporary pop acts, from Taylor Swift to Beyoncé to Lana Del Rey – all pay homage to Nicks. At 76, she’s arguably at the height of her cultural relevance and popularity, playing massive shows throughout the world.

“Look at the power and joy she brings to people,” says her friend and longtime bandmate Mick Fleetwood. “She’s like Edith Piaf. They love her. They feel her. And for good reason. Her story – and how she has sustained it over all these years – is monumental.”

Continue reading Journey of The Sorceress, Stevie Nicks | MOJO