‘Boy wonder’ puts out a new album | The Canberra Times

By Greg Kot
Sat 27 Jun 1992
The Canberra Times

Lindsey Buckingham, late of Fleetwood Mac, is back on top, as Greg Kot reports.

IN 1987, when the musical world last heard from Lindsey Buckingham, he was telling Fleetwood Mac he wanted out — and his bandmates were not taking the news well.

The break-up, on the eve of a world tour, was recounted in bloody detail by Mick Fleetwood in a recent autobiography, but the drummer says that, in retrospect, everyone saw it coming.

Buckingham had been the creative hub of the band for 12 years, as songwriter, singer, guitarist, producer and arranger, the “boy wonder” — as Fleetwood described him — who could take one of Stevie Nicks’s raw, rambling stories and sculpt it into a pop song such as Sara or Gypsy.

But he found himself no longer being challenged. “I had not been very happy in that situation for a while,” Buckingham says. His first new music in five years, Out of the Cradle (Warner Bros), is a fresh start for the 42-year-old singer.

Continue reading ‘Boy wonder’ puts out a new album | The Canberra Times

Lindsey Buckingham: Post-Mac Attack | Rolling Stone, Jun 1992

Rolling Stone Magazine
June 25th 1992
David Wild

The wayward Fleetwood singer continues on – solo

I’m not trying to compete with Kris Kross now, just like I didn’t try to compete with Christopher Cross in the old days.”

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Lindsey Buckingham – the pop genius and sonic architect behind Fleetwood Mac’s string of platinum successes in the Seventies and Eighties – is sitting under a velvet Elvis portrait in his home studio in the lovely hills of Bel Air, California. Buckingham has spent a substantial portion of the last four years in this room. Now, however, he’s finally on the verge of sharing with the public some of the music that he and Richard Dashut, his coproducer and writing partner, have been creating here, and he’s considering the question of how popular his eccentric brand of melodic pop will be these days.

“I guess it’s obvious that making this album hasn’t been an especially speedy process,” says the master of the understatement. “But I had to let a lot of emotional dust settle. People might think I’ve been off on some island getting my ya-yas out. The truth is, I’ve basically been here twelve hours a day. I’ve been goofing off only in the most productive sense.”

Asked if he’s grown sick of the windowless room, Buckingham pauses as if he hasn’t considered the issue before. “Well, I’m not really sick of it,” he says finally. “But I haven’t come inside here for a while, and I’m not sure why. A couple of weeks ago, I opened the door and just looked in. And I couldn’t relate to having spent the amount of time I did in here. This room became more my reality than the rest of the house. At times the whole thing seems like a weird dream to me.” Continue reading Lindsey Buckingham: Post-Mac Attack | Rolling Stone, Jun 1992

Come Into My Parlour | VOX Magazine, Feb 1992

Spencer Bright
VOX Magazine
February 1992

STEVIE NICKS INTERVIEW
Come Into My Parlour

Deserted by Mick Fleetwood, bullied by her record company and haunted by the memory of four abortions, Stevie Nicks is rich but not happy.

Spencer Bright breaks out the Kleenex for the woman who couldn’t go her own way.

Homely snaps by George Bodnar

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I pull a Kleenex from its box and hand it to Stevie Nicks. She wipes a tear as it slides down her cheek. She cries when she speaks of Mick Fleetwood, she cries when she speaks of the babies she might have had and she cries when she speaks of the bullies in the record industry shoving her around. She’s like a damsel in distress in her castle, and we’re in her fairyland lounge. There is a warm glow from the chunky candles and the blue flame of the log fire, while outside in LA the temperature sizzles up in the 80s.

Stevie points out her favourite chaise lounge. Her favourite doll, which resembles her, sits regally upon it. One, a favourite 12-year old garment, is loosely draped around the chanteuse. Stevie needs the comfort of long-familiar possessions: they stress a continuity and equilibrium that have been sadly lacking in her emotional life.

To say that Stevie Nicks is considered flaky is a mild understatement. But, as with so many things Nicksian, it’s a mythical fog that masks the true woman. She isn’t just a mystical old crone running a witches’ coven in the Hollywood Hills: the fantasy world she appears to inhabit actually stems from her love of England, notably it’s history, kings and queens.

Her home is Encino- up the road from Dave Stewart’s house and over the brow of the hill from that of her former lover Tom Petty- is the sort of chocolate box creation you’d expect to find in a theme park. From the outside it’s a Tudor mansion with elephantitis: as you enter there’s a drained waterfall replaced by plants and flowers running alongside the winding brick staircase.

Climbing the stairs it changes from medieval to Hansel and Gretel, as the carved wooden banisters meander perpendicularly up three more stories. At the top of the house is an octagonal bell tower, but there’s no bell: just a viewing platform and windows where Stevie, her friends, and employees go to watch the sun set over San Fernando Valley.

I’m given a guided tour that the barman at my hotel would have died and gone to heaven for. There’s Stevie’s giant four poster bed with lace cushions and lacy covers. In the adjoining dressing room a sweet musty smell of perfume hangs in the air. All around are satin and silk nightgowns bunched on hangers.

Stevie says she bought this house because she could imagine Ann Boleyn living here. When Stevie Nicks first made money with Fleetwood Mac she was able to fulfill  her Dickensian fantasies of looking like a “ragged doll”- she came out resembling between the Artful Dodger, Bill Sykes’ girlfriend Nancy from “Oliver Twist” and Miss Haversham from “Great Expectations.”

Stevie is not quite sure where this obsession with things English came from: “It was born into me. Maybe my last life was in England.” Thus when, in January 1975, a 6’5″ English eccentric named Mick Fleetwood came and asked Stevie and her boyfriend Lindsay [sic] Buckingham to join his band, she had to say yes “Just the idea that this band was English was reason enough to join. It was a dream come true.” At the age of 26, Stevie saw the new group as the perfect opportunity to learn about kings, queens, princes, and princesses.

Fleetwood perfectly matched her dreams. “The first time Mick walked into the room I thought I was witnessing the entrance of an English king, because that’s how he looked to me. He was wearing a burgundy-coloured, water silk vest (waistcoat) with a watchchain and a very long jacket that was really nipped in at the waist, and beautifully made pants. I was awestruck, and still am to this day of Mick’s presence. The whole air around him is power.” The people who saw Fleetwood’s performance on the Brits Awards with Samantha Fox may find this a little difficult to accept.

Previously, Lindsay [sic] Buckingham had dominated Stevie. He was the artist; he didn’t know how to do anything but music. “What was he going to do, sell shoes? I had a $50,000 education, I could do anything.” Her waitress job paid for the rent, the food, the car. “I knew it was going to take my strength to push Lindsay and I over the edge if we were going to make it in the music business.”

After Buckingham came a rogues’ gallery of powerful rock and roll suitors not known for their wimpishness: Joe Walsh, Don Henley, Tom Petty, and producers Jimmy Iovine and Rupert Hine. And the man who called his on the road dalliances an attack of “veal viper,” Mick Fleetwood. All get their individual tributes on Stevie’s ‘Best Of’ compilation album, “Timespace.”

In parallel with the last ten years of Fleetwood Mac, Stevie enjoyed the most successful solo career of the whole group. Her first solo album “Bella Donna” sold ten million copies, and subsequent collections have enjoyed less spectacular but still respectable sales. Now, though, with the apparently final demise of Fleetwood Mac, Stevie is suffering a personal and professional crisis.

The recent Fleetwood Mac troubles can be traced to an old Nicks song called “Silver Springs.” So taken was Stevie’s mother by this number that she was moved to open an antique clothing shop in Phoenix with the same name. Stevie made a gift of the song to her.

“Silver Springs” nearly became a classic, but was dropped at the last minute from the 20 million-selling “Rumours” album. Stevie thought it would be nice to resurrect the song and place it on “Timespace.” But Mick Fleetwood refused to give up the group’s performance rights: he wants the option of having the number on a boxed set due for this year’s commemoration of Fleetwood Mac’s 25th anniversary.

” I have told the world what a vile thing it was that Mick Fleetwood had done to me, who has fought like a dog to keep this band from breaking up. I don’t really know what’s going through Mick’s mind. He never returned a phone call, and he never felt it was his duty to sit down and write a letter to tell me why.

“He’s always been very English, and very proper and sometimes very arrogant, but to me, a very close and loving friend. And somebody that I always felt I could trust and love,” says Stevie, wiping away the tears.

“He has always been the boss of the group. He has always made all the decisions. And he has always made them without asking anyone else. So he had no reason to do this to us. To break up the whole band.”

In the tradition of rock and roll’s longest running soap opera, Stevie has Fleetwood’s soon-to-be ex wife Sarah [sic] on her side. “She’s singing with me now, she’s a very good friend. She’s divorcing Mick after being with him for 13 years: they are completely separated. She doesn’t understand.”

Stevie has included “Beauty and the Beast” on “Timespace,” a song written after her affair with Mick in the late 70’s. She explains that it is not a dig at him being a beast, but about the beauty and the beast within us all. The album’s sleeve notes are full of similar references to her ex-lovers.

Was there a common thread among her men? “They are all very smart and very loving, and they all had a difficult time with my life and the way that I live it and how busy I am.” For four lovers, a crucial test came when she became pregnant and opted for terminations. “It’s always been a tragedy. But they understood.” But they didn’t really. “Eventually, their hearts couldn’t take it, they couldn’t understand quite enough, how deeply embedded in this I was. And so it eventually hurt them too much and they had to leave, or face devastation on their own.”

She put her relationship with her fans before a relationship with one man. Ever since she saw Janis Joplin perform, she wanted to emulate her, to achieve that state of communion with the crowd. “I just wanted to be in love with my audience and I wanted them to be in love with me back.”

But now there is remorse at the havoc her abortions have wreaked on her psyche. “To give up four (babies) is to give up a lot that would be here now. So that really bothers me, a lot, and really breaks my heart. But they’re gone, so…” she composes herself. “But I couldn’t because I was too busy. And I had all these commitments.” She wants to adopt, but age and single-parenthood are against her.

“I’ve also thought about having one myself but I’m booked up for the next four years. I don’t know, at my age, if I can get pregnant right away, do an album at the same time, have a baby, promote the album, go on tour with the baby. So I’m going back and forth in my mind. At 43 years old, my time clock is ticking, so I can’t afford to wait around for very long.” Surely these are the same excuses she made on the last four occasions- with two important differences. There is no obvious candidate for the father, and even if there were, the decision remains totally in her hands.

In an epic inversion of the star’s role, she is subservient to the 40 people who depend on her for their livelihoods. “I don’t know quite how to walk away without hurting a lot of people- even though every one of those people would say ‘You’ve done a lot for us and we know that you love us, but go and do something for yourself for a change.’ But I just can’t.”

The determination, toughness and pragmatism that helped her achieve success now seem elusive, but what hurts most is being pushed around by business moguls. She is smarting from the inclusion- against her wishes- of Jon Bon Jovi’s aptly titled song “Sometimes It’s a Bitch” on “Timespace.”

“I was told at the beginning of this year that if I didn’t do a song by Jon Bon Jovi then my career was over. I don’t have any reason to hate Jon Bon Jovi. He wrote me a song, that was a very wonderful thing to do. I knew that just me singing that kind of a song wasn’t going to go over with a lot of my fans, which it hasn’t. But I was told by the industry, by management, by the record companies, and by everyone else, that if I did NOT do this, and reach this new audience, that my career was simply, finally, completely over.

“They exerted all the pressure you could possibly exert, they scared me to death. So I did the song, and is it a big hit song? No, it’s not.” She found it particularly distasteful to sing the word “bitch,” which she considers a swear word. Stevie concedes that she has difficulty challenging authority figures.

It all makes her appear so fragile. While we speak she only opens her doe eyes to wipe away the tears, preferring instead to look down when talk gets serious. There are no crutches anymore. She gave up the cocaine and alcohol in 1986 when she admitted herself to the Betty Ford Center.

Bad as she was, she still had the inner strength to take control of her destiny, probably because she was in mortal danger. One night while there she was inspired to write a personal creed: “I am not special. I am not infallible. I am dying.”

“I started crying really hard, and I wrote under it something to the effect, never forget these three lines. And so I feel that yes, I can write stories for people. I can tell stories to people, but that I’m not indestructible and that I’m not special. And that I was dying. So, that was a very big turning point at Betty Ford for me.”

If Fleetwood Mac had been told to do “Sometimes It’s a Bitch” she thinks she knows what would probably have happened. “Mick would’ve ridden in on his white horse and swept me up and told them all to go to hell and say I won’t let her do it.” The tragedy is that after all these struggles, Stevie Nicks is a victim once again.

SHOOTING STEVIE

VOX was privilaged to receive a guided tour of Stevie Nicks’s home. However, since several previous attempts at photographing the interior of her mansion had not matched up to her idea of how it should look, Nicks chose to recreate the interior in sympathetic lighting conditions.

Two days later later Ms Nicks summoned our photographer to a professional sound-stage at a studio near LA International airport. There, with the aid of two articulated lorries of furniture, clothes, dolls and assorted knick-knacks, she recreated her bedroom.

A staff of more that a dozen people – including caterers (note the bulging fridge), lighting men, set builders, make-up artists, hairdressers and a mysterious ‘personal assistant’ – spent a whole day recreating the authentic ambiance of Stevie’s home.

All of this was done at her own cost. But Ms Nicks is no stranger to excess. During the last Fleetwood Mac world tour she had every hotel room she stayed in redecorated to her personal taste – and at her own considerable cost.

Fleetwood Mac: Behind The Mask Review | People Weekly

People Weekly, May 14, 1990
Behind the Mask. (sound recording reviews)
by Ralph Novak

BEHIND THE MASK by Fleetwood Mac

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The addition of singers-guitarists-composers Billy Burnette and Rick Vito has livened up the at-times institutional-sounding tendencies of Fleetwood Mac. This time around, things rock a bit harder, throb a bit deeper. The changes are not revolutionary, though; it’s as if General Motors or Ford had hired a couple of new designers who came up with a different bumper here, a sexier headlight there. The basic product stays the same: in this case, a stately sort of pop rock that ranges from ponderous to movingly effective.

Burnette and Vito joined the band for its 1987 tour when Lindsey Buckingham struck off on his own. (Buckingham appears on one track on this album, in a slight but appealing concession to loyalty.) That’s a two-guitars-for-one trade, thus the splashier, harder sound on such tracks as “When the Sun Goes Down,” which the newcomers co-wrote. The best Mac songs, though, still belong to Stevie Nicks. “Love Is Dangerous,” which she wrote with Vito, has a dirge-like, ’60s tone. But “Freedom” (written with Mike Campbell) and “Affairs of the Heart” both generate that disquieting sense of frustrated romantic impulses that Nicks conveys so well.

Christine McVie partisans will also enjoy the sweet lilt of “Do You Know,” composed with Burnette. Still moving to the beat of the same drummer — Mick Fleetwood himself — Mac has been nothing if not consistent over its 20-year, 19-album history, and there’s satisfaction, as well as entertainment, in that. “Predictable” is not always an insult. (Warner Bros.)

Ralph Novak
Review Grade: B

Lindsey Buckingham – Trouble Fanzine (issue two)

Scroll down to view scanned pages of the second and final issue of the Lindsey Buckingham ‘Trouble’ fanzine.

Created by Sue Cole in May 1990

Trouble_Fanzine_edition2

Lindsey Buckingham – Trouble Fanzine (issue one)

Scroll down to view scanned pages of the first issue of the Lindsey Buckingham ‘Trouble’ fanzine.

Created by Sue Cole in the early nineties

Trouble_Fanzine_edition1

In The Nicks of Time | Record Mirror

Record Mirror
May 20, 1989

Stevie Nicks is one of pop’s most enduring personalities. As she releases her first solo album since 1986, Robin Smith meets the Joan Collins of rock and discovers a born survivor who’s just a romantic at heart


Stevie Nicks’ hotel suite is so large you could land a jumbo jet on the carpet or convert the place into an indoor golf course. But somehow, a smaller room just wouldn’t suit her. After all, Ms Nicks’ vocals have powered Fleetwood Mac to becoming one of the best seling groups of all time and she’s also pursued a very lucrative solo career. Her new single, ‘Rooms On Fire’, is nestling as comfortably in the charts as Stevie reclining on a plush sofa.

Stevie Nicks is the Joan Collins of pop. The struggling musician who scraped together a living as a waitress before she was whisked away to a limousine lifestyle. En route she’s suffered several broken love affairs, extreme loneliness and a drugs problem.

“Sometimes I think that not even the bubbliest, wildest soap opera could compare with being in Fleetwood Mac,” chuckles Stevie. “We’ve done a lot of laughing and a lot of bleeding in the band and I don’t think there are another group of people I could work with. There’s such a chemistry and a feeling of love and respect between us.” Continue reading In The Nicks of Time | Record Mirror

Flashback 1989 – Fleetwood Mac’s leading ladies: Stevie Nicks & Christine McVie

Music Connection Vol. XIII, No. 1
Jan.9-Jan. 22, 1989

In 1975, when Fleetwood Mac entered the studio to begin recording a new studio album, no one could have predicted the massive success that this veteran English band would soon achieve. Following a ten-year, checkered history of changing personnel, which frequently left the band minus key members and a music direction, founding fathers Mick Fleetwood and John McVie recruited a little-known singer-songwriting duo, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks. Nick’s bewitching musical persona and Buckingham’s guitar and arrangement talents, coupled with the earlier addition of Christine Perfect (later Mrs. McVie), gave this band all the chemistry and direction it needed. The resulting album, simply titled Fleetwood Mac, spawned the hit singles, “Rhiannon,” “Say You Love Me,” and “Over My Head,” and catapulted a band with a limited sales base into a multi-platinum hit machine.

In the years that followed, the band solidified its superstar status with 1977’s Rumours LP (an incredible twenty million copies sold worldwide); survived the traumatic breakup of two romances within the band – Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, and John and Christie McVie; dabbled in experimentation with the ambitious, 1979 two-record set Tusk; and recorded the lackluster 1982 LP Mirage that had critics and fans wondering if the band had finally run out of creative steam.

But rumors of the band’s demise proved premature. In 1987, after a five-year layoff, Fleetwood Mac released the excellent Tango In The Night, an album that re-established the band both commercially and artistically. That was the good news. The bad news was Lindsey Buckingham, whose production and instrumental skills had so greatly contributed to their success, would be leaving the Mac fold. Undaunted, the band recruited two musicians, guitarist/vocalists Rick Vito and Billy Brunette, to fill the Buckingham void.

Now, with the release of their current greatest hits LP, Fleetwood Mac spears to be taking stock of its platinum past and looking forward to its future. The album is a reminder of past glories – “Rhiannon,” “Don’t Stop,” “Dreams,” and “Go Your Own Way” – and a harbinger of things to come, with two new tracks, “As Long As You Follow” (the album’s first single) and “No Questions Asked,” featuring the band’s new guitar lineup. We recently spoke to the two first ladies of Fleetwood Mac, Stevie Nicks and Christine McVie, about the band’s past, present and future.

MC: Tell me about the new Fleetwood Mac. What’s different and unique about Fleetwood Mac as we’re seeing you now?

Continue reading Flashback 1989 – Fleetwood Mac’s leading ladies: Stevie Nicks & Christine McVie

Big Mac – Fleetwood Mac talks to Record Mirror (Apr 1988)

Well, you can’t get much bigger than Fleetwood Mac, can you?
In the wake of Lindsey Buckingham’s much-publicised departure and their combined chart success.
Dave Zimmer talks to the band that just refuses to lay down and die….

Record Mirror (UK)
April 1988

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Somebody should write a soap opera based on Fleetwood Mac’s career. They’ve been plagued by jealousy, bankruptcy and alcoholism; and when guitarist Lindsey Buckingham left the band last year, it looked like the end of the road.

Buckingham had been with Fleet­wood Mac since 1975 when he and Stevie Nicks helped catapult the rather obscure ‘hippy’ band into the big time with the LP ‘Rumours’. To date, it’s sold over 30 million copies worldwide. But the relationship between Nicks and Buckingham soured, as Stevie explains.

“If Lindsey said the wall in the studio was grey, I’d be absolutely sure it was pink. In order to get one of my. songs on a record I’d have to say ‘Okay, the wall’s grey Lindsey’. Otherwise it was back on the bus.

Continue reading Big Mac – Fleetwood Mac talks to Record Mirror (Apr 1988)

Stevie Nicks Live at Red Rocks. (video recording reviews) | People Weekly

STEVIE NICKS LIVE AT RED ROCKS

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People Weekly, Feb 15, 1988
Ralph Novak

One reason this is such a splendid concert tape is that director Marty Callner, who has worked with Hall and Oates, Heart and Whitesnake, doesn’t seem compelled to show off his technique. He has a gorgeous setting, the outdoor Red Rocks Amphitheatre near Denver. And he has one of pop music’s most physically attractive, musically interesting performers in Nicks. Callner’s cameras record the event faithfully, without distorting it. The second reason the tape is so enjoyable is that Nicks herself, about 10 minutes into what begins as a listless performance (taped in summer 1986), literally puts her foot down. In the middle of Talk to Me, she stomps three or four times, as if to pump herself up, and the effect is galvanizing. Impassivity is part of Nicks’s style, but from that moment her singing seems to take on an undervoiced passion. Her backup musicians also seem to take themselves up another notch, particularly drummer Rick Marotta, guitarist Waddy Wachtel and Robert Martin, who plays saxophone for Talk to Me. The appearances by ”special guests” are overbilled. Anyone who turns away to eat a potato chip could miss the contributions of Peter Frampton and Nicks’s Fleetwood Mac colleague Mick Fleetwood. And Callner lapses during Dreams, patching in a phony sky full of lightning. There’s nearly an hour of solid music, though, with such Nicks hits as Stand Back and an extended Edge of Seventeen, complete with a real dove in honor of the song’s refrain (”Just like the white winged dove sings a song/ Sounds like she’s singing it to you”). When Nicks is shown under the closing credits walking out to the edge of the audience (where she is loaded down with stuffed toys and flowers), the crowd’s affection seems well earned.

Sony, $19.95 — Ralph Novak

Review Grade: A
Mag.Coll.: 44D0668