Buckingham Nicks- Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks Rare Interview
Writing in Esquire magazine, Fleetwood Mac biographer Alan Light reminds us,”The (1973) Buckingham Nicks album itself has always been something of a mystery because it quickly went out of print and, for reasons that are entirely unclear, has never been available on CD or on streaming services…It’s one of pop’s more historically significant records that had fallen out of circulation, and its release is cause for celebration.”
Long before Stevie Nicks became a star as a solo performer; before she and her musical partner ( then lover) Lindsey Buckingham helped to transform the British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac into one of the top-selling groups of all time; even before her professional recording debut in 1973 on the album Buckingham Nicks, Stephanie Lynn Nicks was living a real- life version of the Glass Menagerie, as you can hear in my classic rock interview.
Stevie Nicks: “I remember exactly what it was like to be 20. I mean, I was a cleaning lady, I was a waitress. I had problems… I mean, Lindsey (Buckingham) and me together trying to figure out how we’re going to make it in the music business. And this is the only thing that either of us wanted to do. And what if we didn’t we make it ? I had to go to school. And he didn’t so… that, ya know, he had all this time. I didn’t have much time. I mean I was an emotional wreck at 20. Oh, yeah. I was an emotional wreck at 18, because that’s when I started singing in a band with Lindsey and we played three and ½ solid years up and down the San Francisco peninsula, and opened for all the big huge bands in that special moment in time that was Haight-Ashbury and San Francisco. Where everybody came. And so I got to stand and watch from the side of the stage. Everybody. You name ‘em, we opened the show for ‘em. So I got like first hand experience, it’s the only reason I was able to walk into Fleetwood Mac without having a nervous breakdown. And walk out center front stage to the center mic and not just, ya know, collapse and faint, because I had already played in front of 75,000 people.
And to go from being that poor and having all these little jobs that I had, because Lindsey didn’t know how to do anything else except play music. And I could do anything. And did, to keep us going so that we could do it. Because at that time I had realized that we were going to make it if it killed me. And ya know working solidly to getting the Buckingham-Nicks deal and doing that record and having that record dropped and being just crushed. Because it’s one thing to be working towards it, and another to go into a big studio with a big producer and do a big record with all the 24 track board and everything and having the taste of the big time. And then be just be dropped like a hot potato, and go back to wondering if I should go back to school or if I should just work and let Lindsey pursue the music career. And I should just step out. Because by that time I was to the point where… ya know I’m very loyal and I certainly was Lindsey’s biggest fan and I thought he was the greatest guitar player in the world and had the most beautiful voice. He was one of those people that… I walked into a room once and he sat there and played a song and it was “rooms on fire”! He’s one of those. He was one of those men. And… whatever I had to do to keep him going was OK because it was more important for Lindsey than it was that I make it. Because I knew I could do a hundred other things and nobody could ever take my music away from me. I could still write songs and play. And, I could take my music in anything I did. I could go back to school. I only had a year to go to finish to get a masters. I could go back to school for three years and get a PhD. I would be fine. I knew that.
I worried about him. I didn’t know what he would do. And because I was so in love with him there wasn’t any question in my mind that I would stick in there until if we didn’t both make it, at least I got him up there. And when you love somebody and you see the pain in their face, when they even consider the fact that you might not make it… it’s like, “Don’t even think that we’re not going to make it. We are.” And in my heart I’m saying to myself,”If I have to comb this town, I will find somebody to listen to us that will understand how good we are, or that God willing, at least know how good he is.” -Redbeard









