Category: Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams (2012)

  • Stevie Nicks, just following her muse

    Stevie Nicks, just following her muse

    Stevie Nicks: "If I’ve learned nothing else it’s that time passes and anger doesn’t do you much good." Here, she arrived at the 56th Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles in January. (Photo: Robyn Beck / Agence France-Presse — Getty Images)
    Stevie Nicks: “If I’ve learned nothing else it’s that time passes and anger doesn’t do you much good.” Here, she arrived at the 56th Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles in January. (Photo: Robyn Beck / Agence France-Presse — Getty Images)

    During her 40-year career as a member of Fleetwood Mac and a solo artist, the singer-songwriter Stevie Nicks has made more than 40 Top 50 hits and sold over 140 million albums. In Your Dreams, a documentary film about the making of her 2011 album of the same name, was recently released on DVD. Now 65, Ms. Nicks called from a rented house in Phoenix, her hometown. A condensed and edited version of our conversation follows. 

    You just finished a tour with Fleetwood Mac, a band with a tumultuous personal history. How do you all get along now?

    Mick Fleetwood and I are best friends. We were mad at each other for six months or a year after we broke up, and then were able to return to who we were before. My relationship with Lindsey Buckingham is never going to be that. When it’s all said and done and I’m 90 years old, maybe I’ll be able to figure that relationship out. John McVie I adore. I look after him as much as I can [Mr. McVie was given a diagnosis of cancer in October] and make sure he puts ice on his back.

    Are you surprised that the band is still together?

    Surprised? No. It’s a really great band.

    How has your voice changed?

    I had a lot of problems with my voice from 1975 to 1998. We were only just starting to use ear monitors, and we’d been using huge floor monitors that blast the sound back at you and you just scream over it. There were many bad nights onstage. Since 1998 I’ve been working with a vocal coach, Steve Real, and I’ve never had a problem onstage since.

    Do you have a voice care regimen?

    Three hours before I go on-stage I do a 40-minute vocal lesson. We go on at 8, which means I have to be done at 5, so from 3 to 3:30 I do the first part and between 4:30 and 5 I do the second part; 30 minutes and then 11 minutes. By the time I walk onstage at 8 o’clock, I’m ready to do 2 hours and 40 minutes.

    So your voice is in better shape than it was 30 years ago?

    Oh, yes. I tell all the young people I know that sing to get a vocal coach. You don’t have to take them on the road like I do. They’ll make you a tape, and you’ll become a better singer.

    Why the 10-year wait between your last two solo albums?

    After I made Trouble in Shangri-La, which came out in 2001, I started realizing that everything my manager was telling me about how the Internet was going to eventually kill the music business was true. Records as we knew them, records as concepts, as 12 songs in a row that were sequenced, where you may not like the fourth song but you let it play because you love the way the third song went into the fourth song and the way the fourth song went into the fifth song, were definitely ending. And that was heartbreaking. I was told that the best thing for me to do as an older rock ‘n’ roll singer would be to tour.

    Eventually you made In Your Dreams.

    Well, I saw this movie, “New Moon,” in the Twilight series, and I was very inspired by that story so I wrote a song about it called “Moonlight.” And I thought, I can’t just put out this one song so I guess I’m going to have to put out a record. I got off the Fleetwood Mac tour in 2009 and hit the ground running. I called Dave Stewart [formerly of the Eurythmics] probably two weeks after I got home and said I’m ready to make a record now.

    You and Dave wrote songs together, which was a big change for you.

    That’s probably one of the reasons it was the best year of my life. I always wished that I could write with people. I do write, in a way, with Mike Campbell [a sideman for Tom Petty], who sends me tracks. But he’s not there. So when the thing with Dave happened it was so out of the blue. We wrote seven songs in under three months, and recorded as we went, and my whole idea of songwriting changed. Dave Stewart doesn’t have an ego. He can read your mind. He can read your eyes. If you look the slightest bit like, “Oh, no,” he says, “Let’s go another way.” So you never have to have that pit in your stomach where you’re going, “O.K., when he finishes playing this song I’m going to have to say I hate it.”

    You say in the documentary film about the making of In Your Dreams that recording “Soldier’s Angel” with Lindsey Buckingham marked a new beginning for the two of you. How so?

    Because he was able to come to my house and walk into the world of Dave Stewart and Stevie Nicks, which is not the world of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks. When he walked in the door he was surrounded by cashmere and hugs.

    You recently appeared in the television show American Horror Story: Coven. What was that like?

    It was pretty nerve-racking. I never, ever thought that I would ever do anything in the acting genre because I was in a play when I was in the fourth grade and I consider it the worst moment of my life. We got the script the day before and when my assistant read it out loud to me at 2 in the morning in New Orleans, I said I think I should get on a plane right now and go straight back to Los Angeles and hide out. I was almost in tears. But everyone was really understanding.

    Will we see more of you onscreen?

    There was a point toward the end of the first day where I’d sung “Rhiannon” like 25 times and they said O.K., one more time, and I’m like, are you insane? Now we have to get Jessica Lange and now we have to get the fireplace and, oh my god, these people work so much harder than I do. It’s hard for me to sit and wait.

    The American Horror Story episode was called “The Magical World of Stevie Nicks.” Have magical things happened to you?

    I believe that that first record going to No. 1 and making Lindsey and I millionaires at the end of the summer when I was a waitress at the beginning of the year was magical.

    Is it true what you wrote in “Landslide,” that “time makes you bolder”?

    I wrote “Landslide” in 1973, when I was 27, and I did already feel old in a lot of ways. I’d been working as a waitress and a cleaning lady for years. I was tired.

    How do you feel now?

    I’m extremely lucky. I’ve been in a famous band for a very long time and because of that I’ve taken very good care of myself, except for the eight years I was on Klonopin and I got really fat, but that wasn’t my fault. You have to keep yourself youthful. And I don’t mean looking 22 and going to plastic surgery and looking like a caricature of yourself, a stranger that nobody recognizes so that you can’t even get a table at a restaurant because you really don’t look like Stevie Nicks anymore. I wear the right clothes, age-appropriate clothes. But I can still do some of the things I could do when I was really young and pull it off as a 65-year-old chick.

    You got a lot of attention in the press when you gained weight.

    I just kind of went underground. Understand, I was on Klonopin. It’s a tranquilizer. You’re tranquil. I stayed home in a really beautiful house, watched a lot of TV, and ordered from Jerry’s deli. I went from 125 up to 173 pounds. I did a couple of tours and everyone talked about my weight, but I managed to do pretty good shows so people gave me that. One day I woke up and said, this doctor is insane. He’s a groupie who wanted to have me come in a couple times a month to talk about rock ‘n’ roll I learned a valuable lesson. Never trust doctors, ever. I called up my best friend and said come get me and take me to a hospital. I spent 45 days there and got over it.

    You were prescribed Klonopin after completing rehab for cocaine addiction, right?

    I had gotten out of Betty Ford three months before I went to see him and I was doing great. But everyone was worried I was going to start using cocaine again. So I lost eight years of my life. Think of what could have happened during those eight years. I might have gotten married, I might have had a baby, I certainly would have made more albums.

    You must be furious with that doctor.

    If I was driving a car and he was crossing the street I might run over him.

    How do you manage your anger?

    If I’ve learned nothing else it’s that time passes and anger doesn’t do you much good. Something that seems really bad today is going to be better next week. And things you think are never going to go away soften with time. When things happen that upset me I try to do something that makes me happy.

    Like what?

    Right now I put on Lady Gaga’s “Applause” and dance around the house.

    What else makes you happy?

    Writing. When I write I go into my own world.

    Do you spend a lot of time in your own world?

    I’m single, I don’t have children, and I’ve never been married except for three months a long time ago. And that doesn’t matter; It wasn’t a marriage of reality. I live a single woman’s life and yes, I spend a lot of time by myself. I have a few very close friends, most of them I’ve known forever, and I kind of like it. Would I be willing to have a boyfriend? It would be fun if I could find a boyfriend who understood my life and didn’t get his feelings hurt because I’m always a phone call away from having to leave in two hours for New York or a phone call away from having to do interviews all day long. It’s not very much fun to be Mr. Stevie Nicks. In the last 10 years I’ve just said I’m going to follow my muse. If I want to go somewhere I don’t have to worry about anyone being mad at me. I don’t have to make up excuses on the phone about why I’m not coming home. If it were to happen to me I’d be thrilled. But when I’m 90 years old and sitting in a gloriously beautiful beach house somewhere on this planet with five or six Chinese Crested Yorkies, surrounded by all my goddaughters who will at that point be middle-aged, I’ll be just as happy.

    Can you imagine a time when Fleetwood Mac will come to an end?

    It will probably become less physical and involve less travel. But I don’t see Fleetwood Mac ever really stopping.


    Joan Anderman / The Creative Mid-Life – New York Times / Tuesday, February 4, 2014

    Joan Anderman, a former music critic for The Boston Globe, writes a blog, middlemojo.com, that explores, among other things, how artists change and adapt as they age.

  • Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams DVD signing event in Los Angeles

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams DVD signing event in Los Angeles

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    Watch highlights from Stevie’s December 4th DVD signing event at The Grove’s Barnes & Nobles in Los Angeles. In the new official video, fans thank Stevie for her music and being an inspiration to them.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmfF0VTCWc8

  • Stevie to Christine: 'It all depends on you'

    Stevie to Christine: 'It all depends on you'

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    Stevie addressed rumors about Christine McVie potentially rejoining Fleetwood Mac in a new interview with Billboard Magazine. When asked about Christine McVie mentioning to The Guardian that she would be interested in coming back to Fleetwood Mac if the band asked her, Stevie said, “I don’t know if I believe that.” She added that Fleetwood Mac had spent many years reestablishing itself without the benefit of having Christine in the band and that the decision lies solely on McVie.

  • Stevie talks to Extra

    Stevie talks to Extra

    Stevie recently talked to Extra about In Your Dreams, her relationships with men, and the American Horror Story “secret.”

    [jwplayer mediaid=”12685″]
  • VIDEOS: Stevie attends DVD signing event, meets hundreds of fans in person

    VIDEOS: Stevie attends DVD signing event, meets hundreds of fans in person

    (Photo: Getty Images)
    (Photo: Getty Images)

    2013-1204-bn-iyd-dvd-collageOn Tuesday night, Stevie attended a special signing event at Barnes & Noble at The Grove in Los Angeles for the DVD release of her documentary In Your Dreams. Approximately 500 fans took advantage of the rare opportunity to meet Stevie in person. Fan who arrived early Tuesday morning at Barnes & Noble to purchase the new DVD (or In Your Dreams CD) received a special event wristband (limited to the first 400 people), which assured entry into the event. Fans who weren’t able to get wristbands waited outside in the cold weather, in a line that wrapped around many store blocks. Barnes & Noble admitted approximately 100 of them throughout the night, escorting them into the store in small groups. The store, however, had to turn away some fans waiting in line from the signing event as the store’s 11:00 pm closing hour approached.

    Stevie’s background singer Sharon Celani and Stevie’s publicist Liz Rosenberg, among others on Stevie’s team, also attended the event.

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    Stevie’s entrance

    (Video courtesy of Stevie Nicks Info)

    Stevie signing autographs, talking to fans

    (Video courtesy of Celebrity Chao)

    The scene at the signing event

    (Video courtesy of kandrews)

  • Stevie talks John McVie's health, Christine McVie rumors, more on KLOS FM

    Stevie talks John McVie's health, Christine McVie rumors, more on KLOS FM

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    Stevie pictured here with Mick Fleetwood and Christine McVie, earlier this year at the London premiere of Stevie’s IN YOUR DREAMS documentary.

    Stevie talked to Gary Moore on KLOS FM radio in Los Angeles on Monday. She reported on John McVie’s condition, addressed the rumours surrounding Christine McVie rejoining Fleetwood Mac, discussed her In Your Dreams documentary, and reflected on her recent acting appearance on American Horror Story: Coven.

    Special thanks to Nicole for making this interview available.

    [jwplayer mediaid=”12639″]
  • In Your Dreams DVD contest winners!

    In Your Dreams DVD contest winners!

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    Congratulations to the following winners who were selected to received a brand new copy of Stevie’s In Your Dreams documentary DVD! You will be contacted, via the address that you registered when you commented on the site, within 48 hours. Thank you for commenting and sharing your stories!

    Please check back often for more contests and exciting giveaways!

    Contest Winners

    1. Shauna Caldwell
    2. Berniepaintings Art
    3. Ashley Lenae Smith
    4. Lori Wademan-Rodrigue
    5. Roger Weeden
    6. Robert Cozzi
    7. Victoria Ling
    8. Stephanie (tophatsnbubbles)
    9. Rochelle Jeffreys
    10. Catherine (cet_87)
    11. Brian Cleveland
    12. Em Brown
    13. Melanie Franklin
    14. Sylvia L. Vasquez-Ellis
    15. Laurie Buckinger-Mcknight
    16. Dawn Wisniewski
    17. Michelle White McKenzie
    18. Eddie Castillo
    19. Julie Ann
    20. Jeff Horton
    21. Anita Kayed
    22. Christopher Harpel
    23. Herbert Welti
    24. David Higley
    25. Johnathon Quinones

    Email addresses must match the ones used for commenting. Please note that this DVD is a Region 1 disc, which is only guaranteed to play in the United States and Canada. However, it may play on certain computers and devices that have a built-in converter. Please allow up to 4 weeks for the DVD to be delivered (most will be shipped within 7 days).

     

  • PHOTOS: Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams DVD out Tuesday

    PHOTOS: Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams DVD out Tuesday

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    Stevie’s documentary In Your Dreams will be released on DVD this Tuesday. A deluxe DVD bundle — consisting of the DVD, an insert autographed by Stevie, a personalized letter, and exclusive digital photos — was also issued. The deluxe bundle was limited to 1000 copies and has since sold out. But you can see photos of the bundle items in the above gallery. To see the exclusive digital photos, click here.

    Stevie will be signing copies of the new DVD on Wednesday night at Barnes and Noble in Los Angeles. You must purchase a copy of the In Your Dreams DVD or CD from Barnes and Noble and receive a special wristband to attend the signing event.

  • Stevie Nicks: The MOJO interview

    Stevie Nicks: The MOJO interview

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    The Texas kid who became a ‘Fleetwood Mac rock,’ Stevie Nicks has survived romantic pain, chemical excess and a night in Prince’s purple kitchen. Her secret? ‘Being mysterious is very attractive.’

    With its views of the palatial architecture along London’s Victoria Embankment, the Corinthia hotel is a very Stevie Nicks establishment. Formerly the Metropole, it was once home to saucy wartime liaisons and secret (service) assignments.

    However, there was a time when the penthouse suite’s current occupant could have trumped any of the Metropole’s former residents for illicit adventure…

    “I was up at 6:30,” says Nicks, by way of introduction, cursing her jet lag in a low drawl. “I don’t do early.”

    This is not as inauspicious a start as it might first seem. Even at 65, and after countless interrogations over the years, Fleetwood Mac’s femme fatale still loves to unpack the details of her epic life. “That’s why I’m here,” she says, her soft brown eyes peering over dark tinted glasses. She pulls up a footstool and draws a cushion to her chest. “That’s why I got the fireplace so sweet for us.”

    Stevie Nicks joined Fleetwood Mac in 1974 when Lindsey Buckingham insisted he and his girlfriend came as a package. Today, with her Rapunzel-like blond tresses, and diminutive 5ft 1 ½ inch frame kitted out in loose-fitting black chiffon top, flared black trousers and black suede boots, Nicks still has that ‘70s image of the not-of-this-world fairy-tale siren, but in conversation she can be both dryly funny — playing with a Dame Edna Everage sense of her own importance — and refreshingly tough-talking: “When I told Fleetwood Mac that I was not going to tour with them in 2012, that did not go over big,” she says. “But I was totally right — we’ve been away and now it’s huge again.”

    She also does poignant with appropriate gravitas and is winningly gushy about her heroes. “If Jimmy Page would play guitar with me I’d put a band around us tomorrow,” she says.

    Nicks is in town to talk-up In Your Dreams, her and Dave Stewart’s “glorified home-movie” document of the album of the same name, recorded at her Los Angeles pile in March 2010. She credits Stewart with the most enjoyable year of her life, describing him, endearingly, as being “like all four Beatles rolled into one.”

    Speaking at the UK premiere of In Your Dreams, four days after The MOJO Interview (September 12, 2013), Nicks says it was Peter Bogdanovich’s four-hour Tom Petty film, Runnin’ Down a Dream, that convinced her to let Stewart document the creative process on film. Stewart, Mick Fleetwood and Christine McVie also attend the premiere; Lindsey Buckingham and John McVie do not.

    As our allotted hour stretches to 100 minutes, Nicks is happy not to spend too much time stoking over the embers of Rumours and Tusk, concentrating on the return of the Mac (and McVie), the music and experience that shaped Nicks, and her eventful, still durable solo career. “I love our band,” she says, “and we need it to stay together. I have a loyalty to our incredible history from Peter Green right through…”

    The big Fleetwood Mac news is that Christine McVie is back. How involved has she been?

    She’s just re-emerged to do one song. It could have been a few songs, but Lindsey’s very funny about that. Chris left in 1998 and we didn’t start Say You Will until 2002. It took us that long to figure out what the hell we were going to do without her — or even if we could do without her.

    Lindsey seems almost cross about Christine’s return. He said she’d “burned her bridges,” and asked MOJO not to use a line-up shot including Christine on the cover of our issue about the making of Rumours…

    I think his words to us were, “She can’t just come and go.” That’s important to him, but it’s not so important to me. Chris is coming to Dublin when we go into production rehearsal, and she’s going to come on and do Don’t Stop the second two nights in London. Much as Lindsey adores her — and he does; she’s the only one in Fleetwood Mac he was ever really willing to listen to — he doesn’t want the first night reviews to be all about Christine’s one song, rather than the set we rehearsed for two months. But it will be wonderful to have her back up there, and from there, who knows?

    Lindsey also told MOJO: “There are still parts of mine and Stevie’s relationship that are unresolved and it will be interesting to visit that on this next tour…”

    He’s probably referring to what I call ‘The Talk.’ About a year and a half ago I told him everything I had wanted to say to him since 1968. I said, “Do you remember how cute we were? How we could walk into the room together and people would be mesmerized because we were so funny and smart?” I said, “Lindsey, if we can’t go back to being those people, I’m going to quit. I have other people I can work with that treat me with warmth and utter respect, and in my world there’s never a harsh word spoken.”

    And his reaction?

    He was very quiet. I said, “The ball’s in your park, Lindsey — 2013 better be great.”

    So has it been great? When the pair of you hold hands on-stage now what’s going on there exactly? The hand-holding on the 2009 tour seemed a bit hammy…

    That’s interesting. My cousin John has known Lindsey and I since 1968. He told me, “When I saw you and Lindsey play with Fleetwood Mac in 2009, there was nothing between you. It was as if you were thinking, ‘What shall I get from room service tonight? Grilled cheese? Tomato soup?’” Hammy wasn’t the word for Lindsey and I in 2009 — it was totally fake. It is loving, and it is as close to those two people who met as teenagers as you could hope for. Every night I tell the story of “Without You,” the poem that I wrote in 1972 before we made the Buckingham Nicks album. The story has become longer than the song, and I told Lindsey, “I’m sorry, I’m trying to shorten it.” He goes, “Don’t worry, Stevie — it’s charming.” Three years ago he would have been like, “Are you kidding? We could do “The Green Manalishi” in that time…”

    OK, let’s go back a bit. What were the first records that go under your skin?

    I listened to lots of Top 40 R&B radio. I loved the Shirelles and Martha Reeves and the Vandellas; stuff like “(Remember) Walking in the Sand” by the Shangri-Las.

    But your grandfather Aaron Jess Nicks was a country singer, right?

    Right. Everybody called him A.J. When we lived in El Paso, Texas, he bought me a truckload of records when I was in the fifth grade. There must have been 150 singles: country, rockabilly, some Everly Brothers, a song called “Party Doll” [written by Buddy Knox and Jimmy Bowen] that went (smiles and sings), “Come along and be my party doll/And I’ll make love to you.”

    Was AJ an influence?

    Yeah, we’d duet on songs like [Dorsey Burnette’s] “It’s Late,” and AJ picked up that I was a good harmony singer. But my dad was worried when he saw me getting into music, because he’d watched AJ go down the tubes trying to make it. At the same time I’d be in the back seat of my parents’ car singing some R&B song and saying, “Quieten down! I’m trying to concentrate!” My folks would look back with this bewildered expression that said “Who are you?” I totally had my black self going on, too.

    Your mother Barbara was credited with instilling the love of fairy tales and fantasy that would later feed into your lyrics. Hans Christian Andersen? The Brothers Grimm?

    Well definitely those, yes. And Halloween was a big day at our house. Mom was one of those gals that really loved having a little girl and making things magical for her. My aunt told me that when I was 20 and my parents got transferred back to Chicago and I stayed in San Francisco, the light went out of my mom’s eyes. She’d gone to this freezing cold place without her daughter.

    Your father Jess became president of the Greyhound bus company and you often had to up-sticks because his job. Growing up, did that make lasting friendships difficult?

    It did. When we got transferred from El Paso to Salt Lake City I was pretty bummed, because we’d been in Texas for five years and I’d settled in. I remember my mom saying, “You better learn how to make friends fast, Stevie. Open up a bit; you’re too much in your own world.”

    You first met Lindsey at a party in San Francisco in 1966 when you sang “California Dreamin’” together…

    Yeah, he was 16 and I was 17. It was just a one-off, three-minute moment. After that I never saw him for two years until Lindsey’s drummer called me and asked me to join their band Fritz.

    What did they sound like?

    They were a hard rock band. We were in San Francisco, and it was the Age of Aquarius. If they’d been like Sly and the Family Stone, that would have been fine by me, too.

    Fritz opened for Janis Joplin a few times…

    The time I remember most was at Stanford Frost Amphitheatre. The band that were on directly before her had ran into her time and she screamed, “Get off my fucking stage right now or I’ll kill you!” Boy, they wound it up quick! (laughs). Then Janis gets up there. She’s all red-and-purple feathers, big hair and silky bell-bottoms, but she’s tiny as a peanut. I learned that, small or not, you could walk on-stage with a big attitude. Flamboyance with humility I got from Jimi Hendrix when Fritz opened for him around 1969 and then from Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane I took slinky and floaty. I liked her look a lot.

    What are your memories of shooting the cover for 1973’s Buckingham Nicks?

    I’m actually quite prudish. So when they suggested they shoot Lindsey and I nude, I could not have been more terrified if you’d asked me to jump off a speeding train. Lindsey was like, “Oh, come on — this is art. Don’t be a child!” I thought, “Who are you? Don’t you know me?” I went out and spent my last $100 on a beautiful, hand-painted chiffony blouse that wrapped around and tied, and Jimmy Wachtel, my long-term guitarist Waddy’s brother, took a bunch of photos of us with me wearing it. But then it was, “OK — now without the blouse.” I couldn’t breathe. But I did because I felt like a rat in a trap.

    And when your folks saw the picture…

    Well, I’d taken it home to show them, because I didn’t want them taken by surprise. But then I got sidetracked by an ovarian cyst operation, and I kept the picture under my bed for five weeks while I was back home recovering. When the record came out and I saw my father, it was, “Why didn’t you just say no, Stevie?” I said, “Daddy, I don’t know. I didn’t feel like I had a choice — I’m so sorry.” He said, “OK — move on. Bu you always have a choice.” I learned a big lesson that day.

    Buckingham and Nicks joined Fleetwood Mac on New Year’s Eve, 1974, but you kept waitressing for a bit, right?

    About three more days. Most I was thinking, “What if this doesn’t’ work?” because I’d been supporting me, Lindsey, and Richard Dashut [later co-producer on Rumours and Tusk] for several years. I didn’t mind. It got me out of the cave. I could leave the guys working, earn enough to pay the rent and keep our Toyota running. I just wanted to make sure that, when we joined Fleetwood Mac, we didn’t burn our bridges.

    In those early days, did Mick Fleetwood and John McVie talk about the ‘ghosts’ of Fleetwood Mac; about what had happened to Peter Green, to Jeremy Spencer?

    Oh yeah. And I loved hearing about all that. I liked my haunted castles.

    Was there a specific moment when you turned from being Stephanie Lynn Nicks into “Rock Star Stevie Nicks”?

    I knew that I was Stevie Nicks after about three weeks of being in Fritz. I would stroll through San Jose State with my guitar case thinking, “Does everybody know who I am? I’m a rock star.” I felt it and I believed it.

    Was your song “Rhiannon” part of that later on? A theme song for a new identity?

    Not when I wrote it in 1973, no. I wrote it after reading Mary Leader’s book Triad, which is about a woman who becomes possessed by another character called Rhiannon. It wasn’t until 1978 that I found out about the Mabinogion [Welsh medieval prose tales drawing on Celtic mythology], and that Branwen and Rhiannon are in there, too, and that Rhiannon wasn’t a witch at all; she was a mythological queen. But my story was definitely written about a celestial being. I didn’t know who Rhiannon was, exactly, but I knew that she was not of this world.

    In 1994, you told MOJO’s Sylvie Simmons, “I like being a mystery, and I even think I’m pretty mysterious to the people who know me really well…”

    There are parts of me that nobody knows about, and that nobody ever will know about. There’s stuff in my head; things that I want to do when I’m 75. I might go rent a Scottish castle and write some crazy movie…or I might not. I like mysterious people. I’m drawn to them. And I think that, thanks to Instagram and Facebook, today’s young women have lost their mystery. You want to film yourself in the bathroom in the morning getting ready for school? Are you crazy? You think that’s attractive? Being mysterious is very attractive — that’s where my little world has always been.

    Received wisdom holds that cocaine impairs judgment of what’s good music and what isn’t, so how did Rumours turn out so great?

    Because our drug use was just beginning. We started writing Rumours through 1976 and it was an involved process during which we were happy and confident. But even during the recording of Rumours, the cocaine hadn’t taken us over. It was great until it wasn’t, you know? We were extremely messed-up romantically, but we were young and creative and we still really cared about the band and we were damn well gonna make another great record. The drugs only go really bad during Tusk.

    At what point did you realize that you had far more than Fleetwood Mac could accommodate?

    Pretty much right away. Twelve songs on each album between three writers is only four apiece. I was extremely prolific, so every time we made a Fleetwood Mac record, I’d have 20 songs left over. By 1980 I’d be sitting at the piano and Christine would walk through and go (drops into theatrically overblown English accent) “Oh my God — she’s writing another song!” I’d chase her and she’d shout, “I love you darling!”

    Your 1981 solo debut Bella Donna reached Number 1 in the US and was certified platinum within three months of its release. Did that change the power dynamic in Fleetwood Mac?

    Not much. They weren’t that impressed. Anything I did outside Fleetwood Mac wasn’t that important to them. Chris cared, but not the boys. And it wasn’t like Beyoncé and Destiny’s Child. I’d told them, “I swear to God I’m not leaving ever,” and here I am today. But when I signed my solo deal with Atlantic in 1980, I started this whirlwind thing of being able to flit between two worlds. Fleetwood Mac made Tusk, and I made Bella Donna. Fleetwood Mac made Mirage, and I made The Wild Heart, and on it went. I loved it, because I get bored easily. I change hotel suites twice in the same week.

    Prince played synth on your 1983 single Stand Back, which you had written by singing new words and a new melody to his Little Red Corvette. What do you remember about the session with him at Sunset Sound?

    I remember him playing basketball outside like one of the Harlem Globetrotters. He was spinning the ball on his finger and throwing it backwards into the net. In terms of the actual recording, he was super-quick. Unfortunately, we couldn’t keep him locked-down there forever (laughs).

    But he later sent you the backing track for Purple Rain, asking you if you wanted to write something to it…

    It was a cassette — and I’ve still got it — with the whole instrumental track and a little bit of Prince singing, “Can’t get over that feeling,” or something. But it was 10 minutes long with the big guitar solo and I was overwhelmed. I told him, “Prince, I’ve listened to this a hundred times but I wouldn’t know where to start. It’s a movie; it’s epic.” It was epic. And it became a movie.

    So you turned down what became Prince’s defining song?

    Right. But I always feel like there’s a little bit of me in it. The olive branch of him giving me that cassette was huge, but I think he would have liked a romance with me, too.

    Wow. Were you flattered?

    Very flattered. I remember Fleetwood Mac were in Minneapolis on tour one time and Prince came and got me right after the show. I’m still in my chiffon stage outfit and he’s in his purple stage outfit. We get in his purple Camaro and bomb out onto the freeway at 100mph. I’m terrified, but kind of excited, too: “Shit, we’re gonna get pulled over!” So we get to his purple house and he has a studio downstairs and we try to write a song together. But I’ve just done a show and I’m tired, so I go upstairs and sleep on the floor of his purple kitchen. In the morning he wakes me up and I have some coffee and I sing a little part on the song. But I’ve got to be at the airport by 2pm to take-off with Fleetwood Mac, and you do not miss that plane. We get into the purple Camaro again. Prince bombs it down the freeway and right out onto the tarmac alongside our private jet. He comes around to open my door and we hug goodbye, but we both look like crazy people. I get on the plane and the rest of the band are like (drums fingers, rolls eyes). I’m like, “What? Nothing happened.”

    There’s a moving story about Has Anyone Ever Written Anthing for You from 1985’s Rock a Little. You’d driven to the mountains with The Eagles’ Joe Walsh, and he showed you the silver fountain he’d built in memory of the three-year-old daughter he lost…

    Yes, [it] was written for Joe and Emma Kristen. The drive was in Boulder, Colorado. I was having a hard time and Joe was opening for me, but I soon realized how little I had to complain about. We made the trip there and he told me the whole story about how Emma had been killed by a drunk driver on the way to nursery school. Joe had been married to a woman named Stephanie, but they couldn’t survive what had happened and broke up. My song was for Stephanie, too, I think. It was for all of us. It was about the whole tragic story and how the insidious stupidity of some drunk asshole driving into a Porsche tore so many lives apart.

    How did Joe react to the song?

    He was blown away.

    You’ve said he was the great love of your life.

    It was a long time ago: 1983-1984. We were very excessive. One day my friend Sharon came and said, “Joe told me to tell you that he’s taken a plane to Australia. He says he won’t be back for several months and don’t try to find him.” There was never any closure, so I’ve never got over it. I did go into rehab about a year and a half later, and that was it for me and coke, but I don’t think I ever quite bought Joe’s thing that one of us was going to die before the other person had the chance to dial 911. Maybe some day he will tell me the truth about what happened to us.

    In the new documentary you remark, “I don’t think love changes, it can happen at 16 or 75.” Still time, then?

    I’m fine without a man in my life. I’m busy and I love being free. If I say, I’m off to do 47 show, then I’m gonna be back a few days, then I’m gonna take my niece and four of my best friends to Italy and Paris,” what guy is gonna shout, “Have a great time!” as my limo pulls away?

    One who really loves you?

    Well I’ve tried every kind of man — rock ‘n’ roll star; average Joe; tour manager; producer — but eventually they all go, “Are you serious? You’re not coming home at all?” If I want a boyfriend, I’ll find one tomorrow, but they can’t come on the road with me if they don’t have a job, because the crew start looking at them like, “Why are you here?” That said, if Mr. Right were to walk around that corner, I’d throw all of that out the window. It has happened.

    Will the current Fleetwood Mac tour be the last one?

    That won’t happen until it’s super age-inappropriate. Right now we’re doing shows that last two hours, 40 minutes and it is kick-ass. I’ve got pains in my fingers from playing tambourine, so I don’t know how Mick does it. The first 20 shows of the current tour we’d be going on-stage and I’d whisper to Lindsey, “This is too much for me!” But then the lights go up and…bang!

    You’re in the car and “Dreams” comes on the radio — do you still turn it up?

    Oh, totally! (laughs). If I’m out walking and it comes on down the street, I stop people and tell them, “That’s me!” It can be a Christine song and I’ll still say it’s me. I’m very proud.


    Interview by James McNair / Portrait by Danny Clinch / MOJO (241: 38-43) / December 2013


    STEVIE WONDERS

    Three Nicks picks from start to finish

    Buckingham Nicks (1973)THE YOUNG LOVERS

    Buckingham Nicks
    Buckingham Nicks
    (Polydor, 1973)
    ****

    Uncoded devotion on Buckingham’s sweetly-picked guitar instrumental “Stephanie,” plus Nicks’s fine, oddly-modulating “Races Are Run” and the couple’s epic, vocal-harmony rich co-write, “Frozen Love.” It’s criminal that this crackling Jim Keltner-anchored, Keith Olsen-produced LP has never been properly reissued, and that talk of a 2013, 40th anniversary re-vamp has come to nothing.

    Fleetwood Mac (1975)THE ROCKET TO STARDOM

    Fleetwood Mac
    Fleetwood Mac
    (Reprise, 1975)
    *****

    Packing her cathartic showstopper “Rhiannon,” and also “Landslide,” the poignant ballad that has reportedly netted Stevie some $7 million to date in royalties, Fleetwood Mac, not Rumours or Tusk, is your ultimate Nicks-fix. Mick Fleetwood clocked Stevie’s talent and also her beauty. On the next album she, not John McVie, would be his cover-star.

    Stevie Nicks Bella Donna (1981)THE WELSH WITCH TAKES FLIGHT

    Bella Donna
    (Modern, 1981)
    ****

    Nicks named her debut for a poisonous Eurasian plant and drew in spellbound collaborators. Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers fire “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around,” she’s in super-close duet with Don Henley on “Leather and Lace,” and she’s versatility itself on stoical country gem “After the Glitter Fades.” Better yet, all that pesky early ‘80s technology has yet to envelop her.


    James McNair / MOJO (241: 38-43) / December 2013

  • Meet Stevie Nicks in person at Barnes and Noble on December 4

    Meet Stevie Nicks in person at Barnes and Noble on December 4

    2013-0916-cruzon-mayfair-in-your-dreams-pa-wire-ian-west2-cropped

    Meet Stevie Nicks at Barnes and Noble at The Grove shopping center in Los Angeles on Wednesday, December 4, as she signs DVD copies of her documentary STEVIE NICKS: IN YOUR DREAMS. The special, one-night event coincides with the official North American release of the DVD a day earlier on Tuesday, December 3. See Barnes and Noble’s website for specific event details or call the store at (323) 525-0270.

    But even if you can’t be there, be sure to join the exclusive party as we live tweet pictures and comments from the event. Send your tweets to @StevieNicksInfo #IYDDVD.

    And remember, 25 people will receive copies of the new DVD. Just comment on any post on this website from now until Tuesday to be entered into the drawing!