Monday, September 22, 2025
Buckingham Nicks 4 ½ crystals out of 5
Sunday, September 21, 2025
Categorically FALSE... Fleetwood Mac NOT Playing J.K. Rowling Party
No, Fleetwood Mac Is Not Playing J.K. Rowling’s Birthday Party... Reports stated Fleetwood Mac was set to reunite at J.K. Rowling’s birthday party, but a rep for the band tells Rolling Stone that is not true.
By JODI GUGLIELMI
Rollingstone
Saturday, September 20, 2025
Buckingham Nicks storms global iTunes charts with long-awaited digital debut
Updated September 28th adding Brazil to the list of countries the album charted in on iTunes
- Black star indicates peak position
Buckingham Nicks Finally Gets Its Moment
When Buckingham Nicks—the only studio album by Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks as a duo—was reissued on digital platforms September 19, it was more than just a long-awaited release. For decades, the 1973 record had been a cult item, whispered about by fans, passed around in bootlegs, and endlessly requested. Its long-delayed digital debut sparked an immediate global response, and the iTunes charts over the first two days tell the story of rediscovery.Day 1: From Obscurity to the Top 10
By sunrise on September 19, the album was already stirring internationally, with early iTunes Top 10 appearances in New Zealand (#7), Australia (#8), and a surprise breakthrough in the United States (#9). As the hours passed, momentum snowballed. By mid-afternoon, the album had surged to #4 in the U.S., #5 in the Netherlands, #6 in both the U.K. and Australia, and Top 10 in Canada and Germany.
By evening, the duo had cracked the Top 3 in both the U.S. and Netherlands, with multiple other countries—Luxembourg, Sweden, Ireland—pulling the album into their national charts. The reissue had instantly transformed from a niche archival release into a bona fide international chart event.
If Day 1 was about surprise momentum, Day 2 showed staying power. On the morning of September 20, Buckingham Nicks held Top 5 positions in the U.S., U.K., Australia, Norway, and Canada simultaneously—an impressive feat for a 52-year-old record that had never before been available digitally.
By late morning, the Netherlands had the album soaring to #9 on Apple Music, while iTunes continued to place it high in territories as far-flung as Germany, Israel, Hong Kong, and South Africa. The U.S. market proved especially resilient, holding firm in the Top 3 across multiple updates.
The Takeaway: A Global Reintroduction
The charts tell a clear story: Buckingham Nicks wasn’t just unearthed, it was embraced. Within 48 hours of release, the album had:Top 3 placements in the U.S. and Netherlands.
Top 5 runs across at least five major markets (U.S., U.K., Australia, Canada, Norway).
Charting presence in over 25 countries, from Cyprus to Mexico.
For an album once thought lost to licensing limbo, this debut is nothing short of a second life. The digital era has finally given Buckingham and Nicks’ first chapter the worldwide audience it was denied in 1973.
Friday, September 19, 2025
Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood Feature on Miley Cyrus New Song "Secrets"
Singer says track — off the Something Beautiful deluxe — was written as a "peace offering" for her father, Billy Ray Cyrus
By ANGIE MARTOCCIO
Rollingstone
“I think that Fleetwood Mac was our destiny.” - Stevie Nicks
By Craig McLean
The Daily Telegraph (Features section)
September 19, 2025
Review Buckingham Nicks Forgotten Gem Revived ★★★★✩
Verdict: Forgotten gem revived ★★★★✩
Alas, that reunion — which would have been the first since the death of keyboardist Christine McVie in 2022 — has yet to materialise. But the apparent thaw in relations between Nicks and Buckingham suggests it isn’t wholly out of the question, especially as the pair are jointly overseeing today’s re-release of an album they made as a duo in 1973... a reissue that turned out to be the real reason behind those enigmatic posts.
Their tempestuous relationship is the stuff of legend. Having met at high school in California, they became lovers and musical partners in Buckingham Nicks before joining Fleetwood Mac in 1974, rejuvenating the British blues band by adding their Californian harmonies to the mix.
They went on to chronicle their crumbling romance on 1977’s classic Rumours, with Buckingham writing Go Your Own Way about Nicks; and Nicks responding by penning Dreams and Silver Springs about him.
Many of the building blocks of Rumours (and the self-titled Fleetwood Mac album that preceded it) are present on this reissue, a sought-after collector’s item that is now available on vinyl (€35), CD (€14) and streaming services for the first time in decades. Vocalist Stevie and guitarist Lindsey pool their talents superbly, with their contrasting writing styles (hers poetic, his more matter-of-fact) offering a glimpse of what was to come.
‘She’s a tarnished pearl, she’ll take your money, she’ll wreck your world,’ sings Nicks on Crying In The Night, the cautionary tale of a femme fatale that displays the melodic flair that would later make her a superstar.
Crystal, a pastoral ballad written by Stevie and sung by Lindsey, is another indication of the pair’s natural chemistry.
It’s not all hippie hearts and flowers. Nicks sings of the challenges of living with Buckingham on Long Distance Winner (‘you burn brightly, in spite of yourself’). The guitarist, foreshadowing the soap opera that lay ahead, gives his side of the story on Don’t Let Me Down Again: ‘Baby, baby, don’t treat me so bad / I’m the best boy that you ever had.’
Not everything stands the test of time. Buckingham’s Lola (My Love) is throwaway, and the album’s two guitar instrumentals are superfluous, despite one, Stephanie, being a love letter from Lindsey to Stevie, who was born Stephanie Lynn Nicks. But, with drummer Jim Keltner and guitarist Waddy Wachtel adding muscle, there’s plenty to admire on an album that made so little impact in the 1970s that it was soon deleted, with the band subsequently being dropped by their record label and Nicks going back to her old job as a waitress.
It’s heartening that the pair seem to be back on speaking terms. Buckingham left Fleetwood Mac for a second time in 2018 after a fallout with Nicks (he’d previously quit in 1987), but that now appears to be forgotten.



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