Friday, September 19, 2025

“I think that Fleetwood Mac was our destiny.” - Stevie Nicks

The great ‘lost album’ that ignited a fiery Fleetwood Mac relationship

Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham’s debut led them to join the band – and it’s being re-released after 50 years.



By Craig McLean
The Daily Telegraph (Features section)
September 19, 2025

When penniless, high-school sweethearts Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham released Buckingham Nicks in September 1973, 16 months before they joined Fleetwood Mac, it flopped. Then it went out of print.

But its gauzy, West Coast-folk, hippie-romance-heavy 10 tracks – not to mention its cover image of the hirsute pair, topless and cosied up – were a soft-launch distillation of the songwriting, singing, harmonising and emotional heft that the couple would bring to the floundering Britons. When band founder and drummer Mick Fleetwood heard the record playing in Los Angeles recording studio Sound City, he moved quickly to recruit the young Californians to the ranks of his band.

It became a great “lost album” – it never appeared on CD and certainly wasn’t available to stream (legally, anyway). It was a mythical premonition of the golden music-making that would appear on the Stevie-and-Lindsey-powered Fleetwood Mac (1975) and Rumours (1977) albums. But now, finally, 52 years on, Buckingham Nicks has been remastered and reissued for the first time.

But how was it lost? I asked Stevie Nicks the question one summer evening in Santa Monica in July 2013, when interviewing her for this newspaper. She was sitting in her seafront condo by the Pacific, taking a short break from Fleetwood Mac’s world tour before it came to the UK.

She explained to me that the rights to it were split between her, Buckingham and Keith Olsen, producer of the album. “It’s like sharing ownership of an old car,” she said. “But the stars never seem to exactly align.”

In 2011, also in Los Angeles, I asked Buckingham the same question: why wasn’t their album available on CD?

“I don’t know!” the guitarist shot back. “One of Stevie’s managers has the masters in her house. Why? Well, because somebody’s got to have them somewhere. I don’t know, don’t ask me… The politics of Fleetwood Mac are strange.”

He mused on whether “somebody” within their network of individual managers was waiting for an “appropriate” moment for a CD release. “Which is really stupid! Like, a time when Stevie and I will be able to make some sort of event or tour or do something to make it more marketable? But you know: better hurry up! That’s all I can say.”

It only took another 12 years. After being teased in cryptic social media posts in July, Buckingham Nicks is out today, its 52-year-old high-fidelity ensured by the album being “sourced from the original analogue master tapes for its long-awaited return to vinyl, as well as hi-res digital files for its CD and digital release”.

It is, too, the sound of a long-ago but deep-seated professional and personal love–in–one that clearly transcends Buckingham having been fired from Fleetwood Mac in 2018, reportedly in a dispute over tour dates. Peace, or at least détente – or just septuagenarian pragmatism – has clearly broken out between the former lovers, whose once turbulent relationship inspired both Dreams (written by Nicks) and Go Your Own Way (Buckingham). Tensions were reportedly so high during the making of Rumours that Nicks took cocaine “just to get through it”, ending up with an addiction that led her to rehab.

In 1987, Buckingham refused to join the band on tour, and Fleetwood Mac recorded the 1990 album Behind the Mask without him. Nicks left the band shortly after, when Fleetwood refused to let her release Silver Springs, a B-side she wrote about Buckingham, on a box set of Nicks’s solo work. By 1997, however, they had reconnected enough to go on a 20th anniversary tour together, and in 2003 released one last album: Say You Will. Ahead of their 2018 reunion tour, however, Buckingham left the band, having apparently had an “outburst”.

He told Rolling Stone: “Our relationship has always been volatile. We were never married, but we might as well have been. Some couples get divorced after 40 years. They break their kids’ hearts and destroy everyone around them because it’s just hard.”

Nicks, meanwhile, told Rolling Stone last year: “I dealt with Lindsey for as long as I could. You could not say that I did not give him more than 300 million chances.”

And yet, they have come together to excavate the lost album. “[We] knew what we had as a duo, two songwriters that sang really well together. And it was a very natural thing, from the beginning,” Nicks, 77, says in the reissue’s sleeve notes. “It stands up in a way you hope it would,” adds Buckingham, 76 next month, “by these two kids who were pretty young to be doing that work.”

Those kids had met in 1966 at Menlo-Atherton High School in suburban San Francisco. He was the high-school swimming champ and a prodigal guitarist. She was the girl from Arizona, relocated to the San Francisco area thanks to her father’s corporate executive job.

In late 1971, the couple moved south to Los Angeles. Buckingham worked at his songwriting while Nicks supported them with waitressing and cleaning jobs. “I didn’t want to be a waitress,” she said in a 1997 interview, “but I believed that Lindsey didn’t have to work, that he should just lay on the floor and practise his guitar and become more brilliant every day. “I was totally devoted to making it happen for him,” she went on. “I never worried about not being successful. I wanted to make it possible for him to be successful.”

For her, love trumped everything else – even if she would write about the challenges of being in a relationship with a mercurial artist in the Buckingham Nicks song Long Distance Winner (“love their lifestyle if you feel it / don’t try to change them, you never will”). And, after some months of abject penury, the songs they had written separately and together secured Buckingham and Nicks a record deal with Polydor.

They recorded their self-titled debut at Sound City Studios in 1973, with Olsen as producer. But after its release on September 5 that year, Buckingham Nicks was the victim of poor promotion and a largely indifferent response. The duo soldiered on, writing songs for a second album that they planned to record in 1974. One of those tracks, Without You, would eventually surface on Fleetwood Mac’s 2013 release Extended Play.

“We lost that song,” Nicks told me that July evening in 2013. “We got free time in Sound City, and we think Without You was the first or second song that we did when we started making demos for this new record. We would put everything that we did on cassette. And we think – well, we know – somebody stole it… [But] we never knew it had gone ’cause we had so many cassettes lying around our house. And then we joined Fleetwood Mac…”

That fateful day was New Year’s Eve 1974. Shortly before that, Mick Fleetwood had visited Sound City with a view to using the studio to record a new Fleetwood Mac album. Olsen played Buckingham Nicks' track Frozen Love to demonstrate the facility’s audio qualities. In the 2013 documentary Sound City, Buckingham recounted how, “I walked out of Studio B, and I heard our song Frozen Love coming from one studio over. And I see this gigantic man sitting in the chair with his eyes closed, just grooving, and I thought: ‘Who is that?’”

That was 6ft 6in Fleetwood. He was then also in search of a guitarist to replace Bob Welch, who had just quit. Impressed by the guitar solo on the final track on Buckingham Nicks, the drummer and band MD invited Buckingham to join Fleetwood Mac. Buckingham said yes, on one condition: that his girlfriend could join too.

Within three months, the new line-up had recorded Fleetwood Mac – an album that opens with Buckingham's composition Monday Morning, and that features timeless Nicks songs Rhiannon and Landslide.

The rebooted and rejuvenated Mac had liftoff. As Nicks recalled in another 1997 interview. “Before Lindsey and I joined [Fleetwood Mac], we’d have to steel ourselves not to go into stores. Six months later we were earning $400 a week each. I was totally famous. … You go through that with someone, and you don’t forget.

Still, as music history and the plot of the hit play Stereophoic tell us, rock ’n’ roll romances don’t often survive that kind of vertiginous success. By the time of the writing of Rumours, Buckingham and Nicks had split, with bassist John McVie and keyboard player Christine McVie also heading for the buffers. Ditto the marriage of Fleetwood and Jenny Boyd - they divorced in 1976 (although they would later remarry - and re-divorce).

Buckingham, though, told me he didn’t blame Fleetwood Mac for killing his and Nicks’s relationship - or the relationships of the others. Not wholly, anyway.

“I think the stage was set for all of us to be moving in that direction before we ever met each other as a band,” he said. “But I think the coming together of us as a band became a catalyst for speeding up a process which probably was inevitable. But who knows? Maybe Stevie and I would have worked out our stuff. But… probably not.”

When I interviewed Nicks in Miami in 2011 for The Guardian, I asked her for her take on what could have been the afterlife of Buckingham Nicks, as a musical duo and a couple. If the success of the first two Fleetwood Mac albums - and drugs - hadn’t entered the picture, would she and Buckingham have had a shot?

“Absolutely,” she replied. “If we’d have stayed in San Francisco and just done our music there and gotten a record deal there, we would have still been famous. I’m absolutely sure of that. And we would have married and had children, cause we were headed that way. We didn’t really mess up til we moved to Los Angeles. And that was when the whole world just ripped us apart.

Their relationship didn’t last, but Fleetwood Mac did, and then some 120 million album sales and one of the greatest careers in music history tell their own story. But now, finally, the long-lost album that started it all is finally having its day in the sun. And for all her thoughts on what might have been with Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks said she was happy that the Buckingham Nicks record did what it did. “I think that that was the only way it could have gone,” she told me. “I think that Fleetwood Mac was our destiny.”

Buckingham Nicks (Rhino) is released today.


Review Buckingham Nicks Forgotten Gem Revived ★★★★✩



Forgotten 70s gem fuels rumours of a Fleetwood Mac reunion

BUCKINGHAM NICKS:
Buckingham Nicks (Rhino)
Verdict: Forgotten gem revived ★★★★✩
By Adrian Thrills - The Daily Mail September 19, 2025

THE rumour mill went into overdrive back in July when Stevie Nicks and her estranged Fleetwood Mac bandmate Lindsey Buckingham posted two cryptic messages on Instagram.

They contained lyrics from a song, Frozen Love, by their early 1970s band, Buckingham Nicks, but that didn’t stop fans from speculating that another reunion of the famously combustible Fleetwood Mac could be on the cards.

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.

What happens next is anyone’s guess, but this neglected gem is a timely reminder of the opening steps on the road to Rumours.

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Buckingham Nicks pre tantrems and tiaras – gets reissued

Debut LP by the Mac’s golden couple – pre tantrems and tiaras – gets reissued. 




By James McNair. 
Mojo Magazine November, 2025

Buckingham Nicks 

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Buckingham Nicks 
RHINO CD/DL/LP 

“IT WAS just a one-off moment,” Stevie Nicks recalled of her and Lindsey Buckingham’s duet on The Mamas & The Papas’ California Dreamin’ at a San Francisco Christian youth party in 1966. Two years later she’d joined the Fritz Rabyne Memorial Band, Buckingham’s psychedelic rock act. The pair weren’t yet an item, but support slots with Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin seeded their romance with rock’s mythos. “I would stroll through San José State University with my guitar, thinking, Does everybody know who I am? Because I’m a rock star,” Nicks told this writer in 2013. “I felt it and really believed it.” 

Despite the best efforts of Fritz’s manager David Forrester, no record deal was forthcoming. It was Keith Olsen, already a producer for The Millennium and Joe Walsh’s pre- Eagles band The James Gang, who helped secure Buckingham and Nicks’s contract with Polydor – but only after he’d persuaded them to ditch the rest of Fritz and make some demos as a duo. Recorded sporadically through much of 1973 at Sound City, Los Angeles, Buckingham Nicks proved to be one hell of a debut. Given that Nicks was working hamburger joints and as Olsen’s cleaner to support herself and Buckingham while making it, Long Distance Winner, a brilliant Nicks song about “living with a valid inclusion. 

Though best known as their serendipitous conduit to tenure in Fleetwood Mac after Olsen played Frozen Love on a whim, it seems astonishing that Buckingham Nicks is only now gaining re-release after languishing online in bootleg form for decades. 

Quoted in David Fricke’s new sleevenotes and mindful, perhaps, that it was he and experience of ‘proper’ studio recording, Buckingham understates that Buckingham Nicks “stands up in a way you hope it would.” 

Buoyed by their precocious gifts and aided by such stalwarts as drummer Jim Keltner, Elvis’s TCB band bassist Jerry Scheff and sometime Everly Brothers session guitarist Waddy Wachtel, they clearly relished jumping in at the deep end. 

Throughout the record, there are audible seeds of the sublime AOR sound that Nicks and Buckingham-era Stephanie, a pretty instrumental love-gift Buckingham reportedly wrote for Nicks while laid-up with glandular fever, is one of several songs deploying technique he would later bring to Never Going Back Again, while Lola (My Love) has shades of The Chain (and a sexist lyric Buckingham would likely blush about today). 

Buckingham Nicks often juggles familiar, sometimes slightly competing interests. Buckingham seems torn between facilitating pretty, drivetime- friendly Nicks doozies such as Crying In The Night and more ‘musicianly’ indulgences such as his cover of US jazz pianist John Lewis’s nod to the king of gypsy jazz, Django. That said, some of these Nicks songs also pack more quirk than was later usual. Her vocal melody on Races Are Run has gorgeous, slightly unusual modula- tions, as does that on the aforemen- tioned Long Distance Winner, a fabulous thing with prominent, itch-scratching guiro. There, as elsewhere, Keith Olsen and engineer/ future Rumours overseer Richard Dashut’s rich, vivid sonics give a mighty leg-up. It’s also easy to hear why Frozen Love – the proggy, shape-shifting holy grail of Fleetwood Mac’s most combustible couple – so impressed Mick Fleetwood. 

Buckingham Nicks wouldn’t make the big splash they’d hoped for, but prior to its September 5, 1973 release, Nicks had one last hurdle to jump, namely the album’s nude cover-shot of herself and Lindsey, as conceived and photographed by Waddy Wachtel’s brother Jimmy. 

“Everybody will tell you I’m modest,” Nicks told this writer in 2013. “I could not have been more to jump off a speeding train.’ Meanwhile, Lindsey was like, ‘Come on. Don’t be a child – this is art.’ My dad didn’t like the photograph of course, and when he asked why I did it and I told him I was under pressure, he said, ‘Stevie, you always have a choice.’ That was a big lesson for me – a very useful one for my time in Fleetwood Mac.”



‘Buckingham Nicks’ is an engaging blueprint for the classics

 Music Review: ‘Buckingham Nicks’ is an engaging blueprint for the classics to come

By: Hillel Italie, The Associated Press

“Buckingham Nicks” by Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks
⭐⭐⭐ (3/5 stars)
  • On repeat: “Races Are Run”
  • Skip it: “Django”
  • For fans of: You know who you are.


NEW YORK (AP) — There are two ways to review “Buckingham Nicks,” the long-awaited digital reissue of the 1973, pre-Fleetwood Mac album by Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, their only recording project as a duo.

Imagine you had never heard of them, that they were an obscure 1970s act who made one album, broke up and left the business. You might think of “Buckingham Nicks” as a kind of period curiosity, a taste of vintage Los Angeles singer-songwriter pop, with its folkish stylings, well-crafted melodies and earnest sensibilities (“Do you always trust your first, initial feeling?/Special knowledge holds true, bears believing,” Nicks sings on “Crystal”). The scale is modest and nothing is likely to strike you as a lost classic, but you’ll probably take to at least a handful of the 10 songs — the strumming riffs on “Crying in the Night” and “Stephanie,” the catchy chorus of “Races Are Run,” the way Buckingham’s sensitive tenor is filled out by Nicks’ husky vibrato. You might end up wondering what happened to the two hippie-artists, who look out from the album cover naked, long-haired and unsmiling, as if the photographer had barged in without warning.

But if you’re in the great universe of Buckingham-Nicks obsessives, encyclopedic on their breakups and reunions and musical sparring matches, you’ll find (or rediscover) a trove of clues and portents in Friday’s release. The skillful acoustic picking that opens the instrumental “Stephanie” will remind you of Buckingham’s work on Fleetwood Mac’s “Never Going Back Again.” The opening gallop and heavy bass of “Don’t Let Me Down Again” looks ahead to “Second Hand News” and the slow buildup of “Lola My Lola” feels like a test run for “The Chain.”

Buckingham and Nicks were in their mid-20s during the album’s production and if they ever enjoyed a phase of easy, blissful love, they already seem past it. “Crystal,” the only song also to appear on the breakthrough “Fleetwood Mac” album of 1975, is a rare expression of devotion, or gratitude. Other tracks seem closer to the hard lessons of Nicks’ future chart-topper, “Dreams.” There’s the wary refrain of “Long Distance Winner” — “Yeah, you’re the winner/Long distance winner,” echoed on “Races Are Run” and its reminder: “Races are run, some people win/Some people always have to lose.” Buckingham’s “Don’t Let Me Down Again,” in which the singer fears his lover’s departure, feels like a prequel to the breakup narrative of “Go Your Own Way.”

The reissue adds clarity to the sound of “Buckingham Nicks” that you don’t get from the muddled, unauthorized downloads which turn up online. And the album has a solid cast of session musicians, including Elvis Presley veterans Ronnie Tutt on drums and Jerry Scheff on bass and LA fixture Waddy Wachtel on guitar. But the arrangements never quite anchor or amplify the songs the way drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie would after Fleetwood’s fateful invitation to Buckingham to join his band, and Buckingham’s fateful insistence that his girlfriend come along.

Give “Fleetwood Mac” a listen if you haven’t lately and the difference will grab you from the opening track, Buckingham’s “Monday Morning” — an instant leap into a future that Buckingham and Nicks had only begun to imagine.

Review Buckingham Nicks, takes us back to the beginning

THE ORIGIN STORY OF STEVIE AND LINDSEY


A long-awaited reissue of Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham's 1973 debut, Buckingham Nicks, takes us back to the beginning of rock & roll’s ultimate dysfunctional romance


By ROB SHEFFIELD

Rollingstone - September 17, 2025

⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5 stars)


When Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham released Buckingham Nicks in 1973, they were just a couple of nobodies. Two hippie kids lost in L.A., doing an unfashionable folk-rock flower-child record. Nobody bought it. Nobody cared. Some might have heard it as a promising debut, others as a flop. But it’s safe to say that nobody heard it and said, “Not only are these two of the planet’s greatest songwriters, this is an album they’ll keep arguing about for the next 50 years!”

But in that way, as in every other way, the world underestimated how much drama these two had in them. Buckingham Nicks has taken its rightful place in history as their origin story for the ultimate rock & roll dysfunctional romance. The couple recorded it before joining Fleetwood Mac — before the fame, before the shawls, before the drugs, before anyone knew how much exquisite torture they’d keep dragging into all our lives forever. It’s just the Ballad of Stevie and Lindsey, back in the early days, when they didn’t even need three other lunatics in the band to make a cosmic emotional mess.

After the couple joined Fleetwood Mac for classics like Rumours, Buckingham Nicks became a footnote in their story. It’s been a rare collector’s item for decades, a lost gem never released on CD. Most of their fans never even heard it. But it’s finally back in this long-awaited reissue. No hits, no bonus tracks — just a charming little American beauty of a record. You can hear these two lovebirds learn their craft, alone in the tall grass, doing their stuff, with nobody to impress except each other.

For years, it seemed crazy to hope this Buckingham Nicks reissue would ever happen. They’ve spent years promising it, un-promising it, denying it, battling over it in public. But the exes’ long-running love/hate story finally exploded in 2019, when the band kicked out Lindsey. (What other band could manage to break up onstage in the middle of accepting a MusiCares award as humanitarians of the year? Only these guys.) It looked final, especially after the tragic death of Christine McVie.

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Buckingham Nicks finally restored to its rightful place in the Mac story


Buckingham Nicks
Buckingham Nicks RHINO

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (8/10 stars)

Pat Carty (Classic Rock Magazine)


The Mac in all but name. In retrospect it seems preposterous that this album flopped in 1973, but then fate had other plans for Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks. Recorded while Nicks was still working day jobs to support them both, it looked like disappearing altogether, until Mick Fleetwood, shopping around for recording studios, heard glorious album closer Frozen Love – and his future opening up before him – at Sound City in Van Nuys. He swiftly brought the couple into Fleetwood Mac, and all worries were soon over.

Long deleted and widely bootlegged, Buckingham Nicks is finally restored to its rightful place in the Mac story, and it’s plain to see why this was a no-brainer for Fleetwood. The sound that would soon seduce millions was already here. There’s Buckingham’s unique Flamenco-tinged guitar sound, evident throughout, for a start, as well as Nicks’ already assured songwriting. The Mac would re-record her Crystal (and should have had a go at sure-fire hit Crying In The Night) but the version here is the stronger one, with those now familiar voices melding to perfection.

Pretty much everything here could have slotted onto the more famous records that followed – Buckingham’s guitar solo emerging out of Nicks’ Long Distance Winner, his country/blues picking on Lola (My Love) – but it’s Frozen Love that’s the real prize. A distant precursor to Mac’s The Chain, it has the voices dancing around each other, and Buckingham’s acoustic break gives way to an orchestral swell and stinging electrics.

A superb album rescued from the dustbin of history at last.


Buckingham Nicks is a nifty collection of floral folk cuts and quicksilver instrumentals


BUCKINGHAM NICKS
Buckingham Nicks (reissue, 1973) - RHINO
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (7/10 stars)

Fabled sketchbook for Fleetwood Mac’s imperial phase, reissued after so many lost decades.

By Piers Martin (Uncut Magazine)

Take it with a pinch of salt, but it’s a tough time to be a Fleetwood Mac fan. Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks are still at loggerheads after the guitarist was turfed out of the band in 2018 – Nicks declared she was “no longer willing to work with him”; he suffered a heart attack soon after being fired – and the window has all but shut on a Fleetwood Mac classic lineup reunion now that each member is pushing 80 and Christine McVie has gone. Holograms could be the answer.

But before the credits roll on this most enduring rock’n’roll saga, a key chapter in the band’s origin story from a more harmonious time 52 years ago is finally being reissued. Buckingham Nicks, the mythologised 1973 folk-rock debut by Buckingham Nicks, as Lindsey and Stevie were known back then, has been cleaned up and remastered from the original tapes and is in print for the first time since 1982, and on streaming services and CD for the first time (there’s also a limited vinyl edition with two reissued 7” singles). In some ways, this offers a sense of closure: let’s put it out properly before it’s too late.

Why such a pivotal record in Fleetwood Mac’s history has been ignored for so long does lead you to question the pair’s affection for the material. Surely any scheduling or legal issues preventing the release could have been resolved at any point over the past 40 years if they’d wanted it out, especially given the band’s multi-generational appeal this century. Indeed, it’s such fandom that has kept Buckingham Nicks alive all this time, when it pretty much sank without trace upon release and fared little better when reissued in 1977 and ’81 in attempts to capitalise on the Mac’s global domination.

The trouble is, once you’ve heard Fleetwood Mac or Rumours, Buckingham Nicks feels a little threadbare, like sketches for the main event – and that’s fine, because before fate or destiny intervened in the form of Mick Fleetwood in November 1974, this album captured the duo at their best. Taken on its own, Buckingham Nicks is a nifty collection of floral folk cuts and quicksilver instrumentals with one foot in Laurel Canyon, the other in Nashville, that show the duo’s songwriting promise. Aged 25, Stevie’s all-seeing mysticism is taking shape on “Crystal” and “Long Distance Winner”; her partner, a year younger, volleys between traditional composition (“Stephanie”, “Don’t Let Me Down Again”), bluesy rockabilly (“Without A Leg To Stand On”) and finger-picked flamboyance (“Frozen Love”). They’d already written “Landslide”, “Monday Morning” and “Rhiannon” before they formally joined Fleetwood Mac in January 1975, and would rework “Crystal” from this album for July’s Fleetwood Mac.

The pair had met as high-school students in the Bay Area in the late 1960s. Buckingham, a guitarist since childhood, played bass in a psychedelic outfit called Fritz, and soon enough Nicks became their vocalist. Fritz shared bills with the likes of Janis Joplin, the Steve Miller Band and even a festival show with The Jimi Hendrix Experience, and were attracting industry attention. Keith Olsen, who’d recently set up Sound City studios in Los Angeles, saw Fritz in San Francisco and invited them to LA for a showcase. This spelled disaster for Fritz, because Olsen saw the potential of Buckingham and Nicks as a duo and proposed they record with him.

At the time, the couple had taken over a room in Buckingham’s father’s coffee roasting plant in the Bay Area, where they were figuring themselves out musically and romantically. They worked on songs and recorded four-track demos for a year before Nicks suggested they move to LA. There, in 1972, they stayed rent-free at Olsen’s house in Coldwater Canyon; he believed in them to the extent that he effectively supported them for a year, letting them use Sound City where he could produce them and shop them to labels. Still, they needed money, so Nicks worked three jobs – cleaning Olsen’s house, waitressing and hostessing – while Buckingham toked at home and zoned in on the music.

Olsen assembled classy players for the sessions: Waddy Wachtel, later a fixture in Nicks’ band, plays slide guitar on the album’s worst song, “Lola (My Love)”, a hokey Buckingham stomp; and Elvis’ rhythm section, drummer Ron Tutt and bassist Jerry Scheff, anchor Buckingham’s ecstatic riffing on “Don’t Let Me Down Again”. Throughout, you hear songs before their Mac upgrades: “Stephanie”, Buckingham’s sprightly ballad for Nicks, would muscle up into “Never Going Back Again”; “Without A Leg To Stand On” is the basis for “What Makes You Think You’re The One”. The seven-minute “Frozen Love” – the album’s sole co-write – pits duelling vocals and spectral folk against a looser second section and would be revamped as “The Chain”.

Olsen played “Frozen Love” and other Buckingham Nicks songs to Mick Fleetwood when he came by Sound City to suss out studios for the next Mac record, impressing the drummer not just with the room’s audio spec, but also the track’s spot-on production and freewheeling arrangement. When Bob Welch quit Fleetwood Mac a month later, in December ’74, Fleetwood needed a new guitarist and recalled Buckingham’s playing on “Frozen Love”. Having been dropped by Polydor after Buckingham Nicks’ poor sales, the guitarist agreed to join Fleetwood Mac on condition that Nicks came with him. Now, at least, we can hear what Fleetwood saw in Buckingham and Nicks all those years ago, and appreciate the wild ride they’ve taken us on.


Sleeve Notes:
Crying In The Night; Stephanie; Without A Leg To Stand On; Crystal; Long Distance Winner; Don’t Let Me Down Again; Django; Races Are Run; Lola (My Love); Frozen Love.

7” Singles:
Crying In The Night (Single Version); Stephanie (Single Version); Don’t Let Me Down Again (Single Version); Races Are Run (Single Version).