WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1248 - Lindsey Buckingham

Episode Date: July 29, 2021

Lindsey Buckingham wasn't going to let anything - from the pandemic to major heart surgery - stand in the way of finishing his new self-titled solo album. But it was in part his work on the album and ...the planning of a live tour that led to Lindsey being ousted from Fleetwood Mac after nearly 45 years. Lindsey and Marc talk about being part of the band's most successful lineup, his evolving relationships with his bandmates, and the creative goals he continues to work toward in his solo career.  Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:44 per month. Visit Zensurance today to get a free quote. Zensurance, mind your business. All right, let's do this. How are you? What the fuckers? What the fuck buddies? What the fuck nicks? What's happening? I'm Mark Mar is my show my podcast wtf welcome to it if you're new here is anyone new here if you could just stand up please and you want to say your name and where you're from welcome nice great thanks for coming thanks for being here we appreciate it always welcome always welcome in your house or in your car or at the gym or walking your doggies, wherever you are. Are you at the beach? Are you looking out at the ocean right now, wistfully wondering what's going to happen in the future of this planet? Thinking like, wow, there's so much water. Why can't we live in it? Wow, there's so much beautiful horizon here. Why can't we find peace and make the world a better place environmentally and as a species? Why? Look at this beautiful water, this big ocean that has no judgment, that has no point of view other than it knows in its heart, in the soul, and the throbbing core of the planet that it is being destroyed and dumped in and full
Starting point is 00:02:09 of garbage because of us. So when you're looking at that ocean, make sure you know that it's looking back at you saying, you fuck, you're part of it. Yeah, I don't care how you feel all good. You feel all mushy inside. You feel like maybe there's hope or you're reflecting on your life. You ruined it. You did. You did. You and your holding hands with your loved one there on the beach. You fucked it up. You running with your kids at the edge of me. You fucked it all up. And now your kids are going to have to live in it. You fucking idiots. You and your boat. You fucked it. You pulling more fish than you should out of me. Go fuck yourself. Is it worth it? Is it worth it? How many of those oysters are going to turn into garbage? How much of that fish isn't going to get eaten? You think it's just disposable because we make more in this ocean?
Starting point is 00:02:56 Good luck with it. Pretty soon, there's just going to be garbage, mutated fucking jellyfish in this fucking inside of me. Yeah. What are are you gonna do now oh look at the ocean isn't it pretty the ocean is so pretty isn't it makes me feel warm inside go fuck yourself said the great man of the sea said Neptune said the deep sea monsters go fuck yourself how's it going I um I have Lindsay Buckingham on the show today. Lindsey Buckingham from Fleetwood Mac. Man, do you realize the impact he's had on all of our lives? Do you? Do you think about it? Maybe not everybody. I don't know who really. And maybe some of you will think like, what's
Starting point is 00:03:39 Maragon Soft? No, no. I just, I have some recollections perhaps I'll share with you. I haven't decided yet. So Lindsey Buckingham is an amazing guitar player, an amazing singer, and an amazing songwriter. And I'm not blowing smoke. That's a reality. That is quantitative, a quantitative reality. It's been decided by the world, by the universe, by the ocean. Now what I didn't realize, like a few years ago, he put out a solo record with a song, I think it was called Shut Us Down. And it just it was part of the rotation in my my post separation divorce mix. It's a very heavy hearted song, but it made me feel better. It was comforting, but not hopeful. But I loved it.
Starting point is 00:04:21 It was comforting, but not hopeful. But I loved it. Like, as he's gotten older, he's allowed himself to be expressive with the voice he has at the age he's at. And it's kind of amazing. But going back, like, you think of Rumors. You think of that fucking record. But, like, what do you associate with Rumors? Like, I went back and listened to the solo Buckingham Knicks record, which I happen to have.
Starting point is 00:04:44 It's not that easy to find. And I was able to track his tone because he was the de facto leader of that band. I know it's Mick Fleetwood's band, but that band for its entire existence has sort of defaulted to the guitar player's personality
Starting point is 00:05:01 and style. Now, I don't know anything about the Bob Welch years. For some reason, I just don't do it. But Peter Green, the Blues years, it changed my life. And then if you look at Lindsay's time, which was basically the self-titled Fleetwood Mac 1975 album, Rumors and Tusk, because that's sort of what I stuck with with Lindsay. Now, do you realize how many fucking hits are on that self-titled one?
Starting point is 00:05:28 The Fleetwood Mac 1975? Because I don't know where to put these, but when you start to research these things, you're like, Jesus, man. That record, 1975. So how old are you? What was I, 12? It's got Monday morning, you sure look fine in Rihanna. And over my head, over my head, and it's sure.
Starting point is 00:05:50 I know all those songs. Say you love me and a landslide took that play. And a world turning. That's crazy, right? I mean, they're kind of pounded into your head. They're in the wiring. They're all great songs. Yeah, and Lindsay had something to do with a lot of them. Maybe most of them. I could actually tell you exactly which ones, but we don't need to do that. And then you
Starting point is 00:06:13 move up to Rumors, 1977. So at that point, I'm 14. How old are you? Right? You know those songs, right? Of course you do. Don't stop thinking about tomorrow. Go your own way. Go your own way. Never break the chain. Never break the chain. Never break the chain. Oh, daddy. Go does a woman. Huge records. Mega records. huge records mega records lindsey was all about you know the collaboration but lindsey was like at the heart of a lot of that christy mcvee and stevie you know and then the rhythm section which is the namesake of the band but for me rumors means brush ranch brush ranch was a camp I went to in the Pecos in New Mexico. Okay. I remember that there was a dance at Brush Ranch and I just had this massive crush on this girl named Karen McKibben.
Starting point is 00:07:15 And, you know, I just remember her singing along with secondhand news and I thought it was so heartbreaking and sweet. And I just, I just had the biggest crush on her, but I didn't really know what to do. I don't know what to do. And then she ended up hanging out with Andy Stone. When I was younger, I could never really seal the deal. I just fell into myself and or made a mess. You know how that goes. But I do remember that dance at Brush Ranch in 1977, you know, dancing to Secondhand News, which is not, it's a hard song to dance to, but I just remember looking, watching, dancing with Karen McKibben, and she was singing along to it. And the song moved me, but there was something about her singing it that kind of
Starting point is 00:08:04 never left my memory. Like there was a depth to it. It added depth to her and it made me have some sort of strange empathy and want to be there for that person. But again, it was not our destiny. I don't know what happened to her. It's so long ago, 1977. How long ago was that?
Starting point is 00:08:23 Oh my God. So it was great to sit down with Lindsey. He was very accessible and he's a great guitar player, a great songwriter and a good guy, great singer. Anyways, his new album, Lindsey Buckingham, self-titled, comes out on September 17th. He's going on tour to support the album. And this is me talking to the one and only Lindsey Buckingham. Hi, it's Terry O'Reilly, host of Under the Influence. Recently, we created an episode on cannabis marketing. With cannabis legalization, it's a brand new challenging marketing category. And I want to let you know we've produced a special bonus podcast episode where I talk to an actual cannabis producer. I wanted to know how a producer becomes licensed,
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Starting point is 00:10:03 To show your true heart is to risk your life. When I die here, you'll never leave Japan alive. FX's Shogun, a new original series, streaming February 27th exclusively on Disney+. 18 plus subscription required. T's and C's apply. do you ever use those in the studio these things i don't actually i you know i i'm i sort of i because you know i basically do everything myself in the studio on the solo album right so i'm like a one mic guy you only need unless you're unless you're gonna sometimes i've tracked down there with the drummer but you know you don't but right you don't do the drums
Starting point is 00:10:50 well i do though i mean like on the new album i it was like just playing it off a keyboard oh yeah yeah and that doesn't you don't have any problem with uh the the idea of that not being drums? No, not really. Not as a philosophy. But, you know, it does present certain problems. If you're, I had to sort of talk myself down. I mean, there's like one song in particular that's very sort of rock and roll and it doesn't have a drum feel in there
Starting point is 00:11:23 because I just thought. Right. And I had to, you had to rationalize that away and say, well, you know, Empire of the Sun never does drum fills. So it was sort of like that. You just have to frame it correctly so you can move on. So I was listening, I was trying to catch up, or not catch up, just re-listen to it. I think we could probably talk half an hour about the packaging of the Tusk record. Okay, whatever I can remember.
Starting point is 00:11:51 No, I mean, it's just like there's sleeves within sleeves. I know. There's a lot of artwork. Everything from rumors on, all the records seem like there's drama, some sort of classical ballet poses and theater things going on. Well, there always was the theater, especially with Stevie, you know. Yeah. And I think she brought a little of that, you know, in and it influenced Christine's very slightly and perhaps even Mick.
Starting point is 00:12:20 Yeah. Yeah. But but there's there's no getting around the fact that once we had that ridiculous success with with rumors where the the, you know, the success at some point detached from the music and became about the success. Yeah, I was wondering, like, also, I kind of want to build up to this, but it literally it me, because I'm a Fleetwood Mac fan of the Peter Green years. Oh, as am I. Sure. I don't know anything about the Welch years. Zero. I know there's like four or five albums, and for some reason I put them on, I just can't listen to them. I can listen to Kiln House before I can listen to Bob Welch. Yeah, so I had Kiln House and I had Then Play on. And I'm with you on the stuff that came after that because what happened was, you know, Danny Kerwin started to recede into the background.
Starting point is 00:13:14 Right. And Bob Welch came in and Christine had come in on Kiln House, which was fine. Yeah. But then they kept, you know, I mean, I give Mick a ton of credit for doing whatever he had to do to keep the band going. And I also give Mo Austin a lot of credit for keeping them on the label when they probably were not making Warners a whole lot of money. I mean, they didn't, I don't think they, did they have one hit with Welch? I, well, I don't know. It was maybe Hypnotized.
Starting point is 00:13:41 I'm not really sure. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. But minimal. Right. And beyond that, each album was a different lineup and so there was they were all non-sequiturs yeah and so there was no way to get sort of a flow like who who are these people and it's kind of tricky when your band is really a rhythm section exactly i mean ultimately because because that's one of the things i noticed was that
Starting point is 00:14:03 you know rhythm section is is still just a rhythm section so like whoever is going to be the front man it's on some level it's going to be their band that that is correct and um there were a lot of band leaders in and yet ironically behind the scenes and to some degree, in terms of the essence and the soul of the intent of the band, Mick was always the constant. Well, he was the backbone, literally, of the music. And without him, they wouldn't have stayed together. But focused, but also kind of wildly intuitive enough to, you know, hear, you know, me play guitar on one of the Buckingham Knicks tracks. And based only on that, ask me to join Fleetwood Mac. I have that record, which is not easy to find.
Starting point is 00:14:58 It's kind of a rare record. Yes, it is. Yeah, but I have it. We've talked about re-releasing it, but politics seem to enter into it. What do you mean? What would it take? I mean, they do it for Record Store Day or something. It would just take Stevie and me being in the same mood at the same time. Now, going back, I mean, because you're a style.
Starting point is 00:15:18 I like whatever's happening now. Whenever you decided, like there was a couple of solo albums where you were doing dance music, doing something of the time production-wise. But now it's gotten almost eerie in how you capture your vocals. Right. You know, which is, you know, it gives it sort of a weight where to the point where that, you know, almost shut me down, shut us down. Shut us down, yeah. Shut us down, that song. Like I, you know, when I divorced my second wife,
Starting point is 00:15:46 I couldn't fucking stop listening to that song. And I was like, oh, my God, is this good or bad for me? You know, these feelings that I was getting from it. Right, yeah. But I always have this problem, and I think we talked about it at Largo, where I assume that when I listen to someone, they're singing and they're songwriting, I'm like, he's going through the same thing.
Starting point is 00:16:03 It must be a difficult time for Lindsay. I don't know what's happening, but I appreciate it. Well, you know, I think in a lot of ways, my songwriting and my approach to record making changed dramatically once I got married and had children, because it was a whole new landscape to draw from and a whole new landscape to draw from. Yeah. And a whole new set of challenges in terms of a relationship that, you know, obviously marriage presents a great number of sort of quirks and compromises. Post-divorce searching for a diplomatic word to describe. Yes. word to describe yes so you know um and there there had also been a a long period of time between the solo album i had done in 92 out of the cradle right and then you know i got drawn back into fleetwood mac because i made out of the cradle while I had decided to leave the band for reasons of
Starting point is 00:17:05 survival yeah because the band was just such a crazy circus of drugs and and uh lack of focus at that time so that was like okay so after Tusk you're like I you know I'm not gonna live well you know no it was it was not after Tusk and it was it was after Tango in the Night in 1987. And I did produce the Tango in the Night album, and I think we prevailed in making a great album despite the circumstances. The circumstances being chaos and drugs. Chaos, yeah, and not seeing certain members more than maybe a few weeks out of the year it took to do.
Starting point is 00:17:47 Mick living in a trailer in my front yard. Why was he doing that? Well, because he couldn't drive home at night, you know. So you just put it on the budget? You just put a trailer? Yeah, the budget was quite forgiving back then, you know. So, you know, when it came time to contemplate that scenario and that those challenges on the road which is usually about times 10 what what goes on in the studio i just
Starting point is 00:18:13 said to myself i gotta take a break here and we and you would be you were married already no i was not married no no no the marriage uh didn't until like 2000. Did you like sober up totally or? I didn't, you know, stop drinking until, you know, about the time I. The joke here is. Well, I was going to say. Wait, what time is it? Yeah, right. No, no, no. It was about the time my first child was born. Oh, yeah. And I just,
Starting point is 00:18:50 you know, wanted to be a consistent presence and wanted to, I just didn't need it anymore. I mean, thank God I'd gotten all of that out of my system and I just stopped one day. How old are your kids now? My oldest, and I started late, right? So my oldest is 23, my son, and I have two daughters who are 21 and 17. Oh, wow. So they're through it. They're through the tunnel. They are indeed. And boy, does it go fast, right? Does it? I don't know. I don't have any. It's crazy because you think of them as these little creatures that have unconditional love, and then one day they go in their room and close the door. They don't like you anymore for a couple of years. Or maybe ever.
Starting point is 00:19:33 You never know, depending on the breaks. How was Europe? Where were you brought up? I was brought up in Northern California. That's beautiful. Atherton. Oh, that's beautiful. Atherton. Oh, that's nice. Yeah. I mean, having Palo Alto and Stanford there and all the, not just the intellectual bent that Stanford brought to the whole area, but also the research that they were doing there. And this obviously predates the Silicon Valley.
Starting point is 00:19:59 Was your father in that kind of world? No, no, no. He was in the coffee business. The coffee business? Yes. Early on? Early, no. He was in the coffee business. The coffee business? Yes. Early on? Early adapter? How was he in the coffee business?
Starting point is 00:20:08 Well, he had a label that had been started by my mom's grandfather. A label? A coffee label. So like something you buy in the store. Yes, a commercial label so like something you buy in the store yes a commercial label and it's coffee it came up at the same time as hills brothers and folgers and all those kind of commercial brands that still exist what's the name of the brand the brand is alta coffee but and it it it did quite well through maybe the early 60s and then it then it began to sort of Maybe the early 60s, and then it began to sort of take a bit of a nosedive as a company,
Starting point is 00:20:51 you know, and so at some point, you know, it just shut down altogether. Did he retire? Like, did he have, did he? Well, he passed away, actually. Oh, okay. He was still working at the coffee company. Oh, that's true. Like, how young were you? How old was he?
Starting point is 00:21:01 He was not old. He was like 56. That's scary. I know. How old were you? What was not old. He was like 56. That's scary. I know. How old were you? What was I? 21. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:10 Wow. So was it a heart attack kind of situation? Yes. Yeah. So do you get checked up? You good? I do. I mean, one of the things that has happened in the last few years is I ended up going
Starting point is 00:21:22 in and having a bypass myself, which was a lifesaver. It was a preemptive bypass. Yes. Good for you. And they caught it, huh? Well, I mean, you know, you never know. But yeah, I mean, just went in for a checkup. Do you have chest symptoms? Well, I had some chest symptoms and I went in and they, you know, next thing I remember, my wife going, hey, you just had a bypass. Really? Yes. Wow. So that was fun. Just one?
Starting point is 00:21:50 No, like a triple, I think. Wow. Oh, my God. But it runs in the family. But I also have a brother who passed away much younger, even 44. From a heart attack? From a heart attack. Oh, my God. But I have an older brother who is like 78 who is great.
Starting point is 00:22:04 Nothing? No heart problems? It's a roll of the dice. That's for sure. But I have an older brother who is like 78 who is great. Nothing? No heart problems? It's a roll of the dice. That's for sure. So your old man's in the coffee business. You've got these two brothers. You're in Palo Alto. Now, that must be around the time that there was a folk scene there.
Starting point is 00:22:16 What was going on musically for you when you were coming up there? Well, I'm in high school. And, of course, you've got to sort of predate that time you know my whole interest in music was was predicated on my older brother bringing home elvis presley records oh that's that's always the the the portal it is and if you're if you're old enough to have you know because the music that existed in that you called popular music or the music that was in our household was music our parents listened to. Sure. So you graduated high school when?
Starting point is 00:22:53 1967. Oh, wow. So that was like right before everything turned upside down. But you remember when you were a kid, your brother bringing home like the first few Elvis records? Well, he was a huge fan, and he bought everything from all the great early rock and roll, Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee Lewis and Johnny Cash, everything. Yeah. And I was the beneficiary of that because I suddenly wanted to teach myself to play guitar.
Starting point is 00:23:19 You taught yourself? I did. And so by the time I got to high school, and I had no ambition to be uh a rock and roll when did you start teaching yourself guitar oh about age six so i just got a chord book oh that was how it went yeah yeah i learned songs you know but you never took a lesson of any kind never in my life that's crazy and then you, it's interesting to me because you're such a, you have totally your own style. You know, there's no denying, if you hear Lindsey Buckingham playing on a song and you hear the song and you're like, who is that? That's Lindsey Buckingham. Of course it is. No one plays like you. And I wonder if that's because you had to put it together on your own. It's probably because there was no sense of right or wrong, you know?
Starting point is 00:24:07 Right, right. And some of that is also the things that were profoundly influential. You know, you started off with rock and roll, and then when the first wave of rock and roll kind of started to— Who was the big influence guitar-wise when you were a kid? Well, I mean— Was it Chuck? No, more like a Scotty Moore who used a pick and his fingers.
Starting point is 00:24:27 Sure, Elvis' guy, right? Or Chet Atkins who played on so many great studio sessions. Wow, yeah. And then when that started to die down, looking for something fresh, that's when folk music took over for me. And it was very mainstream initially. At that time? It was like the kingston trio and
Starting point is 00:24:46 like you know later high school for you um no more like um junior high eighth grade you know and uh like 1962 or three or something like that and um so you know that that's where the all the finger-picking style that is so recognizable. You learned that yourself? Well, yeah, and so many of the... Nobody said, come here, Lindsay, let me show you this. No, no, no, no. It was just so prevalent in the folk music. And so it was just something,
Starting point is 00:25:17 and I learned to play like five-string banjo and all of that. And then, of course, the Beatles hit and blew everybody's mind and redefined rock and roll and redefined the world in so many ways. It's so weird because when I listen to, even I think maybe on the most recent record, but certainly in the last few solo records, there's always a few tunes on there that could categorically be called folk music. And there is one in particular that's a cover of an old song by the Pozo Seco singers called Time, which was from, I'm guessing, 1965, maybe? Oh, wow, yeah. Is that on the new one? It is. It's on the new one.
Starting point is 00:25:51 So, you know, all of that existed for me. I don't know if culturally in Palo Alto and in the Bay Area, folk was so prevalent, but what was prevalent was obviously what started happening in san francisco after that sure and so you know the summer of love and and the hippies and and and you were in high school in the film or just out of high school yes well and i was never in a band i never wanted to be but did you go hang out not so much you know i was i had my my craft which i sort of kept to myself i mean people knew i played but it wasn't something that i defined myself so you didn't go You know, I had my craft, which I sort of kept to myself.
Starting point is 00:26:25 I mean, people knew I played, but it wasn't something that I defined myself as. So you didn't go over the bridge and go to the park and do the thing? No, I hadn't deprogrammed, you know, because I think there were expectations probably for me to do something a little more on the straight and narrow. Was your mom a professional person? She was not. And they were always very supportive. I ended up, I found myself in a band because a drummer friend of mine had asked me to play guitar just for a high school assembly our senior year. And that turned into something that we after the summer when i was at junior college the next fall that we decided we wanted to keep going and so what were the songs what were you
Starting point is 00:27:12 playing well i i don't know uh we had a guy um who played keyboard who wrote a lot of the material you're doing originals we were doing originals And we were doing, we did an original at the assembly. Yeah, yeah. Was it like psychedelic stuff? It was kind of more Yardbirds kind of thing. Oh, yeah, sure. Yeah, yeah. But pretty good, his early stuff especially.
Starting point is 00:27:38 And then it did get more psychedelic and maybe we sort of lost the focus of what we were doing. Is the guy still a musician? Well, he's still around. His name's Javier Pacheco. Yeah. And Stevie was in that band. We needed a singer. In high school?
Starting point is 00:27:55 Freshman year of college, yes. That's when you met her? I actually did meet her in high school. She came to my high school when she was a senior. She transferred in because her dad moved around all the time he was a very ambitious businessman who worked for lucky lager and then later for dial soap as an executive and that required him to keep relocating and so uh stevie showed up she's a year older. So I was a junior. She was a senior.
Starting point is 00:28:25 But we definitely connected even back then. Oh, wow. I didn't know it went back that far. Yeah. And then she went off to San Mateo Junior College. And I stayed in high school. And then I saw her again the next year. And we were looking for a singer.
Starting point is 00:28:40 And someone said, what about Stevie? Because she was already known to be a good singer. Because she had sung where? You know, Young Life meetings, things like that. Assemblies, maybe. I can't even imagine. There's a sweetness to the, because I don't know this story, obviously. I just know the story starting at Sound City.
Starting point is 00:29:04 Right. And then the rest of it just seems like a struggle. Obviously, I just know the story starting at Sound City, you know, or, you know, or what? And then the rest of it just seems like a struggle. Well, you know, when I look back on all of those early days now. In high school or before? Well, no, no. From the time that we formed a band and started to play. By the way, my mom and dad were so supportive of that band,
Starting point is 00:29:27 even though they didn't want me to be a professional musician. What was the name of the band? Fritz. Did you lay down any tracks? We did at one point later on, and with the intent of perhaps shopping them to get a deal, but we were never successful. Yeah. It was like, you know.
Starting point is 00:29:45 So when you look back. Well, when I look back on the, let's say, four years that we were together as a band, because we all were in college. Fritz. And we all decided to drop out of college at pretty much, I think actually Stevie stayed at San Jose State, but the rest of us dropped out. And we were working, you know, every weekend, two shows a weekend. And we had a guy named David Forrest, who was our manager, who was very effective at keeping things going and keeping us above water and was not effective at getting Fritz a deal,
Starting point is 00:30:29 and Fritz probably was not worthy of a deal necessarily. But through that, we did go down and expose ourselves to some record people. In L.A.? In L.A. Now, were you and Stevie in a relationship at this point? No, no. Only after... You were just pals?
Starting point is 00:30:52 Yes. Huh. Only after Fritz broke up. And one of the reasons that we became a couple was because when we did go to L.A. as Fritz, there was not a lot of interest in the band, but there was interest in Stevie and me. Someone saw that there was something going on with these two here.
Starting point is 00:31:13 Like a chemistry? A chemistry, or maybe they just sensed that they heard us singing together, and who knows. But that drove us to sort of rethink our self-identity as a duet and then we went back up to northern california and and i we i worked on so and i had never written songs before but i said i guess i got to start writing songs so i tried to figure out how to write songs and stevie was already a pretty great writer. So I worked on, I had gotten, with a little bit of money I had inherited, an old Ampex 4-track, AG440 4-track.
Starting point is 00:31:53 And I took it up to my dad's coffee plant, and at night I would drive up to Daly City, and I would work doing basically what I still do, which is doing the Les Paul tracks the less paul thing where you play everything and you figure out what how to make it sound like a record you have a drum kid up there no oh but you know we we basically got a group of songs and then did the same process with david forrest in la and the manager yes and we did get a deal, you know, eventually. For Buckingham Knicks. Yes. And so I guess what I'm trying to say is when I look back on all of that leading up to,
Starting point is 00:32:38 even the whole Buckingham Knicks time, which on one level was a disappointment because we did this album and it came out and nothing much happened and the record company and our managers sort of lost interest in us. Yeah. and it came out and nothing much happened and the record company and our managers sort of lost interest in us. Yeah. It still led to Mick hearing me. The fact is, like, I listened to that record yesterday and, you know, there are ways of phrasing and ways, you know, both musically and lyrically
Starting point is 00:32:59 and styles that, you know, that stayed with you throughout. Of course. I mean, on some level, you know, your time in Fleetwood Mac was a continuation of a vision that you had you throughout. Of course. I mean, on some level, your time in Fleetwood Mac was a continuation of a vision that you had established. Yes, we brought much of what we were at that point, and that was kind of written in stone into Fleetwood Mac. It's crazy to me.
Starting point is 00:33:16 And changed Fleetwood Mac forever. Yeah, so this record, what was, now looking back on it, because I've talked to musicians about this stuff before. Now, what did you see as a single on that record? Well, that was a problem because there was not an obvious single. And that's what I was trying to figure out. Like, what what went wrong with this? Was it a promotional problem or there was nothing that had a hook clear enough to call it single you know what was ironic
Starting point is 00:33:45 about that was that we started playing some dates with opening for other people poco is one group i remember in the south mainly in florida and in alabama and regional places and suddenly there was we were starting to get airplay on the radio with a song of mine called Don't Let Me Down Again. Yeah. That happened. That falls into that realm of soft rock, right? It does. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:09 Well, it's actually a little harder. Which one is it? It's got a riff. It goes... Oh, the blues number almost. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:18 Yeah. Right. It's kind of a country thing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:20 Yeah. Okay. I always thought because it got a lot of play in Florida, that maybe- Got a little Southern Rock hook. Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, maybe even Eric Clapton thought of that for Motherless Children a little bit. Oh, his version of that.
Starting point is 00:34:34 Because they're sort of similar, you know? Yeah, yeah. The point is that it made it sort of a tough decision to join Fleetwood Mac, because we had this sort of sense that maybe something was actually going to happen. And maybe it would have. We had to make an adult decision if that was something that was even. So that record comes out in like 73, right? That sounds right, yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:56 So like I can't even, it's really hard for me to think back. Like the early 70s, it was still pretty heavy rock, right? Mostly around? Yeah. And how were things changing? I mean, in terms of your decision to take up Mick on this thing. And at this point, you and Stevie are a couple? Yes, we are.
Starting point is 00:35:20 But we are having problems. Immediately. I mean, we had had problems even before I met Mick. Yeah. We'd been together quite a long time. It seemed fairly effortless, and it didn't seem that difficult. It seemed like things were sort of leading up to this other thing in a way. When I look back on it, it feels sort of like, you know, we didn't, we couldn't see it. It was right in front of our face, but, but.
Starting point is 00:35:48 Organic? Organic and, and not difficult because we got down to LA as a duet and we did get a deal. We did make an album and yes, we were in the throes of trying to figure out what to do in, you know, in a sort of post-release environment, but then Mick shows up. But that record, I mean, you had a lot of the L.A. studio crew around on that record, right?
Starting point is 00:36:16 Waddy played guitar. Waddy. Keltner on drums. Keltner played a lot of drums. Ronnie Tutt played some drums. Jerry Schiff. So that was all through the label no those were people that we gravitated to um and i think keith olsen who you know co-produced that that album and and again without keith we wouldn't be here because keith was the one
Starting point is 00:36:41 who said what why don't you you you know, Stevie and I figured, well, you know, if we really want to get serious about this, we got to move from, you know, the Bay Area and be in LA. And Keith was like a big guy, big producer. Well, he was a pretty successful producer. But more than that, he was just a really generous guy. And we didn't know him that well, but he was entrepreneurial, and he was also very human about being entrepreneurial. And he said, come down, you can live at my house for a while.
Starting point is 00:37:14 And we did. We were there for months. So he knew all these guys. And he knew Waddy. He introduced me to Waddy, and I think we sort of threw other names out. Did he have that hair then, Waddy? Oh yeah. He's never had anything else that I've seen. I'm sure when he was in 8th grade. What makes him such an adaptable guitar player?
Starting point is 00:37:39 When you play with Waddy, can you define, can you feel what his style is? Well, I think he's just someone who is, like, superbly appreciative of what people do and the nuance of what they do. In fact, you know, I would say Waddy more than anyone, because we used to hang out almost every day back before Fleetwood Mac. And he was the guy who turned me on to late Beach Boys and turned me on. He was the guy who basically taught me how to listen in that way. The new big brother. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:21 You know, to take it apart. And, of course, I was a very intent listener to Elvis. Sure. In my own way. But not so much, let's, you know, let's look at the architecture here. Wow. You know, that kind of stuff. He was superb at being able to appreciate that.
Starting point is 00:38:38 And I think it just showed in his playing, you know. Sure. And he hipped you to a lot of uh different stuff he did and you know together we you know because we had similar tastes and similar reference points uh-huh you know he was a couple of years older so you know he just and from new york you know what was some of this stuff do you remember that stuff that kind of changed your way of seeing well i mean hearing things um because like sometimes i listen to your rhythms and I don't know where they come from. Well, I think they come from, again, a lack of having been taught what's correct.
Starting point is 00:39:14 But some of it seems kind of primal in a way. And some of it seems kind of almost pre-blues based, that there's a momentum to it. Right. Did you listen to any of those sort of like those earlier blues dudes? I did not. I would say blues, generally speaking, was not something that hit home for me in a way. I mean, I— You've done some blues numbers.
Starting point is 00:39:43 I have. Yeah. And, you know— You have to and you know um she said it like say you have to you know it's a thing we do well you know sometimes it's defined by another writer and okay christine for sure is what more based in the blues and of course john mcphee you know blues breakers and all that. And Mick. And Mick, that's true, yeah. He plays great shuffle blues.
Starting point is 00:40:08 He does. Oh, they all come from that. And I really came from something way more California, you know. But how about does it go back further? I mean, did you listen to any kind of African music or world music? Or you just kind of gravitated towards this? There's a run. There's a way that you do rhythm that seems kind of unique, and I don't know where it comes from.
Starting point is 00:40:32 You just think it comes from? That's a good question. I wish I could tell you. Do you know what I'm talking about? Kind of? Sort of, yes. Yeah, yeah. I mean, you know, even the song you mentioned, Shut Us Down,
Starting point is 00:40:43 I mean, it doesn't have a drumbeat on it to orient you to where the one is. So if you get caught in a kind of a 6-8 measure and you're not sure what it is, you might not be able to latch on to the feel of the song. So there is that element which comes up a lot because I love taking what you would describe as a traditional folk pick, a Travis pick, and then crossbreed it with something
Starting point is 00:41:14 with a different time signature. Right, right, right. But even like on some of the bigger, on Rumors, there's something different. Like even on, like is Secondhand News yours? Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:41:25 That rhythm is not a normal rock rhythm. No. Is the one missing there too initially? No. No, no, no. But that or Go Your Own Way, which is also a little disorienting until you get to the chorus.
Starting point is 00:41:41 Yeah. You know, when Go Your Own Way, which was the first single from Rumors, when it first came out, before the album was even out, they released that as a single, and I was in my car, and I heard it come on,
Starting point is 00:41:55 and I was going, oh, great. You know, so, and this is FM Radio, KLOS, or whatever it was, and the very well-known DJ B. Mitchell Reed comes on after the song and he goes, well, that's the new Fleetwood Mac one. And then he takes a pause and he says, I don't know about that one.
Starting point is 00:42:16 And so me being the ballsy guy that I was back then, and to some degree still am, I got to where I was going, and I got on a phone, and I called him up. I said, hey, B, this is Lindsey Buckingham. He's like, oh, hi. I said, so, you know, you just played my song, and you said you weren't sure about it.
Starting point is 00:42:36 What was it you weren't sure about? He goes, well, I couldn't find the beat. And it's that same thing. You know, Mick's playing. I wanted Mick to play what charlie was played on street fighting man and he paraphrased it in a way which made it even sort of more and again like i say you get to the chorus and it all becomes clear and then you're fine but it kind of throws you where everything is i just realized this goes back to the first
Starting point is 00:43:02 album you did with him like like monday morning has that that groove is it's the same thing in a way well you know mick and i are one of the things that i love about mick is i'll come in and i'll say mick i want this kind of a feel and i'll tell him something specifically and he will usually not do what i ask but he'll do something which is his own right and and so so, you know, anytime you hear something like Monday Morning or Secondhand News or Go Your Own Way that has a beat that seems to stand apart a little bit, it's a combination of my original intention and his interpretation. It's interesting because by Tusk, it's almost like he's just playing bongos the whole time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:44 That was crazy. Well, that was actually a drum loop. I mean, a true drum loop back in the day before digital. And we had like a piece of tape that was edited into itself, and we were running it through the machine and holding a spool across the room and just letting like 16 bars of why because mick was passed out or what well no but i i maybe well there's probably two reasons one is that we found probably found just this little bit which was just the zen of the idea yeah and the other part was
Starting point is 00:44:20 that we you know coming off of rumors we you were a little obsessive okay right so okay yeah that makes sense yes i mean you're talking about the artwork of dusk i mean that's the same thing i mean a post rumors environment so you guys were up it's like more is better right you were awake yes in more ways than one sure a lot of minds's going real fast yeah but i i think uh like i don't think i really remember to realize just how how big of a record that first record you did with them was i mean that's a big record well and again that that kind of goes along with what i was saying about the time from college through meeting mick you know which it all seemed to fall into place in retrospect even
Starting point is 00:45:05 though it wasn't so clear that that was what was happening in the moment right so Mick heard you know the song from the Buckingham yes yeah I Stevie and I were working on some new songs for a second Buckingham Knicks album at Sound City Studios. And they had a smaller studio, Studio B in the back, and the main one where we had cut Buckingham Nicks was Studio A. So I took a break. It was probably mid-evening sometime. And I wandered into Studio A to see what Keith was doing. And I get close to the door and I hear the song Frozen Love from Buckingham Nicks playing very loud. And I'm thinking, what is going on in there? It's my song.
Starting point is 00:45:51 Yes. Yeah. And so I open the door just as my, you know, screaming guitar solo starts. And I look across the console. I see Wave at Keith. And I see this very tall, skinny gentleman on the other end of the console like completely immersed in my guitar solo and just kind of bopping up and down and and with his eyes closed you know completely taken with what I was doing yeah so I just sit
Starting point is 00:46:19 there and watch this it's sort of like well okay. And the song finishes and Keith says, Lindsay, it's so weird you walked in. I want you to meet Mick Fleetwood. Yeah. So we talked for a few minutes and he complimented me on the guitar playing
Starting point is 00:46:41 and I said, nice to meet you and I went back to Studio b i said to stevie i just met mick fleawood that was weird wow and then maybe a couple of weeks pass and then i get a call from mick uh because i think in those two weeks suddenly bob welch had decided that he wanted to leave Fleetwood Mac. And Mick, in the same spirit of keeping the band going, you know, non sequitur or not, calls me up and says,
Starting point is 00:47:15 would you like to join Fleetwood Mac? And, you know, I'm not sure if it was right away or if it was maybe the second call, but I eventually said to him, you know, I think I talked to Stevie about it and we sort of weighed the pros and cons. And then I talked to him again and I said, yes, we would, I'd love to join, but you're going to have to take my girlfriend too. Which he did.
Starting point is 00:47:43 Which he did, to his credit. But he took her in two ways, I guess, right? Yes, very much. And also to Christine's credit, you know, who was the sole female in the band, and the fact that she was so open to it. I'll tell you, after listening to those records, and also like Ive McVie's solo record, the first one,
Starting point is 00:48:04 she's phenomenal. Oh, she's one. Right. She's phenomenal. Oh, she's a true musician. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, like, and I listened to some of the record you did with her. Right. That wasn't that long ago. No, a couple of years ago.
Starting point is 00:48:14 Yeah. Like, it's odd that, you know, coming out of listening to these things, I'm more attracted or more moved by your voice and her voice than ultimately I am. Yeah, I mean, Stevie's great. Right. But there's a nuance to you guys that is different. Well, you know, that was a really fun album to do with Christine because we, you know, it just put us in a whole other context.
Starting point is 00:48:37 The solo one from a couple years ago. Yeah, and she had, you know, she only had like maybe three songs that were sort of written from the ground up, and everything else, she needed more material. So I kept giving her demos of stuff of mine where I'd done the chords and maybe didn't have words, but it hummed an idea for a melody, and I said, see what you can do with this. And she would invariably come back with something just really transcendent,
Starting point is 00:49:04 invariably come back with something just really transcendent you know where she would her sensibilities would became so uh apparent and something that i appreciated even more when i saw what she did to a rough idea of mine and how she articulated it totally in her own way so you like you had a whole new appreciation of her even after working in the band with her for so many years oh very much so and and i think she had an appreciation for after working in the band with her for so many years. Yes, oh very much so and I think she had an appreciation for, you know, because the band is rife with politics, still is, but it was then for sure. So when you first get in there and so you and Stevie decide to take the offer and you immediately start writing and working with
Starting point is 00:49:44 the whole band or you've got songs you've already gotten through? Well, that was the beauty of it, was once again, you know, at every turn it seemed that we were prepared, because we had, I had, you know, brand new material that we had worked on and that I had demoed out on my four track of mine and of Stevie's. So every song on that first album had been worked out and demoed by me before we had joined the band.
Starting point is 00:50:17 On the self-titled, like Monday Morning? Monday Morning, all of them. Wow. World Turning. World Turning, that one's, that's like a blues song. Yeah, oh yeah. Yeah, I love that thing. Wow. World Turning. World Turning. Like that one's, that's like a blues song. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:28 I love that thing. Yeah. Why do you say it like that? Well, I know. I mean, it's that drop D thing. You know, see, that walks the line for me between blues and folk. Yeah, yeah. Sure.
Starting point is 00:50:38 It's the same drop D you've got in the chain, you know? Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's sort of, eh. Yeah. Could be Steve Stillss it could be any you know could be any number of things yeah so uh but it was a hit it was yeah and so yeah i mean so that's how it started you you were you walk you got you we were lucky to have all that stuff ready to go and now how does that start how does that work at the beginning because as as i told
Starting point is 00:51:04 you i was i was listening to stuff it was clear that you were sort of like the de facto leader of the band well you know what's funny was we we started rehearsing yeah um over on beverly boulevard in in the basement of some building and what became clear to me right away yeah i mean even well even before that i knew there were things i was going to have to let go of that were important to me um maybe a lot of my guitar style that you you would find on a song like frozen love the picking and the you know the lead playing why was that gonna have to go well because there was an existing sound that that was there there wasn't enough space for a lot of that. Was there? Well, there really was, because you had John, who was quite a melodic and liked to use a lot of notes. You know, John's two main influences are Paul McCartney and who's the other one?
Starting point is 00:52:02 Who's the great Charlie... Mingus? Mingus, yes. So he's got jazz and he's got McCartney all put together. And Christine had a really fat keyboard sound and tended to play in a fairly Baroque kind of manner. And so I realized, okay, well, I may have to kind of pare back on what I'm able to do as a guitarist,
Starting point is 00:52:24 but what became so clear to me was that these people needed a musical leader. Right. And right away, you know, over my head, which was I think the first song we started working on, the song of Christine's, you know, it was like she started playing it to show it to everybody. We got to the bridge and I was immediately, it was apparent to me, no, no, no, no. We're not going to do that for a bridge.
Starting point is 00:52:48 So we changed the bridge to other chords, other melody. And so from the first day, that was clear that that was going to be probably my most significant role. And it's arguably the role that has remained the most significant for my whole period in flea with mac sure and and i think significant for them too as a band well one would hope yes obviously i mean like you know because i i watched that documentary on peter green and you know it was clear that you know they whatever the deal was with green's ego and naming the band fleawood mac but but you know he was and i think john and mick had a great time playing with that guy
Starting point is 00:53:31 probably because it was they were young and that was the blues time and he was brilliant amazing yeah yeah but you know he was driving that band yes i think your ability to step into that role with some confidence is what makes all the difference. I mean, it could have floundered. And also being willing to concentrate on what was needed for the big picture and not necessarily looking too much at what was needed for myself, you know? Right. But you were just doing what you do and it just happened to be a great fit. And then the sound become defined by your songwriting and the guitar. That's right.
Starting point is 00:54:05 Yeah. And so, you know, it was, again, it was crazy that we get through and we complete that album. And as you point out, that it was so successful because... The first one. Yes, because, again, it just seems like, okay, that was pretty easy to do. Did it surprise you? Sell four million albums, you think that's easy to do? I mean, today it's not.
Starting point is 00:54:29 Did it surprise everyone? I think it may have. That was the biggest record they ever had, wasn't it? Yes, but, you know, there was a, I'm not sure if it surprised the record company, i i i have to assume it did i'm sure but again you had you give mo austin a lot of credit for keeping the band on the label until we showed up when they weren't making a ton of money for the band and there certainly wasn't anything you could hang your hat on in terms of style album to album yeah and yet intuitively mo would was must have been saying you know i think there's something here.
Starting point is 00:55:06 I'm not sure. I'm just going to let it simmer for a while, you know. And that kind of autonomy, even if you have people with that kind of intuition today, the autonomy to be able to act in that. What was his position at that time? He was president. Of Warner? Warner. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:23 Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, I gave him a lot of credit, too. He was president of Warner. well, we think this is going to be successful, but in the context of a brand new group where you had maybe John McPhee saying, well, listening to this sort of, quote, California album we've made with these two new kids that just joined the band, and what he said to Mick was, well, it's a long way from the blues.
Starting point is 00:56:01 And he wasn't wrong. And, you know, so maybe there was a touch of ambivalence about what it was but i don't think that lasted very long you know so when did like when did it start so after you do the first record with them so when does it start getting contentious when does you when does stevie when do you and stevie break up and m Mick starts dating her and the cocaine? When does it all start happening? Well, let's see. Stevie, as I said, Stevie and I had been having some problems even before we joined Fleetwood Mac. She'd been, you know, we'd sort of, there had been disappointing things that had, and then we'd come back together.
Starting point is 00:56:46 Yeah. But what had happened was that I think she sort of mentally had one foot out the door anyway by the time, because of that, by the time we joined Fleetwood Mac. And we joined Fleetwood Mac, which is ironically Stevie and me as a couple, and John and Christine McV me as a couple and john and christine mcvee as a couple yeah and they are in the process of of getting a divorce at the beginning of when your time very soon yes i mean they were in deep trouble already so once this was something that christine and stevie had in common that maybe they they were both looking for some independence. And so it didn't take too long after leaving the band, I mean, after joining the band, to have things come to a head with Stevie and me.
Starting point is 00:57:36 And, you know, I mean, it did sort of happen incrementally because I think the way the album unfolded and the success and the visibility of stevie as a kind of a a front woman happened incrementally too and the more she was able to sort of see herself in that role and get feedback from either people in the business or just the audiences in general the more it fed that sense of independence as well. So by the time we got, you know, it wasn't like we just said one day we're not. Right.
Starting point is 00:58:14 But it was troubled for maybe six months or more. After the first record or during? Well, during. Oh, really? Yeah. Yeah. We had broken up forever by the time we started talking about making rumors.
Starting point is 00:58:27 Mm-hmm. And she was dating Mick, right? That was later, though. Yeah. That was probably during Tusk. Oh, so like that. Because I just can't imagine because I'm a volatile, insecure, egotistical person. Aren't we all?
Starting point is 00:58:43 Yeah, I guess. But I mean, it would have seemed that it would have made you know everything crazy in the band well you know you it was a pretty unusual uh social dynamic we had you know i mean you're talking about two couples breaking up right when when the world is being laid at their feet, so to speak. Right. And having to navigate that emotionally and logistically and everything else. I mean, you had to compartmentalize your feelings. You had to kind of always, always be pulling back and looking at the bigger picture. Do you think it fed the music?
Starting point is 00:59:25 Oh, no question. I mean, there's especially rumors. I mean, you know, when I said that earlier I was saying that, you know, to some degree there was a point where the success of rumors became about the success. But the success of rumors was always about something other than the music it was about this musical soap opera that people could sort of be voyeurs you know yeah into and through the songs or through the tabloids i mean what was happening both i mean the tabloids were far less
Starting point is 00:59:58 invasive than they are now back in 77 the stories were out there the stories were out there i think just because you know music press yes yeah and um and i think you know the subject matter of the songs made it clear that we were writing about what we were living like never going back again yeah yeah boy was was that an illusion wow go your own way yeah and but but and stevie too i guess you make loving fun i guess it was all kind of it really was like you know couples because really you know three of the people who were the four people who were the couple, the two couples, were the three writers. And we were cross-dialoguing to each other all the time through music. And that became like a huge record.
Starting point is 01:00:57 Yeah, and I think that people really bought into the truthfulness and, again, maybe the sortedness of it, if you want to look at it that way. Certainly the tabloid aspect of it. Was it sorted? I mean, like, but when did the drug start getting out of control during that record? Well, I think there was a lot of use during Rumors, for sure. Yeah, yeah. I don't, you know, even at its worst, except maybe for Tango in the Night,
Starting point is 01:01:25 I don't remember it ever affecting our ability to be, you know, to take the creative high road or to articulate the creative high road. Oh, that's good. And I put that down to just the resilience of youth, I guess. Yeah, sure. And if I was the guy who was in there basically producing the records and being the musical leader, I'm not saying I didn't partake, but comparative to other members of the band
Starting point is 01:02:01 and how much they would use certain things or drink, how much they would drink. I was very much the least of those, you know? Yeah, sure. So, yeah, I think so much of what we were able to do was just so strongly ingrained in us. And it was also this synergy, this chemistry, in which the synergy that we created was greater than the sum of the parts, you know? And Tusk was, what do you think,
Starting point is 01:02:34 you know, when you look at Tusk as a record, what does it represent to you? I mean, are you, would you reproduce it? Or are you happy with it? I would, yes. Tusk is actually in many ways the record I'm the most proud of because it thwarted everyone's expectations. I think in a post-rumors environment,
Starting point is 01:03:03 we were in this situation where we possibly were poised to go down one road or another. A particular road would have been to make choices that were sort of representative of what the external world expected us to be. And that's where you start to see a lot of artists lose touch with who they are. You mean repeat it. Repeat. Rumors too. And at some point you're sort of painting yourself into a corner, you know, as an artist because you start to lose your sense of being able to take risks or being able to be engaged
Starting point is 01:03:39 in things that are outside your comfort zone just because, you know, you're doing what people want you to do. Yeah. And the formula from a corporate point of view is if something works, run it into the ground and then move on. Right. Leave them all depleted husks. Yes. Of a nostalgia band. And so when it came time to make Tusk, a lot of new music, new wave stuff had started to come in from England,
Starting point is 01:04:06 especially, and the States. But it was, I was struggling with what did all this mean on that level? And so just the success of, you know, obviously the success enables you to make any kind of choice you want. Yeah. Which is the irony of it, but it also potentially starts to paint you into a corner. And I was very intent on taking a different road. on taking a different road um because you know if if you are an artist or if you want to aspire to be an artist and to continue to do that in the long term you've got to keep making choices that have risk and that that are about what is interesting and and vital to you in that moment. And so, you know, I said to...
Starting point is 01:05:07 For yourself. Well... You're not thinking in the business model. In order to maintain your evolution... No, it's not a business decision at all. Right, yeah. And again, I wouldn't have had the freedom to make that decision or perhaps even the perspective to see that it was a decision that could be made without that business success, that commercial success.
Starting point is 01:05:29 Right. But, you know, in a way, Tusk, you know, obviously in the same way my solo albums are more esoteric and sort of more off to the left generally speaking yes um and and because of that you know maybe i lose nine out of ten people who might listen to a fleetwood mac album yeah it's a choice you make it's like saying i i want to be uh jim jarmusch or somebody you know i'm not going to do this because I want to be Steven Spielberg and have the biggest, the most money-making movie ever made. I want to do this for my art and for what I believe in. And are you satisfied in that? Yes, I am. And so Tusk was really the line in the sand that got drawn, which allowed me and has allowed me to continue to make that choice over and over again
Starting point is 01:06:25 and to somehow have it coexist with Fleetwood Mac. It got to the point where Fleetwood Mac was the big machine and that solo work was the small machine. And they were conflicting at points. Sometimes, but generally not. Because Fleetwood Mac kept touring? I mean, when were you doing both simultaneously? Well, I mean, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:06:46 There was never enough time for me to sort of string together a series of albums back to back and to, I didn't tour till 2006 as a solo on my own. So, you know, it was just one of those things that it allowed, And as Fleetwood Mac sort of went down that road, and of course, as I said, I took leave of Fleetwood Mac in 1987 because I didn't want to do that tour. I made Out of the Cradle, which is one of my better albums,
Starting point is 01:07:20 and then eventually got pulled back into Fleetwood Mac and didn't make another solo album until 2006. So there has been a problem in terms of, maybe not a problem, but a challenge in terms of stringing those things together. Well, the time commitment revolved around touring, right? Yes. So, you know, if you're going to be in Fleetwood Mac, you've got to do everything that Fleetwood Mac needs to be done. It's a big operation. It is. And if that means that you've got to sort of minimize the logistics of your solo work, then that's okay. Because in a way, it's going to be smaller scale anyway just because of what it is.
Starting point is 01:08:02 Right. And that's a good thing for me, you know. Well, maybe it did, you know, force you to at least, you know, be leaner in your approach. Well, I mean, it kept me learning. I know that, you know. And at some point, people are up there doing their hits and they forget how to even be creative, you know. Yeah, I definitely hear that.
Starting point is 01:08:28 Yeah. I'm not afforded that luxury as a sort of like marginal comic. You know, you really got to show up with the new hour every year. That's comedy, as they say. It's hard. Yeah. Jeez. But I want to make sure that we do pay some attention to all the solo records,
Starting point is 01:08:44 especially once you got through. I know that first one was back in the 90s. But it seemed like the shift from the first couple of solo records, which were, you know, I mean, they were, the production is very of its time. And there was, I think, an attempt to make something danceable. Am I wrong? Well, my first solo album was, i think i'm gonna say 1981 it was law and order that was not really so danceable but the reason that i even started making solo albums was because the band had gotten very drawn into the whole tusk idea they were a little bit
Starting point is 01:09:22 wary of of doing it in the beginning but they got completely drawn into it yeah by the time we got done but oh they loved it they loved it yeah but when it did not sell close to 16 million copies i think it probably sold four or five and it was a double album so still mick came to me one day and he said well we're not going to do that again meaning you can't go to your house and work on tracks by yourself and bring them in and have us play over them, which is what I did. So he's sort of blaming you. He's not blaming me. He's just saying, you know.
Starting point is 01:09:57 We got to get back to what works. That was your art album. We want to do something a little broader now. And I said, okay. But I realized at that point that I wasn't going to be able to continue to sort of aspire to be the artist. Right. Unless I started making solo albums. Right.
Starting point is 01:10:16 So that first one wasn't really so dancey. The second one was called Go Ins go insane which was a couple of years later yeah and that was a little bit more the the lynn drum machine had just come in yeah and i had there's a synthesizer presence yeah there's i had this eight bit fairlight which was very new and also uh working with different people whereas on that first album, I'd work with Richard Dashett, who is one of the co-producers. From Fleetwood Mac. Fleetwood Mac. But on this, I worked with a young guy named Gordon Ford,
Starting point is 01:10:52 I was an engineer, and Roy Thomas Baker, of all people, wanted to, he called himself executive producer. On the newest one? On Go Insane, the second one. This was in 1983, I'm thinking. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And he, you know, that could mean anything. Executive producer could mean you never see him, but he was there every day.
Starting point is 01:11:13 Yeah. And I think his sensibilities worked their way into that album. And Gordon, the engineer, they were both English, so they were drawing from the sensibilities of the stuff that was coming over from England. Kind of new wavey. Yeah. So you did get a kind of a more dancey kind of sensibility on that record.
Starting point is 01:11:34 Right. No doubt about it. Right. So I'm trying to get the timeline. The last time that we almost talked, you had just been cut loose from Fleetwood Mac in a fairly dramatic way what was that about how does that happen well um ironically it it sort of began with a I mean the tone for it not the not anything there there was no real substantive reason for it happening, but the tone actually began with the solo album that is about to be released, the brand new one, which has been waiting to come out for three years now at least.
Starting point is 01:12:19 More. More, actually. actually and um when christine and i were done touring uh as a duet which we did you know after we made that album yep a few years ago uh what i asked of the band because they were planning a Fleetwood Mac tour pretty much right after that. After in 2017. Yes, whenever that was. Yeah, maybe 18. 18, yeah. And what I said was, we did this great project with Christine.
Starting point is 01:13:02 I have this other album that I'm really proud of. It's a pop album. And I would love to, if you would give me an extra three months just to put it out and do some American dates before Fleetwood Mac goes out. And, um, there was
Starting point is 01:13:20 certainly one person who did not, uh, want to, want to bestow that on me. And so it kind of got... Why didn't she? Well... Was it petty? I don't know. Okay. With Stevie?
Starting point is 01:13:43 Yes. Okay. Okay. With Stevie. Yes. Okay. And, I mean, to be fair, everyone was anxious to get on the road. Sure.
Starting point is 01:13:55 But, you know, we've all made time for each other's things. Yeah. You know, I'd been in a band for 43 years, for God's sake. Jesus. So, anyway, that sort of led to other things that kind of built up around that and then it just got to the point where um someone just didn't want to work with me anymore and other people were perhaps not feeling empowered enough to stand up for me when possibly they should have or could have huh and um and it wasn't based on i mean i'm not saying that i can't be hard to get along with sometimes yeah but if you put it in in a larger context of all
Starting point is 01:14:45 the things that Fleetwood Mac this this Fleetwood Mac has been through yeah uh and what we've risen above sure um in order to to keep our eye on on the larger picture and in order to fulfill our destiny over and over again yeah you know it was bigger than this oh yes yeah any any issues were were you know were not worthy of of what happened and what was most um disappointing about it to me was was not oh gee i'm not going to get to do this tour so much. What it was was, again, we spent 43 years building this legacy, which was about rising above things. It stood for more than the music. And by allowing this to happen through some levels of weakness,
Starting point is 01:15:43 my own weakness included, through some levels of weakness, my own weakness included, I think we did some harm to that legacy, and that's a shame. Yeah. And outside of the solo album right now, I mean, where does that relationship stand with you?
Starting point is 01:16:04 Where are you at now with that, with the band? Well, I mean, you know, I've spoken to Mick, you know. I've certainly, I probably text him more than I actually speak to him. I've spoken to him a couple of times. I knew I had to call him when Peter Green passed away. Yeah. How was that conversation? It was great. I mean, he and I are soulmates and always will be.
Starting point is 01:16:26 You and Mick. Mick and I. Yeah. And we love each other and we reinforced each other's sensibilities in the band. Yeah. And, you know, I'm sure it's my sense that, you know, pretty much everyone would love to see me come back if that was doable. But, you know, I don't know if it's doable or not. So now you have this, like, for instance, you went through a divorce. Well, it's not, actually, it's not, we have not divorced.
Starting point is 01:17:03 Okay, okay. We filed. Okay, okay. And we're, it's not, we have not divorced. Okay, okay. We filed. Okay, okay. And it's sort of a work in progress. All right, I was just using it as an example. No, I mean, that information was certainly out there, but we have not signed any divorce papers. And I would say, you know,
Starting point is 01:17:22 there's probably some chance that we will work this out. Okay. Well, I guess my question was really leading to, okay, so you were going through things. You had heart surgery. Now, does Stevie call you? No. Wow. No.
Starting point is 01:17:41 I mean, she did, when I had my bypass, she did text me or email me. Oh, she did? Yeah. Okay. Wished me well, and that was nice. Well, that's good. That would have been sad to me. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:53 No, no, no. It's fine. Okay. I mean, I want Stevie to be happy, so, you know. Yeah. So it seems that you, on your own, starting with that record that moved me so much, the Under the Skin record, have really picked up where you wanted to go after Tusk in a real way. Like continue to take chances. Yeah. Because the way you sing now, I've never heard anybody who is such a distinct and powerful singer as you are evolve your voice appropriately to what you seem to see as your limitations as you get older. Right.
Starting point is 01:18:41 And you do it with such uniqueness, and you do not hide the voice. I find it very impressive. Oh, thank you. Do you feel like you are doing the work now that you feel invigorated by the chances you're taking? Well, yeah. You know, I'm in the middle of rehearsals right now, and it's sort of like we haven't started doing the whole set yet, so I don't know how I'm even going to feel physically when we do that.
Starting point is 01:19:08 You look like you're in good shape. Well, I feel good. I get a little more tired than I used to. But I'm assuming you sort of build up to it. It's just been a while since we've done it. Who's your band? Well, a lot of people that have been backup for Fleetwood
Starting point is 01:19:28 Mac and people I've known for years and years. There's a guitar player named Neil Haywood who is brilliant. A keyboardist and guitarist named Brett Tuggle. A keyboardist and sort of computer programmer named Mike Kianca
Starting point is 01:19:43 and a drummer named Jimmy Paxson. Oh, great. And that's it. It's like a tight outfit. It's a tight outfit, you know, and we're having a ball so far. But when you make these records, like this last one, when we were just talking, you called it a pop record.
Starting point is 01:20:01 Well, more so than some, yes. And your expectations of it, given that we've established that you are an evolving artist and it doesn't become about money or necessarily about hits, what is it that you expect out of the work now? Not a whole lot. I mean, you figure X number of people who with the right ears are gonna hear it yeah and you have fans for your solo work and i imagine a lot of the fleetwood mac people enjoy it yes and
Starting point is 01:20:35 then every once in a while you'll hear about somebody who you think oh that's nice. Who is telling me? I did my last solo album with C-Zuiso in 2011. Yeah. And someone was talking about Stephen King. It was like his favorite album. Oh, really? There is not a high expectation to sell anything, you know, especially these days. I mean, if my albums used to sell 350,000 copies, you know, what is the equivalent of that in today's market? 35?
Starting point is 01:21:20 Yeah, yeah. I mean, so you can't really put that in there. So you do, but the touring means something. The whole thing means something because the people who have an interest in hearing it are going to find it. Yeah. And it's going to, you know, you're going to get, you're going to make some waves out there and being able to articulate it by touring. Because we're doing like five new songs. Yeah. yes how many dates you think you're going to do well it's a little hard to say you know we had a bunch of stuff kind of nailed down um we had one leg nailed down which is what we're starting
Starting point is 01:21:58 with still in in america but we also had a bunch of dates in the UK and Europe and also in Australia. And all of that's gone away because of COVID for now. So it's, we don't know. Right. What do you like in the United States? What do you do, like 30 dates? I, eventually probably a few more than that, you know, because we'll break it up into two legs. Right, right.
Starting point is 01:22:23 Yeah. All right. Well, so it's, you don't know when you're going to start again? It's in the beginning of September. Okay. Yeah. Well, I enjoyed the record. Good.
Starting point is 01:22:35 And I enjoyed talking to you. Well, I enjoy talking to you. I always do. Are you going to be doing Largo? Are you doing Largo tomorrow by any chance? Well, it is. It's like one of those judge shows. Oh, no.
Starting point is 01:22:47 I didn't hear about that one, no. Oh, sorry. He just got back from England. Hawaii. Oh, England? Well, he probably did that too, but he was shooting a movie with Fred Armisen, I think. Yeah. Yeah, I guess they're doing, I think they're doing benefits for the actual place.
Starting point is 01:23:02 Oh, okay. I think this is the second one. I just know I got called to, Flanny asked me to do it, so I'm going to go do something. Well, it's funny because Fred Armisen emailed me like two weeks ago and wanted me to do. Oh, his show over there. Yeah, and I couldn't do it. I had something else I had to do that night. But you're ready to go if you're needed?
Starting point is 01:23:23 Well, yeah, hell. Of course. All right, man. Great talking all right man great talking to you great talking to you mark thanks buddy that was a great talk wasn't it lindsey buckingham the new album comes out september 17th he'll be on tour to support that album. Dates forthcoming. Is that how you say that? Rest in peace, Dusty Hill. Godspeed. Bob Odenkirk. Get well soon. Now I'll play some guitar. This was a one-take riff. Thank you. Thank you. Boomer lives. Monkey. Lafonda.
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