You're Wrong About - Fleetwood Mac's Rumours with Carolyn Kendrick
Episode Date: July 11, 2023This week, we bring you a re-release from our bonus vault as Sarah tells Carolyn Kendrick about the making of Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours. We learn about the worlds of songwriting and production, how th...e music business has changed since the 1970’s, and of course all the interpersonal relationships that make us love to love this band. We will be back next week with a new episode. You can find Carolyn online here. Support You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merchWhere else to find us:Sarah's other show, You Are Good[YWA co-founder] Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseLinks:https://www.carolynkendrick.com/http://patreon.com/yourewrongabouthttps://www.teepublic.com/stores/youre-wrong-abouthttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/yourewrongaboutpodhttps://www.podpage.com/you-are-goodhttp://maintenancephase.comSupport the show
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to year on about the podcast where sometimes we go behind the music.
This is a bonus episode that we release back in December.
It is me and Carolyn Kendrick, the producer and sometimes co-host of the show who makes all things
possible. And in this case, we talked about Fleetwood Max Rumors and the story behind it. And
this was a really fun one to do. And you can't hear her, but Carolyn does agree with me. I was not
holding her hostage. If you have been listening to the show for a while,
Stevie Nix is kind of a recurring light motif for me. As his fleet would back,
Stevie Nix is the woman who taught your cold English wife how to feel. And because we are all trying to have a little bit more fun than usual this summer, because life is short and
summer is shorter, and you got to go swim in a lake when
you can. We thought we would bring this episode out that a lot of you have not heard and which
seem to bring people a lot of joy at the time and inspire people to listen to more Fleetwood Mac,
which is always good, especially in July. Thank you so much for being here. Have a great summer, you guys. Carolyn says hags.
Welcome to your wrong about After Dark, where we talk about new gossip, old gossip, and movies
I like. And with me today to talk about old gossip, aka history, about Fleetwood Mac and the
recording of rumors, is Carolyn Kendrick, who produces this show that you're listening to right now.
Hello!
Hello!
Hi Sarah, I'm so happy to be here.
I am so happy that you're here and I'm so happy that we are talking in a way that other people get to enjoy because I always love doing that with you.
Oh my gosh, I always love doing it with you just so much.
Anytime I get the opportunity, I will grab it.
Me too.
And we are talking about rumors today and the making of rumors.
And we're also talking about kind of how music is produced.
And then in a broader sense, how audio is produced, which you have to do with you wrong
about.
Yeah. And one of the things that I have loved about researching this is that as somebody
who loves the album rumors, which even if you don't think you know what that album is,
you probably do. You probably know a song from it that you've heard somewhere along the
way. It's the album that Stevie Nix's dreams comes from. It's the album that gave us.
Don't stop the anthem of the
Clinton administration for better and worse. Oh yeah. And of course, songbird and the probably
least played on the radio song from it, oh daddy, and a bunch of other ones. Yeah, Sarah,
just to do a little foreshadowing at the end of the episode, I would love to do
a fuck Mary Kill of each of these songs.
Oh my God, I love that.
And I love doing that with the songs rather than the people in the band, because once you've
heard this whole story, you're like, oh, let's just stick to the songs.
You're like, oh, daddy.
Which song is the oh, daddy, which is which song is the O daddy?
Yeah.
It's fascinating to me how much effort and time and revising and sort of collage this
album took and how it took a solid year of effort.
And one of the sources I used a lot in preparing for this, is a book called Making Rumors by the albums producer.
He started off as an engineer and was promoted to producer midway through.
Ken Calle, also known as Colby Calle's dad.
Oh my gosh!
I just remember that her big hit was bubbly.
Nice.
Yeah.
And Ken is a very proud dad. Yeah. Because we'll be like deep in a story about
like, you know, people doing Coke in 1976. And I'll be like, it reminds me of my daughter,
Colby. And you're like, oh, this is a nice little break in the scheduled programming.
Yeah. That's lovely. But yeah, I also wanted to kind of within this episode,
having you here because we love Fleetwood Mac,
but also because we make this show together
for you to talk about what it means to be the person who,
you know, ideally, if you do your job,
the best that you can, nobody will think you exist.
Yes, I mean, it's kind of like an editor in literature
or in journalism or anything like that, right?
Like you don't want to think about how the sausage gets made.
You don't want to think about the process necessarily.
You just want to be immersed in the actual art.
The job of a producer and an editor, which I do both,
is yeah, exactly just like you just said,
just to make sure that you, Sarah Marshall,
or whoever whoever the artist make sure that you, Sarah Marshall, or whoever,
whoever the artist is in that moment,
can express their ideas most concisely and profoundly.
Yeah, and I feel like this gets into the sort of,
the human thing, which Janet Malcolm writes about
in the journalist in the murderer,
that the advent of the tape recorder prompted this revelation
that when we think we're speaking in very coherent simple sentences
we're actually speaking in sort of one sentence worth of material that gets spread out in pieces over five sentences
and there's a lot of little digressions and
language that kind of is filling time or goes nowhere or adds a layer of confusion.
I feel like if you're not used to hearing
your recorded voice talking,
it's easy to believe that you're making more sense
than you are, unfortunately.
Yeah, totally.
I've learned a lot about speaking voices
over the last couple of years
as I've been working on this show,
and on you are good.
And yeah, it turns out that we are processing
what we're thinking in real time as we're going through. And even if you think you know what. And yeah, it turns out that we are processing what we're thinking in real
time as we're going through. And even if you think you know what you're saying, you kind
of don't. So, right. You know what you feel you're going to say, but you don't always
know what you're going to say. The sort of intimate quality of conversation is that you're
experiencing someone figuring out what they think potentially. Yeah, absolutely.
People in movies do not speak the way that you normally speak when you're having a conversation
with a friend, because when you're having a conversation with a friend, you're talking
over each other all of the time and you're in this philoc of a better word collage of dialogue
you know, and it's kind of like waves flowing over each other. In a movie, everything
is like person A speaks, person B speaks, and it's a lot of work to make it seem natural,
even though that's just not how we speak normally. And in podcasts, it's the same thing.
Like, yeah. So both myself and Miranda Zickler do editing on this show. Usually what will happen is, I record my part of the audio.
I'm on a Zoom call right now.
You're in Seattle or in Portland?
I'm in a closet in Seattle.
Yeah, and I'm in my guest room in California.
So I'm on a Zoom call, you're on a Zoom call.
I record my half of the audio.
You record yours.
Then we put it in two separate tracks
in a digital audio workstation, which in my case
is usually logic, but you know, other people use other things as well.
And then basically what we do is I move every single bit of sound waves that happens so
that nobody is ever talking over each other, even though we definitely talk over each
other because that's just how people speak.
I think of it sort of like an essay, so that an idea is said and then you have time to think about it
and then the next idea is said, et cetera.
So that's what kind of goes into the actual editing process
for podcasts and then editing and producing in music
is a little bit different.
And then producing in movies is a totally different thing
because sometimes people think of producers as just like the money, you know, you know, like Rob Reiner is,
you know, producing a movie. And so he's like the one that's making it happen in that regard.
And I think like I, and I assume many other people think of it as like, you're the one who gets
the Oscar if it wins best picture for some reason. That's how that works out. Yeah.
best picture for some reason. That's how that works out. Yeah. I produce her in music, which I also produce music as well as podcasts, is more of like
a sonic facilitator in certain regards. So, for example, like I'm a musician as well.
So I will write a song by myself. Usually that takes anywhere from 30 minutes to, I don't know, 30 years.
And so are there, yeah.
And then what you do is you bring your song to your band
or you hire studio musicians and you come into the studio
and depending on how much money you have,
you either have the money to do just like a couple takes
or in the case of like Fleetwood Mac
or people who are assigned to big labels
and especially in the 70s when there was or people who are assigned to big labels and especially
in the 70s when there was actually money for music and people weren't having to fund things
independently. Basically, you would have producers that would be like, okay, so here's what
the song sounds like. I can give suggestions about maybe what is going to happen with
the lyrics, maybe, but overall, I'm being like, okay, I'm behind the recording board, I'm behind the
sound board in the booth, and I'm going like, okay, like that drum sounds maybe a little off,
like let's try a different drum sound, or Stevie, you're sounding a little tired, like maybe you can
take a break so that, and the job of the producer is to oversee the whole of the sonic landscape to
make sure that it's sounding, hopefully, like how the artist wants it to sound.
But often producers in like big labels and stuff are thinking about how it can sound for it to be marketable.
So there's sometimes a little bit of pull between what the artist wants and what can sell on the radio.
I love the producer editor comparison because that does feel so true to my experience,
having things that I've written be edited for some kind of publication or in an academic context
and also editing myself where so much of the job in my opinion is being like, what are you trying
to do? Like, what is your goal with this piece of writing as opposed to like, how do we sort of
beat this piece of gold with a hammer until we get into some sort of preordained shape? But like, how do we sort of beat this piece of gold with a hammer until we get it into some sort of preordained shape. But like, what is the artist trying to do? And I feel like part of
that as well as like the artist may think that they need to achieve their end by doing a particular
thing, but that might actually be getting them farther away from it. And then they have to have
someone who they're able to listen to about that. It's interesting to hear that Ken, who will be learning about more, so he was an engineer
and then turned into a producer, which an engineer in the musical world is the one who's
like, you know, setting up the microphones and actually sending the sound through the
board and their mixing things to make sure that the levels are right and then sending
off the tracks to make sure that they're mastered right and then sending off the tracks to make sure that
they're mastered, which in the podcast world, unfortunately, since we're not in the same place,
you are acting as your own engineer because you're setting up your own microphone and everything.
Well, I had no idea. Yeah. But I was an engineer. I should put that on my business card.
You don't need any. You're not great.
And then Miranda edits it and then I do extra editing passes and then I mix it and then
I master it, which that's kind of an aside.
But it's interesting to hear that it's not always super common that somebody would be
an engineer and then get promoted over the course of the musical project.
So anyways, back to Fleetwood Mac.
So can you introduce me to who's in Fleetwood Mac?
Like what are their names? Where are they from? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So can you introduce me to who's in Fleetwood Mac? Like, what are
their names? Where are they from? Yeah. Who are these people? Yeah. So the rumors five, as
I've seen them refer to, is if they're all co-defendants in a trial, who record this
album and who are the iconic lineup of Fleetwood Mac, are Mick Fleetwood on drums, John McVe on bass, their names are what give the band its name.
Christine McVe on keyboards and vocals, Stevie and X on vocals, and bit of keyboards, sometimes a bit of guitar, and Lindsay Buckingham on guitar. Yeah. And Flea Woodback, going into rumors that,
to me, the two most interesting things about them
are that Lindsay Buckingham and Stevie Nix
are a relatively recent addition.
They joined the band together
because they were already a musical duo
who had just recorded an album called Buckingham Nix,
which is amazing.
You should listen to it and it flopped completely for whatever reason,
even though they're both topless. Oh, in the album. Really? You can see everybody's front. Yeah.
So these two, they were together when they made this, they were like dating. Yeah.
In addition to being a musical duo. Yeah, they were a couple. They had been a couple for years.
The first thing they ever sang together
was a duet of California Dreaming.
And they had been together for like,
you know, their adult lives, really.
Wow.
So yeah, so they have joined the band as a couple.
And the story that I feel like gets told about this
is like, make Fleetwood wanted Lindsey Buckingham to join the band
and Lindsey was like, my girlfriend has to join too.
But she was also primarily,
or at least is importantly, his musical partner.
And I also think Lindsey Buckingham
arguably hadn't found his sound yet without her.
Well, that tracks in terms of how I know
musical couples to go sometimes.
They're joining because before rumors Fleetwood Mac has acquired a reputation as the band that wouldn't die.
They began a decade earlier as an English blues outfit.
Oh!
The McVees and McFleetwood are all English, And the band began its life as Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac.
And it was led by a blues guitarist
and vocalist named Peter Green.
Yeah, okay.
So they're part of the 60s British invasion, I assume,
and then have this like blues element.
Well, what's funny too is that they're not super popular
in the US.
They're charting in the UK in the 60s and early 70s and they're like considered this like
fantastic English rock group, but like Americans don't care
particularly. Yeah, which I mean, arguably if I were a person
there, like there's this great English blues band, I'd be like
fuck off. Right. Yeah. I am bringing into the mix, Fleetwood
Mac on Fleetwood Mac. Okay.
Addited by Sean Egan, which begins with the first news stories about the band, which were about
the blues incarnation of it. Okay. And so the first article we have in here is from 1967.
And it's called Peter Green, the guitarist who won't forsake the blues, and either because they were calling it that, or because the reporter misheard, the band is called Fleetwood Wing.
Here's an excerpt I wanted to know what you thought of.
Peter's guitar playing has made him into one of the most highly rated musicians in the country,
but does Peter think that his very specialist form of music can be truly appreciated by the audiences?
No, no, only by a few.
I think this is demonstrated by the applause I get when I play very fast.
This is nothing.
It doesn't mean a thing playing fast.
It's something I used to do with John when things weren't going too well, but it isn't
any good.
I like to play slowly and feel every note.
It comes from every part of my body and my heart and into my fingers.
I have to really feel it.
I make the guitar sing the blues.
If you don't have a vocalist and the guitar must sing.
Okay, interesting.
I feel like that's interesting to think about as the genesis or the beginning seed of this band,
because I think of Fleetwood Mac as being a very feeling and singing oriented band.
Yeah.
In a time where rock music was very fast and flashy. And so I can see that
through line of the reason that they maybe stick out eventually in the long term once they get into
their final form is that they are using that principle of like actually connecting to the slower and
more meditative moments of a musicality rather than it being like, you know,
flashy, super fast guitar riffs and, you know, all of that. Yeah, and not necessarily seeing speed
as a like superior form of playing, although Lindsay does love to shred as well. Yeah, so I mean,
yeah, there's definitely elements of shreddingess in the music, but it's not their main mode of communication, which I think maybe
also lends to its enduring emotion. We were talking a little bit earlier before we were recording about
how one of the things that's maybe not always a luring about men's songwriting is that it's just like
one emotion at a time. And so like when you're playing fast, that's just one emotion at a time, right? I like that.
Right, and also this thing where the instrument
gets to kind of express emotions all by itself,
which I think Fleetwood Mac does a lot,
and there's just kind of,
it gives you a feeling without necessarily giving words to it.
And yeah, I think there's also something
about not being too over the moment
because then the moment because then,
you know, the moment will change and you'll get left behind. Yeah. And maybe that's how you
stay more timeless. Yeah, absolutely. And Peter Green is guitarist and vocalist who was kind of
the backbone of the band and he left because he was later diagnosed with schizophrenia. And at this
time, he decided that he couldn't be in a band anymore
and he had to go live a godly life and do something like be a grave digger which he did for a while.
Oh good for him. I'm glad that he listened to his needs. Yeah. And he got upset when the band kept
sending him royalty money at some point. Okay. Yeah. So his life is a whole other story and it, you know, seems like he had
a rough road, but he left the band. And then the following year in 1971, Jeremy Spencer,
who also did guitar and vocals, the band was staying in LA. They were going to perform at the
whiskey a go-go, which is also funny to me thinking of them overlapping with the doors. And the thingy of CBNX is like
overlapping with Jim Morrison in some sense, the senses is a stage presence. But
anyway, the current line up of Fleetwood Mac was staying in LA and Jeremy
Spencer went out to go to a bookstore and ran into some members of, I think
they were called the children of God at that time.
It's that cult that River Phoenix grew up in.
Oh sure.
And he never came back.
Oh my God.
He just like left to join a cult and was like, I can't play our gig tonight.
I'm busy in this cult.
Very California story so far.
Yeah.
And so they like started off as this like classic like English blues outfit, they
lost their musical backbone. But Mick Fleetwood and John McVee who has joined since the Peter Green
Big Beat interviews that we heard are keeping the party going. In 1974 we got this list of people
party going in 1974. We got this list of people who had joined the band by then. Okay.
Danny Kerwin, Christine McVee, who also is married to John McVee. They had been married
for a while before she joined the band and she was previously in a blues band called Chicken
Shack.
Amazing. I can't wait to listen to Chicken Shack later. Bob Welch, Dave Walker and Bob Weston.
Okay.
And then Peter Green has left, Jeremy Spencer has left.
Danny Kerwin leaves.
He, I think, by the time they record rumors
is the only member who's been fired.
Everyone else has left by joining a cult or amicably.
Okay.
The two options.
Bob Welch leaves to start another band and Dave Walker and Bob Weston leave.
Okay, great.
And then we get Buckingham and Nick's and then things like come together and they put out Fleetwood Mac,
they are calling the White Album as well in summer of 1975. And to me the weird thing about Fleetwood Mac by today's standards, which is the album
that gives us reanon and over my head. And a lot of other great songs is that it takes a really
long time to become a hit. And it actually becomes a hit album while Fleetwood Mac is recording rumors.
But initially it's like, oh, it's doing all right. So this band thus far has
like had trouble hitting it stride from what I understand because like when you have that kind
of turnover, you can't really like develop a sound because it takes a long time to develop a sound.
I'm sure they also are like not feeling settled as a band because they don't have the same line-up
ever. And so what is this? When now we're like to set, we're in 1975 now,
we've got the rumors five, but they're not like famous,
famous by the time that they're creating rumors.
Right.
And then it's like as they're recording rumors,
their previous album is climbing in the charts
and doing better and better.
And then they're touring to support it in 1976,
which is like they're recording rumors all through that year.
Okay.
And then by the time rumors comes out, they've like built this foundation for it to become
huge.
All right.
Another issue that Fleetwood Mac has had is that in 1974, their former manager Clifford
Davis has decided that he owns the rights to Fleetwood Mac and has set up a fake Fleetwood
Mac that then he sends on tour. So there's like a fake Fleetwood Mac in the mix.
What? There's like, so this is like a totally different band of people that is also called Fleetwood
Mac. Yeah, he puts together a band and he's like, your Fleetwood Mac. Wow, I'm done founded by that.
I feel like managers in like music industry personnel
of this era, especially, but also just throughout
the 20th century and the 21st century
are just never good people.
Like, but this is exceptionally weird
and exceptionally terrible.
Yeah.
And so we got one of our early press accounts
of the wonder that is TV next.
TV sits in an outdoor lounge chair
spooning her way through a cup of local
apricot flavored yogurt as she talks.
Her voice even at conversational level is throaty and resonant.
It's not like I just go on stage and sing every night.
She begins,
I scream and crashed him, reen on my leg and dance around a lot. It's almost an athletic trip for me
because I've never been very strong. In fact, I'm like a snake all day, because grooving along slowly.
Then for two hours on stage, I have all that energy. Afterwards, I'm a basket case. I've got to be
practically carried away immediately. Then we got some background on her.
She says, I feel a lot older than when I join this band.
I'm 28 now, no breaks.
And Stevie is making a living by cleaning houses.
And we're saying, then they join Fleetwood Mac.
Okay.
Because Fleetwood is recording one day in a studio.
And the is like,
hey, do you want to hear these other musicians who are recording here as well?
And he goes and watch his Lindsey Buckingham play guitar.
And Lindsey Buckingham is like, I mean, my use of Lindsey Buckingham's guitar playing in my life is,
it's like a Stevie Nicks and the way she
sings and kind of the lyrics that she has are a reminder that we can feel so many things
at once. And we are capacious enough to sort of meet our feelings as they come to us and
we can even, you know, articulate these seemingly contradictory emotions that are coexisting
inside of us. I feel like Lindsey Buckingham's
playing reminds me of like how overwhelming it is to feel even a single thing.
Totally. That's a great, it's like, it feels like the cup's running over. Like, there's a lot going
on there. So here are just a couple of descriptions of Stevie Nicks, which I had to share with another
human being. If the Buckingham Nicks addition to Fleetwood Mac was inactual, so was Stevie Knicks' emergence
as the new flash Fox and Rock.
One sense is she hasn't deliberately created that identity,
at least as a primary concern.
And I feel like the thing that you know about rumors,
if A, you know that it's an album or a good album,
then the second thing you know is that everybody
was breaking up while it was going on.
And what I find interesting is a point of clarification is that, you know, if we're willing to believe
Kobe Kelley's dad, and I am, it's that, um, that Christine broke up with John and that
Stevie Nicks broke up with Lindsay Buckingham and that these were,
and both cases breakups where the woman
in the relationship was like, I still love you,
but this is just not gonna work out.
Okay.
I have to put the breaks on this and what,
Christian McVee said about this at the time as well
was that she really,
she didn't interview with Cameron Crowe
who of course was working for Rolling Stone at the time and who we must picture his Patrick Fugit and all of this, telling him like,
yeah, I love John and I, the love didn't go away, but he's a bad drunk and I, and his personality
when he's drunk is different and it's bad and I was getting mostly that we couldn't
be together anymore.
So they're breaking up, so Christine
and John are breaking up because of his drinking problem. Yeah. And what does Stevie's
site for the breakup between her and Lindsay? So Stevie breaks up with Lindsay during the
initial recording session. Oh wow. For your rumors, which is in the music plant in Sosolito. Oh, okay. In early 1976, Sosolito
are finest cookie. Yeah. So to quote Patrick Fugit, last year during the
ill-fated structure in Sosolito, she separated from Buckingham after over six
years. The best explanation is try working with your secretary in a rock
as office and then come home with her at night, see how long you could stand her. I could be no comfort to Lindsay when he needed
comfort. Hmm, that's what Stephenic says. This, by the way, is for a Rolling Stone cover story,
where Cameron Crowe has to interview each individual member of the band individually as if he's
their couple's counselor. Wow. And it also features, I think it's how you look at this cover.
Look at Fleetwood Mac Rolling Stone cover, Cameron Crowe.
Okay.
Oh my God, wow.
Is it an A-leab of it?
Is that who took the photo?
Yeah, that is her, that's right.
So she would have been like 28 when this came out.
Oh my gosh, that's incredible.
Yeah, and so it's the five of them in bed.
It's like the two couples together
going different directions.
And they're all topless and potentially
some of them are fully naked.
And they're like holding each other's hands and feet.
Like I think the context is that they're all in bed together, obviously,
but you know, metaphorically as well.
Yeah, but I think that they're actually even out of couple configuration.
Oh.
So Stevie is with McFleetwood in the center, which you can tell if you're looking at the
picture because he's giant.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I believe this is a tiny photo I'm looking at, but I believe Lindsay and Christine McVee
are then flying with their head toward us.
And then John McVee is reading all by himself.
Oh, Lonesome.
Yeah, because the photo I'm looking at
is not a super great resolution,
so I can't really see their faces.
And all of the men sort of look like the same man.
Yeah, it's the 70s.
They all have dark hair and beards
and like a big curly hair. Yeah,
exactly. They're all exactly my type. And two blonde women wearing sheets. So yeah. So even at this
point, like nobody is sleeping with each other literally at this point, they've like just broken up,
right? So this Rolling Stone cover story comes out March 24th, 1977. Okay. So, yeah, after they've been broken up for like over a year at this point, CB and Lindsay
at least, every single band I have been in, there's just like a gravity that happens when
you're in a band that like there's an intimacy that happens.
You're with these people all of the time.
Like, you just get to know people in a way that transforms just your daily life
or transcends your daily life, I should say. And like you communicate in a totally different
language that nobody else knows. And when you're in a band together with somebody, it's like
you know them as a person, but like there's just this other angle that you also are intimate with
them. And so it's just so common for people to fall in love with bandmates. Like there's
just aren't, I just don't know if bands unless it's like sibling bands or like family bands
where people just like don't fall in love with each other. It just like happens all the
time. And every band I've ever been in, I I've fallen in love with people and fallen out of love.
It's interesting that we take this particular story
as maybe this is maybe one of the more dramatic
examples of this happening,
but it's just so common to fall in love with people
that you're making art with.
And it's also, I think equally common to fall in love
with the music that you're making
with the person, but not actually know the person. And then when you actually get to know
who you're together with as a human being and not just the music that they're making,
you realize, oh, this person is imperfect. This person is not who I had thought that they were in
my mind. And now I have to contend with the fact that I am in a business enterprise with somebody
that I am unable to have a functional relationship with.
And then you're like, oh no.
And then you have to play shows together for a really long time.
And then you have to drive great distances together for $45.
You have to stop it come and go and go get hot dogs in between gigs.
Right.
And also, I feel like the sort of the muse narrative for women is a classic.
And what's so much more interesting is making art together.
Or even if you don't do it together, kind of having art making lives together that inform
and strengthen the art that you make.
And Stevie and Ix and Lindsay Buckingham met in a band called Fritz and they played together
for a really long time before they got together, apparently.
And then they did.
And they worked as a duo and then they joined this band and broke up and were bandmates for longer than they were
partners and the same with Christine and John McVee. They like met kind of in the blues scene at
the time and they got married relatively quickly and then she retired from her own music to like be his wife. And then she joined Fleetwood Mac,
because apparently that was not enough.
So Stevie Nix has like started talking on the phone
to Don Henley of the Eagles.
She says, it was weird and fun.
And then they arrive and they're the same venue
as the Eagles.
She says, no, I would never go in there and say,
hi, I'm Stevie, never, I would die first.
So I go into our dressing room,
and here's this huge bouquet of roses with a card in it.
So I open up the card and it reads,
the best of my love, dot, dot, dot.
Tonight, question mark, Don.
Whoa.
And I said, that's about the uncoolest thing
I've ever seen in my whole life.
I mean, how can you possibly preconceive something like that? And I'm dying, right? My face is red and I'm
fuming. And then finally Christine grabs me and takes me aside and says, Don didn't send
that Mick and John did. Oh my god. They were in hysterics. And yet despite this sabotage,
the Henley-Nix relationship does continue, as we know know from the song, Lather and Lace.
Oh, okay.
What is this that this happened?
This is 1976, so this is as they're working on rumors and also touring
and becoming progressively more famous.
It's after their previous album has become ahead.
Okay.
So they've broken up, but they're still recording rumors.
They're still performing rumors. They're still performing
together. What is like the tenor of the band? Because they seem fine on this cover. There's
the connotation that they're just like swapping each other out, I suppose. But what is the
tenor in the band at this point? Well, you asked a bit ago, what did Stevie say about this
breakup? And here's more of what she said to Cameron Crowe, which I think also speaks to
break up and here's here's more of what she said to Cameron Crowe, which I think also speaks to
how she's willing to tell us all about it. She says, I could be no comfort to Lindsay when he needed comfort. Right. And the article says she cites an example from Sosalito. Lindsay was
feeling depressed because he couldn't quite get some guitar parts down, right? She says, we go
back to where we were staying and he would really need comfort for me for me to say, it's all right, who cares about them?
You know, be an old lady, one problem.
I was also pissed off because he hadn't gotten
the guitar part on.
So I'm trying to defend their point of view
and at the same time trying to make him feel better.
It doesn't work.
I couldn't be all those things.
Right.
Stevie has kept mostly to herself since the breakup
with Lindsay outside of a short romance
with drummer-slash singer Don Henley of the Eagles. She spent her days either in the studio
or at home writing and taping her songs. She isely denies talk of an affair with Paul Canner.
It's strange for me she's says in confidential tones, I've never been a dater, I don't really
like parties, I'm very alone now, I'm not one of those women who are just willing to go out and
sit at the rainbow. In my position I can meet a lot of people'm not one of those women who are just willing to go out and sit at the rainbow.
In my position, I can meet a lot of people, I guess, because of the band diamond.
Well, I don't want to meet anybody because of the band diamond.
Stevie doesn't mind airing her personal life like this at all.
I don't care that everybody knows me and Chris and John and Lindsay and make all
broke up.
She declares because we did.
So that's a fact.
I just don't want people to pick up a magazine and go,
oh, another interview from Fleetwood Mac.
If it's interesting, I'm not opposed to giving out information.
On this album, all the songs that I wrote
except maybe Gold Dust Woman, and even that comes into it,
are definitely about the people in the band.
Chris' relationships, John's relationships,
mixed relationships, Lindsay's in mine.
They're all there and they're very honest,
and people will know exactly what I'm talking about.
People will really enjoy listening to what happens
since the last album.
It's interesting that she is so just totally open
about talking about these intense relationships.
Like, there's a very different instinct than I have, I would say.
But so obviously, dreams was written about Lindsay.
Yeah.
So Christine is writing songs about John Ice-O.
About John McVeigh, and also about her new relationship,
which is captured in You Make Love and Fun,
which I submit and have always submitted
is the most brutal song on rumors.
Because the subtext is Christine McVeigh,
having her husband
play base on a song about how much he loves to have sex with her new boyfriend,
which is the equivalent of saying to your ex-husband, oh my god, were we married? I totally forgot we were
even married. Yeah, you're right, that is brutal. That is, but also kind of a power move. I
definitely respect it because, you know, maybe he just
like wasn't, you know, well, obviously as he was like, he was a drunk and he was like
not meeting her needs.
Yeah.
So, you know what?
He probably put her through a lot worse.
So.
Yeah.
There's so much legend that this album has accrued and I feel like this is an album about life-during breakups
because the McVeees are divorcing,
the Buckingham-Nixes are emotionally disentangling
and also while they're recording McFleetwood's wife
who has sensibly stayed out of the band,
is like, I'm gonna leave you as well.
You can also get a divorce.
Oh.
And one of her reasons predictably is that like, he hasn't really
been around and he's putting his energy into the band and he's the doubt of the band, but that's
inconvenient because he also has human children. Yeah, I've been thinking about this a lot lately in
terms of when you're in a relationship that like needs multiple things out of you, which like
obviously we go through this in the podcast because like we are
I mean we're not bringing up with each other in this regard, but like you know we are friends and
we're co-workers and we're emotional supports and then like there's all of these different levels
and I think that as capitalism sort of like melts down the wall, we no longer have like, I mean, maybe we never did,
like have categories for what the people in our lives are,
you know, like things just get more and more blurred
when you don't have like the same kind of traditional
workplace environments,
and especially when you work in arts or content
or any of that kind of stuff,
like you're just inevitably working with people
that you have multiple types of relationships with.
And so it's just inevitable that we're never gonna be able
to be all of the things for the people in our lives
immediately around us.
And sometimes that's just hard.
Yeah, especially when due to supply chain issues,
we all have to be four or five people now.
Right, yeah.
I mean, this also occurs to me just thinking of the experience
of working closely with people to mutually create something
that you care about in the audio format.
I'm not comparing myself to Fleetwood Mac,
but I am comparing yourself to Fleetwood Mac.
So, that there's also an element of like needing
some form of like comfortable consistent
intimacy for everyone to be able to get their job done. And like for me to work with you,
like I have to understand that I'm being witnessed by you and all of my foibles, like both,
and the recording of this episode where we're talking to each other, or the recording of any
episode where you're editing and putting the, or the recording of any episode where you're editing
and putting the episode together, and also in like the working around that and the releasing and the infrastructure. There was a period in my life when I was really like an intimacy dare
devil, and Stevie Nex was definitely my soundtrack for that, because I think she's also an intimacy
dare devil. Yeah, it sounds like it. She's like, I'm gonna jump my motorcycle over all 30 of my ex-boyfriends.
Oh my God.
And I'm gonna tell you about it.
Yeah, and I'll be singing the whole time.
And then I like broke a bunch of my intimacy bones
and I feel like to a great extent working with you
and doing this show with you
and being part of an artistic team
has been like one of the things
that's been forcing me to relearn that
and like get out on the
flying motorcycle again. Oh, that's so sweet. You can jump over me any day if you're up for it.
I mean, I think that's one of the reasons that people love you so much is that you're able to
get to the heart of something very quickly, which requires vulnerability and requires intimacy
with whoever you're talking to.
And that's also maybe ties into why it's more difficult to do something scripted, because
when you're doing something scripted, like you're talking to yourself and talking to yourself
is a different kind of intimacy than talking with somebody else, right?
That's kind of the same thing that, you know, they're going through like in the band,
they're talking to themselves and they're talking to the other people in the band
and then they're also talking to their audience.
Yeah, and I think you have to really, you have to trust the people that you're looking at
and kind of working with directly.
And at least some capacity, like maybe you can't trust them if they're Lindsey Buckingham
to not like cheat on you or something, but you have to trust them musically or artistically.
Yeah.
And in some sense, trust them personally to be able to create something bigger than your parts.
And I mean, and also that, you know, this, this album is interesting because there's like great sort of moments of collaboration where you can see the ego not being at the front of people's thinking. And then all this conflict where you can see the ego not being at the front of people's thinking
and then all this conflict where you can't see the ego come out.
And it's, you know, it's never all one thing.
Two questions.
Yeah.
Did Lindsay Buckingham cheat?
And second question, are there any lyrics from any of these songs specifically that stand
out as good examples of what you're just talking about?
Well, I don't have sources for Lindsay Buckingham cheating that I like pulled for this
episode, but the lyrics of Silver Springs are about him cheating among other things.
And it's also an interesting kind of balance to go your own way. What I love about these songs is that it's kind of like point, counterpoint.
So go your own way is like, if I could, baby, I'd give you my world.
How could I, if you won't take it from me?
So it's like, I'm giving you my world, I'm giving you everything and you're not taking it from me.
And Silver Springs with the counterpoint is, I know I could have loved you, but you could not let me.
And so it's like both parties essentially saying like I had all the love in the world to give, but you couldn't receive it.
And sort of jumping into the production of this album, because this is a really interesting pressure point within it that is present all the way through.
Silver Springs originally is a very long song when Stevie Nicks first record is it.
It's like eight minutes and also going into production
of rumors, she's considered like the weak link in the band,
not just by people around the band or listeners,
but by the band because she doesn't really have a lot
of technical knowledge compared to the rest of them.
She doesn't really play any instrument that well. She'll play the tambourine
while they're recording, but they don't micr. It's just like for her to like have something to do. Oh wow.
I know of people who cannot stand Stevie Nix's voice. I'm sure that like there are people who can't stand any voice that you can think of, but I know that she's divisive.
people who can't stand any voice they can think of, but I know that she's divisive. I love her voice, but I'm conscious that she's doing something a little bit weird, which I wonder if you can speak to.
Well, it's definitely a very unique voice in the sense that it has a lot more texture than your
average female voice of the 60s and 70s maybe. I don't think she's afraid to touch that texture and
kind of lean into it, especially as she gets older, can kind of hear it getting a little bit, you know, you kind of have that like lower
you know chest reverberation going on
And once again like we come back to the idea that she's not afraid to
Express emotions within the within the melody and things like that and I think the emotions that she's conveying
Match up with the timbre of her voice in a way that like if you think about I don't know just like
as a singer myself I think a lot of times where pressured female vocalists are
often pressured to be like well just sounds sweet you know just like seeing a
sweet song or you know make your voice sound pretty and her voice doesn't
always sound like pretty and I don't think it should.
Yeah, I feel like that's like a big part of what she does
and it's such an interesting balance to Christine McVeigh
who like does usually sound pretty.
Yeah.
It's a more consistent product and she's more of a trained musician
and Stevie Nicks is like,
I don't know, like, she reminds me a lot of Mick Jagger.
I don't feel like you hear that comparison that much,
but she's just like, she understands that part of her job
is to like put on an outfit and jump around the entire time.
I mean, she's often referred to as like got like,
witchy energy, which I think Mick Jagger,
there's like an energy there, right?
Yeah. And like, all of the other members,, like when I'm thinking about videos that I've seen of them
playing, like they all have energy, they're all energetic, but there isn't like a gravity
around their orbit. Right. And like Stevie Nex has this for lack of a better term aura,
like things just like get pulled into her orbit. Yeah. I love her voice.
Me too. It's the Stevie and
X part is in podcasts. That's just the way it is. So the initial block of recording time for
rumors is nine weeks at the music plant in Saasolito at the start of 1976. And so the band is newly
working with Ken Calle, their engineer, And one of the main issues that becomes apparent
is that they like to come in at different hours
from each other and they have different drugs of choice.
And it's like fairly difficult to calibrate the timing
so that they can all be able to work for the same chunk of time.
Because sometimes Sean McVee will come in early and start drinking early and he apparently will sometimes start drinking at 6am and
he likes to come in and have a screwdriver with just like a float of vodka on
top so just like as a garnish. And so he can become incapable of working by 10
o'clock, which is earlier than some of the other band members
might even be coming in.
Because one of the things Ken Kelly talks about that he believes in is the 12 hour rule
where if a musician has been recording in the studio for a while, they need 12 hours
of turnaround time to go home and relax and go to sleep and wake back up and come in. Wow. Mick Fleetwood is a Heineken guy and Stevie Nicks to get her voice warmed up before she
sings likes to drink like a toddy with a lot of curvazi A in it.
Well, what is that?
I don't know what that is.
I think it's like somewhat fancy brandy.
Oh, that sounds nice.
I would, right?
I know.
I really want to try that.
But she's not getting like sloshed in the way that some of the other members are.
But is there a lot of cocaine going on during this recording?
Yes.
Okay.
That was my understanding was that that's kind of been the drug of choice for a lot of them.
Yeah.
And it starts off with like cocaine takes a few days to make its first appearance when
they're in the studio.
But then they begin using it more and more.
There's songs where we gotta all do a magic bump
to get in the right headspace to really like
wham into motion, that's a technical term.
And so the first time they use cocaine
when they're recording is when they're working
on Gold Dust Woman, And then they try to do
something that McFleet would call's Transcension. We ran gold dust woman down a couple more times
and we liked it enough to start recording. That night we got eight takes in the can but still
something just wasn't right. John went home a little before 11 p.m. After that, a Transcension
broke out and the rest of us stayed for three more hours,
continuing to record the song.
Mick coined this term Transcension to describe the moment when most of the band members were
at just the right buzz point, where they were ready to play or record anything, even if
they were missing a couple of bandmates.
Often, I felt that these Transcensions worked against our bigger goal.
I would try my best to reason with the band to keep on schedule, but you know.
This is making me think of like, so often,
what you're feeling is like this moment of universal impact
and like things being just like right in the right zone,
it's true that you feel that way,
but then when you listen back to it, you're like,
wow, that was messy, I'd say.
And so also, this is the day when Colby Kelly's dad first witnesses how rage filled, Lindsey Buckingham can get out of nowhere because he's in the booth working with another engineer.
Lindsey, for some reason, thinks that he's preventing the other engineer who
is used to working with from doing his job. So Ken writes, suddenly the band
screech to a noisy halt as Lindsay jumped up turned and screamed at me at the
top of his lungs, dammit, Ken let record fucking get in there and do something.
He was screaming at me so hard that his face had turned bright red and I could
see the veins popping out of his neck. Flabbergasted, I hit the talk back and
blurted out, I'm not stopping him. I stepped away from the board so Lindsay
could see that I was making room. Richard sat down and just looked at Lindsay as if to say,
everything's fine in here idiot. I didn't know what to make of it. Everything was going great
and then out of nowhere blind rage over nothing. Is it me or is that guy crazy? I asked Richard.
over nothing. Is it me or is that guy crazy? I asked Richard. You're fine, Richard smiled. Never mind, Lindsay. And what is Lindsay's drug of choice? Lindsay and Stevie both are smoking a fair amount of pot.
Okay. He doesn't seem to be doing like a lot more cocaine than anyone else.
Okay. So he's like the average cocaine user. Okay. I don't know which substances are contributing to this behavior,
although cocaine would make sense. All this is actually before the cocaine comes out
for the band as a whole. So we don't know about his choices. But yeah, this is like,
this is a trend in this account that things will be going fine. And then again, in this book,
like over some aspect of the music, Lindsay will like go from a
one to a 10 anger wise. Ken Kelly writes, I was shocked. Everybody went back to what they've been
doing before Lindsay's freak out without so much as batting an eye. Little did I know that this
was the real Lindsay coming out in front of me for the first time. The others were simply used to
it. And truth, it wasn't just that they were used to it, that they allowed it. They understood it. That day's outbursts, like the verbal and physical
outbursts that would follow, was just the most extreme manifestation of the obsessive character
that every member of the band possessed. Which I sort of, I can see that being true to an extent.
Well, my first thought is just that it's kind of amazing what we let people get away with
and the name of making art. Like, it's like obviously not acceptable behavior. And obviously,
we didn't have the same sort of rhetoric around what is acceptable in terms of how to express
emotions at the time. But yeah, it's just too bad that that kind of environment was tolerated,
I suppose, and that it was just seen as normal.
Because I also think about the fact that like I work as an engineer sometimes and it's like such a male dominated industry, I think partially because
like if I were in that room, I would be like, I'm definitely not safe.
Like this could go bad.
And so like I'm just not going to be here. You know,
and so I think that that makes me sad to think about all the people who could have been
not in just that room, but in any room where that kind of behavior is tolerated and then
subsequently like aren't because of that culture. Right. And like the extent to which that's the
meaning of like if you can't take the heat, get out of the kitchen.
And it's like, why do I have to work in a kitchen that's on fire? Right. Good point. It's like, well, if you can't stand the heat, perhaps you should talk to Oshah
about ventilation or something. That's a good saying. Right. Yeah.
So as they're recording this album, their previous album is climbing the charts.
And especially during this initial sawsalito phase, it suddenly is popular in a way that it
really wasn't before.
To the point that previously they had been able to kind of quietly go up to this recording
facility and not be particularly noticed and go out for dinner and like not
really be recognized.
And then the fans start showing up and are trying to hang out in the building and also according
to Ken Kelly, he's sharing a house with some of the band members and because they work
such long hours, there's groupies who show up who have been told that they can sleep in the
engineer's beds because they won't be back home until like morning. Oh my God. I wouldn't like it.
Yeah, I wouldn't want to stranger in my bed by any means, but I could also see this like in the
culture of the time being like, what do you mean you don't want a beautiful groupie sleeping in
your bed? Yeah, come on Ken. Do you get tired driving that train?
Do you know where Songbird was recorded?
I don't.
Why don't you tell me about it?
So Ken Kelly, according to himself,
heard Songbird, the song that Christine McVee was working on.
And it was like, you know, the song would sound good
with some reverb.
What if he recorded it like an giant auditorium
and kind of had that kind of sound for it?
And so they recorded it at the Zellerbach auditorium
in Berkeley.
Oh, yeah.
Interesting.
Tell me about that auditorium you've been in there.
Well, I haven't been in there, but it's interesting that
they were, well, it's interesting that it's in Berkeley
first of all, because I think of Fleetwood Mac is, I know that they're recording
in Sosolito, so Sosolito is closer to Berkeley than it would be to LA, but when you said,
like, reverb, I was thinking, like, well, maybe they ended up going to Capitol records to
go do this because Capitol has a very famous reverb chamber.
And also other LA studios.
So reverb is essentially like, it's taking a recorded
sound and then it's like reverberating it, right? And maybe I'll like put on reverb right
now so that you can hear the difference between reverb on my voice and reverb on my voice
so that maybe you can do that. But then a lot of times what they do is that they just like
will put your voice going through
like a different speaker in a different room,
and then it'll echo in that room,
and then it'll take that recorded sound
and put that on, right?
But that's just replicating what happens
when you're in a bigger space, like in an auditorium.
So it's interesting that they just recorded in an auditorium,
which is sometimes a little bit harder to control sound wise. Mm-hmm.
Then if you were in like a chamber situation, this reminds me of like something that Tom
waits at about that album he did in the mid 80s that everybody likes rain dogs.
I think, yeah, where you know that one.
You know the one.
The one everyone likes.
It isn't the closing time.
Yeah.
And I think about this album or definitely about this period, he was
saying, you know, this is when everyone was in love with synthesizers and we had all
these ways of circumventing actually having to make the sound in the world. You could
just like create it. You could synthesize it. That's what that word means when you think
about it. And how he was very much against that.
And in this vein of like, no, I'm going to like,
if I want this weird percussion sound,
I'm going to like hit this door with a stick.
Right.
Yeah, there's something about the literalism of all this
that is really nice to read about.
It's like, yeah, the very early days of film.
Totally.
I mean, it's like a very analog experience,
which obviously in 76 we're still in analog in a way that we are we're just totally digital now
It's like sort of a novelty to record analog
But yeah, it's like okay, you want it to sound like you're in a big room record in the big room
Simple solution, but you would think that that would be obvious
But at least I think to people who record now, it's not because
like you don't have money to record in big rooms now.
Right.
I mean, that's the other thing too, that like the label was like, sure, you can take
a year to make this album.
Yeah.
What do we care?
Or like, maybe we care slightly, but we're persuadable.
I know.
It's also interesting to hear about this, even the fact that what was it?
Like, did you say nine days initially?
Nine weeks nine weeks
Fuck nine initial weeks in Sausolito. So just for context for people like your average independent artist now
Like if I were to go make an album right now
Probably the minimum like a nine song ten song album
With full band and the whole deal recording at a studio,
it would probably minimum cost me between $10,000 and $15,000.
Right?
And so the way that the recording industry is set up now is like, either you have to figure
out how to do that with no money and basically figure out how to do it at home by yourself,
or you figure out how to say of 10 to $15,000 and then you pay for it yourself,
or you get a kickstarter to get that money.
Or you get signed to a label that basically like labels function totally
differently now than they did pre-straming pre-internet.
But now it's basically more of like a loan situation where it's like they
front you the money and then you sell records to give them the money back. So it's basically
just giving money up, but you're not making money in the same way that people made money then.
That's so weird. If I were to make a record right now, which I'm hoping to do this year actually,
I would be like, okay, how can I get this done literally as fast as possible?
Like I only will be able to book studio time for probably six days.
Studio time is going to start recording at 10 a.m.
We'll stop at six.
We'll do comps at the end, which is where you figure out
what takes you're going to take from the day.
You probably will record two songs a day, maybe three,
if you're like really fast.
And so the idea of having nine weeks to experiment
and be like, oh, I took 10 takes of this song today,
but like the energy wasn't there,
so maybe we'll do a little cocaine.
I tried to do enough cocaine,
but then I did too much cocaine,
so let's start again tomorrow at 2 p.m.
Like that is the most luxurious,
not the cocaine part,
but the most luxurious thing not the cocaine bar but
the most luxurious thing I could ever think about having and it's true that
they're popular at this point and they probably didn't have these luxuries when
they were recording their first albums but I'm sure that it was a much more
loose environment than it is now yeah and also you know labels at that time
were just like I mean it's kind of like how. And also, you know, labels at that time were just like,
I mean, it's kind of like how you hear about how, you know, the kind of projects that Joan Diddy and Wysenton, you're like, I'm sorry, they paid for what? Yeah.
The relationships do not shock me in this because it is not shocking to me that people fell in love,
started a band, and then fell out of love while they were making the band because being in a band is much less sexy than starting a band, but
like the actual components of making this record and the kind of machine that was behind
it is definitely fascinating to me.
Yeah, I'm just thinking about how nine weeks, if you look at it one way, it could seem
like really grueling and exhausting and like, oh my god, it's so long kind of living as this musical astronaut. But on the
other hand, it's a luxury to be able to have that kind of time with your work. And also,
somebody was making them lunch every day. Yeah. I had catered lunch. And even like, they had a
house that like paid further and where their engineer engineer was staying like that's also just crazy that yeah everything of this is just we're in a totally different
financial world than we're in now. So speaking of Songbird again, I love how they were like
there were various little like problem solving aspects to this that does remind me a little bit of
when we record shows where they have her set up in the auditorium. Awesome. But one of the problems is that she needs to stay on tempo.
And they're like, why don't we play ClickTrack for you? Which I know what a ClickTrack
is because I've watched a bunch of YouTube videos about the Les Mizz movie and how they
tried and failed to use a ClickTrack to keep people singing the same song. But what's a click
track, Carolyn? Oh my gosh, that's hilarious. So basically a click track is a metronome. It gets
sent into headphones. So you can hear the tempo while you're recording. And also when you're recording
with headphones, that means that you can't hear anything else
other than the ones in the headphones, right?
But also people are recording generally isolated
from each other so that there isn't what we call bleed
so that like when you're mixing the cacha part,
the piano isn't like over it
because you need to have different balances
of everything, right?
There used to be a lot more bleed
and more analog recordings and things like that. And especially if they're recording in an auditorium. But basically the click track
is going to be sent in so that you can hear what tempo you're on. And it'll be like.
Yeah. And so they suggest doing that. And Christine says, can I can't play my lovely
song with this bloody fucking clicking blasting
my ears.
That's a great impression.
It's like Christine, like the impression.
So the engineers are like, okay, well, what if we have Mick just like softly play the drums
with brushes and you can listen to that?
And then they're like, what if we had Lindsay like very softly playing the guitar and you
could hear that on your headphones? And they're like, what if we had Lindsey like very softly playing the guitar and you could hear that on your headphones.
And they're like, great, nailed it.
So they have Lindsey on the other side of the auditorium playing the tempo in his guitar,
which even that like they get some bleed from that unfortunately.
And then the other issue is that Christine has to play it without singing, which she
isn't used to doing because they need the piano track all by itself, right?
And I'm sure a lot of pianists do this, but I feel like the one I always think of is Glenn
Gould, who's the famous, very important Canadian and pianist who is best known for playing
box goldberg variations and hummed the entire time.
And I seem to be still divisive to this day
because some people cannot stand
to listen to Glenn Gould because he is humming
the whole time forever for the rest of your life.
I mean, it's so standard to use a click track now.
And there is something that happens with older generations
where they're like, oh, it just doesn't feel natural because I'm used to performing like in a live environment
where you don't have a click track necessarily like being pumped into your brain while you're playing
your songs. But yeah, because music is produced now on such a time crunch, often people will do
overdubs, which is where, for example, well, this is what Christine would have been doing. You know,
you record your piano part first and then you sing over the part that you just
recorded, right?
And that typically tends to be a little bit more efficient because if you're recording
to a click track, that means that you can like mix and match which takes you've done because
it's standardized to a tempo.
And so like that means that you can do like three or four takes of something.
And then since it doesn't deviate in time, you can use any of them instead of having
to completely redo all of the parts.
Right.
And I feel like that's the answer to the question I realized I should really need to
post to you as well, because why not just record it all together, why record it in parts
at all, as you were talking about editing podcasts before.
I feel like it maps, like, it maps
onto both things the same way. It gives you more choices.
Yeah, it gives you more choices. And then it also is, like, if you're doing such a long
recording session, you're like, you're not going to finish the song. Like, if you know
you're not going to finish the song today, and you're going to have to revisit it in
a few weeks, or if you're going to go to a new studio or just do anything where you might have to revisit it later, it's a lot easier
to be like, okay, the click track is 86 beats per minute.
And so we can send this off to somebody to play over it rather than us all having to
be there at the same time.
And then also with podcasts, we record isolated so that I can move all of the words around.
So it doesn't sound like we're
talking over each other when we definitely are. Yeah and that's it's the best and what if you know
instead of that you just had two people talking over each other and there's nothing you can do to
separate their voices and you can't make them make more sense. Which is what most podcasts are and
yeah it's terrible unfortunately yeah and then it's like, if I wanted this,
I would just live in my real life.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so the other issue they're running into
acoustically is that so she records her piano.
She can't really sing while doing it,
or she can't sing while doing it.
And then she records her vocals.
And they want the vocals to have reverb
to go with the piano reverb,
which is the reason
they're playing it in the auditorium.
But she's singing very softly into this fancy new microphone.
And so they kind of get through the day, they send her home, and then they're listening
to what they've got.
And they're like, oh, we're not getting a reverb from Christine.
She's not matching the sound of the piano.
And so they're problem solving this.
Canon pictured the two engineers.
And they're like, why don't we just get a speaker
and play Christine's vocals through that and then record that.
And we'll play the speaker at a higher volume.
So it'll we'll get the reverb that we wanted.
Yeah. Okay. Interesting.
This is kind of what I was talking about earlier,
which is what they used to do. Well, if I'm
understanding this correctly, like this is sort of what they used
to do a capital. Yeah. And then it's so funny how like when you
listen to songbird, which is, you know, one of the iconic Fleetwood
Mac songs, you know, they made so many of them. It's hard to pick a
short list. But it feels like you're hearing this moment that
really happened. But really, you're hearing this moment that really happened, but really you're hearing
the combination of different moments in time, and also you're hearing a piano played
by real Christine and then the voice of speaker Christine.
Yeah.
Hmm.
There's a day when the women who work at the studio who cook for them make what turn out to be some very strong weed cookies.
And now, who gets too high to continue and they have to scrap the whole day.
And also some piano tuners have come to tune Christine's piano. And they also get too high.
Oh my god.
We're just like definitely not working with efficiency in mind.
No, yeah. And also, it's like when Stevie needs to record,
you know, the bill like, Stevie, you want to come do vocals. And she's like, I really need to sit
on this couch drinking brandy and smoking pot for another hour. And this is at a time in the industry
when it's like, okay, yeah, I'm sure you do. Yeah. The ability to have the luxury of being like, yeah, you need another hour to like mentally
or whatever get where you need to be emotionally to sing this song, right? Like that seems like
something that we have lost and could have used more of. Yeah, like what kind of emotion would
we be able to tap into if we had the ability to work when we wanted to. Yeah, and he was the parts of the day that have the most energy for us.
Yeah.
So Ken Kelly writes,
by Monday, March 15th,
I had lost all ability to keep the band sane and sober.
There were continual outbreaks of drugs, alcohol, and paranoia.
We still had a month to go in Saas Alito,
and everyone was getting homesick.
Our start time was slipping later and later each day.
As I explained earlier, the 12-hour rule always holds true.
If they left the studio at 4 a.m.,
then they would not be back until 4 p.m. period.
Mick was the worst influence.
He always made the excuse that genius music
would come out of the transactions, but it never did.
Maybe that was because the whole band was really there for most of the transactions, just the
Coke dot crazies, making usually Steve Eurkstein. If it could get
either of them tooted up enough, then off the deep end, we'd go
very rarely would Lindsay fall for the late nights. And John
never did make kind of phrase he frequently repeated, which I
later learned was a quote from Robert Frost.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, and we have miles to go before we sleep.
If that phrase was spoken to him, he would go into a translate state and re-can do his
pocket and pull out his tiny bottle of Coke and share it with us.
It became a game of sorts.
Interesting.
And apparently, this kind of changes through their recording, sojourn, but at the start,
the bandwigs keep like a baggy of three or four ounces of Coke just like in the middle
of the studio and they can all just like grab someone they want it.
I mean, yeah.
And kind of decides to prank them by filling another baggy with flour and then bringing
it out and pretending to like drop
it everywhere. This is just like, yeah, I guess a good description of the process.
Stevie couldn't find the same mood she had had the first time she had sung it, but she was a
trooper and didn't give up. Lindsay played an acoustic guitar for her to sing too. Nope,
she tried smoking a joint better. The big guns came out, curveh sing to. Nope. She tried smoking a joint. Better. The big guns came out.
Curvazier, interesting.
She tried a magic bump.
Nothing had the feel of her original vocal.
Which song is this for?
This is for dreams.
Oh, wow.
And so also there's tension because
Stevie is spending less time recording than the rest of the band
because they don't need
her as much because they're not miking her tambourine.
And so she starts kind of going off to another area of the music plant, which is called the
pit.
I tried to find pictures of this.
I couldn't.
I'm sure that there are some out there.
But basically, you got there by climbing through a pair of red lips and then you could record while in a
fore poster bed. Wow. That is not what I was expecting when you said the pit. I was expecting more of
like, I don't know why I was expecting one of those like ball pits that you used to go to with like
McDonald's. I would like that too. Just like Stevie, you like jumping to the ball pit at McDonald's
and you bump into Stevie next with her keyboard,
writing her song. I mean, she really is the face of Fleetwood Mac,
I would say, at this point in time, like I mean, in currently in 2022,
but it's interesting to think about the fact that she most maybe recorded the least on it,
even though she probably has the most cultural impact.
Right, it is really funny. And I feel like she's, you know, I think she's the secret ingredient
that kind of holds the whole thing together because the emotional vulnerability and kind of
clarity of the lyrics and then also the showmanship of it where she was the person who didn't
need to be behind an instrument and could be sort of the visual of the music that was happening.
Yeah. It is crazy that they are doing all of this even though they're breaking up actively
and obviously going through addiction issues and anger issues and just generally not having
their shit together. I do relate to the fact that sometimes,
like the power and like desire to make the music
that you're hearing in your head is so much more powerful
than anything you're going through
and you're just like every day life.
And I think that that feeling definitely comes through
in this album and it's probably why it's had such a lasting
impact.
Like this album is very impactful and very emotional and intense.
And obviously that's because of what they were going through.
But also it seems like they were like, well, we just have this innate desire
to make this music.
We just have to, even though we're going through this, because they easily
could have just been like, no, we're just not doing this, right?
Yeah.
Or were they under pressure from the record label?
Like was that part of it?
And nothing that I've read,
did it seem to occur to anybody to stop.
Mm-hmm.
That's why they call that sign, don't stop, I guess.
Um, there was a feeling of it being difficult
to get through, but yeah, it seems like everyone was so
passionate about the work that they were doing
and so excited about it, that it felt to some extent like,
well, we obviously have to do this. Yeah. Because we were improving. And like they were improving as
they were touring. And, you know, their live renditions of songs that had been on the album,
they'd put out the past year were improving on what they'd recorded for that. And so they have
until April 11th at the record plant in
Saasolito where CV gets to go write songs in the pit. That's where she writes dreams. And
where the general practice for recording songs is, you know, they'll mic and record
each instrument individually. They'll do a bunch of takes. They'll do, you know, like
eight or ten takes at a time. They'll listen back to what they have, and they'll pick different instruments from different sessions that kind of create the best
hole and then go back in and fill that in and add more instrumentation and more vocals potentially.
And Christine McVeigh actually mentioned in one interview that she like got a sculpture degree
in school, And like that
kind of feels like what they're doing. Like they're doing a paper, a mache album. Yeah.
Which is sculpture. Yeah, it's interesting because this is so standard now in the recording
industry to do everything in parts. And for not everybody to be in the same room at the same
time. And often, you know, if somebody's recording something in Nashville, but there's
a guitarist that they love in LA, they'll just send the tracks to LA and then like, it's just very
standard for people to not necessarily be working in the same zone at the same time. But I think
it, this is like a newer thing in the 70s, because if you watch Get Back, which is the Beatles'
documentary, that's like a gazillion hours long, which is perfect
for me, but maybe not perfect for people who don't love the Beatles. They're all recording just in
one room at the same time, and that's in 1969. So like, well, late 60s and 70s are really when people
start getting more into the ability to do this. Yeah. And when I was a little Beatles fan,
I'm still a Beatles fan, I guess, spent a lot less time actively thinking about the Beatles than when I was like 13.
I remember reading about how like it seemed like they were actively innovating when they were recording.
And we just like trying out a bunch of stuff and that like, yeah, totally.
Revolution number nine was like technically a very new thing when it came out and stuff like that.
Yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
Yeah, so it feels like the 70s were kind of like the space age for music engineering.
Like recording in general is, it blows my mind all the time.
Even just the fact that like I can talk into a microphone and it can get converted into
signal.
Like I understand how it works, but just the fact that it sounds like my voice still,
like no matter who records it's going to sound like them, that's crazy, that's magic. Also, the fact that
a lot of recording equipment came about to exist through the military, for example, compressors,
which levels the highs and lows of a sound wave, so that it's not so loud that it hurts
your ears and not so soft that you can't hear it. Like that came about as technology for radio, like you know,
walkie talkies and things like that because one guy might talk super loud and like blast your
ear off if you're, you know, whatever in combat and then another guy might be so soft that you can't
hear him. So they created this technology so that you can hear each other and that's a lot of
the technology that we use for recording and a lot of the technology that was being used for overdubs and things like that.
In this recording session, I'm sure like came about because of military technology and then was like repurposed into art.
Wow. Yeah.
Let's guess what yeah, that's amazing to think about is the connection between World War II and rumors. Yeah, totally.
Yeah.
It's a short walk.
That also reminds one of the facts in this book that makes me feel like I'm being pranked
as Ken Kelly being like, yeah, rumors was successful, I think, partly because it was a loud
album.
We made it louder than other albums were at the time.
So when you played it, it was louder.
And I'm like, is that, is that how records work? And apparently it is.
Yeah. So there is like something that happens. There's like a loudness bias that people have,
where people think something sounds better if it's louder, which is why stuff that's on the radio
now. Like if you're listening in the car, you can turn the knob up and down for it to fit your,
you know, your comfort. But overall, things are mastered, which the difference between mixing and
mastering, mixing is when you're leveling the voices with each other and like leveling everything,
so nothing, you know, so everything's like intelligible, like within the song. And then mastering from album is like matching each of the songs levels to each other so that like, okay, if you're listening to
songbird, you don't have to turn it up once you get to Goldbust Woman, right? Because they're
all different like loudnesses. So, right. Mastering is making sure that everything's like basically, you know, sort of the same volume from song to song. And now we master
songs way, way, way louder. There's much less variance in dynamics now than there used to be.
Just because people or like record labels and like they tend to think that loudness is better.
Right. Yeah, that makes me think of watching TV
and a commercial comes on.
And, no, exactly.
Yeah, it's the best.
So they finished their initial session in Sausalino.
There are nine weeks at the record plant
and Ken drives the masters down on the seat
beside him in his car, down to LA,
which just like boggles my mind.
And there's like another copy, there's one more copy,
but like that's it.
Yeah, okay, it's so stressful.
There exists, you know, a finite number of the objects
on which this music is encoded,
and if they're lost, they're just lost forever.
Yeah.
It's amazing how many important films of the silent era are just gone, because people
didn't bother preserving them or didn't do it correctly.
Yeah, totally.
And so, two of the main issues that the band is kind of having a hard time resolving is that
there's a song that they've been working on from the beginning that they've been calling Keatney there, but that doesn't really have lyrics and that they can't figure out how to make cohesive and it's like it's this great song instrumentally like it's got this great, you know, John McV base part it's got Lindsay freaking out on guitar there's like really compelling about it, but they can't get it to come together
Mm-hmm. And then that Stevie has written the song called Silver Springs, but it's like eight minutes long
And they have to figure out whether it's gonna fit on the album and I remember when I first learned about this
I thought it was bullshit that they were like listen Stevie. It's too long
But it was too long because the album could only
be 44 minutes long. Right, yeah, because when you're working with vinyl and when you're working
with analogue, you're working with a physical medium and there's only so much time that you can have
on either side of a vinyl because you're literally putting the grooves into the vinyl. And if it's
too much data on one side, then the sound will start
to distort. So you can only have like, I don't know, 20-ish minutes on either side of the vinyl.
Yeah, which is amazing. You're thinking about, I don't, yeah, like the freedoms we have today
that we don't really notice. And stuff that I'm aware of, because like, I remember when, you know,
even in high school, I would make playlists for people
or like mixed CDs but you still had to fit it onto a CD and you had like 80 minutes or something.
Yeah totally. Yeah if your eight minutes of your 44 minutes is taken up with this one song then
that's a pretty big percentage. So some record executives come down to listen to one of the tracks as it sounds so
far. They listen to Go Your Own Way, which is Lindsay writing bitterly about his breakup with Stevie
Knicks and famously having her sing back up on it. On a song about how shacking up as all she wants
to do. I wonder if that's true or not. I mean, it's kind of an odd accusation, I guess,
more than anything.
Yeah, especially after hearing that quote for her
about I couldn't comfort him.
Like that doesn't sound like the language of somebody
who's just trying to pin him down, you know?
It's because that you couldn't comfort me
is just a bad lyric, I guess.
We're not compelling in the same way.
I suppose so.
Right, because it's like,
Stevie Nicks has a lot of,
I'm so sad in the lyrics,
he's writing about this breakup.
And you don't got that so much from Lindsay Buckingham.
You know, like, go your own ways,
like such a bouncy, defiant cocaine influence song.
Totally.
And it's just like, I'm fine.
I'm good.
I'm fine with I'm good.
I'm fine with this breakup.
I love this for us.
I actually would have been surprised if he would have been able to access any sadness
because I don't generally feel like when men are going through breakup, that's like the
first thing they can.
Yeah, you have to be angry for six months to your entire life.
And then he can think about accessing sadness.
Right, yeah, especially for somebody
who obviously is already prone to anger issues.
You know, and so they're touring,
they can like feel their level of fame changing,
like it's evident.
And then they're in the studio
and Lindsay quote, barges in
and a few minutes later,
Richard the other engineer, Richard Dashett,
whose name I hope I'm pronouncing someone correctly. And Lindsay's new girlfriend, Christina
come in. And Christina says that Lindsay erupted and got angry and punched her.
Ah, wow. Lindsay apparently Richard talks to Lindsay and says what are you doing Lindsay are you fucking crazy?
You don't do that to people and Lindsay says I know you're right. I don't know why she got me that
mad which is you know oh Lindsay fuck you Lindsay yeah not the response we were hoping for
got to blame the person that you just punched no god. Oh, God. And then Lindsay gets truly angry at
Ken a little bit later on because basically Lindsay is doing take after take of
lead guitar for go your own way and isn't satisfied with anything. They've reached
the max of what they can keep recorded before they have to start taping over
stuff, which as anybody who has used a home video to record a treehouse
of horrors episodes understands the trauma that could potentially surround that.
And so, Lindsay's like, let's do another one.
Let's do another one.
Let's just record over that last one.
And they're like, are you sure Lindsay?
Are you positive?
And he's like, yeah.
And then at some point into this, he's like, let's actually, let's play that one from
before again.
I think they like that better.
And they're like, that's the one that you told us to record over.
And according to, can he like, goes into the booth, grabs him by the throat, which is
fucking terrifying.
I, and everyone knows that's terrifying.
I don't have to say that's terrifying.
But it is.
Yeah, that reminds me of Kubrick during the filming of the
shining who was famously just terrible to Shelley DeVal, and was
like, you have to do take after take after take after take and
basically, I mean, in this case, Lindsey is the one telling
himself to do the takeover and over and over again.
But basically, like, I can definitely speak from experience
that there is a point of negative returns
when you're doing something over and over and over again
where the 50th take is not gonna be that much different
from the hundreds take.
And at a certain point, you have to just live with yourself
in your imperfections. But also, it reminds you
of Kubrick in the sense that that's like a very violent thing to do. What we're willing
to forgive in the service of art, like I feel like rumors is a great album in spite of that
kind of thing, you know, because there's drive and then there's like drive that takes
you to the point where it's not actually improving your work
You're just like stuck in a loop with yourself right and you're strangling Kobe Calle's dad
Not so bubbly
And guess I'm this idea of like, you know, yeah the lone male genius who he was right and everyone was wrong.
And it's like, you know, I myself like stories about someone who had to be a bit of a dickhead
to make art.
And that's why I love the making of Titanic story so much.
But I also feel strongly that like, you know, Lindsey Buckingham, when he joined Fleetwood
Mac, he brought Stevie Nick's with him.
They just came as a unit.
And I feel like that gets told is like, he insisted on bringing his girlfriend with him.
And they were like, well, all right.
But, and, you know, there can have been, I'm sure, some element of that.
But I also think that he didn't really have his own musical identity yet.
That that was just how they performed and what they knew how to do and how their best work had come to them so far was as a duo.
I still can't say why Fleetwood Mac ever made the choices that they did, but I feel like if you are a band who, if you're people who are like learning to exist as band mates, as you're learning how to stop existing as romantic partners. And it's like, I don't
know, you have to be doing that out of some recognition that you're doing something together
that you couldn't do alone. And not just financially.
I am relating to that because I often have been like somebody's girlfriend who may not often,
but it's happened to me before where I've been somebody's girlfriend. They're like, oh, well,
they're girlfriend. Like maybe just be oh, well, you're their girlfriend.
Like maybe just be in the band.
You're around all the time anyways.
That way he won't complain about never spending time together.
Right. Yeah.
Something like that or, you know, and then not that I'm like steving
nicks or anything like that.
But like I've often been in situations where then you're like, you're the face
of the band, even though you were kind of an afterthought.
Yeah.
And also, I've definitely been in many musical situations where I've been doing the majority of the writing, or doing the majority of the work, or doing the majority of whatever.
And then the Lindsay Buckingham of the situation will be like, well, we'll
claim that work that I did was their own. But I can kind of see some of that in this
where it's like he's treating himself like as if he's this genius where it's yeah, you're
just you're just Lindsey Buckingham. And like, you know, and he can even be a genius of guitar, but like he's not a genius of
emotions.
Like you don't have to have strong emotional intelligence to write holiday road.
I'm sorry to say.
I just don't really believe in genius.
And I just don't really think that's a thing, even though there are people who are incredible
at what they do.
Yeah.
It's just interesting that like she's just thought of as this afterthought at this point in time and not to like totally
complete my own situation because they're obviously vastly different.
But she's doing a ton of work in this and like obviously a ton of emotional lifting and
that's coming through in her lyrics definitely. And then also just this idea that like you have to
suffer to make art is just so bullshit like
Like just being basically alive is enough to be able to like tap into
The depths of emotion that we all have and like you don't have to experience pain
And you don't have to inflict pain to be better at making art. I always think of those stories where somebody did like a bajillion
Takes of something and guess was pushed past and durans
Yeah, and then they just used the first take anyway.
I think that happened within halfway in Les Mizz
speaking of click tracks.
And that's always like passed off as a funny story,
but it's not funny.
Like it's actually, you can't treat performers
as your little human props
that you can like push to an emotional breaking point
whenever you feel like it just because you can.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah, what stands out to me about rumors really is like,
Lindsay Beckham is a scary guy and they're in like,
John McVee is drinking way too much.
And everyone's apparently doing at least some
and probably too much cocaine.
And there's, you know, there's like a lot of elements
of precarity here, but also people are sleeping
enough, people are eating enough, people have time to back off of an idea and come back
to it, and release something they're truly happy with. And really the comfort of the whole
thing is what stands out today. And also, yeah, it's like, why are you pushing yourself
like this when you don't have to? Yeah, Lindsay.
You know, the best work in this seems like it comes from just like being in the lips and bedroom
sometimes or, you know, not trying again and again until you're kind of past the point of endurance. Yeah.
So speaking of the point of endurance, Silver Springs is still
eight minutes long. Ken and the rest of the band are like Stevie, the song is too long and Lindsay
is like, yes, Stevie, this song is too long. Okay. Which Silver Springs is my favorite Fleetwood
Mac song. It's my favorite Stevie next song. My favorite lyrics of it, I think, are timecast to spell on you, but you won't forget me.
I know I could have loved you, but you cannot let me.
You'll never get away from the sound of the woman who loves you.
There's no mathematical cancelling out of feelings.
It's not like love plus anger equals nothing.
It's like love plus anger plus hurt plus sadness plus hope
plus question mark equals the song.
So they go through Silver Springs and try and cut it
and try and cut down NSENCHA lyrics.
And Stevie is like in tears while they're doing this
because it's so painful for her.
Yeah.
She says these lyrics are part of the story
and we can't cut them.
And Ken says, if we don't shorten the song,
then it may not fit on the album.
It's my job to try and save your song.
I feel like it's very much the producer's role,
which is like, I am trying to help you.
Yeah.
Oh, God.
And cut the lyrics.
She straightened up like a proud soldier.
He worked for several hours, and I could see that poor Stevie was devastated by the process.
It's so unfair that my beautiful song has to be mutilated.
She said at one point, I agree, I said.
As I've already mentioned, I thought Silver Springs was one of the strongest songs we
recorded and I really wanted to say that.
But if you want to keep a longer version of Silver Springs, then the only option is to
take one of your other songs off the album. And so they do get it down to four minutes
and 33 seconds. Okay. Wow. And ultimately, according to this book, which I guess I would
like to dig deeper on this, but I will accept the story that the band was all like, yeah,
it's still too long. And I don't think that anyone was conspiring to get rid of it.
But I think that, you know, it's a song about
her breakup with Lindsay. And I think it's just like,
it's not mean. And I think it's devastating because it's not mean.
Like, go your own way as a mean song. And this is not
there's like no bitterness in it, which I think is in a way kind of scarier.
Yeah, especially maybe for somebody
who's first instinct is anger,
it's like terrifying to not be met with your first instinct.
Yeah, like to see something totally foreign emotionally,
like to not have like the Stevie Recremanation song,
like go your own way to to T.O.O.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And he says that he feels like Gold Dust Woman is a bitter acrimony song and it's directed
at him even though it's really about groupies.
But yeah, and so they don't put it on the album.
The band nominates Mick Fleetwood to go tell her because nobody else wants to.
Oh god.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, it wouldn't.
And he breaks the news to her, and she's, yeah, very upset about it.
And it ends up being the B side for the first single off of Rimmers,
which is, go your own way.
Oh my god.
That is a real knife to the chest right there.
Yeah, and it just gets out into the world
and people find it gradually and love it
and they perform it when they reunite
in the concert film, The Dance.
But I feel, yeah, I guess it's like the Fleetwood
Max story all over, which is it's like
the song that wouldn't die.
That technically gets out into the world, but people have to figure out over the years like the Fleetwood Mac story all over, which is it's like the song that wouldn't die, that
like technically gets out into the world, but like people have to figure out over the
years how great it is.
And go your own ways great as well.
It's not not a great song.
Right.
Yeah.
But once again, it's just kind of one, it's one emotion at a time.
Yeah.
And the emotion is go your own way. I'm fine, I'm fine.
Yeah. I didn't get impaled when I fell in this hole. That's just a stick I'm holding over my torso.
I'm actually making way better music now that I have this stick in me.
So Ken and Richard the two engineers Ken is now a producer. So Ken and Richard are listening to the masters.
And they're like, does this sound wrong?
This sounds a little off.
What he says is that the heads, the little tape heads
that the tape goes around are getting tape oxide on them.
So like the tape is basically starting
to rub itself off onto the playback equipment.
Yeah. So that's terrifying. And so luckily they have the other set of tapes, the only one other one.
So scary. So Ken starts troubleshooting this. He talks to a maintenance engineer, Billy Oedelman,
and says, is it possible to get the overdubs from our worn out tape onto these unused masters? I asked him. Maybe he said, but you'll have to sync up two machines
by hand and control the speed of one machine. So it stays in sync with the other. That's
never been done before and it won't be easy. Sounds difficult. I wouldn't want to do it.
Yeah. So yes, they do it. It takes till five in the morning and they're able to save the masters and save rumors.
Holy shit.
So we're getting into the homestretch.
Silver Springs has been cut.
We're trying to cope with that loss.
And then they shoot the album art.
And it is of course, I don't know why this didn't occur to me, but of course it was.
It is controversial with the rest of the band that the cover of rumors shows only Mick Fleetwood and CBNix
and nobody else.
Yeah.
And it's a really cool cover,
but you know, if you're one of the three other people
in that five person group, then you would be mad.
And then according to Ken Kelley,
to avoid this happening with Tusk,
the little dog on the cover of the Tusk album
of his dog Scooter. And then he said
that Stevie next told him that she placed a hex on scooter because he got her place on the cover.
I really, really respect that energy. She's like, fuck scooter. And can't feel that like Stevie and Christine
never liked scooter because he was always hunting their little dogs. So I was meaning to ask,
like, what is the relationship between Stevie and Christine? Like, are they, do they get
along at all? I mean, they seem to get along fine in the making of rumors, but I think
they're just kind of
on somewhat different planets.
And then there's, you know, in one of the pieces from kind of soon after the Buckingham
Nix is joined the group, Christine McVee is kind of quoted at length being like, no,
I love having Sevy in the band.
It's great.
It's so great.
And it's like, okay, maybe I believe you.
Okay.
She's like, no, really, it's really great.
No, it's so great.
Because I don't know.
This is pure projection.
But I think that one of the things that makes Fleetwood Mac unusual is having multiple
women, usually you have a bunch of guys or maybe a bunch of guys and one woman.
And if there's two, then if you're the pre-existing woman, then your ability to not be totally discredited
in conflict or to kind of collectively bargain and cruise
or you like have someone to go to
who understands the position that you're in in some ways.
But also like, you're not the only woman anymore.
And that is kind of, it's like a very toxic position,
but it's one that has benefits
if those are the only ones you can imagine, especially.
Yeah, especially at this time,
I could see that being difficult to deal with.
Yeah, I feel like the tension really,
I mean, there's like the couple tension
and there's the tension of, you know,
and Stevie and X and McFleet would have a brief
and ill-avized affair.
I was gonna ask.
There's all kinds of stuff,
which shockingly did not inspire O Daddy.
But there's also kind of the tension between the rest of the band and Stevie, who again
is like, it's like unclear to everybody exactly what she's contributing.
I don't think that anyone doubts that she's contributing something or a lot of something, but it's like it hasn't yet
become evident what she's doing to the whole of the band structure.
She's maybe the one or like a big part of what helps to break the gap from like
music that is really good and that you can really enjoy and can bring out big feelings in you to music that like we'll get a big feeling out of you whether you like it or not.
Yeah, I mean, this makes me think of Lionel's slide, which is obviously one of the most
cited emotional songs.
Yeah.
Like she seems inevitable.
Her whole thing seems inevitable.
But like when you're, if you haven't heard rumors yet, I guess it maybe is confusing.
And so yeah, to Stevie's abilities,
we have this nagging song, Keep Me There,
which like has a lot of promise,
but just isn't fully there yet.
And then finally, near the end of the process,
they look at these lyrics that Stevie has written
for this song called The Chain.
Oh.
Which are just like sad, desolate, like just like pure sadness. And then decide to use
those. And then suddenly that's the missing piece. And it's like you have this like barn burner
of a song that opens with lyrics about vulnerability. Yeah. I feel like that's also your brand.
Yeah, I feel like that's also your brand. Oh my god, ideally.
Yeah, I love that song so much and it's impossible to categorize and it just feels it's angry
and it's sad and it's defiant and it's scary and it's passionate and it's you could
max it to like a bunch of different emotions and it would work for all of them.
Also I'm just looking at the lyrics to the chain right now and the opening lines are
listen to the wind blow, watch the sunrise, running in the shadows, damn your love, damn
your lies.
Wow.
And if you don't love me now, you will never love me again.
Yeah.
Which I think in that original drafting was just this sad, desolate thing to say. And then it somehow becomes when matched with that instrumentation,
like defiant, I've always felt, you know,
like, you either have to love me right now
or just fucking give up on it, man.
Yeah, totally.
And so they get the final mix done.
And then just to sort of highlight the wonder and horror of analog,
I'm going to read you a little passage
again from Ken Kelly's book about how records are born
because this is just, again, I feel like I'm being pranked.
In the days of final records,
the mastering engineer had to play the tape
through his console and turn all of the knobs precisely on cue
to make the required adjustments in real time. This sent the final stereo mix out of the mastering
console to a large lathe, which had a sharp blade that vibrated and converted the sound
waves into grooves on the disc. It literally cut the grooves into the rotating blank version
lacquer to make an actual long playing LP record. When people played the discs on their
turn tables at home, their record players each had a diamond needle that would sit in the groove.
As the disc turned, the tiny bumps down in the cut groove would convert back into sound
that could be played out of the speakers. Then the mastering engineer had to reload the lathe
with new blank lacquer, put side two of the tape onto the tape machine,
and repeat the process with different cues for side two. After both sides were cut,
the mastering engineer placed the lacquer parts in a box to be shipped out to the local pressing
plant, where each final disk was placed in a bath that coated the lacquer disks with silver.
These metal images became the master impressions from which other vinyl versions would be created. And so
Ken and Richard who have been working together on rumors this entire time are watching the little records
being born and then they're like what happens when you just leave the masters like sitting here for a
while after making them and the guy who's cutting them Ken Perry is like,
oh yeah, we always do that.
The quality isn't compromised very much.
And he says much.
Ken explained that after the grooves were cut
into the lacquer, they were perfect.
But as the hours passed, the grooves
tend to spring back toward their original state somewhat.
I was horrified.
And so Richard and Ken decide that they need to drive the lacquers to the bath, which is in
another building down the street so that they can get bathed in silver before they have a chance
to degrade, which apparently they determine later saves like 5% in terms of overall quality.
Yeah.
Well, that's almost the end of the story of rumors.
And then to me, the end is a silver springs live in 1997.
But I don't know.
I love knowing that about the actual little records that went
into the world.
I think it's cool that we're learning about this
through the engineers perspective,
because I think it could be very easy to just focus on
like the interpersonal relationships,
which is obviously a massive part of this,
but like the feet of this music is that it happened
despite all of these things working against it,
despite it being such a long process,
despite all of these people going through massive turmoil and
personally, and these engineers were like, okay, we're just going to make it happen, we're
going to drive it to the silver coating place to get it reproduced faster.
And yeah, I just, yeah, congratulations to Colby Kelly's dad for caring so much. There's something so great about knowing that like when I have to get something
I've recorded to you, I just put it in Google Drive and then share it with you as a file, but it
would be cool to like have to drive it to you. I mean, that's all I would do with any I would
just be const, we would just need to live across the street from each other, which would be fine.
Yeah.
That would be totally great.
What we have today is like in many ways superior,
but we're also at the point where we're realizing
that the internet is not particularly protected
and like huge swass of it can just be like gone all of a sudden
and that there is no cloud.
That's just the cloud is just in a building somewhere and that building can catch on fire.
Yeah, absolutely. And speaking of this analog weekend that I did recently, it was at the studio
in Nashville called Welcome to 1979 where they actually do all of this like vinyl cutting and
reproduction and things like that and the silver plating and all of that. And I was talking to the owner of that studio
and he was saying that the safest way to store your music
is to have analog masters made.
Which is crazy to think about
because it feels so precarious
that they had these analog tape masters
and this analog vinyl.
And like it feels precarious to have a physical medium be like
the finite thing because anything can happen to physical art.
You know, I mean, like our bodies will all be disintegrated one day.
One day these vinyls will all be disintegrated.
None of this is permanent.
Like art is not for forever.
Unfortunately, no matter what.
But it's especially not for forever, unfortunately, no matter what.
But it's especially not for forever because if you think about the history of digital recording,
even in the last 20 years,
if somebody sent me a recording or like a set of files
that was in Pro Tools from like 2008,
I wouldn't be able to access it.
Like I wouldn't be able to work on it.
If I mean, if it was like an MP3 or something,
but if they sent me the actual like pro-tools session,
I wouldn't be able to open it.
And that's not that long ago.
And the same thing between like, you know,
if somebody sent me like a digital session from 1999,
I wouldn't be able to access it.
And that's not that long ago, but, I mean,
I would have to like have a lot more equipment than I have,
but if somebody sent me analog masters,
I would be able to do something with it.
If it was 10 years from now, 20 years from now,
50 years from now, 100 years from now, right?
There was a tornado in Nashville in 2020,
like right before the pandemic hit.
This was like in March,
and actually contributed
to why Alex and I moved away from Nashville because the house we were going to live in got
hit by the tornado. But Woodland Studios, which is Gillian Welch's in Dave Rawling studio,
has all of their analog masters of all of their music and their, like the tapes. And as
though tornado was hitting, like the roof got taken off of that studio.
And like one of the biggest things that they had to deal with was making sure that their masters were
okay and getting those all safely. But I would much rather have to deal with that precarity,
which is the same precarity that we deal with in our mortal bodies every day. Right. Then being like, oh shit, I can't open this Google Drive link.
Yeah.
God.
I mean, it's funny too, because I felt this desire to just like, yeah, do as much stuff analog
as possible.
And I'm sure that's a response to like just by default, more and more of life is taking
place in these virtual spaces that just that your
body doesn't really register is real in the same way. And you're not really tricking
you're like mammal, self. I feel like I haven't adequately said like why rumors, why do
I care, why are we here, you know, because it's easy to do for granted that it's great.
And yeah, why are you invested?
Why does rumors matter?
Why does it matter to you?
Well, first of all, rumors matters to me
because it was shown to me by one of my best friends
Natalie Peterson in high school.
And I grew up in a very instrumental household.
My parents are both jazz musicians and classical musicians. So I grew up in a very instrumental household. My parents are both jazz musicians and classical musicians.
So I grew up around a lot of that and a lot of
prodigiousness, like being a prodigy is like,
or you know, playing something as fast as possible,
you know, you can, like that was considered like what,
or at least what I interpreted that kind of music
to be valued.
And when I finally started listening to more rock music, more folk music, more
country music, more blues, just like music that was song based, rather than instrumentally
focused only, like it just unlocked this part of me that I had no idea was even possible or that I even had capacity for.
My main mode of making music now is writing songs and it took me a long time to be able
to get into that and be able to actually access that part of myself because it's a very vulnerable
thing.
But listening to rumors was definitely one of the first stepping sounds to being able to get there
because of how incredibly crafted the songs are and incredible the lyrics are. And so that's why it
matters to me for sure. I don't know if you feel this way because you're very well spoken and you're
very good at articulating your thoughts, but I think that the only time I am myself, and the only time I'm
able to actually express who I am and what I'm thinking and what I'm feeling, is when I write a song.
I mean, I think that's how I felt about writing for most of my life. And for a really long time,
I felt like the only place I could really, truly articulate myself was like through, like when I was writing something. And if I had to do it like live, socially, it would not happen.
I would just like, I would like back and be like, I don't recognize that person.
And I think I love podcasts so much because it was like bringing this kind of, I don't
know, and like being in academia where you're in sort of seminars a lot and
bringing me to a place where I felt like I was being asked to express how I authentically like thought or felt in a way where like it was like actually me and not like you create a proxy for
yourself that then goes out and talks to people for you. Yeah. So I identify with that where it's like,
and that's why I love Stevie and X,
because the sort of the idea of this voice
that opens up to you if you sit very quietly
in the room behind the lips.
Yeah, like that.
Yeah, that feels very real to me.
I'm like, I'm not a particularly religious person,
and I think that we all kind of need that feeling that comes
with transcendence and that's probably what they were trying to get out with the drugs but maybe
missed a little bit. It's like, yeah, you need to get these songs out there. You need to say the
things that you're feeling and you don't always have other ways to do it. It seems like these people
were not very great communicators and this was
their way of figuring out how they felt. Yeah. I think there's a generosity to just being like,
yeah, this is about all of us having breakups because I feel like maybe not bands as much,
but definitely writers are often like, no, my fiction's not autobiographical at all and it's like,
okay, what is it based on then? Because it's,
you know, it's about the experience of being a human and you are a human. So like, where are you
getting that from? Right. Yeah. Yeah, it just makes sense to me that they didn't stop making this
because it seems like the only way that they could authentically really like touch God.
really like touch God. Yeah.
And I feel like this is one of the reasons why we bother
or feel compelled to make art.
Or if you don't feel comfortable calling what you do art,
which is fine, it's a process, but making whatever you make,
which is art, no matter what.
On some level, I think we understand
that we can lift something out of ourselves
that can make sense to so many more people who we can't conceive of who are out there somewhere.
So what happens after rumors is released and like, do they keep playing together? They
just keep trucking on. They keep going for a few more years. The album is a mega hit.
People famously start doing solo projects, Stevie Nex starts
doing solo albums because she says she's just like writing too many songs for Fleetwood
Mac to like fit onto their albums so she just has to do solo albums as well. They break
up and then reunite for the dance and they will, you know, re-reunite as well. But re-unite very famously with this 1997 concert
film The Dance, which Ken Kelly argues, Bill Clinton is partly responsible for getting them to come back
together to play for his inauguration. I feel like her revenge is that the song didn't die and Lindsey just has to keep hearing it and hearing it and also getting to hear it.
And he has to play it.
And he has to play it.
And he has to listen to her sing it to him.
And this lovely verse about him cheating on her.
I mean, sometimes it's the best thing that can happen. Yeah.
Cause then you know, because I need you know, and then he can go hang out with
Don Henley, then you can go your own way. I just want everybody to just take a
moment. Think about your most difficult X. Think about the worst fight you've ever been in with them.
And now think about performing with that person in front of thousands of people.
Yeah, there's just something. I don't know. I feel like the kind of the jokes that we make,
like point at the truth, but are not quite there. You know, I think of like the John
Malaney line about how Bill Clinton was telling us who he was by choosing Don't Stop as his
campaign song Don't Stop. Song from rumors and album buy-in for people
cheating on each other. And it's like, yeah, it's not not true, but also, you know, I think
that there's like, there's lots of albums
by and for people cheating on each other.
There's more to it than that.
It's really the ability to look your ex on the face
and sing a song about them to them,
which is like, can seem, and again, I'm a Stevie Nix partisan.
So why do I think it's unfair when Lindsey does it and it's fine when Stevie does it?
It's because I'm being unfair, possibly.
But that's what it is really.
It's like not just the rawness or the size of the feelings that somehow making them into
something that other people can feel with you.
I feel like it's like, it's simple like a knife is simple.
Like these songs go down really easy
and you cannot be conscious of everything that's happening
in them, but it's still happening.
And if you want to pay attention to that, then you can.
And like a knife is a complicated thing to make,
but it has a very simple job that it can do. And it does that job pretty well. It's sharpened. Okay, so just quickly,
but I know we're done, but I just want to quickly know your fuck Mary Kill for the songs
on this album. Oh my God. Yes. Okay. So wait, let's get our track list here. Okay. So we've
got second hand news dreams never going back again. Don't stop. Go your own way. Songbird,
the chain. You make love and fun. I don't want to know. Oh, daddy and Goldust woman. Okay, so I unfortunately I'm gonna kill O Daddy because that's
on personally I just can't really listen to it seriously because it's called O Daddy.
Because it's called O Daddy and that saying Daddy should be illegal unless you're
like literally in bed with somebody. And I just can't think about that when I'm walking down the street. And then I am going
to fuck dreams because a song is just sex straight into your veins. And then I think I'm going to
marry it. You make love and fun, which is maybe even a little bit more interesting now that we know
that it's about her new boyfriend after divorcing her ex-susband. It's like the joyful freewheeling song.
It's a careful one.
Yeah.
I was also gonna maybe say kill O'Daddy,
but you've expressed why I would do that.
I think that I would kill, I don't wanna know,
because that's because of the least,
to me the least memorable song.
Oh, interesting, interesting.
Like I really like it, but I don't, you know, and I'm sure now that I've said that, I'll
go listen to it and be like, no, there's so much happening here.
But like, yeah, if I have to kick one of them off the lifeboat, it's that and no daddy
are about even for me.
I think I would fuck Gold Dust woman.
Okay.
It's just like very sexy and it captures some of that kind of like live steveenix freak out energy that I love.
There's broken glass in it which obviously seems like a recipe for safe sex. It reminds me of Jim
Morrison singing the end and that's the kind of sex song I want. And then I think I would marry
songbird because there is like second sort of like the morning after the massacre like
tenderness to it. Yeah, it's um, sunbird is amazing. you you