Stevie Nicks isn’t an original member of Fleetwood Mac. She didn’t found the soft-rock outfit like Peter Green or lend her surname to the band like John McVie and Mick Fleetwood. She didn’t even ...
The continued survival of Fleetwood Mac following the group’s landmark 1977 album “Rumours” came down to the fact that Stevie Nicks chose to have an abortion, the singer told CBS Sunday Morn ...
Emphasizing the importance of women having options, Nicks opened up about her own surprise pregnancy, which came on the heels of Rumours, her 1977 blockbuster album with Fleetwood Mac, when the ...
The love affairs (and subsequent breakups) of 1970s-era Fleetwood Mac can largely be attributed to a sex-friendly decade, the musicians’ constant and close quarters, more than their fair share ...
Fleetwood Mac as we know it could have been done if Stevie Nicks hadn’t had an abortion in the late 1970s. The 76-year-old rock star revealed how her decision to terminate her pregnancy impacted ...
Alone in her red-brick Kentish manor house in its sprawling 19 acres after quitting Fleetwood Mac in 1990, she would swirl from room to empty room, pour another drink and sit pondering the mad old ...
The life of Fleetwood Mac in the late 1970s was akin to an outlandish storyline from a Spinal Tap soap opera. They were an incestuous group who lived in a soft rock bubble that left their personal ...
They were a band that was defined by their stormy relationships. In many ways, their frequent ups-and-downs including drug addiction and inter-band infidelity contributed to Fleetwood Mac's ...