After Years of Feud, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham Finally Call a Truce Years After Fleetwood Mac Split

Stevie and Lindsey (Oberhausen 2003) - owned by Bumperke.

Photo by Bumperke, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

From California Dreamin’ to Fleetwood Mac Fame

Fifty years ago, a young California duo named Buckingham Nicks released their self-titled debut album. Though the record didn’t gain much attention at first, it quietly changed rock history. Mick Fleetwood happened to hear their song “Frozen Love” and was impressed enough to invite Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks to join Fleetwood Mac. Alongside John and Christine McVie, the group became one of the biggest bands of the 1970s, producing back-to-back No. 1 albums, including Rumors, a defining record of the era.

But the success came with turmoil. Buckingham and Nicks were not just creative partners—they were also romantically involved. Their breakup, played out in the public eye and reflected in their music, fueled the band’s emotional power but also its eventual collapse. Decades later, the two appear to have finally made peace, following the September 2025 re-release of Buckingham Nicks.

Remembering How It All Began

Nicks and Buckingham’s story began long before Fleetwood Mac. They met as students at Menlo-Atherton High School near San Francisco in 1966. “Lindsey and I started talking about it last night,” Nicks said in a recent interview on the Song Exploder podcast. “This whole thing seems really like yesterday to us.”

She recalled their first encounter vividly. “We met at a party in San Francisco. I heard this guy singing from a long way away in this big room, and he was singing ‘California Dreamin.’ And I thought, ‘Oh, I know that song.’ So I kind of made my way over and I saw him, and I thought, ‘I’m gonna walk up there and sing.’”

Although she sang with him that night, the two wouldn’t truly connect until later, when they joined a local band called Fritz. After the group failed to secure a record deal, producer Keith Olson encouraged them to perform as a duo. “Striking out on our own drove us together, because we just couldn’t figure it out,” Nicks said. “And then we fell in love with each other, and that was it.”

The Rift That Rocked Fleetwood Mac

The professional and personal tension between Nicks and Buckingham became part of Fleetwood Mac’s story. Their last major conflict came in 2018, when Buckingham was fired just before the band’s global tour.

Buckingham blamed Nicks for his departure, telling People, “It was all Stevie’s doing. Stevie basically gave the band an ultimatum that either I had to go or she would go. It would be like [Mick] Jagger saying, ‘Well, either Keith [Richards] has to go or I’m going to go.’”

Nicks responded in her own statement, saying she had stepped away for her own well-being. “I proactively removed myself from the band and a situation I considered to be toxic to my well-being,” she explained. “I was done. If the band went on without me, so be it.”

Now, after years of silence and old wounds, the two appear ready to put the past behind them—choosing reflection over resentment as they honor the legacy they built together.

 

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