Behind The Song

Fans Believe This Biting Lindsey Buckingham Solo Track Is Actually About Stevie Nicks Years Later

Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks writing scathing breakup songs about one another is nothing new. In fact, itโ€™s how most of the world first came to know the former folk-rock duo that joined British-American blues band Fleetwood Mac in the mid-1970s. From โ€œGo Your Own Wayโ€ to its response, โ€œDreamsโ€, and many, many, many songs in between, some of Fleetwood Macโ€™s greatest hits are just musical barbs each artist threw at the other.

But thereโ€™s something especially contentious and slanderous about the two musicians writing songs about one another after they parted ways. After all, โ€œSilver Springsโ€ is a heartbreaker of a track, but Nicks staring down Buckingham while sheโ€™s singing makes the whole concept seem more like โ€œhealthy albeit uncomfortable confrontationโ€ instead of the less-enlightened, good olโ€™ trash talk. So, when Buckingham played a song during his solo shows in the early 2010s, detail-oriented fans were quick to point out the possible references to Nicks.

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Tensions between Fleetwood Mac members continued well past the 1970s (the only thing they really seemed to leave behind was the rampant drug use). So, itโ€™s absolutely within the realm of possibility that Buckingham would still be writing songs about Nicks around that time. And if this fan theory is correct, then this particular song was quite the doozy.

Fans Pointed Out the Potential Meaning Behind Lindsey Buckinghamโ€™s โ€œDancingโ€

Lindsey Buckingham closed his eponymous seventh solo studio album with a track called โ€œDancingโ€, which was a rare addition to his live performances. When the former Fleetwood Mac guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter did play the song in his set, many fans took to the internet to speculate as to whether or not he wrote the song about Stevie Nicks. And considering the lyrics, it wouldnโ€™t be an unreasonable assumption.

โ€œPoor little raven, how sheโ€™s lost her way / Buys all she can, but she canโ€™t seem to pray / All those who love her just wasting away / dancing, dancing,โ€ Buckingham begins. In the bridge, he sings, โ€œOh, in this world that no one wants to know / how will we get along? / Oh, see the girl with no place to go / This is her song.โ€ Finally, Buckingham concludes the track with the lines, โ€œPromises, promises already banned / emptiness goes where supply meets demand / business and murder, they go hand in hand / dancing, dancing, dancing, dancing.โ€

To Buckinghamโ€™s credit, there are no ultra-explicit references to his former bandmate. But the description of a dark-clothed raven dancing and dancing, breaking promises, spending exorbitant amounts of money, whispers of business and murderโ€ฆit seems more likely than not that Nicks played at least a small inspirational role in the writing of this song.

The Song Seems to Line up With a Major Business Debacle in the Early 2010s

The first instances of โ€œDancingโ€ showing up in Lindsey Buckinghamโ€™s set pop up around 2012, six years before he would include it on his seventh solo album. While all connections between โ€œDancingโ€ and Stevie Nicks can only be assumptions without direct comments from the artists themselves, the timing certainly seems to line up. The early 2010s saw another highly public feud in Fleetwood Mac as Nicks pushed back against the bandโ€™s hopes of putting out a new album ahead of their 2013 world tour. Speaking to Rolling Stone in late 2012, Buckingham made it clear that Nicks was the reason why this album never came to fruition.

โ€œMy intention was that she would come in, hear the songs, and then get engaged and want to bring some material to the table, and we could have a new album,โ€ Buckingham said. โ€œThat didnโ€™t happen. It kind of languished there.โ€

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