New York Daily News

Bio bares Stevie Nicks’ long career

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STEVIE NICKS’ truth is somewhere behind the “Rumours.”

The 1977 Fleetwood Mac album yielded six No. 1 hits, becoming one of the best-selling records of all time. One of those songs was “Gold Dust Woman” — now the title of an unauthoriz­ed Nicks bio due later this month.

Author Stephen Davis chronicles the airy-fairy goddess of rock from her childhood through her plans to go on tour with Fleetwood Mac in 2018. “The fact is that nobody has a clue to what my life was really like,” Davis quotes the singer as saying.

Maybe. But 332 pages later, we have a pretty good idea.

Now 69, Nicks has inspired performers as disparate as Taylor Swift, Mary J. Blige, Beyoncé, Sheryl Crow and the Dixie Chicks. Even if you can’t quite place Nicks, her songs remain inescapabl­e: “Landslide,” “Leather and Lace,” “Rhiannon.”

She’s the blond, petite singer with the sultry voice whose duet with Tom Petty in “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around” is even more heartbreak­ing since his death.

“I fell in love with his music and his band,” Nicks once said of Petty. “If I ever got to know Tom Petty and could worm my way into his good graces, if he asked me to leave my band and join his, I’d probably do it. And that was before I even met him.”

Nicks shared her desire with her manager and Petty agreed to produce a track with her. He came away unimpresse­d — more so with her entourage than with Nicks.

Petty instead recommende­d she work with a producer who had helped him, Jimmy Iovine.

It was hardly a match made in heaven. Iovine was scheduled to work on the fourth Heartbreak­ers album, not to guide Nicks through her solo debut.

And, the author notes, the Brooklyn-born Iovine and the ethereal Nicks were mismatched in personalit­y and style.

“He was like the anti-Nicks,” writes Davis. “Crystal visions were not for him.”

Despite the doubts, they moved quickly from studio cohorts to lovers. She confided in girlfriend­s how much she loved his “little Greek body,” and when Iovine wasn’t around she called him “the little one.”

Davis tracks Nicks’ other lovers, beginning with Lindsey Buckingham. She was a senior and he was a junior at MenloAther­ton High School in California when they met in a church where weekly music sessions were held.

Buckingham started playing “California Dreamin’” and she harmonized.

The two then went their separate ways. Three years later, he reached out, asking her to join a band.

She did, and the longtime couple struggled to make it as Buckingham Nicks. She worked hard outside the studio, too — cleaning houses, waiting tables. Buckingham? Not so much. Several stories recount Nicks coming home exhausted to find Buckingham and his friends, stoned. He landed some gigs playing guitar and she kept singing and writing.

It was during this period that Nicks read a novel about a Welsh witch and wrote the hit-singlein-waiting “Rhiannon.” And she penned another song, this one titled “Landslide.”

Even though their band failed to take off, people in the industry took notice. Fleetwood Mac, a bluesy British band, asked Nicks and Buckingham to join them.

The group’s new incarnatio­n soon turned messy and complicate­d. It was the mid-‘70s, and drug-fueled nights led to new relationsh­ips.

Eventually drummer Mick Fleetwood and Nicks became lovers.

It was about then that Nicks started working with designer Margi Kent. When Nicks assessed her hips as too wide and her breasts as too small, Kent reportedly told her that she “would be easier to dress if (she) added some letters to her bra size,” - so she got implants.

Nicks always had a distinct sense of style, going back to when she was a kid. For a fourth grade tap dance recital she wore a top hat, black vest and skirt, white top and heeled dance shoes.

That served as the foundation for the look she honed over the years. She became a fashion icon with her almost magical appearance: Swirling skirts, gossamer fabrics and shawls. Her look would inspire clothing lines, websites and generation­s of women in whirly, handkerchi­ef hemmed skirts.

The genesis of her fashion sense was a mom who sewed her clothes, including a cowgirl outfit Nicks wore at age 5 while singing in saloons with her grandfathe­r.

Her dad’s father was a singer

 ?? GETTY ?? Fleetwood Mac, comprised of (from left) John McVie, Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood and Christine McVie rewrote rock ’n’ roll history.
GETTY Fleetwood Mac, comprised of (from left) John McVie, Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood and Christine McVie rewrote rock ’n’ roll history.
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