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Stevie Nicks Has Never Heard of ‘Stereophony’

Stevie Nicks Has Never Heard of ‘Stereophony’

NO, Stevie Nicknames I didn’t see StereophonicDavid Adjmi’s hit Broadway play follows a fictional (but very Mac-like) ’70s band recording what would become its (very) own song in the future. rumors-like) masterpiece album.

In fact, the singer who shares her vocals (and decades of triumphs and tribulations) with Fleetwood Mac bandmates Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie had never even heard of the Broadway success.

a new Rolling stone Interview promoting his latest song “The Lighthouse” Saturday Night Live earlier this month – just four blocks from his home Stereophonic), Nicks was asked if she’d seen the play, which tells, among other stories, the breakdown of a relationship between a Stevie-like singer and a Lindsey-like guitarist.

Here’s the swap:

Rolling stone: Have you seen the stereophonic game?
Nicknames: What’s this?
Rolling stone: This is an incredibly successful Broadway play about a band on the verge of stardom recording their new album in Sausalito. So this is basically about… you… and Fleetwood Mac.
Nicknames: Really?
Rolling stone: Yes.
Nicknames: How did I get this far without knowing this?

FYI, Deadline has heard that Nicks isn’t the only former Macs who hasn’t watched the show. Christine McVie died two years ago, of course, so she wouldn’t have seen the fictionalized account of her own inevitable marriage to bassist John McVie, but her ex-husband is very much alive, along with Buckingham and drummer Mick Fleetwood. . None of them stopped by the Golden Theater to see the Tony-winning play.

Nicks says he saw Daisy Jones and SixIt was a TV adaptation of a Mac-like band and he liked it. “Riley (Keough) doesn’t look like me,” Nicks says in the interview. “He is much more agile than me. I couldn’t have been as agile as he was in Fleetwood Mac. Christine and I couldn’t do that because we were peacemakers… But as for her character, she was very similar to me. “I immediately called him and wanted to meet him, and I did.”

Stereophonic It opens on Broadway until January 12th, so there’s still time…

a person of interest rumors who knows for sure Stereophonic It is audio engineer-turned-music producer Ken Caillat who wrote a memoir (with Steven Stiefel) in 2012. Making Rumors. Earlier this month, Caillat filed a lawsuit against Adjmi and the show’s producers, claiming parts of her memoirs were used without permission.

Adjmi has consistently emphasized that his fiction is a work of imagination and that he draws on various band dates for inspiration. He addressed the issue directly in a New Yorker article last month: “As I write Stereophonic I drew from many sources, including autobiographical details from my own life, to create a deeply personal work of fiction. Any similarity to Ken Caillat’s excellent book is unintentional.”