Silver Springs | |
Caption: | Cover of the 1997 single |
Type: | song |
Artist: | Fleetwood Mac |
A-Side: | Go Your Own Way |
Released: | 20th December 1976[1] |
Length: | 4:29 |
Label: | |
Producer: |
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Silver Springs | |
Cover: | Silverspringsmac.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Fleetwood Mac |
Album: | The Dance |
Recorded: | June 1997 |
Venue: | Warner Brothers Studios (Burbank, California) |
Length: | 5:41 |
Label: | Reprise |
Producer: | |
Prev Title: | I Do |
Prev Year: | 1995 |
Next Title: | The Chain |
Next Year: | 1997 |
Next Version: | live |
"Silver Springs" is a song written by Stevie Nicks and performed by British-American band Fleetwood Mac. It was originally intended for the band's 1977 album Rumours, but became a B-side to the single "Go Your Own Way". A live version was released as a single from the 1997 album The Dance; this version of the song was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals in 1998.
Written by Stevie Nicks, "Silver Springs" was intended for the album Rumours. Years after the fact, Nicks commented that its exclusion from the album marked a growing tension in the band. The track describes Nicks' perspective on the ending of her romantic relationship with guitarist Lindsey Buckingham.[2] She said:
I wrote "Silver Springs" about Lindsey. And we were in Maryland somewhere driving under a freeway sign that said Silver Springs, Maryland . And I loved the name… Silver Springs sounded like a pretty fabulous place to me. And 'You could be my silver springs' – that's just a whole symbolic thing of what you could have been to me.[3]
Rolling Stone observed, "Nicks' tender yet vengeful post-mortem on her breakup with Buckingham [became] an emotional lightning rod. The song would have behind-the-scenes repercussions for decades to come – nearly leading to the breakup of the band."[4] For reasons including its length and relatively slow tempo, the song was excluded from Rumours despite strenuous and repeated objections from Nicks.[4] In a 1997 documentary on the making of Rumours, engineer and coproducer Richard Dashut called it "the best song that never made it to a record album".[5] The song was, however, released in late 1976 as the B-side of the "Go Your Own Way" single,[4] a Buckingham-written song about the couple's breakup.[6] [7]
Years later, after Fleetwood Mac's Behind the Mask tour concluded, Nicks left the group owing to a dispute with Mick Fleetwood: the drummer would not allow her to release "Silver Springs" on her 1991 album Timespace - The Best of Stevie Nicks because he planned to include it on a forthcoming Fleetwood Mac box set.[8] The song subsequently appeared on the 1992 box set 25 Years – The Chain.[9]
On a remastered edition of Rumours, issued in 2004, "Silver Springs" was included (as a previously unreleased, slightly longer 4:47 version) between "Songbird" and "The Chain". "We always loved her," remarked musician Danielle Haim. "But when we heard 'Silver Springs' – a song that didn't make Rumours and landed on one of the box sets – we fell in love all over again."[10]
The song also appeared on Nicks' compilation Crystal Visions - The Very Best of Stevie Nicks. She wrote in the liner notes that the song was intended as a gift for her mother, who later referred to it as her "rainy day song", and that the exclusion of the song from Rumours was a source of anger for many years.[11] Nicks was particularly upset that "Silver Springs" initially generated little money for her mother, who was gifted publishing rights for the song in the 1970s.[12]
In 1997, "Silver Springs" got a second life on the reunion album The Dance. During the filming of the concert that reunited Nicks and Buckingham, the track was on the setlist. Nicks said, "The fiery take on the song that appears in The Dance was 'for posterity… I wanted people to stand back and really watch and understand what [the relationship with Lindsey] was.'"[4] The Dance was recorded across three performances at Warner Brothers Studios in June 1997.[13] "I never thought that 'Silver Springs' would ever be performed onstage [again]," Nicks reflected during a 1997 MTV interview. "My beautiful song just disappeared [20 years ago]. For it to come back around like this has really been special to me."
The live version of "Silver Springs" was released as a radio single in the United States on 22 July 1997, and it was physically issued in the Netherlands the same year.[13] Radio & Records reported in early August that it was the most added song on Adult Alternative, Hot Adult Contemporary and Adult Contemporary stations, including 51 adds in the latter category.[14] "Silver Springs" appeared on several charts, including the US Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart (number 41), the Canadian RPM Top Singles chart (number 38), and the Dutch Single Top 100 (number 96). In 1998, the track was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals.[15]
The Guardian and Paste ranked the song number six and number two, respectively, on their lists of the 30 greatest Fleetwood Mac songs.[16] [17]
Chart (1997) | Position | |
---|---|---|
Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM)[18] | 68 | |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[19] | 32 |