Dave Stewart recalls his fling with Stevie Nicks and how it led to a hit with Tom Petty

By editorial board on March 31, 2024

In an excerpt from Sweet Dreams Are Made of This: A Life in Music, Dave Stewart’s  recalls a wild night of love — and drugs — with Stevie Nicks (and the drama that followed)

We were touring America  when Annie Lennox and I played the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, the place was absolutely packed with half of the L.A. music industry and a host of famous ­musicians. There were a lot of ­musicians and ­singers backstage, and one of them was Stevie Nicks.

(The excerpt is  from from Dave Stewart book 'Sweet dreams are made of this' appeared first on  Feb. 6 issue of Billboard and on Stevienicks.info.

Stevie was in my dressing room doorway, wearing a faux-fur coat just like the first time I met Annie. Underneath she wore a black lace dress and she had long, flowing hair. I didn’t know who she was, but there was something about her that I was instantly attracted to. Stevie remembers that I looked her straight in the eye and said, “I want to be your ­boyfriend.

Sweet Dreams Are Made of This: A Life In Music by Dave Stewart (Hardcover, 2016) for sale online | eBay
” Little did I know that the day before,  The Eagles’  Joe Walsh and Stevie had had a big fight and had broken up.
She invited me back to her house for a party, and 10 minutes later, still in full sweaty leather stage gear, I was in the back of a limo with Stevie and her backing singers. When we got there it wasn’t really a party: just Stevie and her singers being very speedy, ­laughing and talking.
The house seemed enormous to me, so I wandered around, and when I came back to the ­living room, they had all disappeared into a bathroom for what seemed like hours. Actually it was hours. At around three in the morning, I ended up saying to myself, “OK, I’m really tired now and I have no idea where I am or which hotel Annie and the band are staying in.”

 

Obviously they were all still ­wide awake, aided, I imagine, by what we in England call “marching powder.” Stevie went back in the bathroom and about an hour later came out in a long Victorian ­nightdress and quietly slipped into the other side of the bed.

I remember at one point actually falling backward out of bed onto the floor, which made us both laugh hysterically.

I remember making love once, but she later told me we made love twice. And then she said, “I remember clearly because I was wide awake, wired on cocaine.” It was all very good-humored and sweet, but also romantic in a rock’n’roll kind of way.

I was woken up at about 9:30 a.m. by Stevie saying I had to leave because someone might have been coming around to collect their clothes, and things could get tricky.

After San Francisco we had some time off, and I decided to go back to L.A. to see Stevie again. Jimmy Iovine, the great producer who went on to start Interscope Records in the early ’90s, had invited me to stay with him at his house, and this was where it got interesting.

 

After San Francisco we had some time off, and I decided to go back to L.A. to see Stevie again. Jimmy Iovine had invited me to stay with him at his house, and this was where it got interesting.

I played Jimmy the demo of “Don’t Come Around Here No More” and he said, “Wow! This is going to be great. Let’s make it for Stevie’s album.”

I jumped at the chance to work with Stevie, and we went right into the studio a few days later. When we started recording, Stevie was acting strangely and not really coming out of the bathroom much.

Stevie was upset and the discussion became very tense. He was saying, “Can you stop arguing with me in front of my friend David? You don’t really know him.” And she said, “Your friend? What are you talking about? We slept together the other night.” I turned white and stared at the floor, ­wondering what was coming next. Fortunately Stevie turned, walked out the door and left the studio.

I thought Jimmy was going to ask, “What does that mean?” But he just said, “I know what we should do. We should get Tom Petty down here to finish writing the song with you. He’s great.”

—Dave Stewart

 

The 75-year-old singer broke up with Buckingham in 1976 and had a brief affair with Mick while he was still married to first wife Jenny Boyd. Nicks later dated Eagles’ Don Henley who got her pregnant, before she had an abortion in 1979.

 

DISCLAIMER: the images used by Videomuzic are for the purpose of criticism and exercise of the right to report news, in low quality, in compliance with the provisions of the law on copyright, used exclusively for the information content.
DISCLAIMER: Videomuzic usa le immagini per finalità di critica ed esercizio del diritto di cronaca in modalità degradata conforme alle prescrizioni della legge sul diritto d'autore utilizzate ad esclusivo corredo dei contenuti informativi.
Copyright © 2022 Videomuzic | Rome. ITA | Pictures, videos remain the property of the copyright owner, Any copyright owner who wants removed should contact us..
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram