On the Day a CEO Gets Kiss-Cammed, Nicks and Buckingham Tease a Reunion
- DP
- Jul 19
- 2 min read
It’s been a big day for public displays of affection—both regrettable and long overdue.

While Coldplay’s kiss cam quietly lit a corporate firestorm by possibly catching the CEO and chief people officer of Astronomer mid-canoodle, another, far more poetic exchange is stirring the hearts of music fans. Two posts, minutes apart, from Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, have triggered speculation that one of rock’s most emotionally fraught partnerships might finally be on the verge of a new chapter.
Nicks posted a single white image on her socials reading: “And if you go forward…” Thirty minutes later, Buckingham posted: “I’ll meet you there.” The two lines, when put together, form the final lyric of “Frozen Love”, the last track on their self-titled 1973 album Buckingham Nicks. The album, released before the pair joined Fleetwood Mac, flopped commercially but became a cult relic, especially after the duo’s tumultuous history played out across the band’s most iconic works.
To recap: Fleetwood Mac’s stratospheric rise began when Mick Fleetwood, hearing Buckingham’s guitar work, invited him to join the band. Buckingham insisted Nicks come too. Their arrival catalysed the group’s transformation into one of the biggest acts in rock history, with Rumours selling over 40 million copies and serving as a sonic diary of fractured relationships, notably their own.
While the music soared, their personal bond collapsed. “Silver Springs,” a Nicks-penned chronicle of their breakup, was famously cut from Rumours and later resurrected on The Dance in 1997—complete with one of the most searing onstage stares in rock history.
Buckingham was ultimately ousted from the band in 2018, and following Christine McVie’s death in 2022, Nicks declared Fleetwood Mac was “done.”
And yet—here we are. Not a grand announcement. No press release. Just two half-lines from a song buried on a long-out-of-print LP, offered like breadcrumbs to a fanbase still hanging on to the most mythologised breakup in music history.
If this is a tease for a reissue of Buckingham Nicks—or something more—it would mark their first creative alignment in decades. On the same day corporate HR got caught playing house on a jumbotron, maybe Nicks and Buckingham decided it was time to look forward.
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