Stevie Nicks announces her divorce

“You could drop dead”: The drugged-out music video Stevie Nicks finds hard to watch

In the 1980s, we had entered the age of MTV, and so, naturally, an increased value was put upon creating videos to accompany the release of singles. Nicks recalled that in the mid-1980s, she would regularly take drugs on the set of her music videos. But one video that she really can’t stomach in hindsight is ‘I Can’t Wait’ from Rock A Little. “I look at that video, I look at my eyes, and I say to myself, ‘Could you have laid off the pot, the coke, and the tequila for three days, so you could have looked a little better?’” she stated in the book I Want My MTV. “It just makes me want to go back into that video and stab myself.”

This wasn’t the only time drugs and music videos had chaotically collided for the star, either. Her 1983 single, ‘Stand Back’, saw her take creative control over the direction of the video. “I decided it was going to be a Civil War scene. It was insane,” she recalled regarding the creation of the video on I Want My MTV: The Uncensored Story of the Music Video Revolution. “I tried to act, which was horrific.”

But the acting wasn’t half as bad as the mere notion of how a drug addict on set, with no equestrian experience, ride a horse. At one point, while Nicks was straddling the steed, it got spooked by the car filming alongside it and bolted straight towards a grove of trees. The crew screamed for Nicks to ‘jump’, and she leapt from the speeding beast into a bush, just about surviving unscathed, before deleting the video and chalking the whole experience up to another sign that sobriety had to be imminent.

In an interview with The Mirror, Nicks recalled considering the premature rock ‘n’ roll deaths of Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix: “I saw how they went down, and a part of me wanted to go down with them,” she added, reflecting her naivety at the time. “But then another part of me thought, I would be very sad if some 25-year-old lady rock and roll singer ten years from now said, ‘I wish Stevie Nicks would have thought about it a little more.’ That’s kind of what stopped me and made me really look at the world through clear eyes.”

Nicks ultimately saw value in a healthy life and got clean in the late 1980s. However, some of Nicks’ friends were concerned that she might relapse and recommended seeking out a Klonopin prescription from her psychiatrist. This, counterintuitively, led Nicks down another dark path into a Klonopin addiction, which impacted live performances with Fleetwood Mac in the late 1980s and early ‘90s. “Klonopin was worse than the cocaine,” she later said. “I lost those eight years of my life. I didn’t write, and I had gained so much weight.”

In 1993, Nicks, fortunately, put a stop to her damaging relationship with Klonopin by ceasing her prescription and entering a painful 47-day detox in hospital. The road has looked clearer for Nicks ever since. She has remained sober, aside from Californian-approved marijuana, and she has never once attempted another civil war recreation.

Watch the music video for Stevie Nicks’ ‘I Can’t Wait’ below.

 

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