Stevie Nicks didn't want to walk on the sand with her platforms. By which time it was getting dark." According to Fields, " John McVie was drunk and tried to punch me. " Christine McVie was about ten hours out of the makeup trailer. They didn't want to be there", says Barron. "Four of them-I can't recall which four-couldn't be together in the same room for very long. Further, she elaborates, the rest of the band was angry with Fleetwood because he had then begun an affair with Nicks' best friend, who left her husband as a result, causing serious issues for Nicks. Lindsey Buckingham was still not over their breakup six years earlier, nor her subsequent affair with Mick Fleetwood.
"It was so hot, and we weren't getting along" recalls Stevie Nicks. " were, um, not easy to work with" agrees Steve Barron, who directed the clip. The desert itself is littered with broken mirrors, which serve as a motif in the video, and with violins and the electric guitars and other instruments.ĭue to the band members' strained relationships at the time, the video shoot in the Mojave Desert was "a fucking nightmare" according to producer Simon Fields. Lindsey discovers Stevie lying on a chaise longue and paints her, while in other scenes John and Mick are archaeologists. In the video, Christine is in a room with many paintings, searching for Lindsey in the desert with a telescope. The music video for Hold Me features the band in a surreal scenario set in a desert based on several René Magritte paintings.
The song is also included on the 2002 US version, and 2009 UK re-issue of the album The Very Best of Fleetwood Mac. It became a quite popular radio hit however, and it was eventually re-issued in February 1989 to promote the group's 1988 Greatest Hits package with "No Questions Asked" as the B-side. It was first released there in July 1982 and failed to chart. In the UK, "Hold Me" was not a successful single. It is alleged that the song was about McVie's turbulent 3 year relationship with Dennis Wilson who struggled with alcoholism throughout their time together. Released in June 1982 in advance of the album itself, the song became one of Fleetwood Mac's biggest hits in the USA, peaking at #4 for seven consecutive weeks and ranking at #31 on the Hot 100 year-end chart for 1982. "Hold Me" was written by Christine McVie and Robbie Patton and sung by McVie and Lindsey Buckingham. The song was the first track to be released from the 1982 album Mirage, the fourth album by the band with Lindsey Buckingham acting as main producer with Richard Dashut and Ken Caillat. " Hold Me" is a single by British-American rock group Fleetwood Mac.