For years it seemed that Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham were, indeed, destined to go their own way.
Decades after their 1976 breakup all but spelled the end for Fleetwood Mac —the rock band they formed with Mick Fleetwood , John McVie and the late Christine McVie in the early '70s—their antagonistic relationship remains every bit as famous as their chart-topping singles.
Of course, more than a few of those (ahem, "Dreams," "Go Your Own Way" and "Landslide") dove into the end of their four-year romance.
"I met her when I was about 16," Buckingham, now 75, explained of his girlfriend-turned-bandmate in the 2009 BBC documentary Fleetwood Mac: Don't Stop . "It’s been most of my life. Sadly, for the lion’s share of those years, there has been distance and animosity of