Every die-hard fan knows that Fleetwood Mac's album was created during serious tension among the members, from deteriorating relationships, divorce, and even affairs. Unlike other tracks in their library, "The Chain" is tagged as the only song credited to the entire band.
Believe it or not, the fan-favorite classic was actually created using rejected material from Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, and John McVie. It was originally a Christine McVie song, titled "Keep Me There." Reports claim that they manually splice tapes using a razor blade during the track's creation.
"Originally we had no words to it. And it really only became a song when Stevie wrote some. She walked in one day and said, 'I've written some words that might be good for that thing you were doing in the studio the other day.' So it was put together," said Mick Fleetwood, according to SongFacts.
"But it ultimately becomes a band thing anyway, because we all have so much of our own individual style, our own stamp that makes the sound of Fleetwood Mac. So it's not like you feel disconnected from the fact that maybe you haven't written one of the songs. Because what you do, and what you feel when we're all making music together, is what Fleetwood Mac ends up being, and that's the stuff you hear on the albums. Whether one likes it or not, this is, after all, a combined effort from different people playing music together," he said.
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