A Quote by Lindsey Buckingham

You could say that Fleetwood Mac is a bit of a dysfunctional family, but we are a family. — © Lindsey Buckingham
You could say that Fleetwood Mac is a bit of a dysfunctional family, but we are a family.
Defining something being a Fleetwood Mac song is calling it a Fleetwood Mac song, you know? Nothing becomes Fleetwood Mac until that's what you call it.
There is nothing like this extended family that is Fleetwood Mac. And I think you have to say, for all the perceived and real dysfunction that there has been, underneath that, there is and always has been a great deal of love. And that keeps pulling us back together.
My other family is Fleetwood Mac. I don't need the money, but there's an emotional need for me to go on the road again. There's a love there; we're a band of brothers.
I'm a bit of a Fleetwood Mac girl. I also think you can't beat a bit of old school Girls Aloud to get in the mood for going out.
It is a family; it's a slightly dysfunctional family, but it's also very close and warm and loving family.
I have always been very family-oriented. I came from a dysfunctional, broken family growing up, and it's probably instilled in me the need and the want to have a strong family and a great foundation. So I think that is something that I naturally gravitate toward.
It doesn't matter whether you have the happiest upbringing... the young Joe Scot had the most dysfunctional family there could be but it's still a family and it's a really good, strong family. But in spite of that he runs away from home. I relate to all of those things very directly. I hit 40 this year but I still think about being a teenager and hopefully I will for the rest of my life. They are important years.
I come from a completely dysfunctional alcoholic family, so we kind of parented ourselves a little bit.
We fight a lot, you know, but that's family. We may be dysfunctional, but we're still family.
We fight a lot, you know, but that's family. We may be dysfunctional but we're still family.
The people of the Balkans are like a dysfunctional family. We may fight and argue, but in the end we are family.
When I discovered blues - I was 12-years-old - I didn't discover it in America where it was from; I discovered it from Fleetwood Mac - the original Peter Green Fleetwood Mac, Saveloy Brown - like British blues interpretations of it,' which then, when I started the liner notes and seeing all these names, I was like, 'Who's Willie Dixon?' Then I go to the record store and ask the guy there and he goes, 'Oh, you don't know anything.' And so, to me, that's the root of most of it anyway.
A dysfunctional family is any family with more than one person in it.
In Limerick, a family that was dysfunctional was one who could afford to drink but didn't.
I came from a dysfunctional family - very dysfunctional. And my father used to find great humor in throwing me down the stairs.
I came from an extraordinarily dysfunctional family, full of abuse and alcoholism. And eventually everyone within the family had committed suicide.
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