Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1977


I Don't Want to Know

Buy I Don't Want to Know now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'"I Don't Want to Know"' is a song written by Stevie Nicks which was first released by the British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac on their 1977 album 'Rumours'.

Background



Stevie Nicks wrote "I Don't Want to Know" much earlier than the 'Rumours' sessions, when she and Lindsey Buckingham were performing as the duo Buckingham Nicks, prior to joining Fleetwood Mac. The other band members of Fleetwood Mac decided to use the song as a replacement for a song Nicks had written for 'Rumours', "Silver Springs," when they found that "Silver Springs" would not fit on the album. The other four band members made a recording of the song without Nicks late in the 'Rumours' recording sessions. Buckingham was able to sing Nicks' lead vocal on this version as well as the harmony vocals because he knew the song from their Buckingham Nicks days. Drummer Mick Fleetwood then broke the news to Nicks that they decided that they needed to replace "Silver Springs" with "I Don't Want to Know" and wanted her to re-record her vocal part over the one Buckingham recorded for the song. At first, Nicks was angry and did not want to cooperate with the recording, but ultimately she relented, unhappy with the prospect of only having two songwriting credits on the album.

Nicks later remarked that if "Silver Springs" had to be replaced, she was glad that "I Don't Want to Know" was used, since she likes the recording, noting the Everly Brothers-like harmonies in her vocals with Buckingham.

In 1978, the song was also released as a single in Japan with "Oh Daddy".

Lyrics and music



"I Don't Want to Know" has a country music flavor. It is an uptempo song, which recording engineer Ken Caillat describes as "3:16 of high impact energy." Fleetwood Mac biographer Cath Carrolll describes the opening of the song as being "unprepossessing" and "almost lumpen." However, she claims this has a purpose, as it makes it even more powerful and energetic when the main part of the song kicks in.

The lyrics provide a conciliatory view of the end of a romantic relationship. Although the song was written long before the breakup of Nicks and Buckingham, "I Don't Want to Know" fits the pattern of the songs on 'Rumours' where Nicks' songs, such as "Dreams" provided a conciliatory perspective and Buckingham's songs, such as "Go Your Own Way" and "Second Hand News," were more bitter.

One of the lines of the song seems to be in answer to a line in a song Buckingham wrote for the previous self-titled Fleetwood Mac album. On "Monday Morning", Buckingham sang the lines

In "I Don't Want to Know" Nicks picks up the "move down the line" motif with the lines:

Reception



'Rolling Stone' critic John Swenson described "I Don't Want to Know" as "pure post-Buffalo Springfield country-rock formula." Fleetwood Mac biographer, Carroll, attributes its strength to the vocal harmonies between Nicks and Buckingham and to Buckingham's "strong country-pop guitar solo." 'Stylus Magazine' critic Patrick McKay regards "I Don't Want to Know" as one of the "strongest tracks" on 'Rumours'. In his book 'Killing Yourself to Live: 85% of a True Story', Chuck Klosterman praised Buckingham's acoustic guitar playing in that the way you can hear the squeaking sound of his fingers sliding down the guitar strings made the opening of the song sound "organic and raw." Music historian Joel Whitburn lists "I Don't Want to Know" as an essential song for downloading to an iPod. Author Joe S. Harrington regards Liz Phair's "Six Foot One" as a "musical [and] spiritual descendent" of "I Don't Want to Know."

Other media



The Goo Goo Dolls covered "I Don't Want to Know" on 'Legacy - A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac's Rumours' in 1998. According to AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine, "the Goo Goo Dolls rock the song up". The song was used in a second season episode of 'Glee' titled "Rumours." The song was performed by Cory Monteith (as Finn Hudson) and Dianna Agron (as Quinn Fabray). In 2013, the song was used in a Saturday Night Live sketch, "Diner Divorce". The divorcing couple's intense arguments would end whenever the song played.

Personnel



*Stevie Nicks vocals, hand claps

*Christine Mcvie Wurlitzer electric piano

*Mick Fleetwood drums, tambourine

*John McVie bass guitar

*Lindsey Buckingham 12 string and electric guitars, vocals

References



Category:1977 songs

Category:Fleetwood Mac songs

Category:Songs written by Stevie Nicks

Category:Song recordings produced by Ken Caillat

Category:Song recordings produced by Richard Dashut

Category:Goo Goo Dolls songs

Category:1978 singles

Buy I Don't Want to Know now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1977



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1087593926.