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"Go Insane" is the title track of Lindsey Buckingham's second solo album. Released as a single in July 1984, it became Buckingham's second top 40 hit (after "Trouble", three years earlier). "Go Insane" is also Buckingham's most recent U.S. solo hit (peaking at #23 in the Billboard Hot 100 chart); on the other hand, it did not chart in the United Kingdom.

"Go Insane"
Single by Lindsey Buckingham
from the album Go Insane
ReleasedJuly 1984
GenreRock, New wave
Length3:08
LabelReprise/ Warner Music Group
Songwriter(s)Lindsey Buckingham
Producer(s)Lindsey Buckingham, Gordon Fordyce
Lindsey Buckingham singles chronology
"Holiday Road"
(1983)
"Go Insane"
(1984)
"Slow Dancing"
(1984)
Audio sample
"Go Insane"
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Lyrics


When asked about the lyrics of "Go Insane", he explained:

"Insanity can be said to be very relative to the context you find yourself in. An example might be a very acceptable and typical behavior for a group of people in a little rock and roll microcosm, might be grounds for someone being committed if they worked in a bank". "Looking at it that way we all tend to go insane a little bit, I think that's ok. I think that's one of the things the album is saying – it is ok to go insane, it can be quite cathartic actually, to watch yourself go out to the edge and sort of reel yourself back in – now hopefully you do reel yourself back in."[1]

In later years, Buckingham has stated that the song, "Go Insane", was actually written about his 7-year-old (at that time) post-break up relationship with former lover, Stevie Nicks. “We were disintegrating as couples, by virtue of that, we were suffering as people. So in order to get work done, I had to go through this elaborate exercise in denial – leaving whole areas of baggage on the other side of the room, compartmentalize feelings... no time to get closure, to work things out... working in a very highly charged and ambivalent environment. So the go insane thing – would just be whenever I let my guard down and got back to all the things I hadn’t dealt with, it was almost like going insane – like I always do. Took a long, long time, working in an artificial environment on a personal level. So many things not worked through for a long, long time." – Lindsey Buckingham [2]

“Stevie, at some point her persona onstage was latched onto and she was in a sense called away by a larger world and separated on her own from me.”- Lindsey Buckingham [3]


Personnel



Chart history


Chart (1984) Peak
position
Canada RPM Top Singles[4] 57
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[5] 23
U.S. Cash Box Top 100[6] 24

Other versions



References


  1. "Transcript of a 1984 interview with Lindsey Buckingham". fleetwoodmac.net. 1984. Retrieved July 14, 2016.
  2. April 16, 2008 Rockline Radio interview
  3. Sound Opinions August 2013
  4. "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. 1984-10-27. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  5. Whitburn, Joel (2013). Joel Whitburn’s Top Pop Singles, 14th Edition: 1955-2012. Record Research. p. 122.
  6. Cash Box Top 100 Singles, September 29, 1984





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