"Sara" is a song written by singer-songwriter Stevie Nicks of the British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, which was released as a single from the 1979 Tusk double LP. The vinyl album version length is 6 minutes 22 seconds, and the edited single version length is 4 minutes 37 seconds. The song peaked at No. 7 in the US for three weeks, No. 37 in the UK for two weeks, No. 11 in Australia, and No. 12 in Canada.
"Sara" | ||||
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Single by Fleetwood Mac | ||||
from the album Tusk | ||||
B-side | "That's Enough for Me" | |||
Released | December 1979 | |||
Recorded | 1978–1979 | |||
Genre | Folk rock, soft rock | |||
Length | 6:22 (full album version) 4:37 (single edit)[1] | |||
Label | Warner Bros. | |||
Songwriter(s) | Stevie Nicks | |||
Producer(s) | Fleetwood Mac, Richard Dashut and Ken Caillat | |||
Fleetwood Mac singles chronology | ||||
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Speaking in a radio interview for the Friday Rock Show with Tommy Vance in the early 1990s, Stevie Nicks said the song was partially written about her good friend, Sara, who married Nicks' ex and bandmate, Mick Fleetwood.[2]
However, Nicks' former boyfriend Don Henley claimed that the song is about their unborn child.[3] In 1979, Nicks said, "If I ever have a little girl, I will name her Sara. It's a very special name to me." In a 2014 Billboard interview Nicks said, "Had I married Don and had that baby, and had she been a girl, I would have named her Sara... It's accurate, but not the entirety of it."[4]
In his 2014 autobiography, Mick Fleetwood agreed with the suggestion that the song referred to an affair with a friend named Sara which ended his own relationship with Nicks. Fleetwood and Nicks had been involved in a romantic relationship in the late 1970s. The lyrics, "and he was just like a great dark wing/within the wings of a storm" refer to Fleetwood being an emotional comfort zone for Nicks following her breakup with fellow band member Lindsey Buckingham.[5] Although the relationship was not exclusive on either side, Fleetwood states that Nicks became upset when she learned of Fleetwood's relationship with her best friend, Sara. This relationship effectively ended the romance between Nicks and Fleetwood.[6]
Cash Box called "Sara" "a lush, entrancing Stevie Nicks composition, with effectively echoed lead vocals by Nicks" and called the arrangement "glistening".[7]
The version of the song featured on the original vinyl release of Tusk was the unedited 6:22 version, but when Tusk was originally released as a single Compact Disc in 1987 it featured the edited version, which leaves out the middle verse and musical bridge. It was not until the 1988 Fleetwood Mac Greatest Hits compilation was released that the 6:22 version of the song became available on compact disc.[8]
There is also a version known as "the cleaning lady" edit, so-called as Nicks is heard at the beginning of the demo recording, "I don't want to be a cleaning lady!" This version lasts almost nine minutes and was released on the 2-disc remastered version Tusk in March 2004. The song contains an extended vamp, which includes excised lines previously only heard in live performances, such as, "and the wind became crazy", "no sorrow for sorrow, you can have no more", and "swallow all your pride, don't you ever change—never change".
On 5 November 2015, a live version was released as part of a remastered Tusk. This recording features a heavier hitting drum beat from Fleetwood.[9]
The 2018 Fleetwood Mac 50 Years – Don't Stop album includes a remastered single version of the song that runs 4:37.
In 1980, Nicks was sued for plagiarism by a songwriter who had submitted a song called "Sara", which she had sent to Warner Bros. in 1978. Nicks showed that she had written and recorded a demo version of the song in July 1978, before the lyrics were sent to Warner, and the complainant accepted that no plagiarism had occurred.[10]
Chart (1979–1980) | Peak position |
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Australia (Kent Music Report) | 11 |
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[11] | 14 |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[12] | 12 |
Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM)[13] | 3 |
French Singles Chart | 31 |
Germany (Official German Charts)[14] | 44 |
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[15] | 14 |
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[16] | 12 |
South African Singles Chart | 18 |
UK Singles (OCC)[17] | 37 |
US Billboard Hot 100[18] | 7 |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[19] | 13 |
Chart (1980) | Rank |
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US Top Pop Singles (Billboard)[20] | 87 |
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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United Kingdom (BPI)[21] | Silver | 200,000![]() |
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'I sat up with a very good friend of mine whose name is Sara, who was married to Mick Fleetwood. She likes to think it's completely about her, but it's really not completely about her. It's about me, about her, about Mick, about Fleetwood Mac. Its about all of us at that point. There's little bits about each one of us in that song and when it had all the other verses it really covered a vast bunch of people. Sara was the kind of song you could fall in love with, because I fell in love with it...
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link)Years later, Henley had this to say about his affair with Nicks: "[Stevie had] named the unborn kid Sara, and she had an abortion." She then wrote the song of the same name (which became a huge hit for her) and, according to Henley, dedicated it "to the spirit of the aborted baby"
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