Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide” Finally Cracks the Billboard Hot 100, After 50 Years

“Landslide” is one of those songs that feels too big, too iconic, and too emotionally baked into pop culture to still have firsts left.

And yet, nearly 50 years after Fleetwood Mac released it, the song has just debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 thanks to the series finale of “Stranger Things”.

Nearly five decades after its release, Fleetwood Mac’s iconic 1975 song “Landslide” has debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 for the very first time, landing at an impressive #41.

“Landslide” has long been one of Fleetwood Mac’s most beloved songs, the kind of track that feels permanently woven into pop culture. It is regularly cited as a fan favorite, shows up on countless best-of lists, and has been covered by artists across genres. Still, despite all that love, the original studio version had never actually cracked Billboard’s main singles chart.

That makes this moment especially wild. A song that has sold more than two million units and is certified two-times platinum by the RIAA is only now officially a Hot 100 hit. It turns out cultural impact and chart history do not always line up neatly.

This is not “Landslide’s” first brush with the charts, though. A live version of the song reached #51 back in 1998, thanks to Fleetwood Mac’s massively successful live reunion album “The Dance”. That release introduced the song to a whole new generation at the time, much like “Stranger Things” has done now.

The latest surge proves, once again, just how powerful TV soundtracks can be.

“Stranger Things” has a solid track record of reviving older songs and pushing them into the streaming era spotlight, and “Landslide” is the newest beneficiary. Viewers heard it during a major emotional moment, immediately searched for it, streamed it, and sent it climbing straight onto the charts.

For Fleetwood Mac fans, this chart debut feels long overdue. For everyone else, it is a reminder that great songs do not expire. Sometimes they just wait patiently for their moment, even if that moment comes almost 50 years later.

Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham Will Reissue “Buckingham Nicks”

Fleetwood Mac legends Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham sent fans into a nostalgic spiral after dropping what looked like a carefully coordinated set of clues pointing to a long-awaited reunion . . . or at least a major project together.

Last week, both artists raised eyebrows on social media by following each other again after years of estrangement. But what really sent the rumor mill into overdrive was what they posted next: lyrics from their 1973 song Frozen Love, the final track on their only album as a duo, “Buckingham Nicks”. Stevie wrote, “And if you go forward…” while Lindsey added, “I’ll meet you there.”

Enter the conspiracy boards.

Fans immediately speculated about a reissue of their cult-classic “Buckingham Nicks” album, which has never been officially re-released or added to streaming platforms.

But then things got even more interesting: Mick Fleetwood himself joined the fun, posting a video of himself listening to “Frozen Love” and calling it, “Magic then, magic now. What a thrill. Amen.”

And just when it couldn’t feel more like a ‘70s rock movie teaser trailer, a billboard appeared on Sunset Boulevard in L.A. featuring the original “Buckingham Nicks” album artwork and a date: September 19th. No caption. No further context. Just enough mystery to make longtime fans absolutely lose it.

And now we finally have an answer. We are getting a reissue of “Buckingham Nicks” in all formats (digital, vinyl, and CD) on September 19th.

The original album came out in 1973 but was quickly buried after poor commercial sales—despite becoming a fan-favorite over the years. It also famously led to both Nicks and Buckingham joining Fleetwood Mac in 1975, setting off one of the most dramatic and iconic chapters in rock history.

So far, the track “Crying in the Night” is available on streaming,

Worth noting: this probably won’t lead to a Fleetwood Mac reunion. Stevie has said there’s “no chance” of putting the band back together after Christine McVie’s passing in 2022. But a musical reconnection with Buckingham—who was fired from the band in 2018 after personal tensions boiled over—feels like a long-overdue bit of closure, if not outright healing.

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