Indroduction and 
News Mp3's, Real 
Audio, and MIDI Videos and Multimedia Lilith Fair the art opening ~ gallery The Fumbler Forum ~ A fan's page The words to the music Medusa's Web Get in Contact Webrings dedicated 
to Sarah McLachlan and Women in Music

These are my favorite quotes and lyrics from her songs. Elsewhere is by far, my favorite song. I'm not going to put all the lyrics to every song, only because there's enough of that out on the net. So these are the words that touch me. I'm sure there are a few of them that touch you too. If you have a quote you'd like me to put up, let me know! Also below is an exclusive conversation between Sarah and Stevie Nicks!

My favorite quote directly from Sarah in an interview was from Pulse magazine, July 97 edition...
"We've all been obsessed to greater or lesser degrees. You can get to a stronger place by being ugly, by letting yourself be portrayed in less-than-flattering light. That's the most naked, honest, place to be."

"...So don't tell me why he's never been good to you - don't tell me why he's never been there for you and I'll tell you that why is simply not good enough. So just let me try and I will be good to you - just let me try and I will be there for you. I'll show you why you're so much more than good enough..."
-Good Enough

"...she cradled us. she held us in her arms unselfish in her suffering she could not understand - that no on seemed to have the time to cherish what is offered..."
-Mary

"I love the time and inbetween, the calm inside me where I can breathe. I believe there is a distance I have wandered to touch upon the years of reaching out and reaching in holding out holding in. I believe this is heaven to no one else but me and I'll defend it as long as I can be left here to linger in silence if I choose to would you try to understand."
-Elsewhere

"...the only comfort is the moving of the river..."
-Ice

"...but I fear I have nothing to give I have so much to lose here in this lonely place. tangled up in your embrace there's nothing I'd like better than to fall..."
-Fear

"...By the shadows of the night I go, I move away from the crowded room that sea of shallow faces masked in warm regret. They don't know how to feel, they don't know what is Lost..."
-Lost

"...I threw bitter tears at the ocean...but all that came back was the tide..."
-I Will Not Forget You

"...Lying awake in these restless dreams, life's never what it seems..."
-Steaming

"...And when we're done soul searching, as we carried the weight and died for a cause, is misery made beautiful right before our eyes, will mercy be revealed, or blind us where we stand..."
-Witness

"... all I feel is black and white, and I'm wound up small and tight, and I don't know who I am...Everybody loves you when you're easy, everybody hates when you're a bore, everyone is waiting for your entrance so don't disappoint them..."
-Black and White



Interview w/ Stevie Nicks
Stevie, I feel is THE Gypsy Queen...she helped pave the road for female artists today, and as you will read, Sarah too!

Stevie Nicks: Hello?

Sarah McLachlan: Hi. I'm so bummed that we're not talking in person. Where are you now?

SN: In Phoenix

SM: On, right on.

SN: So, Sarah McLachlan. First, I have something to tell you. I go to bed very late, and when I finally do got to bed, about four o'clock in the morning, It's the only time I listen to the radio. And lots of times when I'm really asleep, something will pull me out of my sleep and the amazing thing is it's often Fleetwood Mac. I'll hear the bass and drums and it'll wake me up.

SM: Mmmm.

SN Every once in a while, somebody else will pull me out of my sleep. So this past February I'm sound asleep and all of a sudden this {sings} "And I will be the one." (SM takes a deep breath) Right?

SM: Right.

SN: And I'm going, "I love this." The DJ said, "That was a new, fabulous thing from Sarah that's called Possession." So I wrote down: Sarah, Possession. The next morning I said to my assistant, "You have to get this record that's called Posssession. I don't know if that's the name of the album or the song. All I know is that this lady's name is Sarah, which of course, is my favorite name. And you have been a total part of my life since. I have to give you the greatest compliment that I could pay to anyone. You remind me so much of the first time that I went to the Fillmore in San Francisco. I was in a band that was the opening act on a show that had about seven acts in it. And there was red velvet drapes and you knew that Janis Joplin had sat in this dressing room, and there was something about your music that reminded me of how I felt about Janis. When I heard your music, I thought, Somehow this woman reminds me of the incredible music that came out of San Francisco when all of us were so knocked out to be alive.

SM: Whoa! That's pretty heavy for me.

SN: Well, it was heavy for me too, because I thought, Wow. She's ticked into an incredible thing here. Somehow she's new, yet she must be a very wise, old soul, because she's put it all together now, but she's still a little antique.

SM: Wow, that blows me away.

SN: When did you start doing this?

SM: I started singing professionally when I was nineteen. I got a record contract offered to me on a silver platter. A couple of years previous, I was in a band, and the first gig we did, a guy from a record company saw me and wanted to sign me- when I was seventeen. But my mom kind of freaked out. And in retrospect, it was really a good thing, because I forgot about it and I went to art college for a year and was really feeling like I fit in someplace for the first time in my life. Then they came back to me and offered me a contract. I had never written a song up until that point.

SN: Really?

SM: For years and years, I had been playing other people's songs. It was always my biggest dream to be up onstage performing. It always seemed intangible for me, because my mom and dad were academics and wanted me to go to university, so it was like a dream come true and a big push for me to start writing myself.

SN: I never in a million years expected it to happen to me. I took typing and shorthand. I went ot five years of college and I quit and also got into humongous trouble from my parents for that.(SM laughs) I moved to Los Angeles with Lindsey Buckingham, which was totally unacceptable to my entire family. Not only was I living with somebody, but I quit school. "What are you gonna do? Be in the circus for the rest of your life?"

SM: Yeah. "When are you going to get a real job?"

SN: Right. I also think that fame and fortune have a high price.

SM: On, no shit. Especially if you're not asking for the fame part. I just want to sing. I've only really become what you call a famous person in the past year. I'm lucky I had five years to get used to it in bits and pieces.

SN: The same thing with me. I was just singing with my then-boyfriend, Lindsey, and we had nothign, no money. And i worked. He didn't work. He furiously practiced his guitar every day, all day-and I backed that up. And then we got a call from a famous guy in a famous band who said, "Do you wanna join our band?" We actually went back and forth about it: "Well, maybe we don't. Maybe we just want to do what we're doing now." And between Jan. and my birthday in May we became famous."

SM: On man!

SN: We got paid in cash, two hundred dollars a wek each, so I had hundred-dollar bills everywhere. And since we hadn't spent any money in five years, we didn't know how to spend money. And I was washing hundred-dollar bills through the wash and finding them crumpled and detergented out, and hanging them on the line with the rest of our stuff. Well, Sarah, are you happy?

SM: Me? Yeah. i've been out on the road for over a year now, so I'm sort of at my wit's end with life and the world. But I kind of have a happy magnet. I can't stand being depressed, so I work my ass off to get out of it as soon as possible.

SN: It's so pretty here that it's hard to be in a bad mood. The desert's very healing, and I have just been setting up a Bosendorfer piano, which is the pride of my life.

SM: Oh, you lucky thing, you!

SN: And for the first time I moved my piano into the living room and I'm building around that piano. It's the reason why this house is here, the reason I'm here. IT's kind of like if this house burns down, you will see me-

SM: Dragging the piano! (laughs)

SN: I've actually had some serious fire drills on the road. And I stand in the middle of the room and think, Well, I have to get my tape, because there's stuff that I've written that is nowhere else. And I have to run down twenty-four flights of staris with all my writing, all my tapes, a guitar, and two or three dolls-I collect dolls. I get to the lobby, and everybody's standing there, saying, "I can't believe you brought all that stuff with you." I'm saying, "Well, you can't believe it, but this is my life."

SM: When you're out on the road, you have so little that is familiar to you, so those things just become so important.

SN: And you travel on a bus?

SM: Yeah. We have two tour buses and we caravan.

SN: I had never gone on a bus in my life until this year. And I have never had such a great time in my whole life, because it was like getting on an incredible little traveling thing with my best friends.

SM: Oh yeah, it's like a candy store.

SN: I loved it so much that I was really sad to see that bus go. I thought, If I could just park this bus in front of my house and live on this and go in and shower and do my hair, then I could love this little space.

SM: I get nostalgic about touring after I've been away from it for a while. But on our European tour we'd been out for so long and together in such a confined space, we all started to regress. The last show of the tour in Paris was pretty frightening. I'd had laryngitis for about two weeks. I could hardly sing. Afterward we went to this restaurant and got rip-roaring drunk and made absolute fools of ourselves.

SN: Which is very easy to do over there, because everybody there drinks like it's water. When I joined Fleetwood Mac, I was twenty-seven years old and i had never ever drank, and these people were used to getting on an airplane at nine in the morning and ordering a double Bloody Mary.

SM: Oooh!

SN: Pretty soon I realized I can't enjoy being with these people, because they look at the world through a different pair of glasses than I do. Lindsey and I were California girls and boys. We were a strange group of three English people and two American people, and that was very hard on the road., because we were just so different. Christine McVie had Stevie Winwood carrying her books home from school, and Eric Clapton was best friends with Mick Fleetwood when they were sixteen, and I could not even relate to that. It was like, "You guys are too famous for me. And I'm getting really nervous."

SM: I can't be with people who are drinking unless I'm drinking too. I hardly drink anyway.

SN: That's OK, because we drank for you. We got it out of the way. You don't have to do it.

SM: Yeah, you people are why my mother had a bad attitude about the music industry (laughs)

SN: I bet. Well, my partents had no sympathy for it all. My granddad was a country and western singer, and he left his family and took freight trains and traveled all over, playing in bars and supporting himself by playing pool. So my mom and dad thought, Well, there she goes. She's gonna walk down the same road as her grandfather. And luckily I became a bit more successful than he was (both laugh). You know what? I would love to meet you sometime and sit down and just talk about your music and my music and share some of the mistakes I made that maybe you don't need to make.

SM: Well, I'd definitely love to bend your ear some more, because I have had very little opportunity to talk to anybody who's been in any position such as mine. Especially a woman.

SN: You can always call me. I have been through just about every possible thing that you could go through, and I've just given up everything you could possibly give up for this. And I wonder sometimes if I made the right decisions. There are a lot of things that I would love to tell you that might make a difficult time a little easier for you. I'll give you my phone number so that you can call me when you're in the middle of Toronto, bummed out, and I can tell you that everthing's gonna be all right.

Issue 9504 Interview Magazine pgs 114,132 small pic of Sarah, full page pic of Stevie.