"Gypsy" is a song by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac. The song was written by Stevie Nicks around 1979; the earliest demo recordings were made in early 1980 with Tom Moncrieff for possible inclusion on her debut solo album Bella Donna. When Nicks' close friend Robin Anderson died of leukemia, the song took on a new significance and Nicks dedicated the song to her in future performances. "Gypsy" was the second single release and second biggest hit from the Mirage album, following "Hold Me", reaching a peak of No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks.

They could not afford a bed frame, so they slept on a mattress directly on the floor. Nicks says the mattress was decorated in lace, with a vase and a flower at its side. Whenever she feels her famous life getting to her, she goes "back to her roots," and takes her mattress off the frame and puts it "back to the floor" and decorates it with "some lace, and paper flowers."[5] On 31 March 2009, Nicks gave an interview to Entertainment Weekly discussing the inspiration for the song:


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However, three months later, Nicks filed for divorce after she "received a sign" from Snyder telling her to get out of there. Nicks has stated that she has put Matthew through college and told him about what had happened many times. As Snyder was dying, Nicks dedicated "Gypsy" to her. Nicks found it extremely difficult to sing the song in concert.[11]

Billboard described it as an "archetypal Stevie Nicks performance" and commented on the "lacy backing vocals and Lindsey Buckingham's chiming guitar lines."[12] The Guardian and Paste ranked the song number nine and number seven, respectively, on their lists of the 30 greatest Fleetwood Mac songs.[13][14]

The video for the song, directed by Russell Mulcahy, was the highest-budget music video ever produced at the time.[15] The video locations included a highly detailed portrayal of a forest and required many costumes and dancers. It was the very first "World Premiere Video" on MTV in 1982.[citation needed]

The b-side of the "Gypsy" single [45 RPM] was "Cool Water," an acoustic performance featuring John McVie on backing vocals, a rare occurrence where McVie contributed his vocals to a Fleetwood Mac recording.[17] The song was originally written in 1936 by Bob Nolan and has been covered by numerous artists over the years. The Fleetwood Mac version appears on the compilation album Revenge of the Killer B's, Volume 2,[18] and has been released on the Deluxe Edition of the band's Mirage CD.

This is driving me nuts, I heard this song last night and thought I had found it, but it's not quite right. The song I'm thinking of uses the same (or very similar beat), but the vocals are much faster/higher paced. It's a popular meme song I've heard on several TikToks as well, but cannot find it now. Anyone have any ideas?

A song with an asterisk (*) before the title indicates a dance number; a character listed in a song with an asterisk (*) by the character's name indicates that the character exclusively serves as a dancer in this song, which is sung by other characters.

All the characters in my songs ~ the Gypsies, the Saras, and the on this album, Alice and Juliet ~ they're all me. But they're all different sides of me.

~Stevie Nicks, interview in Revolution, November, 1989 Gypsy is about um ...going back to the gypsy that I was prior to Fleetwood Mac.

~Stevie Nicks, Rock's Family Tree Yes in my uh Doheny house - in my English house. I just uh.. I went through an experience that wasn't particularly pleasant and I moved out of my big English bedroom into the little back bedroom that was all...the lady that owned this house had put all this French wallpaper up that was flowers and it was beautifully, beautifully done. It's just a little tiny room and put my bed back on the floor, moved my JBLs [speakers] in there, all my plants... all my junk, everything I had into this tiny little room about as big as this sofa, you know and I just lived in there for about 3 months. And I, it was really like living back in my apartment before I joined Fleetwood Mac...it was ...I'm very comfortable living in one little room with my bed on the floor and kind of lace tacked up at the windows, you know.

In the song Gypsy it says, Going back to the velvet underground/ Back to the floor... which means my bed went back on the floor, with the paper flowers and the, you know, there's a part of that that [era] there will never be again ...except that it does live in my house because it was so special. 

~Stevie Nicks, Video Interview for Fleetwood Mac's Greatest Hits (1988) as cited in Mirror Mirror, Issue 3 [On being a gypsy] The clothes I wear... that doesn't change. I love long dresses. I love velvet. I love high boots. I never change. I love the same eye make-up. I'm not a fad person. I still have everything I had then. That's one part of me... that's where my songs come from. There's a song on the new Fleetwood Mac album [Mirage] that says, 'Going back to the velvet underground/back to the floor that I love,' because I always put my bed on the floor. 'To a room with some lace and paper flowers/ back to the gypsy that I was.' And that's San Francisco. That's the Velvet Underground. Those are the things that I can't give up. 

~Stevie Nicks, The Record, February 1982

For me to be a gypsy; for me to write about the gypsy - and for me to live the life of a gypsy that I love - I sort of almost have to be almost cold and insensitive to be able to remain that gypsy. It's not easy to be a hippie-gypsy when you're rich and when you're a rock'n'roll star. 

~Stevie Nicks, Jim Ladd Innerview, 1983

Dreams was a very real song. Gypsy was very real.

~Stevie Nicks, BBC Interview, 1989 The song Gypsy isn't a real happy story. Gypsy is a lot about returning to San Francisco. And Gypsy was written when my best friend [Robin] died of Leukemia and uh ...about the fact that she wasn't going to see the rest of this: I still see your bright eyes, it was like she wasn't ...going to make it. And uh, I was like the lone gypsy ~ this was my best friend from when I was 15 and so I was a solo gypsy all of a sudden and it was very sad for me and that's sometimes when I write my very best songs. Robin had been on the road with Fleetwood Mac for five years. As my speech therapist and also management, an incredibly efficient helper. I still miss your bright eyes ~ that's why we don't do it on stage ~ it's because it's really too hard for me to sing. Lightening strikes maybe once, maybe twice... that means one time in your life you find a very good friend, and maybe if you're incredibly lucky, you might find a second. It all comes down to you, means but you have to look very hard.

~Stevie Nicks, video interview for Fleetwood Mac's Greatest Hits (1988) You also, I think, know this girl. I knew her [Robin]. And she's stillhere so I guess... New York was our favorite place, so....

~Stevie Nicks, introduction to the song Gypsy on the Radio City Show of the Wild Heart Tour, September 13, 1983

Willie Hugh Nelson was born in Abbott, Texas, in 1933, and during his 60-year career has demonstrated a wide range of talents. The American icon is a musician, singer, songwriter, author, poet, actor and activist. He has recorded more than 60 studio albums and appeared in more than 30 films and television shows. At 82 years old, he still has an active touring schedule.

Today I stumbled upon VGMix.com, an online community of amateur musicians who make recordings of video-game music. This sounded fun to me, so I spent some time recording a guitar version of the Super Mario Bros 2 level-one theme, in the style of Django Reinhardt (gypsy jazz).

After I spent a while recording and mixing this, though, it was just my luck to find out VGMix.com isn't accepting new registrations, so I can't actually post the song to the site. I guess I'll just post it here:

This is excellent! I've been meaning to track you down, 'cause we used this song on the outro of our first Nintendo podcast. I didn't know who to give credit too but it has since been updated. See Infendo Radio show number 1.

Amazing!! I'm a heavy metal fan who recently has been interested in gipsy jazz. I even bought an introductory book to start learning whatever I can from this style of music. I just find it relaxing, amusing, interesting, etc... And by coincidence I was browsing the web for SMB2 theme song and by coincidence I ran into your song. Wow! I look forward to the day I can come up with something like that! It sounds so cool and like it must be so fun to play. Thanks for your contribution to the music comunity.

Gypsy displays striking similarities to vertebrate retroviruses, including the presence of a yet uncharacterized additional open reading frame (ORF3) and the recent evidence for infectivity. It is mobilized with high frequency in the germline of the progeny of females homozygous for the flamenco permissive mutation. We report the characterization of a gypsy subgenomic ORF3 RNA encoding typical retroviral envelope proteins. In females, env expression is strongly repressed by one copy of the non-permissive allele of flamenco. A less dramatic reduction in the accumulation of other transcripts and retrotranscripts is also observed. These effects correlate well with the inhibition of gypsy transposition in the progeny of these females, and are therefore likely to be responsible for this phenomenon. The effects of flamenco on gypsy expression are apparently restricted to the somatic follicle cells that surround the maternal germline. Moreover, permissive follicle cells display a typically polarized distribution of gypsy RNAs and envelope proteins, both being mainly accumulated at the apical pole, close to the oocyte. We propose a model suggesting that gypsy germinal transposition might occur only in individuals that have maternally inherited enveloped gypsy particles due to infection of the maternal germline by the soma. ff782bc1db

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