Category: 2010 Late Summer

  • The solo side of Stevie Nicks performs in Atlantic City tonight

    The solo side of Stevie Nicks performs in Atlantic City tonight

    Stevie Nicks’ new album will debut 30 years after her first Bella Donna

    Stevie Nicks admits she’s led a double life since the early 1980s. In one life, the ethereal singer stands front and center as a mainstay of the celebrated Fleetwood Mac. In the other, she flies solo.

    And she couldn’t be happier with the two sides of Stevie Nicks. The crossover keeps the juices flowing, keeps boredom at bay.

    “Now I go back and forth and it’s proved quite wonderful for me. I do Fleetwood Mac till I’m run ragged. I run ragged till the music plays out as Stevie Nicks. It’s worked well all these many years,” she said in a phone interview last week.

    The solo Stevie Nicks brings her entourage to the Etess Arena at Trump Taj Mahal tonight as part of a very short tour this month, which included an earlier benefit concert for a cancer-stricken girl in Santa Barbara.

    Meantime, Nicks has been busy in the studio recording her first solo album of new material since Trouble in Shangri-La in 2001, with the Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart as producer.

    An Arizona native, Nicks has sold over 120 million albums, both solo and with Fleetwood Mac. She has seven Grammy nominations and, with Fleetwood Mac, won a Grammy for Album of the Year for Rumours. As a member of Fleetwood Mac, Nicks was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.

    With an almost ten year lag, Nicks said she wasn’t going to make a new record. “But I woke up one day and said “I’ll do it even if only one person buys it.”

    And she’s glad she came to that conclusion. “I’m having the best experience I’ve ever had,” Nicks said.

    Working with Stewart on songs together was a first, she said.

    “I’ve never written before with anyone in the same room. It never appealed to me. But this opened my eyes why Lennon and McCartney did this great writing as a team,” she said.

    Stewart also provides something Nicks lacks when creating a song: an almost endless supply of chords. “I know four chords on guitar and not as many on piano. Imagine what I can do with ten chords,” she said.

    The expanded musical vocabulary translates to expanded lyrical capacity as well. “I go through my poetry and pick something out. With Dave, I’m able to get more of each poem in there. I get these great whole stories in the songs,” she said.

    So far, she’s worked on nine songs with Stewart. “The songs are spectacular. Another five were just mine. Once we weave it all together, it’ll be fantastic,” she said.

    Don’t expect Nicks to preview any of the spectacular songs in Atlantic City. “I never do songs I’m working on. Otherwise they’ll be on YouTube the next day.”

    Nicks also believes playing new songs short changes the audience.

    “If I go see my favorite band and they take out “Rhiannon” and “Stand Back” to put new ones in I would be disappointed. You can’t make people listen to a bunch of new material no matter how good it is. I learned that a long time ago. We did that with (Fleetwood Mac’s) Rumours tour and we almost got booed off stage.”

    Next year when the album comes out, she’ll do up to three new numbers on stage. The as-yet untitled record will debut 30 years after Nicks’ first release, Bella Donna, which yielded such hits as “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around,” “Leather and Lace,” “Edge of Seventeen” and “After the Glitter Fades.”

    As for the other side of Stevie Nicks, Fleetwood Mac is on hold right now. “When I’m done with this project I’ll go back to Fleetwood Mac. I’m loyal to the group. I love my band,” she said.

    Stevie Nicks performs at 8 tonight at Etess Arena at Trump Taj Mahal, 1000 Boardwalk. Ticket are $116, $96 and $76 and can be obtained by either calling Ticketmaster at (800) 736-1420, on the web at www.ticketmaster.com or in person at the Taj Box Office. For box office hours and more information call (609) 449-5150.

    August 27, 2010 / Courier Post / William Sokolic

  • Stevie Nicks to play Turning Stone Resort and Casino Event Center

    Stevie Nicks to play Turning Stone Resort and Casino Event Center

    Stevie Nicks
    Stevie Nicks performs in June 2007 at Turning Stone Resort and Casino in Verona. (Photo: Gloria Wright/The Post-Standard, 2007)

    By Mark Bialczak
    The Post-Standard
    Friday, May 7, 2010

    Stevie Nicks is coming back to Turning Stone.

    The member of classic rock band Fleetwood Mac will bring her show to the resort and casino’s Event Center at 8 p.m. Aug. 25.

    Tickets, priced at $80, go on sale at 10 a.m. May 15 at the Event Center box office, ticketmaster.com and by phone at 877-833-7469.

    I caught her show at the Event Center in June 2007, and wrote a review for The Post-Standard. It started:

    Stevie Nicks was in fine voice Tuesday night at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino’s Event Center.

    Front and center amid her seven musicians and three backup vocalists, the woman who put much of the mystery into Fleetwood Mac belted out the hits like a true rock star.

    One year removed from her 60th birthday, Nicks looked and sounded much like the energetic star who delivered to America a long line of hits, from the Buckingham Nicks start of 1971 to the full-blown Fleetwood Mac days to the solo career that bloomed because the three or four songs per album she was allowed to contribute to “The Mac, ” as she called them, weren’t enough to satisfy her songwriting talents.

    She told the just-about-capacity crowd just that early on during the concert. Nicks would be in a chatty mood, she explained, because she wanted to talk about all those great songs of hers.

    From the first song of the night, “Stand Back, ” it was obvious that Nicks’ pure, soaring rock voice still sizzles. It was vintage Nicks, dressed mostly in black, numerous strands of beads draped from her microphone stand, body ready to twirl with arms extended as if she really believed a wind beneath the balloon sleeves of her outfit could carry her off into the clouds.

    Her band, led by her longtime friend and music director Waddy Wachtel on a very demonstrative guitar, was forever ready to help Nicks drive home the point with equal parts melody and power.

    Between songs, Nicks smiled a whole lot.

    “In 1981, going solo from the Mac was a very dangerous thing to do, ” she said. “I didn’t want to split up the band, but I needed a vehicle to do more than three or four songs a record as a songwriter. So we put out the album “Belladonna.”‘

    The rest, she declared, was made rock ‘n’ roll history.

  • Stevie Nicks returns to Turning Stone August 25

    Stevie Nicks returns to Turning Stone August 25

    Stevie Nicks
    Stevie Nicks returns to Turning Stone on August 25.

    Oneida Nation
    Friday, May 7, 2010

    Her last visit to Turning Stone Resort and Casino’s Event Center was in 2007. If you missed that sold out performance, you’ll want to be part of the excitement and live the experience as the voice and songwriting talent of Stevie Nicks returns August 25. Tickets to the 8 p.m. Event Center show are priced from $80 and go on sale May 15 at 10 a.m.

    Nicks, both as a solo artist and as a member of Fleetwood Mac, is truly the stuff of legend. Indisputably one of the most successful female artists in rock history, she is noteworthy for an extraordinary career that includes multiple Grammy awards, numerous Gold and Platinum awards and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

    For more about Stevie Nicks and for your Nicks Fix visit her on the web at: http://stevienicks.net/ or http://www.nicksfix.com

    Tickets are available by calling the box office at 361-SHOW or toll-free at 1-877-833-SHOW. The Turning Stone box office is open daily from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tickets may also be purchased at any Ticketmaster location, Ticketmaster charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000 or online at ticketmaster.com