Category: The Other Side of the Mirror (1989)

  • The Other Side of the Mirror turns 25

    The Other Side of the Mirror turns 25

    (Photo: Neal Preston)
    (Photo: Neal Preston)

    By the end of the ’80s, Fleetwood Mac fans had grown accustomed to enjoying a round of solo releases from band members between solo projects, with singer Stevie Nicks establishing herself as the most prolific artist outside the confines of the group.

    Starting with 1981′s Bella Donna, Nicks spent the decade see-sawing between her solo career and Fleetwood Mac projects, and the market seemed perfectly willing to bear the extra music; both Donna and its followup, 1983′s The Wild Heart, made the Top 10, and 1985′s Rock a Little extended her streak of platinum releases. But after finishing three records in five years, Nicks put her solo career on temporary hiatus — partly because of her obligations to Fleetwood Mac following the massive success of the band’s 1987 Tango in the Night album, and partly because personal problems put a crimp in her creativity.

    As she explained in a 1998 interview with People Magazine, Nicks’ cocaine dependency came to a head in 1986, when a plastic surgeon reportedly warned her, “If you want your nose to remain on your face, stop right now.” She entered rehab to deal with her addiction, but as she put it, “after I quit cocaine, things got even worse” — mainly because she left treatment with a prescription for the powerful sedative Klonopin, which she said “changed me from a tormented, productive artist to an indifferent woman.”

    Even without chemical woes in the way, Nicks’ solo career faced another critical stumbling block in the mid-to-late-’80s: the frequently turbulent personal dynamics between the members of Fleetwood Mac. Pointing out that the tour for Tango in the Night went on for months, Nicks later recalled the difficulties of dealing with her Mac bandmate Lindsey Buckingham’s lack of support. “When you work with Lindsey he pretty much demands that you’re there,” she recalled. “And I was also touring. We’d tour for six weeks and come home for a week then I’d bang into the studio to try to be there as much as I could. But Lindsey was not very understanding about that. He felt that I shouldn’t have a solo career. It was like, ‘Oh, thank you so very much for giving us another week of your precious time!’ So it was never a very pleasant experience.”

    Stevie Nicks The Other Side of the Mirror 1989Fortunately, she’d reached the stage of her career where she no longer needed to keep recording to pay the bills, and whatever urgency she felt to finish the album was solely creative. “At my age and after all I’ve been through, what I really need is to love the music that goes out,” she insisted. “I have everything I need on a living basis, so whatever the sales, I want the music to be true to me and my songs.”

    To that end, Nicks sought out a new producer when she got down to work on what would become her fourth solo album, The Other Side of the Mirror. “I started out with Rupert Hines, who is an amazing keyboard player, so that whole album sort of went the way of the airy, surreal keyboard and synthesizer thing,” she explained in a 1994 interview with Music Connection. But it wasn’t just Hines’ keyboard playing that led Nicks to hire him — more importantly, he was willing to listen.

    “The thing that I told him was most important to me was that my songs came through,” she later recalled. “I have archives of demos, and I have many, many friends who prefer the demos — who have them and listen to them, and that’s kind of really hard to take when it costs you nothing to do a demo and it costs you $500,000 or $1 million to do a record, and people come to you and say, ‘Can I have a cassette of the song when it was just a demo?’…It’s very important to me that what I’m saying comes through. I’m not a musician. More than musically, it’s very important that what I have to say comes through and so on this record, he did what I asked. He let me put my demo feeling through.”

    Released on May 11, 1989, The Other Side of the Mirror was presented as a sort of loosely constructed song suite based around Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, although Nicks herself could be somewhat evasive on the subject. “I’m not ready to tell everybody exactly what the songs are all about,” she demurred when asked about the inspiration behind the album, “because I’d rather people interpret them in terms of their own lives, as opposed to thinking the songs are just about me.”

    During an interview with Record Mirror, however, she admitted that the songs often are about her. Discussing the inspiration behind leadoff single “Rooms on Fire,” she said, “I guess the single is about when you’re in a crowded room and you see a kind of person and your heart goes, ‘Wow!’ The whole world seems to be ablaze at that particular moment. You see, I don’t write fantasy songs. Everything I write is based on personal experience. I guess I’m quite an intense, romantic person. Of course, selling lots of records means you can live a privileged, glamorous lifestyle, but it becomes very lonely as well.”

    Speaking with Revolution later in 1989, she opened up further, saying The Other Side of the Mirror started out as a tribute to her grandmother. “I called her Crazy Alice; I lost her three months ago and I just loved her so much,” she explained, adding that as the album developed, it took on several personalities.

    1989_tosotm_back_cover“I love making up little fantasy things,” Nicks admitted. “All the characters in my songs — the Gypsies, the Saras, and on this album, Alice and Juliet — they’re all me. But they’re all different sides of me. It’s a great way to write about what’s going on in your life without telling it in a real serious way, but the point comes over and I think people understand that. I don’t think I started out intending it to have much to do with Alice in Wonderland, though I read it when I was little. But I kept thinking about how I go back and forth from one side of the mirror to the other. And then I have a little space in between, which is when I do other things which nobody really knows about; my painting, my art, my writing.

    “That’s my sanity life,” she added. “That’s when I’m pretty serious and sane. And my Fleetwood Mac life and my Stevie Nicks life, both of those are pretty heavy and I have to scurry back and forth constantly. For the past seven years I’ve been running two straight careers pretty solid, and they’re both big and they’re both demanding.”

    It could get a little confusing at times. “Much of Alice in Stevie Nicks’ Alice is Stevie writing about Alice in parallel back to Stevie, so I’m really writing about Alice’s adventures as in comparison to my adventures,” she explained in a separate interview. “For Alice to run back and forth between the looking glass is kind of what I perceive my whole life to be, running back and forth between two places — which is obviously my career with Fleetwood Mac and my career by myself. And then of course, there’s the other part of my life, which is my own life, which there isn’t very much of. But I always seem to be running to one place or the other.”

    She’d soon find herself running to all kinds of places, courtesy of an extensive tour that found Nicks visiting Europe as a solo artist for the first time. Although she later confessed that her growing Klonopin dependency had obliterated most of her memories of the tour, ‘Mirror’ still did well, both overseas and in the States; “Rooms on Fire” was a hit on both sides of the Atlantic, and the album reached No. 10 on the Billboard charts, eventually selling more than a million copies in the U.S. alone.

    In spite of its success, The Other Side of the Mirror represented the end of Nicks’ time as a platinum-selling solo act. Shortly after wrapping her tour for the album, she drifted back to her duties with Fleetwood Mac, and although she departed the band shortly after the release of 1990′s Behind the Mask LP, personal issues continued to stunt her creative output until the mid-’90s; it wasn’t until she underwent another round of detox (and got a little tough love from her old friend Tom Petty) that she really started writing again, and by the time a reinvigorated Nicks released the well-received Trouble in Shangri-La in 2001, the radio landscape had tilted away from artists of her generation.

    Still, Nicks remains active, both within and without Fleetwood Mac; the band reunited with keyboard player Christine McVie for a highly anticipated 2014 tour, and her most recent solo release, 2011′s In Your Dreams, broke the Billboard Top 10. Once a rock ingenue, she’s now looked up to by younger artists the same way she looked up to her own influences — a role she clearly relishes.

    “I would say I am a very romantic person and very intense,” Nicks mused of her songwriting in general. “I don’t write real happy songs, but I don’t ever write a song that leaves people with no hope. Everything I write comes from reality, and then I throw a handful of sparkle-dust over it and try to make it so that people can accept it and say, ‘Life goes on no matter how bad or what kind of tragedy you’re involved in, a heartbroken love affair or whatever it is.’ You will make it. Because I’m proving it. I’m telling you that I’ve been through it all and I’m still here.”

    Jeff Giles / Ultimate Classic Rock / Sunday, May 11, 2014

    1989_mirror_press_cropped

  • TODAY IN STEVIE HISTORY: ‘Rooms on Fire’ sizzles up the summer charts

    TODAY IN STEVIE HISTORY: ‘Rooms on Fire’ sizzles up the summer charts

    On July 1, 1989, “Rooms on Fire,” the lead single from Stevie’s fourth solo album The Other Side of the Mirror, peaked at number 16 on the Billboard Pop Singles chart. The summer release was even a bigger hit on the Album Rock chart, where it commanded pole position for one week. “Rooms on Fire” remains Stevie’s highest charting song on the Album Rock chart, following by “Stand Back” (2) and “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around (2). The song is also one of Stevie’s most successful international singles, charting in the Top 50 in Australia (23), Germany (46), the Netherlands (15), and the UK (16).

    Accompanied by a visually appealing video, “Rooms on Fire’s” strong melodic hook and whimsically atmospheric production allow Stevie’s vocals to soar, especially at the end of the song. Here is the official music video and some live performances of “Rooms of Fire” over the years.

    Official video
    [jwplayer mediaid=”15619″]

    Top of the Pops UK (May 1989)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11nPNVU4gZs]

    The Other Side of the Mirror Tour (Mountain View CA, 8/20/89)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HY_igUwyyGU]

    Whole Lotta Trouble Tour (Wantagh NY, 7/23/91)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3O0A-8Yc5k]

    Street Angel Tour (West Hollywood CA, 9/18/94)
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JiH-H2nvJfs]

  • New releases recommended: The Other Side of the Mirror

    New releases recommended: The Other Side of the Mirror

    Stevie Nicks The Other Side of the Mirror 1989STEVIE NICKS
    The Other Side Of The Mirror

    The Other Side of The Mirror by Stevie Nicks is a remarkably strong record. Putting the over-worked Alice In Wonderland imagery aside, the album is floating, melodic, twisting and turning.

    Music Week / October 6, 1989

  • ‘Other Side of Mirror’ brings Nicks to town

    Stevie Nicks may be an unapproachable, larger-than-life figure to her fans, but Tom Petty can tell her to shut up, Bob Dylan doesn’t have to, and both her heart and body are vulnerable.

    All of that emerged during a delightful, digressive phone interview from Chicago while Ms. Nicks was enjoying a few days off before her concert tonight at Lakewood Amphitheatre. The singer, 41, is touring to promote “The Other Side of the Mirror,” her third solo album since joining the irregularly working Fleetwood Mac in 1975.

    Stevie Nicks may be an unapproachable, larger-than-life figure to her fans, but Tom Petty can tell her to shut up, Bob Dylan doesn’t have to, and both her heart and body are vulnerable.

    What’s more, Ms. Nicks is mad at the Australian government, she loves Atlanta, and her current fantasy is having someone – preferably an executive at Atlantic, her record company – give her a Lear jet so she doesn’t have to worry about excess baggage when she travels.

    All of that emerged during a delightful, digressive phone interview from Chicago while Ms. Nicks was enjoying a few days off before her concert tonight at Lakewood Amphitheatre. The singer, 41, is touring to promote “The Other Side of the Mirror,” her third solo album since joining the irregularly working Fleetwood Mac in 1975.

    A blond, lush-lipped beauty, Ms. Nicks is best known for her dreamy, impressionistic songs about witches, gypsies and affairs of her heart. But she can occasionally be remarkably direct and pragmatic.

    Discussing her friendship with Mr. Petty, who helped her record the hit single “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around” in 1981, she says, “I call Tom when I’m upset or questioning my existence on this planet. He can tell me that I’m just having a bad day, to shut up and go to bed, and I’ll take it. But if he tells me I’m wrong, I’m wrong. He doesn’t lie, and he doesn’t say things to flatter people. He just tells you the truth.”

    However, Mr. Dylan doesn’t have to say anything to intimidate Ms. Nicks, who went along as a non-performing guest when he and Mr. Petty toured Australia two years ago.

    “I got to watch them put their personalities together, and it was fascinating,” she says. “I watched some – well, not exactly rows – but a little bit of going back and forth between them.”

    During one stop, Mr. Dylan unexpectedly motioned Ms. Nicks onstage. “He put me between him and Tom and started a song and then backed off so I could sing. I was completely and utterly stupefied,” she says. “Thank God, my voice worked.”

    But when Ms. Nicks, a bit more relaxed, joined Mr. Dylan and Mr. Petty onstage a second night, Australian officials took exception because she didn’t have a work permit. She says she was told that if she kept performing, she “wouldn’t be welcome again in Australia.”

    Those and other experiences Down Under didn’t work their way into the songs on “The Other Side of the Mirror,” but much of what Ms. Nicks writes is rooted in her reality. Thus, “Two Kinds of Love” incorporates aspects of her relationship with Mr. Petty, and “Long Way to Go” is a stinging farewell to a former lover.

    Ms. Nicks doesn’t identify the person she’s addressing in “Long Way to Go,” and she doesn’t even hint that it might be Lindsey Buckingham, her musical and romantic partner when they joined Fleetwood Mac in 1975.

    “I was really angry at the person I wrote that song about. It’s a lot of fun to perform because it has a definite attitude that audiences can pick up on.”

    What the crowds haven’t noticed during her three-month tour, which opened Aug. 16, is that Ms. Nicks has been performing first with a broken foot and then a severely sprained ankle. All they’ve realized is that Ms. Nicks, who prefers to perform in boots that make her appear taller than 5 feet 3 inches, has been wearing rhinestone-decorated Reeboks.

    “I haven’t told anyone, but I’m talking about it now because I hope I’ll be able to wear my boots when I come to Atlanta,” she says. “I broke my foot in a swimming pool this summer, and was in a cast for eight weeks. I just got out of it when the tour began.”

    Because she was unable to wear her usual boots, she made some adjustments. “I spray-painted my Reeboks and put rhinestones on them and I had to have all my dresses altered because without my boots, I’m 5 inches shorter.”

    She hopes things return to normal tonight because she is performing in one of her favorite cities. “I love Atlanta,” she says.

    Ms. Nicks, of course, can afford to travel anywhere because of the enormous success of Fleetwood Mac and the fact that her three LPs have total sales of more than $4 million. But she’s still waiting for Atlantic Records or even MCA, owner of Lakewood Amphitheatre, to give her a jet so she doesn’t have to worry about how much luggage she packs.

    “I’ve already been told to drop half the stuff I’m traveling with,” she says, laughing and then doing her best to sound like she’s whining. “I want a jet and I want it now,” she says before shifting to a bewitchingly sensual, but demanding voice. “Tell whoever’s in charge there that if there’s no jet for me in Atlanta, maybe there won’t be a show.”

    But she’s laughing – deliciously, wickedly – when she hangs up.

    Stevie Nicks. Performing tonight with opening act the Hooters at Lakewood Amphitheatre. 8 p.m. $21.50 for reserved seats, $17.50 for admission to lawn seating area. Old Lakewood Fairgrounds off Interstate 75 and Lakewood Freeway interchange. 577-9600.

    Russ DeVault / Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution / September 27, 1989

  • Review: Stevie Nicks – The Other Side of the Mirror

    SONG

    The title’s allusion to Through the Looking-Glass is no coincidence. This album also includes a tune called ”Alice,” and it’s not that hard to think of Nicks as the little blond from the Disney cartoon 20 years and some measure of frowsiness later. Nicks’s lyrics, too, often have a surreal quality. Line by line, they don’t add up to much. Read the title of ”Doing the Best I Can (Escape from Berlin)” and try to make sense of it. But Nicks knows which words can carry a serious burden, and her impressions do create vivid images: ”And the angel said, ‘Well you must have had a dream . . . / And you remember it . . .’ Till the dream followed through . . . / Till the — end of the dream . . . and the dream came true/ When I want something . . . I get it.” (Nicks has a Cheshire cat sense of punctuation; all those ellipses and dashes are hers.) She continues to sound darker and more substantial on her own than she does with Fleetwood Mac, and her nanny-goat-with-a-head-cold voice, while it’s nobody’s textbook instrument, conveys the passion, anger and persistent curiosity of her language. It’s hard to imagine, say, Judy Collins singing most of these songs without sounding silly. Nicks makes them both poetic and musical. Bruce Hornsby sits in (and sings in) on a couple of tracks, to the best effect on ”Juliet,” where his jangly piano complements Nicks’s vocal. There’s also a reggae-ized version of the Johnny Cash standby ”I Still Miss Someone (Blue Eyes)” on which Nicks succumbs to blatant romanticism. Most of the time the images are less sweet, as in ”Rooms on Fire” or ”Fire Burning,” which make Nicks seem to be someone interested in neither lighting any candles nor cursing the darkness, though she might be talked into sitting down and spending some time discussing the topic ”All Right, Just Exactly What Is Going on Here?” (Modern/Atlantic)

    Ralph Novak / People / July 3, 1989

     
  • ALBUM REVIEW: The Other Side of the Mirror

    ALBUM REVIEW: The Other Side of the Mirror

    Stevie Nicks The Other Side of the Mirror 1989The Other Side of the Mirror (Modern/Atlantic)
    Stevie Nicks

    The title’s allusion to Through the Looking-Glass is no coincidence. This album also includes a tune called ”Alice,” and it’s not that hard to think of Nicks as the little blond from the Disney cartoon 20 years and some measure of frowsiness later. Nicks’s lyrics, too, often have a surreal quality. Line by line, they don’t add up to much. Read the title of ”Doing the Best I Can (Escape from Berlin)” and try to make sense of it. But Nicks knows which words can carry a serious burden, and her impressions do create vivid images: ”And the angel said, ‘Well you must have had a dream . . . / And you remember it . . .’ Till the dream followed through . . . / Till the — end of the dream . . . and the dream came true/ When I want something . . . I get it.” (Nicks has a Cheshire cat sense of punctuation; all those ellipses and dashes are hers.) She continues to sound darker and more substantial on her own than she does with Fleetwood Mac, and her nanny-goat-with-a-head-cold voice, while it’s nobody’s textbook instrument, conveys the passion, anger and persistent curiosity of her language. It’s hard to imagine, say, Judy Collins singing most of these songs without sounding silly. Nicks makes them both poetic and musical. Bruce Hornsby sits in (and sings in) on a couple of tracks, to the best effect on ”Juliet,” where his jangly piano complements Nicks’s vocal. There’s also a reggae-ized version of the Johnny Cash standby ”I Still Miss Someone (Blue Eyes)” on which Nicks succumbs to blatant romanticism. Most of the time the images are less sweet, as in ”Rooms on Fire” or ”Fire Burning,” which make Nicks seem to be someone interested in neither lighting any candles nor cursing the darkness, though she might be talked into sitting down and spending some time discussing the topic ”All Right, Just Exactly What Is Going on Here?”

     Ralph Novak / People Weekly Vol. 32, Issue 1 / July 3, 1989

  • Review: Stevie Nicks – Other Side of the Mirror

    (Modern/Atlantic)

    ** (2 stars out of 5)

    Other Side of the Mirror is Nicks’ first solo album in more than three years and follows her three successive solo platinum releases away from the confines of Fleetwood Mac. Don’t look for many new sounds here. Nicks has finally slipped away into a world of darkness and candles, eerie pop and flirtations with rock ‘n’ roll. A tough voice and wild hair can take an artist only so far, and Nicks never gets much farther on this album.

    Nevertheless, “Rooms On Fire” and “Two Kinds of Love,” a duet with Bruce Hornsby, no doubt will make their way up the charts-they’re pure sellers, not music. In all, a disappointing sound-alike with no new ground broken.

    David Silverman / Chicago Tribune / June 8, 1989

  • The Other Side of the Mirror (1989)

    The Other Side of the Mirror (1989)

    The Other Side of the Mirror (1989) is Stevie Nicks‘ fourth solo album. The album debuted at No. 10 on the Billboard 200 and spawned the hit single “Rooms on Fire,” which reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Album Rock Tracks and No. 16 on the Hot 100.

    Tracklist

    1. Rooms on Fire
    2. Long Way to Go
    3. Two Kinds of Love (Duet with Bruce Hornsby)
    4. Ooh My Love
    5. Ghosts
    6. Whole Lotta Trouble
    7. Fire Burning
    8. Cry Wolf
    9. Alice
    10. Juliet
    11. Doing the Best I Can (Escape from Berlin)
    12. I Still Miss Someone (Blue Eyes)

    Other Tracks

    1. Real Tears (b-side of “Two Kind of Love”)
    2. Dial the Number (with Kenny G) – unreleased
    3. Don’t Treat Me Like a Stranger (with Kenny G) – unreleased
    4. Lily Girl (with Kenny G) – unreleased
    5. Tragedy of One’s Own Soul (with Kenny G) – unreleased

    Background

    The Other Side of the Mirror is a concept album loosely inspired by Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Driven by British producer Rupert Hine‘s keyboard arrangements, the album features a whimsical sound—a sonic departure from the signature rock sound that characterized Stevie’s earlier solo work. Pianist Bruce Hornsby (“Two Kinds of Love,” “Juliet”) and saxophonist Kenny G (“Two Kinds of Love,” “Alice”) also perform on the album. It includes a cover of Johnny Cash‘s 1958 song “I Still Miss Someone,” which closes the record. Sticking with the album’s theme, Stevie dedicated the album to her grandmother, “The Queen of Hearts.”

    Besides “Two Kinds of Love” and “Alice,” Stevie recorded at least four other tracks with Kenny G that were not included on the final album. Some of these unreleased tracks are circulating among fans.

    Release

    Modern Records released CD, cassette, and vinyl versions of The Other Side of the Mirror on Tuesday, May 9, 1989. The album debuted at No. 10 on the Billboard 200 and spawned the hit single “Rooms on Fire,” which reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Album Rock Tracks and No. 16 on the Hot 100.

    Modern Records heavily promoted the album overseas, leading Stevie Nicks to tour Europe for the first time as a solo artist. As a result, “Rooms on Fire” became an international hit, charting in Germany (#46), the Netherlands (#15), and the UK (#16). The song also reached the top 40 in Australia (#23). Other singles included “Long Way to Go,” “Two Kinds of Love,” and “Whole Lotta Trouble.”

    In Japan, the album included a slightly different tracklist: the 7″ Remix/Edit of “Rooms on Fire” and a bonus live version of “Has Anyone Ever Written Anything for You” from Stevie Nicks: Live at Red Rocks (1987).

    Stevie Nicks The Other Side of the Mirror

    Charts

    Rooms on Fire

    Billboard Chart Peak
    Hot 100 16
    Album Rock 1

    Outside U.S.

    Country Peak
    Australia 23
    Germany 46
    The Netherlands 15
    UK 16

    Long Way to Go

    Billboard Chart Peak
    Album Rock 11

    Outside the U.S.

    Country Peak
    UK 60

    Two Kinds of Love (Duet with Bruce Hornsby)

    Did not chart

    Whole Lotta Trouble

    Country Peak
    Ireland 22
    UK 62

    Promotional Videos

    Two Kinds of Love

    News & Coverage

  • Stevie’s solo turn

    Stevie’s solo turn

    This much can be said for Stevie Nicks‘s solo career: It won’t suffer from lack of material. “I have about 50 songs from the last two years,” she reports. “And if you want to go back through the archives, I’ve probably got another 300.” Nicks is now wading through some of those songs with producer Rupert Hine, selecting tracks for her fourth solo album, which she hopes to release early next year. Meanwhile, she’ll go into the studio with Fleetwood Mac and producer Don Gehman to record two new songs for a greatest-hits album that’s due this fall.

    But it’s her solo album that Stevie is more anxious to work on. “My music outside Fleetwood Mac has always been really special to me,” she says. She’s already done three songs — “The Tragedy of One’s Own Soul,” “Dial the Number” and “Don’t Treat Me Like a Stranger” — with Kenny G. Once her record is finished, she plans to make another Mac album, do a solo tour, then tour with the band. “I’m trying really hard to make everybody happy,” she says.

    Rolling Stone (Random Notes) / Summer 1988.