Tag: Bella Donna

  • How Still My Love: ‘One of my most romantic songs’

    How Still My Love: ‘One of my most romantic songs’

    “How Still My Love” is Track 7 on Bella Donna (1981), Stevie Nicks’ first solo album. Stevie describes it as her “sexiest song.”

    [“How Still My Love”] was really probably one of my most romantic songs. I was feeling really romantic at the time; it’s my sexiest song. I love to sit and play it. It’s the one song I said had to be on [Bella Donna], and it was the one that went in and out and in and out and off and on and off and on the album in the last four months, incredibly, until finally, I knew that it would come around to people realizing it’s really such a neat song even if it’s for yourself to enjoy it” (Nicks, 1981).

    “I really don’t write extremely sexual songs, never have. I’m always going to write about the bouquets and the flowers. But ‘How Still My Love’ really is a sexy song, and being that it’s one of my few sexy songs, when we do it onstage it’s fun. It’s kind of woozy and it’s slow, but it’s got a really great beat — kind of a strip-tease, a little burlesque, a little Dita Von Teese-y.

    “The title actually came from two different books I saw in some hotel, one was called How Still My Love and one was called In the Still of the Night, and I used both, but I never even opened up the books [laughs], so I have no idea what they were about. Whenever I come into a room with a library, in a hotel or whatever, I pull them all down and just sit — I get a lot of ideas that way” (Greenblatt, 2009).

    Lyrics

    Still the same old story
    What price glory
    You make it easy
    In the still of the night
    In the still of the night
    How still my love
    In the still of the night
    How still my

    Doing all you can for me
    They say you’re not the man for me
    Don’t make it easy
    In the still of the night
    In the still of the night
    How still my love
    In the still of the night
    How still my love

    Standing in the doorway
    Watching out to sea
    Calling out to me
    You go your way
    Go on go on
    But you don’t forget me
    Oh no you don’t forget me
    Oh no my lonely one
    You’re doing all you can for me
    They say you’re not the man for me
    Don’t I make it easy
    In the still of the night
    It’s me talking to you

    How still my love
    In the still of the night
    How still my love
    In the still of the night
    It’s me that’s talkin’ to you
    In the still of the night

    (Stevie Nicks) © 1979 Welsh Witch Music (BMI) admin. by Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

    Reference

    Nicks, S. (1981). Breaking the chain

  • The Queen and the Highwayman

    The Queen and the Highwayman

    For Bella Donna‘s ruby anniversary (40th), we click our heels three times and look back at another track from Stevie Nicks‘ classic debut solo album. Closing out the seminal work is “The Highwayman,” which was inspired by Alfred Noyes’ romantic poem of the same name. The song itself is about Eagles’ drummer Don Henley, with whom Stevie had a relationship in the mid-’70s. Fittingly, Don provides harmony vocals on the track.

    “‘The Highwayman’ I wrote probably in 1975, probably,” Stevie recalls. I basically wrote it with the idea of the old poem ‘The Highwayman.’ The Highwayman comes riding, riding and Bess, the lady at the inn is waiting, and she’s set up with a rifle that’s gonna go off as soon as he comes through the door, and she can hear the hoofbeats.

    “I mean, The Highwayman was like the wonderful person that stole from the rich and gave to the poor, right? He was the romantic figure on the horse with the cape. Well, I paralleled that to today’s male rock and roll musician, which they’re all highwaymen. No other way to look at it. They steal from the rich and give to the poor sometimes. And they are that romantic on-the-road figure, you know? They could just as well be in coaches with seven black horses leading them.

    “Basically, Don Henley is The Highwayman. I used him as my idea, The Eagles, you know, on the road because this was before I was, you know, I could only look in awe at all these men because I’m a songwriter and what I really wanted to do was I wanted to be accepted by these people as a lady songwriter and not as just a girl. And I never really got accepted as anything else but a girl by any of them, right? But I wrote this song and Don sang it with me. We did a demo of it. And I call him the old Highwayman himself.

    “So it’s a story, you know? It’s basically about a girl who sort of has a dream that’s a premonition, and she’s like a asleep in a rocking chair and she wakes up and she realizes at the end of the song, it says ‘A dream as the thunder wakes her / And the highwayman disappears / Or a life already lived before in eyes wet with tears / Today and still today they ride / Will they ever win? / He the glory she the love / Still They try again’ — and that’s Don and I. I mean, we just try again, you know, over and over. And it is very much like the old, elegant, sort of… It’s very romantic. I’d love to do a video to this song because it’s a perfect… I mean, it says, ‘She in the distance sees him against the sky / A pale and violent rider / A dream began in wine.’ And I see him riding against the moon on his horse just a black charger, you know, going away.”

    Recording

    “Don played drums, and we have this videoed. We videoed the whole thing with just a kind of a cool home-video camera. So I have Don Felder playing bottleneck slide, and Don playing the drums, and Davey Johnstone playing the acoustic guitar, Benmont playing organ, and all these wonderful people. It was like staring out and looking at The Eagles standing in front of me ’cause if you see Don Henley and Don Felder, that’s enough of The Eagles to look like The Eagles. A lot of these recording sessions were very romantic because I would just be standing there in the middle of this room singing and looking at these incredibly famous people, who I had sung along with for years before I had ever achieved any success. So I was unknown completely when I was really, really involved with their music.

    “So to be sharing my first album with them was like I can’t even tell you. It was like being homecoming queen. I mean, it was just the neatest thing that ever happened to me. And Don Felder played wonderful guitar on it — he knows it too. He knows he was wonderful. They all know they were wonderful because they felt it, you know. They walked out of the room, I mean, grinning, all of them.”

    Lyrics

    Alas he was the highwayman
    The one that comes and goes
    And only the highway-woman
    Keeps up with the likes of those
    And she in all her magic
    With hands as quick as light
    Took him to be a challenge
    And went into the night

    And he in all his glory
    Was far ahead of her
    But she was never sorry
    For wishes that would burn
    Enter competition
    She chases beneath the moon
    Her horse is like a dragonfly
    She is just a fool

    And she wonders is this real
    Or does she just want to be Queen
    And he fights the way he feels
    Is this the end of the dream

    And then he sees her coming
    Heartbeats on the wind
    Considers slowing down
    But then, he could never win
    And she, out in the distance
    Sees him against the sky
    A pale and violent rider
    A dream begun in wine

    And she wonders is this real
    Or does she just want to be Queen
    And he fights the way he feels
    Is this the end of the dream

    A dream as the thunder wakes her
    And her highwayman disappears
    On a life already lived before
    In eyes welled with tears

    Today and still today they ride
    Will they ever win
    He the glory
    She the love
    Still they try again
    He the glory
    She the love
    Still they try again
    He the glory
    She the love
    And still they try again

    (Stevie Nicks) © 1975 Welsh Witch Music (BMI) admin. by Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

    Reference

    Nicks, S. (1981). Stevie Nicks Interview.  Denis McNamara, interviewer, WLIR 92.7 FM.

    Nicks, S. (1981). Breaking the chain

  • Stevie Nicks shares her ‘dream’ for Bella Donna’s 40th Anniversary

    Stevie Nicks shares her ‘dream’ for Bella Donna’s 40th Anniversary

    Stevie Nicks has shared a journal entry on the 4oth anniversary of her debut solo album Bella Donna. In the entry, Stevie shares the story behind the title track.

  • Revisiting the Glitter

    Revisiting the Glitter

    “After the Glitter Fades” is Track 5 on Bella Donna, Stevie Nicks‘ first solo album, which happens to turn 40 this month.

    Stevie wrote the song about the highs and lows of stardom, a premonition of things to come in her life and career. “‘After the Glitter Fades’ was written in 1972; it was copyrighted in 1975. Which is a strange sort of premonition to have in 1972 because that was two years before Fleetwood Mac. And I mean that was when the Buckingham Nicks album had been dropped, so we were going nowhere fast. And I seemed to have some idea what was going to happen, that I was really gonna face some really serious glitter and see some serious glitter fade.”

    Stevie actually had country singer Dolly Parton in mind when she wrote the song. “I wanted [Dolly Parton] to do ‘After the Glitter Fades’ ’cause I really thought it would be perfect for her. And it got sent to her and I don’t think Dolly ever really got it. I think if she’d ever got the song, she would have wanted to do it.”

    Lyrics

    Well I never thought I’d make it
    Here in Hollywood
    I never thought I’d ever
    Want to stay
    What I seem to touch these days
    Has turned to gold
    What I seem to want
    Well you know I’ll find a way

    For me it’s the only life
    That I’ve ever known
    And love is only one
    Fine star away
    Even though the living
    Is sometimes laced with lies
    It’s alright
    The feeling remains
    Even after the glitter fades

    The loneliness of a one night stand
    Is hard to take
    We all chase something
    And maybe this is a dream
    The timeless face of a rock and roll
    Woman while her heart breaks
    Oh you know the dream keeps coming
    Even when you forget to feel

    For me it’s the only life
    That I’ve ever known
    And love is only one fine star away
    Even though the living
    Is sometimes laced with lies
    It’s alright
    The feeling remains
    Even after the glitter fades

    For me it’s the only life
    That I’ve ever known
    And love is only one fine star away
    Even though the living
    Is sometimes laced with lies
    It’s alright
    The feeling remains
    Even after the glitter fades
    Oh you know the feeling remains
    Even after the glitter fades
    Oh the feeling remains
    Even after the glitter fades

    (Stevie Nicks) © 1975 Welsh Witch Music (BMI) admin by Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

    Release

    “After the Glitter Fades” was the fourth and final single from Bella Donna. Coupled with “Think About It,” the single reached No. 32 on the Billboard Pop Singles chart.

    Billboard Chart Peak
    Pop Singles 32
    Adult Contemporary 36
    Country 70

    Reference

    Nicks, S. (1981). Interview with Stevie Nicks.  Denis McNamara, interviewer, WLIR 92.7 FM.

    Nicks, S. (1981). Interview with Stevie Nicks. WMMR 93.3 FM.

    Nicks, S. (1981). Interview with Stevie Nicks. WIOQ 102.1 FM.

  • Danny Goldberg describes key role in launching Bella Donna

    Danny Goldberg describes key role in launching Bella Donna

    On Saturday, Danny Goldberg was the latest guest on Stefan Adika’s Talking Wax in a new episode titled “Stevie Nicks: Breaking Away from Fleetwood Mac!”

    In the 20-minute segment, Danny talks about his pivotal role (along with Paul Fishkin) in building the vehicle for Stevie’s solo career with the release of Bella Donna (1981). He shared fond memories of working closely with Stevie and recalled how she “gives energy to other people,” making those around her feel important and involved in her creative process. 

    Listen to the full interview below. 

  • Taken by the wind

    Taken by the wind

    The story behind the photographs of Stevie Nicks with veils on the roof of her house in Venice Beach, 1981

    Stevie Nicks from Fleetwood Mac stands in the ocean breeze with her trademark flowy dress sleeves rippling dramatically over her head.

    According to Preston, the wind was so strong, one of his assistants literally had to hold Stevie down by her boots. “She was living in Venice, California, at the time and she had a condo on the top floor of a six-story building right on the sand in Venice Beach and we had a great shoot, she couldn’t have been easier. But I still wanted that one last killer photograph and I said almost at the same time as she said: ‘Why don’t we go up on the roof and shoot as the sun is going down?’ I thought it was a fantastic idea.

    Stevie Nicks
    (Neal Preston)

    “She had put on this white outfit with long sleeves of fabric that really caught the wind like a sail on a sailboat. The second I put the camera to my eye the wind starts kicking up. She is posing and the sleeves are going all over the place, and I realize about three frames in that the wind is going to be blowing so hard that one gust and she could be blown right off the side of the building, six stories down, which would have ruined Time Life’s insurance department’s day.

    “There was only one thing to do because we were getting great photos and the sun waits for no man and it was going down. So I made an assistant of mine lie on his stomach out of frame, and I said ‘You hold on to that white boot — you do not let go.’ And that is what he did. She stayed in one place and we got great pictures. But that is why you don’t see her boots in the pictures. There could be no full-length shot.”

    Stevie Nicks
    (Neal Preston)

    Preston grew up in Queens, New York. He went to Forest Hills High, the same school that spawned The Ramones. He was already photographing bands and set to go to the Philadelphia College of Art when he realized the career he had chosen didn’t need a degree.

    “The day was absolutely intoxicating, and the next afternoon a bouquet of flowers arrived at my house with a note thanking me for a ‘magical shoot.’ She’s a friend for life and one of the most creative people I’ve ever met.”

    Design You Trust / May 2021

  • VMP to reissue Bella Donna on 180g blue, black galaxy vinyl

    VMP to reissue Bella Donna on 180g blue, black galaxy vinyl

    In May, Vinyl Me, Please Essentials members will receive a brand new reissue of Stevie Nicks’ 1981 album Bella Donna on 180 gram blue and black galaxy vinyl, remastered from the original master tapes by Ryan Smith from Sterling Sound.

    https://www.facebook.com/VinylMePlease/videos/658791714904803/

    Read VMP’s An Ode to the Witchy Woman.

    https://www.facebook.com/stevienicks/posts/3164935036849895

  • Rhino Records reissuing Bella Donna on gold vinyl

    Rhino Records reissuing Bella Donna on gold vinyl

    Stevie NicksRhino Records will be reissuing Stevie Nicks’ 1981 debut solo album Bella Donna on gold vinyl on Friday, January 17. The limited edition release will be sold at participating retailers.

    Rhino is kicking off 2020 with the annual Start Your Ear Off Right campaign. Beginning on Friday, January 10th and continuing throughout the month, Rhino is releasing limited edition vinyl titles from some of the most celebrated acts in music including: The Replacements, Bad Company, Deep Purple, MC5, Stevie Nicks, Warren Zevon, Uncle Tupelo, Devo, Van Morrison, Angelo Badalamenti, Ramones, and Sex Pistols.

    Rhino Records Start Your Ear Off RightAlso back for 2020 is the highly sought-after Rhino wall calendar. For a limited time, anyone who purchases one of the “Start Your Ear Off Right” releases at participating FYE and Indie music retailers will receive a free copy of the Rhino calendar, while supplies last.

    Find a participating local store!

  • REVIEW: Going solo post-Tusk (2016 Deluxe Editions)

    REVIEW: Going solo post-Tusk (2016 Deluxe Editions)

     

    While the cynic may naysay at Fleetwood Mac’s busy re-release schedule, Rhino’s reissues certainly earn their deluxe stripes. The remastered Tusk received 42 (!) extra tracks and for this pair of early 80s LPs, Stevie fans are similarly blessed.

    Stevie Nicks - Bella Donna Deluxe Edition

    1981’s solo debut Bella Donna gets the most love; a crisply remastered album, a disc of alternate versions and a live set. A ragged take on “Edge Of Seventeen” doesn’t quite nail the final version’s airbrushed drama but the Bella Donna solo piano demo is a thing of true beauty. As for the live disc, 14 songs are included, all with an enormodome sheen. Taken from a show at the Fox Wilshere Theatre on December 13th 1981, it’s a shame Rhino haven’t included it in video form (given it was shown on HBO and released as White Wing Dove) and bootleg fans will see the full 16-song set remains unreleased.

    Stevie Nicks - The Wild Heart Deluxe Edition1983’s The Wild Heart only gets nine extra tracks, but the accent is on lesser-spotted songs. Highlights include a remastered “Garbo” (a B-side for Stand Back), unreleased fan faves “Sorcerer” and “Dial The Number” plus a belting demo of “Wild Heart.” What next? Almost Inevitably something else–and one day, we’ll hear just what else Prince did for The Wild Heart apart from uncredited synth on “Stand Back” — but if it’s Rhino releasing, it’ll be worth the wait.

    Caption: Stevie Nicks: Black Lace’s biggest fan

    Stevie Nicks

    Bella Donna: Deluxe Edition ***
    Atco/Rhino 081227942090 (3CD/LP)

    The Wild Heart: Deluxe Edition ***
    Atco/Rhino 081227942083 (2CD/LP)

    Mike Goldsmith / Record Collector / December 15, 2016

  • The resurgent appeal of Stevie Nicks

    The resurgent appeal of Stevie Nicks

    Her generous songs provide an antidote to today’s often embattled pop music.

    Stevie Nicks Bella Donna (1981)The cover of Bella Donna, Stevie Nicks’s first solo album, shows the artist looking slender and wide-eyed, wearing a white gown, a gold bracelet, and a pair of ruched, knee-high platform boots. One arm is bent at an improbable angle; a sizable cockatoo sits on her hand. Behind her, next to a small crystal ball, is a tambourine threaded with three long-stemmed white roses. Nicks did not invent this storefront-psychic aesthetic—it is indebted, in varying degrees, to Hans Christian Andersen’s Thumbelina, de Troyes’s Guinevere, and Cher—but, beginning in the mid-nineteen-seventies, she came to embody it. The image was girlish and delicate, yet inscrutable, as if Nicks were suggesting that the world might not know everything she’s capable of.

    This intimation is newly germane: a vague but feminine mysticism is in. Lorde, Azealia Banks, FKA Twigs, chvrches, Grimes, and Beyoncé have all incorporated bits of pagan-influenced iconography into their music videos and performances. Young women are now embracing benign occult representations, reclaiming the rites and ceremonies that women were once chastised (or worse) for performing. On runways, on the streets, and in thriving Etsy shops, you can find an assortment of cloaks, crescent-moon pendants, flared chiffon skirts, and the occasional jewelled headdress.

    While Nicks’s sartorial choices have been widely mimicked, it’s rare to hear echoes of her magnanimity in modern pop songs, which are frequently defensive and embattled, preaching self-sufficiency at any cost. It’s difficult to imagine Nicks singing a lyric like “Middle fingers up, put them hands high / Wave it in his face, tell him, boy, bye,” as Beyoncé does in “Sorry,” a song from her newest album, Lemonade. Nicks’s default response to betrayal is more introspective than aggressive. Her music has long been considered a balm for certain stubborn strains of heartache; her songs are unsparing regarding the brutality of loss, yet they are buoyed by a kind of subtle optimism. It’s as if, by the time Nicks got around to singing about something, she already knew that she would survive it.

    Stevie Nicks - Bella Donna Deluxe EditionThis month, Bella Donna, from 1981, and Nicks’s second solo album, The Wild Heart, from 1983, are being reissued. Nicks was thirty-three when Bella Donna was released. Though its cover might not suggest an excess of reason, in its songs she is a sagacious and measured presence. Her acknowledgment of the heart’s capriciousness is gentle, if not grandmotherly. There’s surely no kinder summation of love’s petulance than the chorus of “Think About It,” a jangling folk song about taking a breath before hurling yourself off a metaphorical cliff. “And the heart says, ‘Danger!’ ” Nicks sings. She pauses briefly. “And the heart says, ‘Whatever.’ ” For anyone busy self-flagellating over an error in judgment, this can feel like a rope ladder thrown from above—an invitation to scramble up and out of despair. It is generous and knowing, and offers a clear-eyed conclusion: some things can’t be helped.

    Stevie Nicks - The Wild Heart Deluxe EditionIn 2012, Tavi Gevinson, the young founder of Rookie, an online magazine concerned chiefly with the complexities of teen-age girlhood, ended a tedx talk with some blunt advice: “Just be Stevie Nicks. That’s all you have to do.” What does it mean to be Stevie Nicks? To understand loss and longing as being merely the cost of doing business? To acknowledge the bottomless nature of certain aches, yet to know, in some instinctive way, that you’ll keep going? Nicks evokes Byron, in spirit and in certitude: “The heart will break, but broken live on.”

    Nicks was born in 1948, in Phoenix. Her paternal grandfather, A. J. Nicks, Sr., was a struggling country musician, and he taught Nicks how to sing when she was four years old. She was given an acoustic guitar for her sixteenth birthday, and immediately wrote a song called “I’ve Loved and I’ve Lost and I’m Sad but Not Blue.” The title is a surprisingly succinct encapsulation of Nicks’s lyrical alchemy: a combination of acceptance (I am hurting) and perspective (I will not hurt forever).

    1966-menlo-athertonIn 1966, when Nicks was in her senior year of high school and living in Atherton, California—her father, an executive at a meatpacking company, had been relocated there—she met the guitarist Lindsey Buckingham at a party. He was sitting cross-legged on the floor—bearded, curly-haired, and strumming the Mamas and the Papas’ “California Dreamin’.” Uninvited, she joined him in harmony. (“How brazen!” she later said.) Buckingham asked Nicks to join his band, Fritz. By 1971, the two were romantically involved. They eventually took off for Los Angeles, where they tried to make it as a duo, called Buckingham Nicks, releasing one album, in 1973, to very little acclaim. Not long afterward, Buckingham was asked to join Fleetwood Mac, a British blues band featuring the singer and keyboard player Christine McVie, the bassist John McVie, and the drummer Mick Fleetwood; the group was being rebooted as an American soft-rock act. Buckingham insisted that Nicks be invited, too. She ended up writing two of the band’s biggest early hits, “Landslide” and “Rhiannon.”

    1977_uncredited03Extraordinary success often leads to spiritual dissolution, and Fleetwood Mac had its share of psychic turmoil. In 1975, Fleetwood divorced his wife, the model Jenny Boyd, after she had an affair with one of his former bandmates. Nicks and Buckingham broke up the following year. Around the same time, John and Christine McVie’s marriage collapsed. There was an ungodly amount of brandy and cocaine on hand to help nullify the despair. Still, in 1977, Fleetwood Mac—now five wild-eyed, newly single people—released Rumours, a collection of yearning songs about love and devotion. The record spent thirty-one weeks at the top of the charts, and is one of the best-selling albums in American history.

    (Norman Seef)
    (Norman Seef)

    Tusk, which the group released two years later, was a bombastic double LP that cost a million dollars to produce. The critic Stephen Holden, in his review of the album for Rolling Stone, suggested that Nicks sounded “more than ever like a West Coast Patti Smith.” Superficially, at least, Nicks and Smith aren’t obvious analogues. Nicks is hyperfeminine, intuitive, and bohemian; Smith is androgynous, cerebral, and gritty. But both are unusually perceptive chroniclers of their time and place.

    If Smith is obliged to the Lower East Side of Manhattan—and the punk scene that included the Ramones, Television, and Suicide—Nicks’s debt is to Laurel Canyon, and to the sentimental, silky-voiced artists who emerged from L.A. in the late sixties and early seventies. Some of those acts—James Taylor, the Eagles—are now considered, fairly or not, irrelevant to the Zeitgeist: too mellow, too affluent, too sexless, too white. Candles and incense and macramé plant hangers; wistful thoughts about weather. Nicks’s lyrics often worry over domestic or earthly concerns—gardens, mountains, flowers, the seasons—and how they might affect the whims of her heart. “It makes no difference at all / ’Cause I wear boots all summer long,” she sings in “Nightbird.” When compared with the dissonant and provocative music coming out of downtown New York, the California sound could seem limp. But the scene in Laurel Canyon was tumultuous. Many of its artists—including, at various times, Nicks—were wrecked by drug addiction. Nicks’s voice, a strange, quivering contralto, gives her songs unexpected weight. Its tone reminds me of the gloaming—that lambent, transitional moment between night and day.

    Jimmy Iovine Stevie Nicks
    Jimmy Iovine and Stevie Nicks, 1981 (Chris Walter)

    Bella Donna was produced by Jimmy Iovine, a Brooklyn-born audio engineer who worked on Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run and produced the Patti Smith Group’s Easter and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ Damn the Torpedoes. Iovine spent time in California, but his sensibility was tougher and more plainly that of the East Coast. He later became a co-founder of Interscope Records, where he helped to establish the career of the rapper Tupac Shakur, and, for a period, he oversaw the hip-hop label Death Row Records. Iovine was aware of concerns that Nicks was too coddled and immature to make a solo record as good as the records she’d made with Fleetwood Mac. Regardless, there was romantic chemistry. “This record was our love story unfolding,” she has said.

    Bella Donna reached No. 1 on the Billboard chart, and produced four hit singles: “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around,” a duet with Petty; “Leather and Lace,” with Don Henley; “Edge of Seventeen”; and “After the Glitter Fades.” The last, a country song about the travails of stardom—Nicks wrote it just after she and Buckingham moved to Los Angeles, long before she had a record deal, showing either hubris or prescience—contains organ, pedal steel, and reassurances. “The dream keeps coming even when you forget to feel,” she sings.

    Nicks, like most artists, culls inspiration from disparate sources. She is prone to saying things like “ ‘Edge of Seventeen’ was about Tom Petty and his wife, Jane, my uncle dying, and the assassination of John Lennon.” But her personal life—a tangle of love affairs, often with her collaborators—informs her work in explicit ways. “Heartbreak of the moment isn’t endless,” she sings, in “Think About It.” This might seem like a billowy platitude, but if you are someone who does not think that every flubbed decision is fodder for personal growth, it is comforting to hear someone assert that nearly all mistakes can be neutralized, if not conquered. If Bella Donna contains a single directive, it’s to love freely, love fully, and hang on.

    Fleetwood Mac 1982
    (David Montgomery)

    In 1981, Iovine flew with Nicks to the Château d’Hérouville, in northern France, where Fleetwood Mac was recording its next album, Mirage. Iovine left almost immediately, to escape the interpersonal conflicts that roiled the band. Iovine and Nicks’s relationship foundered. The following fall, while Fleetwood Mac was on tour, Nicks’s childhood friend Robin Anderson died, of leukemia, at the age of thirty-three. “What was left over was just a big, horrible, empty world,” Nicks has said. Days before her death, Anderson had prematurely given birth to a son. Nicks, operating under the savage logic of grief, married her friend’s widower, Kim Anderson, thinking that she would help raise the child. They divorced three months later.

    By 1983, Nicks was ready to make another record. Her relationship with Iovine was strained, but Nicks asked him to produce the record anyway. The Wild Heart is inspired in part by the unravelling of that relationship, and in part by her mourning for Anderson. Nicks frequently cites as a guiding influence for the recording sessions the 1939 film adaptation of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, which depicts an undying, almost fiendish love. Mostly, the songs are about bucking against the circumstances that separate us from the people we need.

    (Herbert W. Worthington, III)
    (Herbert W. Worthington, III)

    The artist Justin Vernon, of the band Bon Iver, uses a brief sample of “Wild Heart” (a track from The Wild Heart) on the group’s new album, “22, A Million.” Nicks’s voice is sped up, pitch-altered, and barely discernible as human—just a high, grousing “wah-wah,” deployed intermittently. Vernon pinched it from a popular YouTube video of Nicks, in which she sits on a stool having her makeup done, wearing a white dress with spaghetti straps. She begins to sing. Soon, someone is messing with a piano; one of her backup singers joins in with a harmony. The makeup artist gamely tries to continue with her work, before giving up. While the studio recording of “Wild Heart” is saturated, almost wet, this version is all air, all joy.

    What affects me most about the video is how profoundly Nicks appears to love singing. Her voice has an undulating, galloping quality. It is as if, once it’s started up, there’s no slowing down, no stopping; the car is careering down a mountain, with no brakes. You can see on her face how good it feels just to let go.

    Stevie Nicks“Stand Back,” the first single from The Wild Heart, was inspired by Prince’s “Little Red Corvette,” which Nicks heard on the radio while driving with Kim Anderson to San Ysidro Ranch, in Santa Barbara, for their honeymoon. (Prince played keyboards on the track, though he’s not credited in the album’s liner notes.) The song was produced in accordance with the style of the era, with lots of synthesizer and rubbery, overdubbed percussion. The lyrics describe a deliberate seduction followed by an acute betrayal. “First he took my heart, then he ran,” Nicks sings. The chorus is appropriately punchy: “Stand back, stand back,” she warns. Nicks is capable of going fully feral before a microphone, perhaps most famously at the end of “Silver Springs,” a song intended for Rumours and one of several that she wrote about Buckingham. (It ends with Nicks hollering, “Was I just a fool?”) On “Stand Back,” she erupts briefly, on the middle verses, but for the rest of the song she is more characteristically sanguine. “It’s all right, it’s all right,” she concedes. “I did not hear from you, it’s all right.”

    Nicks went on to make six more solo albums, and three more with Fleetwood Mac. Following her divorce from Kim Anderson, she never married again, or had any children, though a rich maternal instinct runs through all her songs. This, more than anything else, may be the reason that Nicks’s work has endured—why listeners turn to her for consolation, especially now, when many feel wounded and the radio remains rife with confrontational whoops. To be Stevie Nicks is to offer shelter. ♦

    Amanda Petrusich / The New Yorker / November 28, 2016

    Amanda Petrusich is a contributing writer for newyorker.com, and the author of “Do Not Sell at Any Price: The Wild, Obsessive Hunt for the World’s Rarest 78rpm Records.” MORE

    This article appears in other versions of the November 28, 2016, issue, with the headline “What the Heart Says.”