On Wednesday, Stevie Nicks congratulated Sheryl Crow on her induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She described Sheryl’s induction into the Class of 2023 as “a very elite club for us women,” alluding to the shockingly few women that have received the prestigious honor since the Rock Hall began inducting artists and music industry people in 1986.
Stevie met Sheryl in the mid-1990s after hearing Sheryl’s hit song “All I Wanna Do” on the radio. “I first became aware of Sheryl in 1994 when I heard her singing ‘All I Wanna Do’ on the radio. A year or two after that, I did a song of hers (“Somebody Stand by Me”) for a movie soundtrack, Boys On The Side. I didn’t know that she was a fan of mine until we met at the launch party for that album in LA” (McNair, 2002).
Since then, the two living legends have collaborated many times over the years, including on Stevie’s sixth solo album Trouble in Shangri-La (2001), for which Sheryl produced several tracks, and most recently on Sheryl’s “Prove You Wrong” (2019). Stevie affectionately refers to Sheryl as “the sister I never had.”
The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame has opened the vault to rock greatness, as the Rock Hall gives access to past induction speeches, such as recent tributes by Stevie Nicks and Harry Styles.
Each year, rock’s highest honor, induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is bestowed upon a handful of artists, cementing their legacy for eternity. That night, they are celebrated by their peers and the contemporary artists they have influenced. All share a mutual admiration for these legends who have dedicated their lives to Rock & Roll. Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Vault gives unfiltered access to these iconic speeches from the biggest names in music ranging from the Beatles to NWA.
The Rock Hall gives access to past induction speeches. As the first woman to be inducted twice, Stevie Nicks comes to the induction stage grateful and honored to be holding that title. Pop music force Harry Styles shares poetic stories of his own fandom, honoring the “true Stevie” we all have come to know and love.
Stevie Nicks launched her impressive solo career in 1981 with the release of her essential recording Bella Donna, produced by Jimmy Iovine. The album contained the Top 40 singles “Leather and Lace” (a duet with Don Henley), “Edge of Seventeen (Just Like the White Winged Dove),” “After the Glitter Fades,” and the lead single “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around,” a Top-3-smash-hit duet with Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers. She proceeded to release several more successful recordings, such as The Wild Heart (1983), Rock a Little (1985), and The Other Side of the Mirror (1989), among others, and the retrospective compilations TimeSpace: The Best of Stevie Nicks (1991), Enchanted: The Works of Stevie Nicks (1998), Crystal Visions…The Very Best of Stevie Nicks (2007), and Stand Back: 1981-2017 (2019).
Listen to the speeches by Stevie Nicks and Harry Styles below.
My Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction is featured on Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s Induction Vault podcast this week. #tbt…
The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame will be hosting Stevie Nicks Fan’s Weekend on Friday, March 27. For one more weekend, fans can see costumes, handwritten lyrics, and the Bella Donna tambourine, before the exhibit closes in April to make way for the new 2020 class. Tickets are free for members and $28 for non-members.
The full description of the special event appears below.
FREE WITH ADMISSION FROM MARCH 27 – 29TH
STEVIE NICKS FAN’S WEEKEND – FRI MAR 27
INCLUDED WITH ADMISSION
GENERAL TICKET
TIME
10:00 AM – 05:30 PM
LOCATION
ROCK HALL MUSEUM
Presented in conjunction with the Rock Hall’s Women’s History Month celebration
Stevie Nicks was inducted in 2019 as the first female two-time Inductee to the Hall of Fame. Visit and celebrate Nicks by watching uncut Induction footage from the Vault featuring Nicks in 2019 and 1999 (as part of Fleetwood Mac).
Nicks is currently on display as part of the 2019 Inductee special exhibit. Visit and see costumes, handwritten lyrics and even the Bella Donna tambourine before the exhibit closes in April to make way for the new 2020 class.
You can also participate in Album Spotlights and trivia contests, belt out your favorite Nicks lyrics with our band in the Garage and view her official signature in the Hall of Fame Gallery.
HBO has shared a new trailer for the upcoming TV broadcast of the 2019 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. Stevie was inducted for the second time at last month’s ceremony.
The 2019 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony premieres on April 27 at 8 p.m. EST on HBO, as well as HBO NOW, HBO GO, HBO On Demand and partners’ streaming platforms.
On Friday night, Stevie Nicks was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the second time — her latest induction as a solo artist. Stevie was previously inducted in 1998 with Fleetwood Mac, who were present to show their support for Stevie’s big night.
Fleetwood Mac shows their support for Stevie, L-R: Michael Campbell, John McVie, Stevie Nicks, Christine McVie, Mick Fleetwood (Kevin Mazur / Getty Images)
Stevie kicked off the evening with the electrifying “Stand Back,” complete with trademark “Stand Back” cape and spins. She shared a story about the famous cape after the performance.
Stevie performs “Stand Back” at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction concert. (Theo Wargo / Getty Images)
Stevie reunited with Eagles’ drummer Don Henley for a lovely rendition of their Bella Donna duet, “Leather and Lace,” which reached No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the fall of 1981.
Stevie Nicks and Don Henley perform “Leather and Lace” at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony. (Getty Images)
Harry Styles joined Stevie for a rousing rendition of her highest Billboard-charting solo single “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around,” reaching No. 3 on the Pop Singles chart.
Stevie Nicks and Harry Styles perform “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around” at Barclays Center in New York on Friday night. (Mike Coppola / WireImage)
Then came “Edge of Seventeen” (Pop #11), Stevie’s signature concert set closer and arguably her most defining solo recording.
(Wire Images)
After the performance, Harry Styles formally inducted Stevie into the Rock and Hall of Fame, giving a short overview of Stevie’s music career, along with his own experience of listening to Stevie’s music growing up. He closed the speech by affectionately describing Stevie as “the magical gypsy godmother who occupies the in-between.”
As Stevie came out to accept the honor, Harry knelt and bowed before her feet like royalty for what seemed like 30 seconds and presented Stevie with her award. Amused but gesturing to Harry to “stand back” up, Stevie took the award and the two embraced.
(Getty Images)
HBO will rebroadcast highlights from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony and concert on Saturday, April 27.
Catch some of the great performances that were uploaded to YouTube below.
Stevie Nicks and Harry Styles backstage. Stevie is charming, funny, smart, not into witchcraft (she wants us to know) and kind of adorably long-winded. Stevie did just say Harry Styles was in N Sync. We reminded her it was One Direction. #rockhall#3rockhall#rockhall2019@wkycpic.twitter.com/Q9PRCrhqJJ
Critic’s Picks: Ahead of her second Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction, Billboard ranks Stevie’s top solo tracks
As of this Friday (March 29), Stevie Nicks will have the honor of two spots in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame — but to hear her tell it, one small step is not a giant leap for womankind. “It’s 22 to zero,” she deadpanned to Rolling Stone in 2019. “Twenty-two guys who have gone in twice to zero women. So maybe this will open the doors for women to fight to make their own music.”
If the music industry has a long way to go for equal gender representation, we’re lucky to have Nicks leading the charge. Fleetwood Mac began as a blues-rock boys’ club in 1967 — but conquered the world in the 1970s with powerful songwriters of both sexes.
Fleetwood Mac’s internal disharmony made the Mac a less-than-utopian ideal — to graph out their various interband trysts would be to weave a tangled web. But crank up their still-intoxicating “Go Your Own Way,” “Dreams” or “Rhiannon,” and for a moment, you believe. She proved she didn’t need the boys to achieve commercial success in her own right, topping the Billboard 200 with solo debut Bella Donna in 1981 and continuing to release hit albums throughout the ’80s. She never stopped making great music: earthy later albums like 2001’s Trouble in Shangri-La and 2011’s In Your Dreams stand among her finest work.
Many rockers of her generation are on the final legs of their farewell tours; she’s still slugging it out on the road with an updated Fleetwood Mac. Still, she knows what she’ll do when she finally hangs up her shawls. “I will fall to my knees on my cushy white rug and look out at the ocean and go, ‘I am finally free,’” she told Rolling Stone. But she’s still onstage, casting her singular spell — one that’s landing her in the Rock Hall one more time.
In honor of her second induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, here are her 10 greatest solo cuts, ranked. (Her 1981 duet with Tom Petty, “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around,” is excluded from this list because she wasn’t involved in the writing.)
10. “Beauty and the Beast” (from The Wild Heart, 1983)
The Wild Heart is Nicks’ most opulent album — and for its final track, “Beauty and the Beast,” she pulled out all the stops. The tune was to be recorded live with a symphony orchestra and grand piano; she and the background singers wore long, black gowns and served champagne to a throng of guests. (“It was like we had gone back in time,” said Nicks.) The song itself flips the Jean Cocteau film into a long, languorous ballad about the shackles of time and the meaning of love. In spite of itself, “Beauty and the Beast” works. Leave it to Stevie.
9. “Planets of the Universe” (from Trouble in Shangri-La, 2001)
Originally a demo from the Rumours days, “Planets of the Universe” confronts a heavy subject: her publicly doomed relationship with Lindsey Buckingham. Nicks doesn’t deal in crocodile tears, but celestial language. “The planets of the universe go their way / Not astounded by the sun or moon,” she sings, as if breaking up can be chalked up to Newton’s law of universal gravitation. Few writers are this unafraid of changing.
8. “Stand Back” (from The Wild Heart, 1983)
Fleetwood Mac stretched out and got weirder in the early 1980s, but Nicks was busy kicking up some new-wave dust on her solo albums. (She barely appeared on Tango in the Night.) “Stand Back,” a loving rip of Prince’s “Little Red Corvette” she wrote after her wedding to Kim Anderson, is a funky, infectious example of this, with the newlywed Gold Dust Woman purring like a cat over period synth arpeggios.
7. “Blue Denim” (from Street Angel, 1994)
Recorded during her exit from Fleetwood Mac and in the throes of a nasty Klonopin addiction, Street Angel is her least-loved LP by some margin, stalling out at No. 45 on the Billboard 200. Shame, since it features “Blue Denim,” which captures Nicks beautifully in her element even as it evokes Chrissie Hynde. “It’s a song about this guy who came into my life, but left just as quick,” she told WDVE, referring to Buckingham. “And his eyes were that intense.” The music is just as bedazzling.
6. “For What It’s Worth” (from In Your Dreams, 2011)
In Your Dreams is Nicks’ version of James Taylor’s October Road, Graham Nash’s This Path Tonight or Van Morrison’s Keep Me Singing: rich, autumnal listens in which a 1970s troubadour audited their history from the vantage point of a new millennium. “For What It’s Worth” is a touching tribute to Tom Petty, and the gem of the bunch. “What you did was you saved my life / I won’t forget it,” she sings, referring to a tour with the Heartbreakers. The song vaulted to No. 26 on the Adult Contemporary chart.
5. “Rooms On Fire” (from The Other Side of the Mirror, 1989)
In the early 1980s, Nicks romanced British music producer Rupert Hine; instead of just exchanging numbers, the two headed to a Dutch castle on top of a mountain. “We made an agreement to make a magic album,” said Nicks of this unconventional courtship. Their collaboration was “Rooms on Fire,” a spectral jam about being spellbound by a lover in the halls of a candlelit palace. Few songs feature so many windchimes.
4. “Has Anyone Ever Written Anything For You?” (from Rock a Little, 1985)
In 1974, Joe Walsh tasted tragedy. His daughter, Emma, was involved in a car accident, passing away at only three years old. A decade later, Walsh and Nicks drove through the mountains of Colorado together; when Nicks complained about a trivial matter from the shotgun seat, Walsh responded by talking about Emma’s death. This knee-wobbling shift in perspective produced “Has Anyone Ever Written Anything For You?”, one of Nicks’ most beautiful ballads. It’s a tribute to Walsh, Emma and anyone who ended up without a song.
3. “If Anyone Falls” (from The Wild Heart, 1983)
“If Anyone Falls” constructs a vivid, three-dimensional scene of bodies in space. There’s Nicks, ear pressed against a wall listening to a man’s voice. (“Feels good, sounds good,” she sings.) Until she hears another voice through the door — a man’s, and it throws Nicks for a loop. “There was a time in which I was falling out of one love and into another,” explained Nicks, remembering her moving on from Walsh to musician Waddy Wachtel. Like the Pixar film Inside Out, in which emotions are given personhood and personalities in a girl’s mind, “If Anyone Falls” lets Nicks’ romantic hang-ups play out in a theater of the mind. Only she could pull it off.
2. “Edge of Seventeen” (from Bella Donna, 1981)
Ever inspired by conversational minutiae, Nicks caught one of her greatest songs from a chat with Tom Petty’s wife, Jane. When she mentioned she met her husband “at the age of seventeen,” Nicks misheard “edge of seventeen.” With one slip-up, she was off to the races. She took the phrase to not just mean coming of age, but the enormity of death: her uncle Jonathan had recently died of colon cancer, her colleague John Lennon shot and killed. “The white-winged dove in the song is a spirit that is leaving a body,” she told Rolling Stone. “I felt a great loss at how both Johns were taken.” The result is the greatest, most distinctive rocker she ever penned; its tense 16th notes, uneasy bass line and ascending piano line will lift you to that same heavenly plane.
1. “After the Glitter Fades” (from Bella Donna, 1981)
No Nicks song captures her voice like “After the Glitter Fades.” It begins ruefully looking out from the Hollywood Hills — she “never thought she’d make it” in Tinseltown. She considers King Midas: when did his golden creations lose their luster? A lonesome pedal steel curlicues like a question mark. It soundtracked a real-life memory. Nicks wrote “Glitter” in 1972, before she joined Fleetwood Mac. She wasn’t sure she could make it in music. She was fed up trying. Of course, we know how this story ends — but Nicks’ weariness still rings true. “Glitter” speaks to the end of fame, of showbiz, of everything. It’s why we love Nicks. Her songs never claimed that life was hunky-dory; they’re about how life goes on. We can all relate. This glitter hasn’t faded.
Stevie shared a new selfie on her social media pages, expressing that she’s nervous but excited about her second Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction on Friday. Of course, the first question that comes to mind when anybody sees this picture is: How is this woman 70?!
Stevie’s latest retrospective Stand Back: 1981-2017 (1CD) will be released on the same day.
Stevie Nicks has been inducted into the 2019 Rock and Hall Rock of Fame. She is the first female artist to be inducted twice, her first induction as a member of Fleetwood Mac in 1998. Stevie received 427,844 votes in the fan voting, coming in second behind Def Leppard with 547,647 votes.
“To be recognized for my solo work makes me take a deep breath and smile. It’s a glorious feeling,” Stevie told Rolling Stone, who had proclaimed her “the reigning queen of rock and roll” back in 1981.
At the ceremony, Stevie will be inducted by One Direction’s Harry Styles.
Stevie joins fellow 2019 inductees The Cure, Def Leppard, Janet Jackson, Radiohead, Roxy Music, and The Zombies. The inductees will be honored at the Induction Ceremony on March 29th, 2019 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY.
CONGRATULATIONS TO STEVIE AND ALL OF THE 2019 INDUCTEES!!
I have a lot to say about this~ but I will save those words for later. For now I will just say, I have been in a band since 1968. To be recognized for my solo work makes me take a deep breath and smile. It's a glorious feeling. @rockhallpic.twitter.com/aNofFoG6eC
Stevie Nicks has received her first nomination for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as a solo artist. Stevie first became eligible for induction in 2006 — 25 years after the release of her first solo recording Bella Donna.
Although Stevie is already an inductee as a member of Fleetwood Mac, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame members have largely ignored her solo work, despite having released seven albums (selling more than 15 million copies worldwide) and having been nominated seven times for Grammy Awards since 1982. But the tide of change may finally be here, as fans can now cast the deciding votes for their nominees (as of 2012).
Stevie’s cultural impact (American Horror Story, Night of a Thousand Stevies, School of Rock) and profound influence on generations of artists (Sheryl Crow, Dixie Chicks, and Lorde, to name just a few) are simply undeniable. Fans have known this for years, and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame members finally seem to be coming around, too, if early voting is any indication of things to come (Stevie currently has a commanding lead over the other nominees).
Here is a list of the 2019 nominees in alphabetical order:
The Cure (second nomination)
Def Leppard (first nomination)
Devo (first nomination)
Janet Jackson (third nomination)
Kraftwerk (fifth nomination)
LL Cool J (fifth nomination)
MC5 (fourth nomination)
Stevie Nicks (already an inductee with Fleetwood Mac, but first solo nomination)
Stevie attended the 29th annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony on Thursday night. She joined an all-star cast of musicians to pay tribute to the great Linda Ronstadt, one of this year’s inductees.
Stevie took the lead on Ronstadt’s 1977 hit “It’s So Easy,” while her “backup supergroup” consisting of Sheryl Crow, Glenn Frey, Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt, and Carrie Underwood sang along.
Stevie said that hearing the song (which was originally recorded by Buddy Holly in 1958) in high school inspired her to be a singer.
Afflicted with Parkinson’s disease, Linda Ronstadt chose not attend the ceremony.
Linda Ronstadt Tribute Set List
Different Drum (Carrie Underwood)
Blue Bayou (Bonnie Raitt & Emmylou Harris)
You’re No Good (Sheryl Crow & Glenn Frey)
It’s So Easy (Sheryl Crow, Glenn Frey, Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt, Carrie Underwood, and Stevie Nicks on lead vocals)
When Will I Be Loved (Sheryl Crow, Emmylou, Harris, Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt, and Carrie Underwood)
The New York Daily News provided a live blog and posted videos clips from the induction ceremony. The full show will air May 31 on HBO.
It’s So Easy (courtesy of Cool Hand 62)
It’s So Easy (courtesy of Adam Edelman)
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When Will I Be Loved
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Photo Gallery
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Photos courtesy of Barclays Center, HBO, Rolling Stone, Scott Kropa, Kabir Bhatia, and Frank Posillico