Tag: stevie nicks

  • Deep Dish’s ‘Dreams’ on new CD

    Deep Dish’s ‘Dreams’ on new CD

    Stevie Nicks, Dreams, Deep Dish, George Is OnA reconstructed version of “Dreams,” which debuted at Stevie Nicks’ recent Las Vegas concerts, is expected to appear on George Is On, the forthcoming CD by Deep Dish. The CD is due in stores on July 12, according to Amazon.com. Stevie contributed to the project by recording new vocals, after being impressed with the initial demo.

  • SINGLE PICK: Santa Claus Is Coming to Town

    Section: Music
    Billboard Picks; SINGLES

    HOLIDAY
    CHRIS ISAAK FEATURING STEVIE NICKS
    Santa Claus Is Coming to Town (2:30)
    PRODUCER: Chris Isaak
    WRITERS: E Coots, H. Gillespie
    PUBLISHERS: EMI Feist Catalog; Gillespie
    Haven Music (ASCAP)
    Wicked Game/Reprise 101453 (CD promo)

    CONTRIBUTORS: Jim Bessman, Leila Cobo, Deborah Evans Price, Rashaun Hall, Sarah Han, Katy Kroll, Gall Mitchell, Michael Paoletta, Wayne Robins, Chuck Taylor, Christa L. Titus, Philip van Vleck, Christopher Walsh.  ESSENTIALS: Releases deemed by the review editors to deserve spec attention on the basis of musical merit and/or Billboard chart potential. VITAL REISSUES: Rereleased albums of special artistic, archival and commercial interest and outstanding collections of works by one or more artists. PICKS (**): New releases predicted to hit the top half of the chart in the corresponding format. CRITICS’ CHOICES (*): New releases, regardless of chart potential, highly recommended because of their musical merit. All albums commercially available in the United States are eligible. Send album review copies and singles review copies to Michael Paoletta (Billboard, 770 Broadway, 6th floor, New York, N.Y. 10003) or to the writers in the appropriate bureaus.

    Michael Paoletta (Editor) / Billboard / 11/20/2004

  • Sheryl Crow and Stevie Nicks

    By James McNair
    The Independent
    (UK)
    Sunday, July 21, 2002

    Sheryl Crow, 40, was born in Missouri. Having sung backing vocals with Michael Jackson and Don Henley, she released her Grammy award-winning debut album, ‘Tuesday Night Music Club’ in 1993. Briefly engaged to Eric Clapton, she wrote ‘My favourite Mistake,’ allegedly about him, in 1998. Her new album, ‘C’mon C’mon’, features Gwyneth Paltrow, Emmylou Harris and Stevie Nicks.

    Stevie Nicks, 53, was born in Arizona. She found fame with Fleetwood Mac and co-wrote ‘Rumours’, one of the bestselling albums ever. Currently single, she had long-term relationships with fellow band-mate Lindsey Buckingham and The Eagles’s Don Henley. Last years she released her sixth solo album, ‘Trouble In Shangri La’, on which Sheryl guested.

    Stevie Nicks: 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 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. And it wasn’t until we both did a charity benefit for Don Henley that we sat down and talked properly about recording together. I thought, “If it doesn’t work out at least we’ll each have a new friend.” I love that Sheryl does what I do. I’ve never really had a female friend like that before. I’m a rock star and I always wanted to be one. Sheryl is a rock star too, and under that umbrella, each of us listens to what the other says. If Sheryl says, “I don’t think you should do that,” I’m probably not going to do it. Only a few people in my life have that authority. Sheryl’s life, like mine, is very busy. And when I was her age, I didn’t want to have a day off, either. Now, if I can work for three days and rest for two, I’m happy. But Sheryl just wants to keep going. In one of my more maternal moments, I did convince her to take a holiday. We went to Hawaii: me, my assistant, Sheryl, her assistant, and Sheryl’s best friend. We took a catamaran and sailed to Molokai for 10 days. It was great, because nobody was going to mess with Sheryl and me together. We were like Thelma and Louise. My friends have begun to become Sheryl’s friends, but she’s kind of a loner. She’s not from here; her family is back East. She has a house in Florida and she’s thinking of buying one in Nashville. She’s not really settled, and she knows that being a famous woman in rock makes it hard to find relationships. I love living in LA but my real foundation is a house in Phoenix that I’ve owned since 1980. I think Sheryl’s looking for somewhere like that; a place where her heart wants to stay. We expect a lot from each other. Are we possessive of each other? I would say, “Yes.” I’m possessive in a way where I want what she does to be great. If she plays me something and I don’t like it, I’m going to tell her. And she’s not going to save my feelings either. We both know that you can’t pussy-foot around saying bad songs are great. How else do we differ? Well, Sheryl likes to go to parties and stuff. But then she’s 40 and I’m 53. I don’t like to party so much any more, and even when I was her age I was a little more private. We’re actually more similar than different. I’ve never found anything important enough to give up my music for, and Sheryl’s the same. If you want to get married and have a child, you have to stop. The world is fickle. If you give up the gauntlet — and that’s Sheryl’s phrase — you may not be able to come back. Our friendship will continue forever. Sheryl did a benefit for my father and the Heart Association, so my family loves her as much as I do. She committed first and then we got everyone else in and we raised enough to build a hospital. Now that’s girl power.

    Sheryl Crow: I first met Stevie at a Grammy’s party about 6 years ago. She’d just recorded “Somebody Stand By Me,” a song of mine. I liked her, and she said, “We should get together and work some time.” I thought, “Great!” But then I didn’t hear from her for two years. My first impression was that I’d known her forever, that she was really open. I think the kindred spirit thing is also partly to do with us having similar backgrounds and both becoming well known around 28. Musically we both have a similar dictionary of references, too. She’s totally like a sister: one of the few people who takes care of me. If I’m sick, Stevie will come over with a cashmere blanket; that’s how she is. She’s a big rock star, and she doesn’t need to drop everything, but she cares about people. When I was first Grammy nominated she was very supportive at the awards ceremony. Other female artists in the room seemed to ignore me but Stevie didn’t have any of that. She doesn’t have an ego about music. Clothing wise, I have more masculine tastes. I like cowboy stuff, she’s more into frills. Neither of us is into furs or expensive cars but we do like to go to extravagant getaways. We went to Hawaii together and Stevie rented a house on the ocean. She knows how to live. Stevie can never know how much of an inspiration she’s been to me. Even when I was at school, I had my hair cut like hers and I was wearing shawls and stuff and my friends thought I was a freak. Also her singing style. Somewhere in there, she came out of blues and country, and when I first heard it, it validated what I liked. To me she was the greatest female songwriter of her generation, and I don’t know of anybody today who gets so lost in the mystery and power of their music. And she’s still like that. When we last played together here in LA, it was like a church revival, you could feel it in the air. It was right after 11 September and Stevie had people in the palm of her hand. She’s become quite matriarchal in recent years and she gave people a lot of strength and comfort that night. We disagree about personal things. When we were on the road together, I got on to her about not looking after herself. She drinks too much coffee and no water — ever. When she lost her voice, I said, “Well, you have to cut out the caffeine.” I’m the bossy little sister. We both know how hard it is to meet a partner when you’re a successful woman in music. In some ways I think we sacrificed our romantic and social lives for our work because we derive so much satisfaction and self worth from it. Stevie says that her songs are her children; that they go out and work on her behalf. And they do, because they are very healing for people. I’ve yet to make that peace with my work because it doesn’t have that depth. But if I ever wrote something as good as “Landslide,” say, I’d just get in my car, drive to Tennessee and have kids. I’d feel completely sated. Stevie should tell herself the wonderful things that she tells me — she’s way too tough on herself. It’s hard to be in the public eye, and getting older isn’t easier for any of us gals. Stevie’s still gorgeous, though, and I get frustrated with her because she doesn’t realise it.

  • Stevie Nicks, Don Henley, Lenny Kravitz on new Sheryl Crow LP

    By Corey Moss
    MTV News
    Thursday, January 10, 2002

    All of Sheryl Crow’s collaborating over the last couple of years apparently gave the singer some ideas for her fourth studio album.

    The as-yet-untitled follow-up to 1998’s The Globe Sessions, due in late March, will include contributions from several big-name artists, including Stevie Nicks, Don Henley, Lenny Kravitz and the Dixie Chicks’ Natalie Maines, according to Crow’s Interscope Records spokesperson. “Soak up the Sun,” the album’s first single, is due in February and features additional vocals by fellow female rocker (and could-be twin sister) Liz Phair.

    Nicks, who appeared on Crow’s 1999 live album, Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live From Central Park , sings on “You’re Not the One.” Crow and Nicks recently collaborated on Nicks’ Trouble in Shangri-La (2001), sharing vocals on “It’s Only Love.” Crow also produced several tracks on Nicks’ record.

    Eagles singer Henley, who’s among the artists Crow sang backup for early on in her career, appears on the track “It’s So Easy.” Kravitz sings on “You’re an Original,” and Maines adds her signature twang to “Abilene.” Crow and Maines performed several songs together at a breast cancer benefit in Los Angeles last fall, including Crow’s “It Don’t Hurt”. Maines’ Dixie Chicks also appear on Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live From Central Park.

    Other guests on the upcoming album are folk and country veteran Emmylou Harris (“Weather Channel”) and blues guitarist Doyle Bramhall II (“Steve McQueen,” “Over You”).

    Since the release of The Globe Sessions, which featured the single “My Favorite Mistake,” Crow has recorded with an array of artists, from Tony Bennett to Kid Rock .

    While recording in New York last summer, Crow played several high-profile club shows that included many of the guests on her album along with Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards .

    In other Crow news, she was just added to the list of presenters for the American Music Awards in Los Angeles on Wednesday night. The show will be broadcast live on ABC.

    Tentative track list for Sheryl Crow’s upcoming album, according to her spokesperson:

    • “Steve McQueen”
    • “Soak up the Sun”
    • “You’re an Original”
    • “It’s So Easy”
    • “Over You”
    • “It’s Only Love”
    • “Weather Channel”
    • “You’re Not the One”
    • “Missing”
    • “Abilene”
    • “Slave”
    • “Safe and Sound”
  • Stevie Nicks fans’ zeal leads to VH1

    Stevie Nicks fans’ zeal leads to VH1

    Laurinburg professor and his daughter share a passion for the singer.

    VH1’s “Fan Club” profiles music fans to give viewers a better understanding of rabid devotion.

    The latest episode (10p.m. Sunday) examines Stevie Nicks’ fans, including Jim Lankford, 68, of Laurinburg, about 90miles southeast of Charlotte.

    Lankford loves Nicks as a solo act, but he also likes her older work with Fleetwood Mac. His Nicks fandom grew out of his love for his daughter Jackie, 37.

    Lankford, a chemistry professor at St. Andrews Presbyterian College, began studying Nicks last year to try to connect with his estranged daughter, a longtime Nicks fan, who was slipping into depression. In an interview, he talked about his newfound passion and how it improved his relationship with Jackie.

    How did you get on VH-1?

    He and Jackie responded to a notice on a Nicks Web site.

    What is the smoke-pop experiment you mentioned on VH-1?

    An oxidizing agent mixed with an organic compound produces a cloud of smoke. “I think of the song `Rhiannon’ when I do that. Stevie’s talking about Rhiannon rising to the sky and being swept away.”

    What is your favorite Nicks videotape that Jackie sent you?

    Her “Bella Donna Tour” on HBO. It was the first one Jackie told him to watch.

    Your favorite outfit?

    “I liked her back in the early days when she had the black outfits, the black shawls and was being witchy and mysterious.”

    When and where did you see your first Nicks concert?

    The “Trouble in Shangri-La Tour” in Camden, N.J., this summer with Jackie. “It was such an enormous thrill after I had been studying her so much to finally see her performing live.”

    What does your wife think about this?

    They attended the Charlotte show together. “She understood me better. I don’t hear as many complaints.”

    How many custom CDs have you and Jackie burned?

    “43, and we’re not done.”

    What was your first one?

    A double disc, “Our Stevie CD: Music that Made a Difference.” It’s songs that helped him and Jackie understand each other. It includes “Landslide,” one of Jackie’s favorites, and “Sara,” one of Lankford’s favorites.

    How many Nicks pictures do you have?

    Jackie sent him most of her stuff so they could have one giant collection. “I’m running out of space. My den is completely full, the family room has got several and our master bedroom has one.”

    What’s in the master bedroom?

    The “Enchanted Tour” program opened to a page with Nicks reclining on a bed.

    What other Nicks projects are you working on?

    He and his daughter are thinking about writing a book about what her music means to them and how it could help others.

    What other female singers do you like?

    Enya.

    Tonya Jameson / Charlotte Observer /Saturday, November 10, 2001

  • CHART BEAT: Bootylicious

    CHART BEAT: Bootylicious

    Stevie Nicks appeared in Destiny Child's video for "Bootylicious."
    Stevie Nicks appeared in Destiny Child’s video for “Bootylicious.”

    SUPREME ACHIEVEMENT:  Only three girl groups in the history of The Billboard Hot 100 have been No. 1 for more than five cumulative weeks. The leader of the pack is the Supremes, with a total of 22 weeks. Close behind is TLC, with 18 weeks. This issue, Destiny’s Child is within striking distance of TLC, as “Bootylicious” (Columbia) remains at No. 1 for a second week, giving the act an aggregate total of 17 weeks at the summit. The Supremes’ total comes from 12 different chart champs, spread over five years, four months, and two weeks. TLC reached its total with only four singles and in a slightly faster time frame: four years, eight months, and one week.

    Destiny’s Child also needed four No. 1 singles to achieve its total: “Bills, Bills, Bills” (one week), “Say My Name” (three), “Independent Women Part I” (11), and “Bootylicious” (two to date). But the act pulled this off in record time–a mere two years and three weeks.

    THE WRITE STUFF:  Chart Beat reader David Brunot of Guys Mills, Pa., wrote to ask where Stevie Nicks ranks among songwriters with the longest span of No. 1 songs, given that Destiny’s Child’s “Bootylicious” samples her “Edge of Seventeen.” A few months ago, Nicks would have been in eighth place. But the rankings have since changed dramatically: This year, four contenders entered the top 10 for the first time. That means Nicks, with 24 years, one month, and three weeks between Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” and “Bootylicious,” is in 12th place. The record was set a few weeks ago by Bob Crewe, with 38 years, six months, and two weeks between the 4 Seasons’ “Big Girls Don’t Cry” and Christina Aguilera, Lil Kim, Mya & Pink’s “Lady Marmalade.” Crewe sent previous record-holder Chip Taylor into second place, with 34 years and eight months between the Troggs’ “Wild Thing” and Shaggy Featuring Rayvon’s “Angel.”

    In third place are Luigi Creatore, Hugo Peretti, and George David Weiss, with 31 years, eight months, and three weeks between the Tokens’ “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” and UB40’s “Can’t Help Falling in Love.” Newly positioned in fourth place are Ahmet Ertegun and Eddie Curtis, with 27 years, two months, and two weeks between Steve Miller Band’s “The Joker” and Shaggy’s “Angel.”

    Also ahead of Nicks are Kenny Nolan (26 years, three months, one week), Cameron Lewis and Arthur Wright (25 years, six months), Brian Holland (25 years, five months, three weeks), Elton John and Bernie Taupin (24 years, 11 months, one week), Gerry Goffin (24 years, nine months), Lamont Dozier (24 years, five months, two weeks), and Bill Withers (24 years, five months).

    DIAMOND LIFE:  Neil Diamond’s first chart album of the new millennium is his highest-debuting of all time. Three Chord Opera (Columbia) enters The Billboard 200 at No. 15, topping the 1993 No. 28 debut of Up on the Roof-Songs From the Brill Building.

    Fred Bronson / Billboard / August 11, 2001

  • Planets of the Universe (Tracy Young Club Edit)

    Planets of the Universe (Tracy Young Club Edit)

    Unreleased edit of Tracy Young’s Club Mix. Original version from the 2001 album Trouble in Shangri-La.

  • REVIEW: Planets of the Universe, Every Day

    REVIEW: Planets of the Universe, Every Day

    Reviews & Previews

    **STEVIE NICKS Planets of the Universe (4:21)
    PRODUCERS: John Shanks, Stevie Nicks
    WRITER: S. Nicks
    PUBLISHER: Welsh Witch, BMI
    Reprise 00572 (CD promo)

    STEVIE NICKS Every Day (3:34)
    PRODUCER: John Shanks
    WRITERS: J. Shanks, D. Johnston
    PUBLISHERS: EMI-Virgin/Little Miss/Line One, ASCAP
    Reprise 00570 (CD promo)

    One of music’s true originals previews Trouble in Shangri-La, her first studio collection in five years, with a sterling pair of tunes that nicely reflects the project’s overall tone. “Planets of the Universe” shows Nicks in classic form, wrapping her unique brand of romantic poetry in jittery electric guitars and a chugging groove, la her now signature 1982 smash “Edge of Seventeen.” Meanwhile, “Every Day” casts the artist in a more time-conscious mode, as she gamely interprets a sweet John Shanks/Damon Johnston song amid a cozy swirl of synths and strumming acoustic guitars. Although “Planets” is wisely aimed at mainstream rock and triple-A formats and “Every Day” is geared toward AC and top 40 outlets, the currently quirky (that is, narrowcast) nature of radio dictates that Nicks’ best shot at airplay for either track is at AC. Given a choice, most programmers will likely opt for “Planets,” if only because it’s her strongest self-penned effort in years. It’s also a refreshingly vibrant, instantly memorable recording on which Nicks performs with the kind of heart that’s made her an enduring rock heroine. In the end, though, both songs are several notches above the material currently vying for attention right now. You can’t lose by choosing either tune.

    CONTRIBUTORS: Patrick Eves, Larry Flick, Rashaun Hall, Chuck Taylor. SPOTLIGHT: Releases deemed by the review editors to deserve attention on the basis of musical merit and/or Billboard chart potential. VITAL REISSUES: Released albums of special artistic, archival, and commercial interest, and outstanding collections of works by one or more artists. PICKS (**): New releases predicted to hit the top half of the chart in the corresponding format. CRITICS’ CHOICES (*): New releases, regardless of chart potential, highly recommended because of their musical merit. MUSIC TO MY EARS (***): New releases deemed PICKS that were featured in the Music to My Ears column as being among the most significant records of the year. All albums commercially available in the U.S. are eligible. Send review copies to Chuck Taylor (Billboard, 770 Broadway, 6th floor, New York, N.Y. 10003), or to the writers in the appropriate bureaus.

    Billboard / April 7, 2001

  • In the News: Stevie Nicks

    In the News: Stevie Nicks

    In 1994, STEVIE NICKS was watching the O.J. SIMPSON trial when she came up with the title of her next album: Trouble in Shangri-La. “It’s the whole idea of achieving paradise,” says Nicks, “and how difficult it is to handle it. Trouble in Shangri-La is about a lot of people, including myself.” Nearly eight years later, on May 1st, the album will hit stores. Says Nicks, “I love these songs, and I’m so excited to share them with the world.”

    Shangri-La was mostly written by Nicks but also features a variety of guest stars. Sheryl Crow plays some guitar and co-produced five of the album’s thirteen tracks, Macy Gray sings on “Bombay Sapphire,” and Dixie Chick Natalie Maines duets with Nicks on “Too Far From Texas.” “I’m really a harmony singer, so I love to sing with other lead singers,” says Nicks, who, in addition to her work with Fleetwood Mac, has topped the charts duetting with both Tom Petty and Don Henley. Another guest is Fleetwood Mac’s Lindsey Buckingham, who plays guitar on a song called “I Miss You.” Is the song about her former lover? “Well, it’s not,” says Nicks. “But a lot of these songs are about Lindsey.”

    Expect Nicks to hit the road this summer. And, if she has anything to say about it, another Fleetwood Mac album remains a possibility. “I would love to see us do one more record,” she says. “I’ll be doing my Trouble in Shangri-La thing for however long, and next year we could be on our way to a Fleetwood Mac album. Life is short. Why wait?”

    Rolling Stone / March 29, 2001

  • High Priestess

    High Priestess

    Shedding drugs, weight and breast implants, Stevie Nicks whirls back

    ENTHRONED UPON HER FOUR-poster bed, incense and candles burning as the clock nears midnight, Stevie Nicks nestles into a stack of pillows and tries to remember the last 10 years of her life. It doesn’t come easy: Nicks, the hottest femme in pop’s pre-Madonna firmament of the 1970s, degenerated into a bloated, drugged-out cliché of the era’s rock-and-roll excess. “I know how serious things were, and it scares me to death,” she says. Her nightmarish fall began with a cocaine habit that consumed millions of dollars and burned a hole through the cartilage of her nose. But as the Fleetwood Mac singer reveals for the first time, in a bedroom interview in her sprawling, adobe-style Phoenix home, cocaine was just the start of her long slide into darkness. It seems late in the day to meet the press, but for Nicks the bewitching hour is the right time to conjure up her ghosts: “This is when my life gets going.”

    In more ways than one. Nicks, now 49, slimmed-down, drug-free and in her best health in years, has executed a turnaround worthy of her heyday as Fleetwood Mac’s doe-eyed dervish. Enjoying a rebirth of interest in her music and even her over-the-top look—designers Isaac Mizrahi and Anna Sui aped her slit maxis and sky-high platforms in their recent collections—Nicks has been riding a new career high since last May. That’s when her old band regrouped after a seven-year recording hiatus to cut a No. 1 album, Dance, and launch a three-month, sold-out tour. This week, Nicks’s once contentious, newly copacetic Mac mates—her former flame, guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, 50, drummer Mick Fleetwood, 50, bassist John McVie, 52, and his ex-wife, keyboardist Christine McVie, 54—are to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame during ceremonies in New York City. For Nicks the event will be especially sweet. “Stevie bridges the gap between the powerful rock singers of the ’60s, like Janis Joplin and Grace Slick, and what’s going on today,” says alternative diva Sheryl Crow, echoing a chorus of surprising fans that includes the Smashing Pumpkins’ Billy Corgan and Courtney Love. Adds Crow, who will deliver the induction speech: “She is the woman all young girls wanted to be and all men wanted to be with.”

    That proved too heavy a burden for Nicks, who grew up in Northern California as the daughter of a well-traveled executive, Jesse Seth Nicks, and his homemaker wife, Barbara (they now live near Stevie in Phoenix). In 1974, Nicks and Buckingham, her former high school classmate, joined Fleetwood’s struggling blues band, helping to transform it into one of the most successful groups in pop history.

    But like others who made the leap to stardom in the 1970s, Nicks fell for cocaine’s allure. Recalls Fleetwood: “Sometimes I worried myself sick about whether she would survive.” His own addiction, he adds, landed him in that “same dark place.” While she remained a member of the band, Nicks launched a solo career with her hit Bella Donna album in ’81. Meanwhile she continued to snort so much coke that in 1986 a plastic surgeon told her, “If you want your nose to remain on your face, stop right now.”

    Nicks took his advice, completing a 28-day stint at the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif., that year. “But after I quit cocaine,” she says, “things got even worse.” She continued to gain weight and looked constantly fatigued. In 1987 friends who feared she would relapse on cocaine persuaded her to see a psychiatrist, who prescribed Klonopin, a powerful tranquilizer to which she became addicted. “The drug changed me from a tormented, productive artist to an indifferent woman,” says Nicks, who became so zonked-out that she barely remembers an entire solo tour in 1989. “I vegetated into my own little world.” While hosting a bridal shower for a friend in late 1993, Nicks crashed into a fireplace and gashed her head but didn’t feel a thing. That scare gave her the courage to face a brutal, 45-day detox. “It would have been so easy for me to call a limo from rehab, go to another hospital and ask for Demerol because I was in so much pain,” she says. “Instead I stood on the edge of the cliff and said, ‘I need to live.’ ”

    Back home and drug-free in 1994, Nicks embarked on a six-month solo tour despite weighing 175 pounds and still feeling tired. Described by one critic as “twirling toward oblivion,” Nicks recalls walking off the stage at tour’s end and vowing “I would never sing in front of people again. Singing is the love of my life, but I was ready to give it all up because I couldn’t handle people talking about how fat I was.”

    While her growing lethargy had been diagnosed as the effects of Epstein-Barr virus, which causes constant fatigue, Nicks and her mother suspected it might be related to silicone breast implants that she had received in 1976. “Like cocaine, the whole world was getting them back then, and everyone was told they were safe,” Nicks says. “But I’m living proof that they aren’t safe.” Indeed, several doctors advised that removing her implants would be painful and unnecessary, but Nicks had the surgery anyway in 1994. “It turned out they were totally broken,” she says.

    With her health restored, Nicks also decided to slim down, and in 1995 she lost 30 pounds on a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet. When her band-mates called last April suggesting a reunion, Nicks was game. A highlight of the ensuing tour was her performance of her previously unreleased 1977 tune “Silver Springs,” which chronicled the breakups of Nicks and Buckingham’s relationship and the McVies’ marriage. “There was such a multilayered story being told,” drummer Fleetwood says of the song. “It was our moment of high passion. It floored me every night Stevie sang it.”

    No old romances were rekindled during the tour, says Nicks, who has remained single since a brief 1983 marriage to Kim Anderson, the grieving husband of her best friend, Robin Stucker, who had died that year of leukemia. Though she has also been involved with rockers Don Henley, Joe Walsh and producer Jimmy Iovine, Nicks says she doesn’t mind being single. “I’m free,” she says. “So when someone starts telling me what to do, it’s like, ‘See ya!’ ” Nicks appears to have cast off her troubles with equal assurance. “I’m so far away from that now, it’s almost like another person,” she says of her stoned past. “I don’t want to be her ever again.”

    Steve Dougherty & Todd Gold / People, Vol. 49 No. 2 / January 19, 1998