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(PHOENIX) ARIZONA REPUBLIC, SEPTEMBER 18, 1983 "A WILD HEART --- STEVIE
NICKS" BY ANDREW MEANS, REPUBLIC STAFF (DATELINE HOUSTON) ---- It had
been building toward this all day. First, Stevie Nicks' personal assistant
and then her road manager had issued the warning: Don't ask Stevie about
her personal life, or else. Now the lady herself was making it perfectly
clear. If I strayed into that sanctified area, that would be it. She
would walk out of the sitting room in her Houston hotel suite. And I would
be left staring into the dismayed faces of assorted band members and
friends. As a prelude to Stevie's Compton Terrace show next Sunday,
photographer Sean Brady and I had flown 1,000 miles and waited a day for
this meeting. Already a request to photograph during the interview had
been turned down. The pact had to be made. Besides, in a way, this
emotional start to the interview cleared the air. I had accepted all along
that Stevie had a right to answer "no comment" to any given question. What
was contested was my right to ask the question. Here, unmistakably, was a
"no comment" issued before I had even had a chance to ask the
question. "No one knows how I feel, what I say, unless you read between
my lines," Stevie confides in her current single Stand Back. Interviews
can be the same way. Most of us prize privacy. However, a songwriter who
makes a living translating personal experiences into public works of art
has to live with ill-defined boundaries. Reading between the lines
written by this part Joan of Arc/part Alice in Wonderland is indeed a
tricky business. Just as a symbol might lose its potency if analyzed, so
Stevie Nicks seems to function best when harsh realities are cloaked in the
wings of white doves and other favored images. This perspective is
brutally at odds with the needs of interviewers, but evidently exercises a
mesmeric influence on some of her fans. (Just read the personal columns of
the New Times, for instance, to appreciate the impact of Nicks songs like
Bella Donna or Rhiannon. Make no mistake, her mystical, authoritative
persona has considerable power and flexibility. Thus, she can elevate her
friend Robin Anderson, who died of leukemia, to the status of sage and
martyr, while Robin's widower, whom Stevie subsequently married, suddenly
becomes a non-subject as media stories circulate about the marriage's
apparent difficulties. After putting her personal life out of bounds,
Stevie continued our Houston encounter by disowning a recent segment on
TV's Entertainment Tonight show in which she appeared to be mourning the
end of that marriage. Generic comments about the difficulty of maintaining
a rock 'n' roll marriage were misapplied to her own situation, she
said. If Stevie presents a more hardbitten face to the world nowadays, it
is no wonder. She acknowledges the change. In fact, as she talked about
it, her voice trembled slightly. As I recall, that was the only falter in
an otherwise obdurate stance. "Well," she began, "if I continue to be the
same mealy-mouthed little person that I have been up until now I will never
get anywhere in this world and I will have nothing. So a little bit of me
is a little tiny bit harder. It has to be for me to survive in this world.
Everybody else makes it that way for me." Presumably, most performers go
into a benefit concert with some kind of commitment. Stevie's conviction
toward the September 25 fund-raiser for The City of Hope and The American
Heart Association goes beyond that. Her family has a history of heart
disease, while The City of Hope nursed Robin through her final
months. "It's the only friendship that I've ever had or......well, I'm not
going to say ever will have," Nicks said wistfully. "We just started out
together at 15 years old. She kind of walked me through life. And, as I
questioned would there be life after Fleetwood Mac, I certainly questioned
would there be life after Robin. then I found that there is life after
Robin, except that it's not the same, not near as special. There's a
spirit gone, and that's why I'm really dedicated to this leukemia
(benefit). That's why I will do anything I have to do to make as much
money to get rid of this disease as I can because I would really never want
anyone to experience losing someone as beautiful as her in this horrible
way." Can you be more specific about what she contributed to your
life? "She taught me how to sing. She taught me how to use my voice. She
made very sure before she left this planet that I was all right, that my
voice was all right. I don't have problems with my voice now, but I did
and it took us years to fix it. Robin was one of those people (who) when
she walked in the room everybody looked. She was breathtaking, and that's
why it's so wild that she could possibly have died. It just doesn't make
any sense at all." The discovery that Robin was dying of leukemia was
sudden, Nicks recalls. Robin called on a Wednesday, early last year, to
say she was sick. Two days later she called back to say she had been given
two months to live. With help from The City of Hope, a Duarte, California,
institute specializing in catastrophic diseases, she eventually stretched
out her life for a year. Ironically, while Robin's reaction to the news
was that it would give her time to do some writing, Stevie used it as a
catalyst for drawing and painting. "I needed to find some way of being
there with her, even though I couldn't be there. And I just sat down one
day. (Producer) Jimmy Iovine went out and bought some stupid little
kindergarten paints and some paper, and I started drawing this pyramid
which ended up to be the first painting that I did.....I would go back into
a burning building to get my paintings." When the benefit concert was
first announced, Nicks was also asked about her then unreleased album, The
Wild Heart. She called it her masterpiece, and it is not hard to see the
appeal for her of this metaphor for unbridled emotion helpless on the tide
of destiny. Don't blame it on me, baby/Blame it on my wild heart. Not
all reviewers have been so kind, some making unfavorable comparisons with
the album's predecessor, her first solo album, Bella Donna. Rolling Stone
reviewer Christopher Connelly attacked The Wild Heart's "inchoate
ramblings." "It's Bella Donna Grown Up," Nicks still insists. She says
she doesn't read reviews. Someone must do it for her though, because she
knew enough about Connelly's review to mention it by name. "I don't care,"
she continued. "I just care about the kids, and they like it, and I like
them and they like me. (Reviews) put me through a lot of grief. I mean, I
don't forget it for weeks. I don't like to see scary movies, either,
because I walk around with them for weeks." Band members and friends
drifted casually into the room in ones and twos, as Stevie huddled into her
chair and dutifully addressed the questions. What does Wild Heart album
represent to her? Is there an overall feel? "Freedom," she promptly
replied. "It sets me free. It sets me free from Fleetwood Mac. It sets
me free from Stevie Nicks. It sets me free from the person who drives me.
You always have to please somebody. It is letting me go. I'm all right.
This is two records now. So the first record wasn't just a fluke accident.
And I can go and write and dance and do children's stories and do whatever
I want now and no one is going to be saying to me: 'You still aren't a
proven solo artist.'" Even though her songs may not be made public in the
same order they were written, she says her albums represent personal eras.
Bella Donna, for instance, has associations with Scottsdale, where she
lived when she was writing several of the songs on that album. Eventually,
she had to sell her house because, quite simply, she couldn't spend enough
time there. Now she rents a house in Los Angeles and lives the life of the
road. "Every song I write is a story of my life. If I approach writing
at all, that's how I approach it. As I write down each new experience, I
get better at telling a story. All of my songs are in eras, where I'll
write three or four songs in a four-month period and they're definitely
their own thing. Then I'll dance or I'll draw or I'll do something else
for a month or two. Then I'll come back and get an idea for a song and
that will be off on a whole new three- or four-month period.....I'm already
thinking about the next album. We're already about seven songs into
it.....And it's very different from Wild Heart. "It's called "Rock 'n'
Roll". I wrote this song about three years ago. I lived on the beach, and
this song is about the fact that the beach was always shaking and I always
thought it was an earthquake. So I had to learn to know not to pack my
bags and run out the back. "It's real rock 'n' roll, and was written
before Wild Heart. It was really written right along with Bella Donna.
But I knew the second I wrote Rock 'n' Roll that it would be the next
record after Wild Heart. What are your options now? Sooner or later will
you say goodbye to rock 'n' roll? "That's probably why I'm working on
this painting and my book (of children's stories). I think what I'll do is
I'll gracefully slip out of it and nobody will really know." Is there anything Fleetwood Mac can give you now that you
don't have as a soloist? "A headache." Stevie's whispered remark
quickly turns into a laugh. "......I love them so much they drive me
crazy. Eight years together --- you can't rip that out of your heart.
There's no way. It's a part of you." Apparently Fleetwood Mac exists
without really trying. Whatever is in store for the group lies way beyond
Stevie Nicks' current tour. Is there a competitive element between the
members of Fleetwood Mac? "I don't think there's ever been a competitive
element between any members except for Lindsey (Buckingham) and me, and
that started way before Fleetwood Mac and goes right on to this day and
will go on till we die. That's just the way we are --- Mr. and Mrs.
Intense." Your own family has a history of heart disease. Does that
frighten you? "No, because I have a prolapsed heart valve, too, just like
my mom and (brother) Christopher. My heart just pounds away all the time,
and I figure it's just going to do what it does. I'm the same as my dad:
If I have to worry about that there's no reason for me to be here. So I
don't. I try to take good care of myself. I'm really having to change my
life, and I am doing it and loving it, because for the first time in my
whole life I have actually said I'm going to exercise. I feel younger than
I have ever felt. So I'm really excited. The previous night Stevie had
generated some of that excitement at Houston's circa-20,000 seat Summit
arena. The transition from Fleetwood Mac to solo status has brought a
corresponding increase in presence. She alone is overseer to the chemistry
on stage. Now, as before, her magic depends as much on atmosphere as
physical stimulation. One is drawn in by those half-understood images and
expressions of mourning, defiance and fatalism. She is a character actress
who, in her only role, finds insight through suffering. At her side,
guitarist Waddy Wachtel's bold fills and animated bounds provided necessary
fire. Bassist Jerry Seay (formerly of Mother's Finest) seemed a little
intimidated by this partnership, while on the platform behind them much of
the musical ballast came from Roy Bittan, piano; Liberty DeVit, drums;
Benmont Tench, keyboards, and Bobbye Hall, percussion. Nicks interacted
closely with her backing singers, Lori Perry, Sharon Celani and Carol
Brooks. She seemed relieved to have that female presence there. Romantic
clothes --- long dress and shawl --- were the expected Nicks apparel. Not
anticipated was Stevie's drift away from the ephemeral ballet steps of
previous tours toward bolder choreography. There was much stamping of the
feet and frenetic head shaking. In Houston, as at Compton Terrace, Joe
Walsh was on the bill, too. He provided an interesting contrast: abrasive
rock and devil-may-care attitude. If Walsh offers himself as a
presidential candidate, don't be surprised.
Thanks to Kayde for posting this to the Ledge and to Anusha for sending it to us.
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