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Boston Herald 7-15-01
Nicks draws crowd with no `Trouble'
by Sarah Rodman
Sunday, July 15, 2001
Stevie Nicks, Tweeter Center, Mansfield, last night.
The nightbird has taken flight once again.
Touring behind her first new solo album in eight years, the solid `Trouble
in Shangri-La,' Stevie Nicks alighted on the Tweeter Center stage last
night and reclaimed her stake as one of the most enchanting women of rock
'n' roll.
Predictably and comfortingly attired in a frilly black gown with slivers of
sparkly silver - which she occasionally covered with shawls - Nicks took to
the stage to the ominous harmonies of the title track to her new album
before launching into the sly, big beat wallop of `Stop Draggin' My Heart
Around.' Veteran guitarist Waddy Wachtel ably filled in for Tom Petty on
vocals, played blistering solos all night and served as leader to Nicks'
sturdy nine-piece band throughout the hour and 45-minute set which
seamlessly mixed old and new.
Highlights included a sublime version of Fleetwood Mac's willowy `Rhiannon'
which featured a rapturous piano intro and Nicks full-bodied immersion into
the soaring vocals and ethereal mysticism. That song's new spiritual sister
`Planets of the Universe' also found Nicks nailing a gut-wrenching wail.
Although time and well-documented substance abuse appear to have robbed the
53-year old vocalist of her upper register, two solid backing singers and
indispensable special guest Sheryl Crow filled in the brighter colors in
the mix.
As one of Nicks' most gifted musical heirs and a sizable contributor to her
new album, Crow proved to be a shot in the arm in general. She made her
entrance during the hitching rhythms of `Gold Dust Woman' and added
goosebump harmony vocals to the song's gauzy but rollicking climax as Nicks
sandpapery lower growls synched with her higher-pitched keening. Crow also
lent a swaying acoustic guitar to likeminded new rocker `Sorcerer,' aching
harmonies to the country-flavored `Too Far From Texas' and played her own
funky rockers `My Favorite Mistake' and `Every Day is a Winding Road.'
Not that Nicks' performance required too much assistance. She conserved her
voice wisely to pull off the inimitable caterwaul that falls in the middle
of `Edge of Seventeen,' itself the night's peak with the spiraling guitars,
thunderous drums, flashing white lights and Nicks' vocals converging
perfectly. She also put her older and wiser sensibility to good use in the
gracious piano ballad `Has Anyone Ever Written Anything For You.'
Doing her trademark twirls, Nicks drew wild cheers from the audience, which
seemed to bolster both her confidence and energy throughout the night.
Thanks to CLMoon for sending this article to
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