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Dallas Morning News 8-4-01
Review: Positive spin
Concert unveils Nicks' undimmed mystical allure
By Mario Tarradell / The Dallas Morning News
Just two songs into her show Friday night at Smirnoff Music Centre, Stevie
Nicks walked backstage and emerged with a glittery gold shawl wrapped
around her black dress. Her seven-piece band began the intro of "Gold Dust
Woman" and Ms. Nicks turned dramatic, flaunting hand gestures and body
movements and slow spins with arms extended. That shawl
now resembled a cape.
She would drape on more shawls as the concert progressed; a silver-speckled
black one was striking against her long blond mane. And it's as if each of
those shawls embodied part of Ms. Nicks' artistic spirit. She worked them
with the same gusto, the same élan as her way with the tambourine.
In the midst, Ms. Nicks offered the crowd of 12,000 more than 27 years'
worth of material, from songs she wrote for Fleetwood Mac to her solo
repertoire. She is, of course, touring
to promote Trouble in Shangri-La, her sixth solo album, with Austin singer-
songwriter
Bob Schneider as her opening act. The Smirnoff stage was decorated like the
Shangri-La CD artwork, with twisting vines, earth-colored columns, vases,
flowers and a mural of an archway to the outside world as the backdrop.
It's all part of the Nicks mysticism. She remains one of the most
influential female artists in the world of rock. Everybody from Sarah
McLachlan to Sheryl Crow to Macy Gray has borrowed a piece of Stevie Nicks'
persona. And although years of hard living, not to mention excessive
belting back when she could, have robbed Ms. Nicks' voice of the haunting
power
it once had, she still has a distinctive tone.
The new songs seemed more passionate. She sang "Sorcerer," "Every Day" and
"Planets of the Universe" with nuance and heart. "Too Far From Texas," a
recorded duet with Dixie Chicks lead singer Natalie Maines, reveled in its
country flavor and killer hook. "Fall From Grace" was a full-on rocker
where Ms. Nicks took on that defiant stance as she sang into the microphone.
By contrast, '70s classics such as "Dreams" and "Rhiannon" came off more
subdued. Ms. Nicks can no longer hit some of the high notes in "Dreams,"
and "Rhiannon" was reworked to accommodate her vocal limitations. It began
as a piano ballad and then morphed into the signature rocker. She carried
the song, make no mistake, but she just doesn't sing it the way she used to.
And yet, Ms. Nicks managed to deliver "Stand Back," one of her biggest solo
hits, with zest and plenty of trademark drama. The song has always been a
synthesizer-and- percussion marvel, with a groove that sticks to your
brain, and she kept up with every beat. Plus,
we got more of her spinning with arms extended. Again, the shawl had that
capelike effect.
Through it all, Ms. Nicks seemed warm and genuinely happy to be onstage.
She never had the superstar air. She chatted with the audience and
explained the origins of several songs. At every turn, she had the adoring
crowd under her musical spell.
Thanks to CLMoon for sending this to us.
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