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Orange County Register 8-20-01
After rocky start, Stevie Nicks rewards patient fans
Review: New tunes were good, but technical glitches marred some of her
concert.
August 20, 2001
By GEORGE PAUL
Special to the Register
Stevie Nicks adores her fans - so much so that she concludes each concert
by urging everyone to "take care of yourself and be well so that you can be
with us next time." Ironically, there was a period in the late '80s and
early '90s, when it was doubtful whether Nicks would ever regain her full
potential as an artist.
Now, with a successful Fleetwood Mac reunion tour and a much-heralded
addiction to prescription drugs in the past, the gypsy chanteuse has
released "Trouble in Shangri-La." The rewarding collaboration with gal pal
Sheryl Crow, Sarah McLachlan, Macy Gray and others is easily Nicks' most
accomplished effort since "Bella Donna" two decades ago.
At Verizon Wireless Amphitheater on Saturday night, devotees were given a
thumbnail sketch of Nicks' lengthy rock career instead of a hit- packed
overview - to mixed results. The luminous stage décor resembled a Victorian
courtyard: large ivy-strewn columns, ornate vases, regal statues and an
ocean/planetary projection backdrop.
Following the familiar rattling "Edge of Seventeen" guitar loop sampled on
"Bootylicious" by Destiny's Child, a radiant-looking Nicks clad in black
dress and her nine-piece band got off to a rocky start. They launched the
13-song, 80-minute set with "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" amid a muddled
sound mix. Nicks' voice had an unusually nasal timbre and took a while to
warm up (a recent respiratory infection the likely culprit).
Fueled by some rollicking piano work, the buoyant "Enchanted" saw Nicks'
husky voice mesh wonderfully with Sharon Celani's supple backing. Nicks
unveiled the Mac's "Dreams" early on and sent the crowd into a frenzy. She
left and returned with a gold shawl atop her dress to start the mystical
"Gold Dust Woman," unfortunately bogged down by overpowering drums
(timekeeper Marc Shulman isn't a master at subtlety like Mick Fleetwood).
Soon after, the sound glitches were fixed. Among the four alluring new
tunes was "Every Day," which featured Nicks' world-weary vocals set to
strummed acoustic guitar and elegant keyboards. Wrapped in another glittery
dark shawl, she confidently delivered a haunting piano version of
"Rhiannon" in trademark quavering voice that dwarfed the 26-year-old Mac
original.
Then the band moved from subtlety to bloated excess in a 15-minute "Stand
Back" that opened with mind-numbing drum and percussion solos and dated
disco synths (ditto for the equally long "Edge of Seventeen," lumbered down
by longtime Nicks tour guitarist Waddy Wachtel).
A breezy country rock vibe made "Too Far From Texas" one of the evening's
highlights and showed Nicks is adept at other genres besides rock. Nicks
capped the encores with another stunning piano ballad, the tearjerker "Has
Anyone Ever ... " All told, the concert's low points (erratic song
selection, way-too-slick band) balanced out with the high points (Nicks'
still awesome voice and unique stage presence
Thanks to CLMoon for forwarding this article to us.
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