The two sides of Stevie and a new release 30 years after ‘Bella Donna’
The solo side of Stevie Nicks performs in Atlantic City Tonight
Courier Post by WILLIAM SOKOLIC
Stevie Nicks admits she’s led a double life since the early 1980s. In one life, the ethereal singer stands front and center as a mainstay of the celebrated Fleetwood Mac. In the other, she flies solo.
And she couldn’t be happier with the two sides of Stevie Nicks. The crossover keeps the juices flowing, keeps boredom at bay.
“Now I go back and forth and it’s proved quite wonderful for me. I do Fleetwood Mac till I’m run ragged. I run ragged till the music plays out as Stevie Nicks. It’s worked well all these many years,” she said in a phone interview last week.
The solo Stevie Nicks brings her entourage to the Etess Arena at Trump Taj Mahal tonight as part of a very short tour this month, which included an earlier benefit concert for a cancer-stricken girl in Santa Barbara.
Meantime, Nicks has been busy in the studio recording her first solo album of new material since “Trouble in Shangri-La” in 2001, with the Eurhythmics’ Dave Stewart as producer.