Thursday, May 05, 2011

Mick Fleetwood's Appearance on Maui with Neal Preston

Mick Fleetwood made an appearance hosting an event last night on Maui at Celebrites Galleries for Rock Photographer Neal Preston.  Neal has a long history with Fleetwood Mac and it's members dating back as far as the early 70's. 

According to Suzanne Kayian, Freelance entertainment writer for Maui Magazine, Rhythm and Views, Mick was gracious and posed with new collectors purchasing Neals work.

Stevie Nicks releases her first new album in 10 years a collaboration with record producer and songwriter Dave Stewart from The Eurythmics






Telegraph.co.uk
A lot has changed in the music business since Stevie Nicks released her last original work almost a decade ago, but the 62-year-old singer – who doesn't even own a computer – believes that producing quality music with a focus on quality is something that never goes out of style.

"There is no autotuning, nothing is fake about this record. It's all real, we can go onstage and play every one of these songs," she said.

It was Stewart who approached Nicks last year about co-writing songs, a concept she initially found foreign.

"I'm very selfish with my writing, I don't want to share that process with anybody, I like sitting in there and having that suffering thing, with my 50 pages of words taped to the piano, where I'm taking little bits and pieces from 20 poems at once, and that was something that I thought that was the way I wanted it to be," she said.

But the singer admits she had an "epiphany" after sitting down with Stewart. "My life changed, the golden doors opened, and I realised and understood why Paul McCartney and John Lennon wrote together," she said. "He knows a thousand chords, I know seven. I have 40 pages of poetry, he doesn't have 40 pages of poetry, so we can bring that to each other".

When it came to recording the album Nicks invited studio staff and performers to her Pacific Palisades home in southern California. Performers were encouraged to lounge around between sessions at the spacious mansion overlooking the ocean, a freeing experience that hearkened back to the Fleetwood Mac days.

"You know, you go into a studio, and its $2300 a day, and you have rules there. When you're here at a house, you can have food, you have the kitchen, you can like hang out. If you don't want to work, you cannot work, so it was a fantastic experience, and I hope that experience made its way onto the tape," Nicks said.

In Your Dreams was released by Reprise Records on May 3.

(Review) Stevie Nicks 'In Your Dreams' "Moonlight (A Vampire's Dream) is classic Nicks"

STEVIE NICKS - IN YOUR DREAMS (WARNER) Star rating: * * * 1/2
Herald Sun - Australia
Cameron Adams

IT'S been a decade since Stevie Nicks released a solo album. The cover of drought breaker In Your Dreams sees Stevie in a forest, in a flowing dress, with a horse. Naturally.

It's business as usual on the musical front as well. Musical cohort Dave Stewart (Eurythmics) guides her through country lite (In Your Dreams) to mystical English-lit gypsy rock (Wide Sargasso Sea) - she even shares a writing credit with Edgar Allen Poe on the soft rocking, poetry-quoting Annabel Lee, which harks back to Nicks in Fleetwood Mac's '70s glory days. See also For What It's Worth.

Moonlight (A Vampire's Dream) is classic Nicks - you can almost hear the scarves swishing on the mic stand - while to add to the familiarity Lindsay Buckingham guests on the surprisingly gritty Soldier's Angel.

Sounds like: surrogate Fleetwood Mac album.
In a word: Californian


STEVIE NICKS 'In Your Dreams' Friday... and in your country NOVEMBER

Get ready Australia and New Zealand... Not only is Stevie's new album being released on Friday... She's coming to your neck of the wood!  

New album In Your Dreams will be in stores and online Friday May 6th.
'In Your Dreams' 
is her first album of new material in a decade and was co-produced by former Eurythmic Dave Stewart along with 
Glen Ballard.

If you missed the video interview... Stevie announced during a Perezhilton interview posted earlier today that she will be touring Australia in November...Not sure if that also means New Zealand.. we'll have to see.  It's a long way off from now.. But oh so exciting for you! 

Now if she could just factor in the UK and Europe!

Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Based on First Day Sales... Stevie Nicks Will Debut At Either No. 5 or 6

BUY STEVIE'S NEW ALBUM THIS WEEK... GIVE HER A HUGE OPENING WEEK... A SUMMER TOUR DEPENDS ON IT... CHECK OUT THE PEREZ VIDEO INTERVIEW!

ADELE’S 21 ROLLS A SEVEN FOR MOTHER’S DAY WEEKEND
Hits Daily Double

This Adele album is a mother.

The XL/Columbia U.K. pop diva is rolling sevens with 21, which will spend its seventh week at #1 next week, adding what appears to be another 120-150k to its 1.4 million U.S. total, thanks to Mom’s Day Weekend. That’s based on one-day sales reports from those music retailers who have stopped searching for Osama bin Laden.

Next week, the real battle will be for #2 between a pair of Capitol/EMI entries. The Beastie Boys’ long-awaited Hot Sauce Committee Part Two, the sequel to an album that never officially came out, looks to be in the 100-110k range, the same as the next volume of the Now 38 series on the same label.

Indie stalwart Sub Pop’s indie answer to Crosby, Stills and Nash, Fleet Foxes’ Helplessness Blues is looking at an impressive first-week total of 80-90k, which should be good for Top 4.

American Idol judge Jennifer Lopez’s Island/IDJ bow, Love?, looks to be in the 60-65k range, which might be helped by her performance on Thursday night’s edition of the show.

Reprise’s Fleetwood Mac vet Stevie Nicks, currently on tour with Rod Stewart, comes out with In Your Dreams, her first solo album since 2001’s Trouble in Shangri-La, which should do between 40-45k.
Atlantic R&B crooner Musiq Soulchild is back with his sixth studio album, MusiqInTheMagiq, in the range of 30-35k

Motley Crue’s Nikki Sixx band, Sixx: A.M., is back with the Eleven Seven album, This Is Gonna Hurt, on target for between 25-30k, the same as Epic’s Sade The Ultimate Collection.

So if Hits predicts correctly and based on this info... Here's how the Top 10 should look:

No.1  Adele - 21 (120-150k)
No.2  The Beastie Boys or Now 38 (100-110k)
No.3  Now 38 or The Beastie Boys (100-110k)
No.4  Fleet Foxes (80-90k)
No.5  Jennifer Lopez (60-65k)
No.6  Stevie Nicks (40-45k)
No.7  Musiq Soulchild (30-35k)
No.8  Nikki Sixx Band or Sade (25-30k)
No.9  Sade or Nikki Sixx Band (25-30k)
No10??

This could change slightly but Hits is usually pretty darn close with their numbers...

BUY STEVIE'S IN YOUR DREAMS.... THIS... WEEK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

NEW Extensive Interview with Stevie Nicks... Lots of info

Stevie Nicks talks gays, 'Glee' controversy and losing weight... with her own music?

By Chris Azzopardi
Pridesource.com

Ten years have passed since Stevie Nicks released her last solo album, but she's still the same gay-loved goddess of earthy rock she built her legend on. The new release, "In Your Dreams," is exactly how the gypsy queen left us - with that uniform sense of mystical otherworldliness that's made Nicks a go-her-own-way virtuoso since her days with Fleetwood Mac. White horses, vampire tales and ethereal love parables all seep into this set, Nick's first all-new studio project after reuniting with Fleetwood Mac for 2003's "Say You Will."

Nicks recently spoke with us about taking a trip to "the magical world of fairies and angels," the dress drag queens love, and how her own music motivated her to lose a dozen pounds.

Why did it take so long to release another solo album?
Even though I haven't made another solo record in 10 years, I've been making music solid since "Trouble in Shangri-La." I came off the road from 135 shows in 2005 with Fleetwood Mac and was going to make a record, and the business people around me said, "We don't think you should do it because the music business is in chaos" - you know, with Internet piracy, which was really hitting us in the face in 2005 - "and it's just going to be a really emotional pull on you. We don't think you should do it. Tour while you can, do big shows and sell lots of tickets, that's what you can do." And I just was stupid enough to kind of go, "OK."

When did you wise up?
At the end of the Fleetwood Mac tour in 2009. We were in Australia, and I wrote the "Moonlight" song (from "In Your Dreams") there, and when I got done with that song - I started it in Melbourne and I finished it in Brisbane - there was a piano. I stood up and I said to my assistant, "I'm ready to make a record now."

What was it like recording "In Your Dreams"?
The whole year of recording this record was like this magical mystery tour that we did at my house. We recorded the whole thing at my house and (the Eurythmics') Dave Stewart, and his entourage were there every day, and my girls and everybody were there every day. It was just a fantastic experience. We started in February and ended in December, and when it was over I was heartbroken. I didn't want it to ever end.

The concept of the video for the first single, "Secret Love," is intriguing - it merges your older self with your younger self. How do you feel now versus then?
That's why the little girl that's in the video, Kelly, is wearing the green outfit that was my first colored outfit made in 1976, 1977 - that's when my designer, Margi Kent, started making my clothes. But my outfits were black, and that's one of the only colored ones she made; it's a kind of tie-dyed green outfit. The little girl that's playing me, she's 15 and she's one of my goddaughters, she, like, fits into this and we're looking at her going, "Oh my god, we were that tiny!"

But anyway, that's what I wanted. I wanted Kelly to be the 25-year-old Stevie, and then there's the older Stevie. That song was written in 1975, so I wanted the spirits to blend. That's why you see her leaving the white horse and then you see me leaving the white horse and then we're both together, because in my dreams as a little girl that white horse was very important.

That horse was so beautiful. (While shooting the video) we looked down out of my bedroom window and saw this horse - and there was a fog machine on and the actual sun was coming through all the evergreens in my backyard - and I was like, "That can't possibly be real." If that horse had a horn you would've thought, "OK, I've died and gone to fairyland," because it was so, so mystical and so real in its magicness. This horse was like Guinevere.