Saturday, September 10, 2016

Stevie Nicks & Pretenders Flyaway Sweepstakes


Enter for a chance to win a flyaway trip for two to see Stevie Nicks and Pretenders on the 24 Karat Gold Tour at participating show of your choice!


Eligibility: The Live Nation: Stevie Nicks & Pretenders Flyaway Sweepstakes ("Promotion") is open only to natural persons who are legal residents of the United States of America or Canada (except Quebec) who have a valid social security or tax ID number, who are at least eighteen (18) years of age at the time of entry. 

PRIZES
Grand Prize: One (1) winner and guest will receive a 24 Karat Gold Tour Flyaway Package which includes:

  • Reserved tickets to see Stevie Nicks and Pretenders on the 24 Karat Gold Tour at a participating show of winner's choice.
  • Round-trip Airfare
  • 2-night stay hotel accommodations
  • $200 Cash Gift Card

DATES & ELIGIBILITY
Start : September 06, 2016 @ 12:00 pm (US/Pacific)
End :  October 12, 2016 @ 12:00 pm (US/Pacific)




Fleetwood Mac, Blues and Chemistry: The Mick Fleetwood Interview


Written by: Ken Sharp
Rock Cellar Magazine

Long before Fleetwood Mac owned the Billboard record charts for years in the mid to late ’70s with a string of mega-selling albums/singles culled from the albums Fleetwood Mac, Rumours and Tusk, their formative sound was rooted in something altogether different.

Fleetwood Mac mark 1 drew from a heavy blues-rock sound that stood in diametric opposition to their reputation as traditional pop alchemists in a later configuration featuring Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham.

Fronted by one of Britain’s most respected and revered lead guitar players, Peter Green, the early form of Fleetwood Mac was a raw blues band that won over audiences with its dynamic, blues-drenched sound with such signature classics as Albatross, Oh Well, Rattlesnake Shake and Black Magic Woman.

Full Interview at Rock Cellar Magazine


THE MICK FLEETWOOD BLUES BAND TOUR DATES:

Sept 16 - Aspen, CO - Belly Up Aspen
Sept 17 - Denver, CO - Ogden Theatre
Sept 18 - Telluride, CO - Telluride Blues & Brews Festival
Sept 20 - Los Angeles, CA - John Anson Ford Amphitheatre
Sept 21 - Solana Beach, CA - Belly Up Tavern
Sept 23 - Grass Valley, CA - Veterans Memorial Auditorium
Sept 24 - Monterey, CA - Golden State Theatre
Sept 25 - Napa, CA - Uptown Theatre
Sept 26 - San Francisco, CA - The Regency Ballroom
Sept 28 - Spokane, WA - Fox Theater
Sept 29 - Aberdeen, WA - D & R Theater
Sept 30 - Coquitlam, BC - Hard Rock Casino Vancouver
Oct 02  - Victoria, BC - University of Victoria/Farquhar Auditorium

Enter to WIN Tickets to see Stevie Nicks in LA at The Form 12/18

Stevie Nicks at The Forum
with Special Guest The Pretenders

Enter to win a pair of tickets to see STEVIE NICKS with Special Guest The Pretenders at The Forum on December 18th!

Enter Here: -> 100.3 The Sound

WIN Stevie Nicks Tickets - Tampa, Ft. Lauderdale, Chicago, Washington, Boston, Nashville, St. Paul, Phoenix



TAMPA:
Starting Monday, Ann is giving you the chance to win two tickets to see Stevie Nicks on Wednesday, November 2nd at Amalie Arena!

Listen to Morning Trivia with Ann Kelly on Monday morning for your chance to win!
Call (888) 723-9388
105.5 WDUV Lite Favorites

FT. LAUDERDALE:
She's 24 Karat Gold, She's a multi-platinum, award-winning music icon ... and she's returning to South Florida: Stevie Nicks -- The 24 Karat Gold Tour, with special guests, The Pretenders -- November 4th at BB&T Center. 

You can win your spot on the LITE FM Guest List
Listen to 101.5 for the LITE FM BrainScrambler with Julie Guy & Evelyn Curry as you're getting ready for work weekday mornings at 6:10 a.m., September 12th-September 16th.

And ... here's your bonus way to win:
Enter here to win two tickets to the Stevie Nicks/Pretenders concert at Hard Rock Live. 
101.5 Lite FM - Enter online

FT. LAUDERDALE:
Win Stevie Nicks Tickets!  Listen at 4 pm each weekday for DJ Holiday to provide the keyword for your chance to win 2 tickets for Stevie Nicks’ 24 Karat Gold Tour with Pretenders at BB&T Center on Friday, November 4th at 7 pm, courtesy of Live Nation. You can also enter online below! Msg & data rates apply. STOP 2 cxl.

FT. LAUDERDALE:
Win a pair of tickets to see Stevie Nicks, the 24 Carat Gold Tour with Special Guests The Pretenders at BB&T Center on Friday, November 4th!

CHICAGO:
Win Stevie Nicks Tickets. Stevie Nicks is returning to Chicago on December 3rd to play at the United Center! Enter for your chance to win a pair of tickets. Contest begins September 11th

WASHINGTON:
Win 2 Floor Seats to see STEVIE NICKS WITH PRETENDERS at the Verizon Center on November 14th! Listen to Craig Chambers on Monday morning starting at 9:40 for the PHRASE THAT PAYS.  Every hour at :40 minutes after the hour we will give you another word until 5:40pm.  Put them all together and be the 7th caller when STASH asks you to call and you might win!!
100.7 The Bay

BOSTON:
Enter now for your chance to win a pair of tickets to see Stevie Nicks and The Pretenders live at TD Garden on Tuesday, 11/15!
105 Lite Rock

PHOENIX:
Stevie Nicks Win Before You Can Buy Weekend
94.5 Coolfm

ST. PAUL:
Win Stevie Nicks Xcel Energy Tickets All Weekend
104.1 Jack FM

NASHVILLE:
Prize Grab with Mike Lindsey.  September 11th – September 15th – Join the fun at 8:25p for your chance to win a pair of tickets to see Stevie Nicks when she returns to Bridgestone Arena on November 7th.
MIX92.9 FM


Nicks discusses what the 24 Karat Gold Tour setlist might include

Stevie Nicks on Crafting a Setlist for 24 Karat Gold Tour, Possible Fleetwood Mac Album & Wishing She'd Performed With Prince
by Keith Caulfield
Billboard


"Whenever I play ‘Stand Back’ from this day forward, Prince will be standing next to me."

“I'm hoping that this will be as much fun for the audience as it's gonna be for me,” Stevie Nicks tells Billboard about her just-announced 24 Karat Gold Tour. The two-month trek -- launching Oct. 25 in Phoenix, with the Pretenders opening -- supports her 2014 effort 24 Karat Gold: Songs From the Vault, which marked her sixth top 10 album on the Billboard 200 chart.

The album was comprised of tracks Nicks had written and made demo recordings for decades ago but had never been included on any of her previous albums. Then, in 2014, she and producer Dave Stewart headed to Nashville with the demos and recorded entirely new versions of the songs to produce 24 Karat Gold. “I think this [tour] is going to be great,” Nicks says. “I think that all the fans are gonna have a ball. And I hope that they totally just dress up -- as Wendy Williams would say, 'Dress to the nines.' And come to party, and sing.”

Nicks says the setlist for the tour is still being shaped (it’s “about at 30 songs right now”) but will feature songs from 24 Karat Gold and possibly title cuts from some of her older albums, like “Bella Donna,” “Wild Heart” and “Trouble in Shangri-La.” She wants the show to “have its little explosions of fun” from the various parts of her career. Nicks also gives a hint to fans: “You know what, you might want to come to two shows, because you never know: There might be an alternative [set]list.”

It’s likely that familiar favorites like “Edge of Seventeen” and “Stand Back” will both turn up in the setlist, and for Nicks, “Stand Back” has a new emotional weight. The track was “written to” Prince’s “Little Red Corvette,” and she’s “brokenhearted” that she was never able to have him share the stage with her on the song. “Had I ever in a million years thought that we would lose him,” Nicks says, “I would have made sure that that would have happened. And it didn't. So that's just one of those things in your life where you so say, 'I really missed out.' Because he should have. That should have happened. So whenever I play ‘Stand Back’ from this day forward, Prince will be standing next to me. That is always going to be a joy.”

Tuesday, September 06, 2016

Stevie Nicks Balancing a Band With Solo Pleasures


Stevie Nicks on Her Fleetwood Mac ‘Team,’ Solo Joys and the 2016 Election
By Phoebe Reilly

Stevie Nicks says that one of her favorite things to do is light a candle, sit at the desk in her Los Angeles home and write poetry. Ms. Nicks, the rock ’n’ roll mystic who constitutes one-fifth of Fleetwood Mac’s classic lineup and wrote several of its most beloved hits (including “Dreams” and “Rhiannon”), is so prolific that six years after joining that multiplatinum California band in 1975, she embarked on a solo career with “Bella Donna,” which featured the memorable centerpiece “Edge of Seventeen.”

“In the beginning, I actually sat down and said, listen, I am doing this because I have way too many songs,” Ms. Nicks said. “I get frustrated because one of you walks by me every time I sit at the piano and says: ‘Oh my God, there she goes writing another song. We only need three or four from you.’ So what am I supposed to do?”

Eight solo albums later, Ms. Nicks, 68, is preparing to go on the road in support of her most recent releases, “In Your Dreams,” from 2011, and the 2014 album “24 Karat Gold: Songs From the Vault,” a collection of tracks written mainly between 1969 and 1987. A 28-city tour with the Pretenders as special guests begins on Oct. 25 in Phoenix. “I just woke up one morning and said I have two years off before Fleetwood Mac comes knocking on my door [for another tour],” she said. “Why would I want to sit around and do nothing?”

Fleetwood Mac has endured despite drug addictions and multiple intra-band relationships (and breakups) during the late ’70s, and recently completed a two-and-a-half-year, 122-date tour. (“I don’t twirl nearly as much as I used to,” said Ms. Nicks, whose past relationship with the guitarist Lindsey Buckingham provided a dose of drama.) When reached by phone, she was struggling to whittle down her set list. Here are edited excerpts from the conversation.

What’s the difference between touring behind your solo work and touring with Fleetwood Mac?

Fleetwood Mac is a team, and when you’re on a team everybody has the same vote — except in this particular team Lindsey has a little bit of a stronger vote than anybody else. I love being part of a team. We argue all the time, but we always have. In my band, there is no arguing. I am the boss. My solo career is probably the reason Fleetwood Mac is still together in 2016, because I was always happy to leave Fleetwood Mac, and I was always happy to come back, too.

You have said you thought Lindsey would like “24 Karat Gold” because so many of the songs are about him. What was his reaction?

Well, I don’t know. I don’t even know if he ever listened to the record and, honestly, I don’t care. I gave up caring about how everybody else in Fleetwood Mac feels about my solo work a long time ago. It’s not their thing. If my feelings were ever hurt, it was after “Bella Donna,” when I didn’t feel that anybody even listened to it. That was in 1981.

The ’80s have once again become a point of fascination in television shows like “Stranger Things.” Are you ever nostalgic?

I wouldn’t want to ever go back there. Yes, it was a lot of fun between 1975 and 1990 — until it wasn’t. I walk onstage every night now and do a three-hour show with Fleetwood Mac, and I have a great time up there. I wish I had known that I actually had the energy to do this entire set totally sober and get just as excited. On one hand, that makes me feel great and on the other it makes me sad that I ever did my first line of coke.

Your songs never lost the rawness associated with youthful emotion. Do you find that inspiration comes from your everyday life now, or is your imagination triggered by re-examining the past?

I would say both. Great stories inspire me. Some people have the ability to be extremely convincing, and other people can sing for 30 years and not convince you that they have lived a story. At 16 I could sing a love song well. My dad would go, “That’s a good song, honey.” And my mom would go, “That’s just beautiful, Stevie.” And they would be thinking, “We know for a fact that she’s only been on one date and she was back in two hours.”

“Don’t Stop” was the theme song of Bill Clinton’s campaign. What are your hopes for this election?

Of course I’m for Hillary Clinton. It’s hard to think of anything as amazing as that song was for Bill. He picked it out when he was driving around in a cab somewhere years before. When she wins by a landslide, I could gather together the Dixie Chicks, Billy Corgan and everybody who’s ever sung a version of “Landslide.” It’s not up-tempo, but it certainly would get the message across.

Are you a fan of Taylor Swift, Lady Gaga or any other major contemporary female artist?

I have so many favorites. I love Katy Perry. [And] I’m so happy for Adele right now. She’ll do what I did — she’ll figure out a way to stay in the business. The big difference between her and me is that she has a child, and that will change things for her, but I think Adele knows what she wants and I don’t think she’s in a hurry. And that’s great. If she needs to go away for three years, she doesn’t feel like somebody’s going to take her place. When you believe in yourself that much, you can take as long as you want.

A version of this article appears in print on September 6, 2016, on page C3 of the New York edition