Thursday, April 7, 2011
Member Review: Stevie Nicks and Rod Stewart
BPD member Al Batross sent us this detailed report:
Stevie Nicks still looks and sounds great at 62-years-old. Same goes for Rod Stewart, now 66, great flaxen hair and all.
Stewart told me backstage that he felt that Nicks was “one of the greatest rock voices of the era and the 21st century.” I didn't get to spend any time with Stevie. Something seemed to go wrong with the lighting about 15 minutes before the show began and she was preoccupied supervising the way she wanted it to be.
Her 80-minute set was composed of solo, Fleetwood Mac and Buckingham-Nicks hits plus Secret Love, the first single from her new solo album, In Your Dreams, due May 3.
Nicks, in a sequined, corsetted and ruffled black dress, and wedge-heeled black boots - a downgrade from her signature black suede platforms of the ‘70s - could also still move, if more gingerly, as she performed a signature twirl just minutes into her set opener, Stand Back.
And with her interpretive dance moves, long hair, and numerous accessory changes in a little black tent at the back of the stage that saw her work her way through two gold shawls - including one for set highlight, Gold Dust Woman - she conjured up her image from Fleetwood Mac’s heyday, especially when she hovered around guitarist Waddy Wachtel with her arms outstretched.
Other set standouts included the Mac’s classics Dreams and Rhiannon - which included a video of unicorns and produced the first crowd clap along of the night - the poignant Landslide, which featured pictures of Nicks family including her late father, and Edge of Seventeen with a loving, long walk around the stage by Stevie, waving to her fans and paying tribute to her musicians.
With his arrival Stewart transformed Nicks stripped-down stage into an impressive gleaming white production reminiscent of a ‘60s British music variety show with 13 musicians joining him, including three horn players (two women in heels), for his set opener, a cover of The O’ Jays’ Love Train.
“Good evening my friends, what a night!” said Stewart dressed in a gold blazer, white shirt, black tie and black dress pants, a shiny black patent shoes.
He then delivered his own, Tonight’s The Night (Gonna Be Alright), prompting a major crowd singalong, before returning to another cover with Sam Cooke’s Havin’ A Party.
Then it was time for two collaborations with Nicks (now in her signature black suede platform boots) with one slightly improved over the other but neither great - Passion (not so good), and Young Turks (only marginally better).
How about them doing Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around, Whenever I Call You Friend, or Leather and Lace - i.e. a proper duet from Nicks’ back catalogue - instead?
Stewart, who ditched the blazer and untucked his shirt pretty early in the show, also dug deeper into his five-decade long stash of well-known covers with Cat Stevens’ The First Cut is the Deepest and Bob Dylan’s Forever Young, the latter which he dedicated to his six-week old son - and eighth child - Aidan.
But mainly he seemed intent on having a good time over the course of an hour and 40 minutes, dancing around the stage, and swigging red wine, as he returned to such covers as Sam Cooke’s Twistin’ The Night Away, Tom Waits’ Downtown Train - complete with a Brooklyn Bridge backdrop - Tim Hardin’s Reason To Believe, and Chuck Berry’s Sweet Little Rock And Roller.
Stewart second dedication of the night was “to all servicemen, past and present,” during Rhythm of My Heart, which prominently featured his three female back up singers.
His standout outfit, however, was a purple suit and lavender shirt, which he donned for his cover of Van Morrison’s Have I Told You Lately, his own Hot Legs, the latter which saw him kick soccer balls into the crowd in his trademark move, the show-ending Maggie May and the encore number, Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?
STEVIE NICKS SET LIST:
Stand Back
Secret Love
If Anyone Falls
Dreams
Sorcerer
Gold Dust Woman
Fall From Grace
Rhiannon
Landslide
Edge of Seventeen
ENCORE:
Love Is
ROD STEWART SET LIST
Love Train
Tonight’s the Night (Gonna Be Alright)
Havin’ a Party
Passion (with Stevie Nicks)
Young Turks (with Stevie Nicks)
The First Cut is the Deepest
Forever Young
Some Guys Have All The Luck
Twistin’ The Night Away
Downtown Train
Reason to Believe
You’re In My Heart (The Final Acclaim)
Sweet Little Rock and Roller
Rhythm of My Heart
Knock On Wood (by his backup singers)
Have I Told You Lately
Hot Legs
Maggie May
ENCORE:
Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?
Thanks so much, Al. Sounds like a great night.
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