![]() I mean, we got lucky: We had access to the original analog tapes, and we felt there was a space to do a beautiful deluxe version of this album that feels like a collector’s piece and really does this record’s legacy justice. ![]() I mean, I’d be hard-pressed to find somebody who hears the beginning of “Edge of Seventeen” and doesn’t start getting goosebumps… even if you only know that song because of its amazing feature in School of Rock! She got a bunch of her friends together - Tom Petty, Don Henley, and all these amazing musicians - and put together what I think is an essential record. It really felt like an opportunity for Stevie to really come into herself and make music that was entirely her own, which is not something I think she was really able to do while making music with Fleetwood Mac. The more I thought about it, the more interesting this feature became: this was Stevie Nicks’ first solo record, she wrote it while Fleetwood was recording Tusk. A lot of people on our team (and the label) freaked out and got really excited, so I listened to Bella Donna and realized that I knew all of these songs, and didn’t know they were all on this record! ![]() We thought about doing maybe a different Fleetwood Mac title, but more and more, we were like, “but what about Stevie’s solo albums?” I think everybody has this mythical idea of Stevie Nicks but, frankly, I hadn’t spent much time with the music. Talk me through how we picked this as our Essentials Record of the Month.Īlexandra Berenson, Head of A&R: We were discussing doing Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk and, for whatever reason, that wasn’t going to be a possibility. ![]() VMP: This one has been in the works for a minute. ![]()
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