It's ideal timing for the release, as audiences crave a fix of live music – this is about as close as it gets at the moment.
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From her "all-time favourite tour", it documents concerts in Pittsburgh and Indianapolis, played to full houses. Stevie Nicks 24 Karat Gold Tour is a film based on two shows from her 67 city 2017 tour and is set for release in two weeks. They say God is in the details? Boy, there were a lot of details." "I didn’t remember how much work it was putting together a whole concert film. While for the first few months of the pandemic, Nicks was "really just numb", watching loads of television, in May, she flew to Chicago to edit the film. Stevie Nicks: 'We just dance around our subjects so people can relate to what we’re saying.' Can't we just get along? That’s what the song is really saying, can we join hands and get back on track." You’re frightened to say anything people might literally come after you." It’s very frightening here, it’s very scary.
All that work since the '60s has just disappeared from four years ago. We’ve slid back down the ice mountain to what it was like then. What’s happened now is I feel like we’ve gone back. "I’ve been worried about the whole civil rights thing since forever I lived through it. "What’s going on in this country is very, very divisive," she says. The power of the track reminds her of Edge of Seventeen, from her solo album Bella Donna, released in 1981. Two months ago, she realised now was the time to release the song, which she wrote with Greg Kurstin, who also produced and mixed it. Back then, Nicks had been watching a lot of documentaries from the 1950s, and one night she had a dream that she wrote down as a poem it would form the basis of Show Them The Way. The never-released track was written in 2008, when Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were vying for the presidential nomination, but it has a particular resonance in the context of the forthcoming election.