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Your Dreams [Forest Green 2 LP]
Barnes and Noble
Your Dreams [Forest Green 2 LP]
Current price: $18.99
Barnes and Noble
Your Dreams [Forest Green 2 LP]
Current price: $18.99
Size: CD
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Perhaps it's all down to
Stevie Nicks
being at peace with her legacy, perhaps she was coaxed back toward the '70s by producer
David A. Stewart
, perhaps it's the presence of
Lindsey Buckingham
on
"Soldier's Angel,"
or perhaps it's the fact that she excavated a 1976 song called
"Secret Love"
for this album, but
In Your Dreams
is
Stevie
's first solo album to embrace the sound of
Fleetwood Mac
at their prime.
Nicks
never exactly ran away from
the Mac
, but her '80s solo hits were tempered by a steely demeanor and her subsequent solo albums strove too hard to recapture the magic that
conjures so easily. Despite the quite deliberate connections to her past,
never feels labored; the hippie folk drifts into the mystic pop, punctuated by some witchy rock that may be polished a bit too sharply by
Stewart
, yet he manages to keep everything warm despite its cleanliness.
's real coup is focus: he keeps everything tight and purposeful, letting each element snugly fit together so
winds up capturing the essence of
, which -- as her previous three decades of solo albums prove -- is no easy feat. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Stevie Nicks
being at peace with her legacy, perhaps she was coaxed back toward the '70s by producer
David A. Stewart
, perhaps it's the presence of
Lindsey Buckingham
on
"Soldier's Angel,"
or perhaps it's the fact that she excavated a 1976 song called
"Secret Love"
for this album, but
In Your Dreams
is
Stevie
's first solo album to embrace the sound of
Fleetwood Mac
at their prime.
Nicks
never exactly ran away from
the Mac
, but her '80s solo hits were tempered by a steely demeanor and her subsequent solo albums strove too hard to recapture the magic that
conjures so easily. Despite the quite deliberate connections to her past,
never feels labored; the hippie folk drifts into the mystic pop, punctuated by some witchy rock that may be polished a bit too sharply by
Stewart
, yet he manages to keep everything warm despite its cleanliness.
's real coup is focus: he keeps everything tight and purposeful, letting each element snugly fit together so
winds up capturing the essence of
, which -- as her previous three decades of solo albums prove -- is no easy feat. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine