Stevie Nicks - Stand Back [Dream-scape To Route 66 Dance Mix] MOTOCROSS VIDEOS - MOTOCROSS VIDEO CLIPS & MOTO-X MOVIES

1983\'s biggest-hit Stand Back by Stevie Nicks (Dreamscape To Route 66 Dance Mix). Edited in my own video remix tribute. An IBN Production. Hope you\'ll like it!Review.- Stephanie Lynn \"Stevie\" Nicks (born May 26, 1948) is an American singer and songwriter, best known for her work with Fleetwood Mac and a long solo career, which collectively have produced over twenty Top 40 hits. As a member of Fleetwood Mac, she was inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.\n\nDuring her senior year, Nicks met fellow student Lindsey Buckingham, with whom she formed the band Fritz along with friends Javier Pacheco and Calvin Roper. Between 1968 and 1971, the group became a popular attraction on the West Coast music scene, opening for Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Creedence Clearwater Revival. Ultimately, tensions arose over the amount of attention paid by fans to Nicks\' pouty allure, and after three years Fritz disbanded; Buckingham remained her partner, however, and soon became her lover as well.After moving to Los Angeles, the duo recorded their 1973 debut LP, Buckingham-Nicks. Despite a cover which featured the couple nude, the album flopped; however, it caught the attention of the members of Fleetwood Mac, who invited Buckingham and Nicks to join their ranks in 1974. In quick time, therevitalized group achieved unparalled success: after the LP Fleetwood Mac topped the charts in 1975, they recorded 1977\'s Rumours, which sold over 17 million copies and stood for several years as the best-selling album of all-time. \n\nMajor hit singles like \"Dreams\" and \"Rhiannon\" made Nicks a focalpoint of Fleetwood Mac, and in 1981 she took time off from the group to record her solo debut, Bella Donna, which hit Number One on the strength of the Top 20 hits \"Stop Draggin\' My Heart Around\" (a duet with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers), \"Leather and Lace\" (a duet with Don Henley) and \"Edge ofSeventeen (Just Like the White Winged Dove).\" After a return to Fleetwood Mac for the 1982 album Mirage (which featured her biggest-hit \"Gypsy\").\nIn the spring of 1983, Nicks worked on her second solo album. Inspired in part by the death of her close friend Robin Anderson from leukemia in late 1982, the album was recorded mostly live and retains a rock-inspired, live quality.\n\nNicks released The Wild Heart on June 10, 1983. The album featured much the same cast of musicians and producers, but it also introduced songwriter and performer Sandy Stewart who lent a synthesized sound prevalent in early 1980s rock music.\n\nThe Wild Heart went double platinum, reached #5 on the Billboard 200, and featured three hit singles: \"Stand Back\" (Billboard #5), \"If Anyone Falls\" (#14), and \"Nightbird\" (#33). Nicks says that she got the musical idea for the song \"Stand Back\" from Prince\'s \"Little Red Corvette\", and that Prince himself laid down some of the synthesizer parts used on the studio track. She adds that he declined credit for his minor contributions. Several promo only singles (songs released exclusively to radio) placed on the Mainstream Rock chart: \"Enchanted\" (#12); \"Nothing Ever Changes\" (#19); and \"I Will Run to You\" (#35), another duet with Tom Petty A lesser-known track, \"Beauty and the Beast\" featured lyrics devoted to Mick Fleetwood with whom Nicks later admitted to having a short love affair in the late 1970s.\n\nOn Memorial Day weekend (May 3 - May 5, 1983), Nicks performeda 90-minute set at the second US Festival at Glen Helen Regional Park in San Bernardino, California. She toured from June 1983 to November 1983 throughout the United States in support of The Wild Heart album, playing sports arenas and amphitheaters. Her band included Waddy Wachtel on lead guitar, Wizard on bass, Benmont Tench on organ, Roy Bittan on piano and electric piano, Liberty DeVitto on drums, and Bobbye Hall on percussion. The songs \"Beauty and the Beast\", \"Stand Back\", and \"If Anyone Falls\", all from The Wild Heart album, were mainstays of the tour set that year.\nA variety of songs were recorded for the album, but only ten made it to the final version. The title song, \"Wild Heart\", was partially written during 1981, and footage exists from a Rolling Stone magazine cover photo shoot where Nicks, while getting her make-up done, sings the work-in-progress to the instrumental line from Lindsey Buckingham\'s \"Can\'t Go Back\" (from Mirage).

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