Bella Donna | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | July 27, 1981 | |||
Recorded | Autumn 1980 – Spring 1981 | |||
Studio | Studio 55 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 41:48 | |||
Label | ||||
Producer | ||||
Stevie Nicks chronology | ||||
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Singles from Bella Donna | ||||
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Bella Donna is the debut solo studio album by American singer and songwriter Stevie Nicks. Released on July 27, 1981, the album peaked at number one on the US Billboard 200 in September of that year. Bella Donna was awarded platinum status by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 7, 1981, less than three months after its release, and in 1990 was certified quadruple-platinum for four million copies shipped. [1] Bella Donna spent nearly three years on the Billboard 200, from July 1981 to June 1984. [2]
The album spawned four hit singles during 1981 and 1982: the Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers-penned duet "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" (number 3), the Don Henley duet "Leather and Lace" (number 6), along with "Edge of Seventeen" (number 11) and the country-tinged "After the Glitter Fades" (number 32). [3]
Bella Donna would mark the beginning of Nicks' trend of calling upon her many musician friends and connections to fully realize her sparse demo recordings. Along with friends Tom Petty and Don Henley, Nicks brought in session musician Waddy Wachtel, Bruce Springsteen's E-Street Band pianist Roy Bittan, and Stax session man Donald "Duck" Dunn of Booker T. & the MGs. The album marked the first recording featuring Nicks' backing vocalists, Sharon Celani and Lori Perry, who still record and tour with Nicks today. [4] [5]
The album was also included in the "Greatest of All Time Billboard 200 Albums" chart. [6]
Nicks began work on Bella Donna in 1979, in between sessions for Fleetwood Mac's Tusk album, released in October that year. Nicks recorded various demo versions of songs in early and mid-1980 but these recordings were not used on the album. Following the end of the Tusk tour on September 1, 1980, work with a full band commenced under producer Jimmy Iovine. [7] [8]
Nicks recalled that the album was recorded piecemeal since several of the session musicians, including Waddy Watchel and Russ Kunkel, were operating under a tight schedule. "We didn't put on 50,000 guitars because we didn't have Waddy around long enough to do 50,000 guitar overdubs. We were lucky to get him to do one guitar part." The Bella Donna recording sessions also presented Nicks with an opportunity to work on arrangements without Lindsey Buckingham, who extensively assisted with arrangements on her Fleetwood Mac material. For Bella Donna, Nicks instead allowed the session musicians to develop their own ideas for the instrumentation based on the demos she created. [9]
Recording sessions continued until the spring of 1981 when the final songs for the album were completed: "Edge of Seventeen" and "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around". The 10-song, 42-minute album Bella Donna was released in the summer of 1981. Nicks wrote "Think About It" for her friend and Fleetwood Mac bandmate Christine McVie during the Rumours recording sessions, but the song was never completed until Bella Donna. [10] After the Glitter Fades was Nicks' oldest song on the record, having been written in 1972, while "Think About It", "Leather and Lace", and "Highway Man" were written in 1975. [9]
A number of finished songs did not make it on the album, including "Blue Lamp", which was released instead on Heavy Metal soundtrack later in 1981, and "Sleeping Angel", released on the Fast Times at Ridgemont High soundtrack in 1982. These two songs were included on Nicks' Enchanted boxed set in 1998, along with another unused Bella Donna session song, "Gold and Braid". Three more songs from these sessions, "If You Were My Love", "Belle Fleur" and "The Dealer", were finally released on Nicks' album 24 Karat Gold: Songs from the Vault (2014). "Julia" was a song written and recorded by Nicks during the Bella Donna recording process about her close friend Robin Anderson. [11] In total, Nick recorded 16 songs for the album, of which 10 were selected for Bella Donna. [9]
Bella Donna debuted at number 12 on the US Billboard 200 for the week dated 15 August 1981. It was the highest debut on the Billboard 200 since Stevie Wonder 's Hotter Than July entered the chart at number four in November 1980. [12] In late August, the album ascended to number two, the same week that Mick Fleetwood 's The Visitor album reached its peak of number 43. [13] [14] In reaching number two, Bella Donna outperformed the number four chart peak of Fleetwood Mac 's 1979 Tusk album. [13] By September, Bella Donna reached number one in the US. [15] One month later, the album received a platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). It was certified quadruple-platinum in 1990 for four million copies shipped in the United States. [1]
On her Enchanted boxed set release in 1998, remastered versions of some Bella Donna tracks ran noticeably longer in some instances, notably "Leather and Lace". Video footage of the album sessions can be found on the DVD portion of Nicks' retrospective release Crystal Visions – The Very Best of Stevie Nicks (2007).
Rhino released an expanded, three-disc version of Bella Donna on November 4, 2016. The first disc is the remastered original album. The second disc includes outtakes, alternative versions, demos, and material released on soundtracks. The third disc consists of live tracks from Nicks' "White Wing Dove" tour 1981, recorded at the Fox Wilshire Theatre in Los Angeles, California on December 13, 1981. [16] [17] [18]
Nicks underwent a short national tour in support of the album, starting on November 28, 1981, and finishing on December 13, 1981. The final night at The Wilshire Fox Theatre in Beverly Hills was recorded by HBO for a television special [19] and later released on VHS and LaserDisc video in many territories by CBS/Fox in 1982 as White Wing Dove – Stevie Nicks in Concert. The whole show was recorded, but only 9 tracks ("Gold Dust Woman", "Gold And Braid", "I Need to Know", an edited "Outside the Rain", "Dreams", "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around", "Sara", "Edge of Seventeen" and "Rhiannon") were shown on the TV special and released to video.
However, the live performance of "Leather and Lace" was used as a video promo for the single release (even though it was a solo version and did not feature Don Henley), and did surface on the 1986 VHS collection I Can't Wait, which featured six of Nicks' promo-clips between 1981 and 1985. These six promos were released on DVD as a special feature to the Australian issue of Fleetwood Mac – Mirage Tour in 2007.
On the 2016 Bella Donna Deluxe Edition, 14 tracks from the show - the ten aforementioned songs as well as "Angel", "After the Glitter Fades", "Bella Donna" and "How Still My Love" - were remastered and released (Disc 3), with "Outside the Rain" being restored to its full version. Previously, only two tracks ("Edge of Seventeen" and "Gold and Braid") were found on the boxset The Enchanted Works of Stevie Nicks (1998). "Blue Lamp" and "Think About It" were recorded and received audio broadcast on radio but were not televised, and as such have never been officially released.
Nicks' retrospective Crystal Visions – The Very Best of Stevie Nicks (2007) included the full live 1981 clip of "Edge of Seventeen" on the DVD supplement, with optional commentary from Nicks. She admits that her tears at the end of the song were due to her thoughts of having to join Fleetwood Mac in France the following day to begin recording the album Mirage , one of the key reasons why the 1981 tour was so short.
The White Wing Dove performance remains unreleased in its entirety, although it has been circulating for many years amongst fans as a bootleg.
Tour set list
Tour dates
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Mojo | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Record Collector | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Rolling Stone | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Smash Hits | 6/10 [25] |
Robin Katz of Smash Hits gave Bella Donna a six out of ten and "folk and country strains, woven between Nicks' famed harmonies and the texturized West Coast sound-mix." They ultimately felt that it heavily resembled a Fleetwood Mac album despite the contributions of Tom Petty and Roy Bittan. [25]
Writing for Rolling Stone , Stephen Holden praised the album's "superb arrangements" and highlighted the drumming of Russ Kunkel and guitar playing of Waddy Watchel. While he dismissed certain lyrics as "purple blather", he said that "Nicks' lost-in-the-stars eccentricity has its charms." [23]
In a retrospective review, Alex Henderson of AllMusic considered that Nicks' solo career was "off to an impressive start" and highlighted how the album "yielded a number of hits that seemed omnipresent in the '80s". [20] Henderson also wrote that Jimmy Iovine "wisely" avoided "over-producing" and kept the sound "organic". [20]
All tracks are written and composed by Stevie Nicks, except where noted.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
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1. | "Bella Donna" | 5:18 | ||
2. | "Kind of Woman" |
| 3:08 | |
3. | "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" (duet with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers) |
| 4:02 | |
4. | "Think About It" |
| 3:33 | |
5. | "After the Glitter Fades" | 3:27 |
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Edge of Seventeen" | 5:28 |
2. | "How Still My Love" | 3:51 |
3. | "Leather and Lace" (duet with Don Henley) | 3:55 |
4. | "Outside the Rain" | 4:17 |
5. | "The Highwayman" | 4:49 |
Total length: | 41:48 |
Released on 4 November 2016, this edition features remastered audio and consists of three discs, divided into: the original album; alternate versions, unreleased tracks, and "rarities"; and a 1981 concert. The information on disc two has been adapted from the Rhino website and the deluxe edition CD's liner notes. [16] [26]
All tracks are written by Stevie Nicks, except where noted.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Edge of Seventeen" (early take) | 6:41 | |
2. | "Think About It" (alternate version) |
| 4:45 |
3. | "How Still My Love" (alternate version) | 4:50 | |
4. | "Leather and Lace" (alternate version) | 4:17 | |
5. | "Bella Donna" (demo) | 3:31 | |
6. | "Gold and Braid" (unreleased version) |
| 4:14 |
7. | "Sleeping Angel" (alternate version) | 4:43 | |
8. | "If You Were My Love" (unreleased version) | 4:54 | |
9. | "The Dealer" (unreleased version) | 4:19 | |
10. | "Blue Lamp" (from the Heavy Metal soundtrack) | 3:48 | |
11. | "Sleeping Angel" (from the Fast Times at Ridgemont High soundtrack) | 4:40 | |
Total length: | 50:42 |
Adapted from the album's liner notes. [27]
Musicians
Additional musicians
Production
| Artwork
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Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
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Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Australia | — | 100,000 [43] |
Canada (Music Canada) [44] | 2× Platinum | 200,000^ |
New Zealand (RMNZ) [45] | Gold | 7,500^ |
United States (RIAA) [46] | 4× Platinum | 4,000,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
Stephanie Lynn Nicks is an American singer-songwriter, known for her work with the band Fleetwood Mac and as a solo artist.
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Hard Promises is the fourth studio album by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers released on May 5, 1981, on Backstreet Records.
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The Wild Heart is the second solo studio album by American singer and songwriter Stevie Nicks. Recording began in late 1982, shortly after the end of Fleetwood Mac's Mirage Tour. After the death of her best friend, Robin Anderson, and with new appreciation for her life and career, Nicks recorded the album in only a few months and was released on June 10, 1983, a year after Fleetwood Mac's Mirage album. It peaked at number five on the US Billboard 200 and achieved platinum status on September 12, 1983. The album has shipped 2 million copies in the US alone.
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"Edge of Seventeen" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Stevie Nicks from her debut solo studio album Bella Donna (1981), released as the third single from the album on February 4, 1982. The lyrics were written by Nicks to express the grief resulting from the death of her uncle Jonathan and the murder of John Lennon during the same week of December 1980. The song features a distinctive, chugging 16th-note guitar riff, drum beat and a simple chord structure typical of Nicks' songs. The song's title for the single release was "Edge of Seventeen (Just Like the White Winged Dove)". In the United States, "Edge of Seventeen" just missed out on the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 11. Despite this, it became one of Nicks' most enduring and recognizable songs and has been covered by several artists. In 2021, it was ranked No. 217 on Rolling Stone's list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".
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This is the solo discography of the American singer-songwriter Stevie Nicks.
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The Visitor is an album by Mick Fleetwood, released by RCA Records in 1981. All the songs were recorded in Accra, Ghana between January and February 1981 at the "Ghana Film Industries, Inc. Studio" and produced by Richard Dashut, and were later mixed in various studios in England. The album has been re-released several times, including a US CD release by Wounded Bird Records on October 18, 2011.
"Sara" is a song written by singer-songwriter Stevie Nicks of the British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, which was released as a single from the 1979 Tusk double LP. The song peaked at No. 7 in the US for three weeks, No. 37 in the UK for two weeks, No. 11 in Australia, and No. 12 in Canada.
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