Stevie Nicks shares what she did during her shoulder fracture recovery
Stevie Nicks stepped away from touring to heal from shoulder fracture
Stevie Nicks has spilled on what she did during the time she was healing from shoulder fracture.
In an interview with People Magazine, the legendary singer revealed some of the artists she listened to while she was recovering.
Nicks, who canceled a few shows earlier this year to heal from shoulder recovery, returned to stage in October. She told the outlet, "I'm all over the internet. I listen to a lot of current bands."
She listed some names, including, The Midnight, The White Kites and Night Traveler. "And all through my recovery, I've listened."
"That's the one thing that I have done physically through this recovery, is to really listen to all this younger music that I love. And when I wasn't feeling well at all, it just carried me on a cloud through this whole thing," Nicks noted.
Additionally, the singer also noted that "All my tapes are really curated by me. I'm not high-tech at all."
Nicks also shares that in the past five or six years, she has started using radio functions on platforms like Pandora and Spotify, noting, "I push the thumbs-up. Love this. Don't love that. Love this."
She explained, "Just to lay in bed and stare at the ceiling is not my idea of a good time. That kept me dancing to a point, just kind of Snoop Dogging around my place, because you can be pretty beat-up, and you can still dance if inspirational music comes on."
Adding, "The power of music to heal you is amazing. If I didn't have those tapes, I don't know what I would have done."
On the other hand, Stevie Nicks has also been listening to Buckingham Nicks lately, the 1973 album she recorded with her ex and former bandmate Lindsey Buckingham.
"If you can ever just sit in a big room with somebody who has a great stereo or whatever you want to call it, great speakers, or lives next door to a studio, just go in and listen to it, because you'll hear stuff in Buckingham Nicks that none of us have heard since that record came out because it was only pressed at one time and went out that one time," Nicks said.
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