Stevie Nicks sounds exhilarated and exhausted.
She's thrilled to be on tour again with Fleetwood Mac and singer/keyboardist Christine McVie, who has rejoined after a 16-year retirement. But she sounds daunted by the band's schedule: 40 shows last fall, and now 40 more North American concerts, 20-some gigs in Europe and then possibly a tour of Australia.
"That is four shows a week, three hours a show. We are all over 65. That was a very difficult tour," said Nicks, whose band launched its On With the Show Tour in Minneapolis in September, and returns Friday to kick off the second leg of the tour at St. Paul's Xcel Energy Center.
"It's not like you the watcher aren't going to think, 'They are great and they are strong and they are athletic.' But we hobble back to our rooms after the show is over and hot water bottles are being filled and everyone is going, 'I don't think I'll make it to the end of the week.' "
Nicks, 66, burst into laughter. She was merely explaining, not complaining. She's delighted to have McVie, who'd retired to the British countryside because of a fear of flying, as her bestie once again.
"When we went on the road, I realized what an amazing friend she'd been of mine that I had lost and didn't realize the whole consequences of it till now," Nicks said last week from New York City.
"She brings the funny back into Fleetwood Mac. Before, it was just a boys' club. With her back, there's more of a feminine touch to the whole thing. I never want her to ever go out of my life again, and that has nothing to do with music and everything to do with her and I as friends."
Of course, McVie's return brings back the three-part vocal harmonies from the band's blockbuster mid-1970s lineup, as well as six or seven songs including "You Make Lovin' Fun." Said Nicks: "When you feed those songs back into the set, you really make the set brighter and more sparkly."