The first American single-disc
Stevie Nicks compilation since 1991's
Timespace, Reprise's 2007
Crystal Visions: The Very Best of Stevie Nicks bests that previous set even if it falls just short of being truly definitive. The problem area lies in the place where it clearly attempts to distinguish itself from its predecessor: the inclusion of
Fleetwood Mac songs. Where
Timespace never attempted to explore this territory,
Crystal Visions does, but with the exception of "Silver Springs," all of the
Mac songs are re-recordings -- "Dreams" is performed with
Deep Dish, there's a live version of "Rhiannon," and a version of "Landslide" performed live with
the Melbourne Symphony. None of these is necessarily bad, but it's hard not to wish that the original versions of these hits were alongside the original versions of "Edge of Seventeen," "I Can't Wait," "Stand Back," "Talk to Me," "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around," and "Leather and Lace," since that would have resulted in a perfect
Nicks retrospective. With the live versions, this merely becomes a near-perfect compilation, representing the scope and range of
Nicks' career, as a solo artist, as a member of
Fleetwood Mac, and as a duet partner. The big songs from all of her career are here, along with some sharply chosen lesser-known tunes -- including a live version of
Led Zeppelin's "Rock and Roll" and "Sorcerer" -- that, along with good annotation by
Nicks (and in the case of the deluxe edition, a DVD of 13 of her videos), help paint a full portrait of
Nicks' career so well that it makes it all the more obvious that this compilation needs the originals of the
Mac songs to be perfect, but as it stands,
Crystal Visions is very good (indeed, it's the best
Nicks retrospective assembled to date). ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine