The chemical shift is probably quite similar, unless there are some kind of solvent effects. The major difference in SSNMR is, that (unless you have a single crystal) you "see" the whole chemical shift tensor. The shielding value depends on the orientation relative to the magnetic field. in solution, you only see the average (isotropic) signal. in ssnmr without magic angle spinning, you see the all possible orientations (weighted with their probability). summa summarum: you have BROAD lines.