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01 |
Run, Baby, Run |
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Written by Bill Bottrell, David Baerwald, and Sheryl Crow.
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04:53 |
02 |
Leaving Las Vegas |
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05:09 |
03 |
Strong Enough |
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03:10 |
04 |
Can't Cry Anymore |
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03:42 |
05 |
Solidify |
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04:07 |
06 |
The Na-Na Song |
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03:12 |
07 |
No One Said It Would Be Easy |
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05:28 |
08 |
What I Can Do for You |
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04:15 |
09 |
All I Wanna Do |
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04:33 |
10 |
We Do What We Can |
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05:39 |
11 |
I Shall Believe |
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05:34 |
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Country |
USA |
Original Release Date |
1993 |
Cat. Number |
540 126-2 |
Spars |
DDD |
Sound |
Stereo |
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Producer |
Bill Botrell |
Engineer |
Blair Lamb |
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Tuesday Night Music Club are:
David Baerwald - guitar
Bill Bottrell - guitar, keys, bass, etc.
Sheryl Crow - vocals, piano, guitar, hammond
Kevin Gilbert - keys, guitar, bass, drums, etc.
Brian MacLeod - drums
David Ricketts - bass
Dan Schwartz - bass
Produced by Bill Bottrell
Engineered by Blair Lamb
Sheryl Crow
Born Feb 11, 1962
Making the trek westward from Missouri to California in 1986 might have seemed like big doings, but that was only the beginning for a young Sheryl Crow. How about touring the world with Michael Jackson and Don Henley? Been there. How about having Wynonna and Celine Dion record your songs? Done that. All this before she even had her own record deal, which came through the assistance of producer Hugh Padgham in 1991. Crow's first attempt at making an album, with Padgham producing, proved to be overly slick, not showcasing her immense talent. A&M Records chose not to release it, instead offering her another go at it with Kevin Gilbert. After a bumpy start, they teamed with producer/engineer Bill Bottrell and singer/songwriter David Baerwald and began jam sessions every Tuesday night. What emerged in the end was Crow's debut album, Tuesday Night Music Club, which was released in the fall of 1993. Although it didn't immediately skyrocket up the charts, the label stayed with it, releasing several singles, including "Can't Cry Anymore" and "Strong Enough," before "All I Wanna Do" and " Leaving Las Vegas" became the mega-hits of 1994.
After touring extensively for almost two years supporting Tuesday Night Music Club, Crow finally began work on her follow-up record. Her self-produced Sheryl Crow hit the streets in 1996 with a little more musical (and lyrical) eclecticism and edge than had been previously heard. She was coming into her own as an artist, finding her voice and her place in the musical world, proving she had the goods and that her success was not just the luck of the draw. Even her appearance took on the slightest bit of grit, accentuating her strength as a woman, songwriter, and artist. The singles "If It Makes You Happy," "Every Day Is a Winding Road," and "Maybe Angels" sealed the multi-platinum fate of Crow's sophomore effort. What followed in 1998 was a step even further - The Globe Sessions. Never one to toss out mediocre work just to please the masses or the suits, Crow pushed her own artistic envelope, balancing her trademark intelligently melodic tunes, such as "My Favorite Mistake" and "Anything But Down," with a number of brooding, introspective works, and again found success. As the natural course of record releases goes, 1999 was the perfect opportunity for either a greatest hits or a live album, and thus Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live in Central Park was born. Talk about friends, Keith Richards, Dixie Chicks, Chrissie Hynde, Eric Clapton, and more are included, as are most of her hits from over the years. - Kelly McCartney
1993 Tuesday Night Music Club A&M
1996 Sheryl Crow A&M
1998 Sheryl Crow [Bonus CD] Polygram
1998 Sheryl Crow [Japan] Import
1998 The Globe Sessions A&M
1999 The Globe Sessions [Australia Bonus CD] Polygram
1999 Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live in Central Park A&M
1999 Globe Sessions [Japan Bonus Tracks] Polygram
2000 Globe Sessions [Import Bonus Tracks] Polygram
2002 C'mon C'mon Interscope
2002 C'mon C'mon [UK Bonus Tracks] Universal
2002 C'mon C'mon [Japan Bonus Tracks] Universal