b. Sheryl Crow, 11 February 1962, Kennett, Missouri, USA.
Sheryl Crow's asymmetric and abrasive songwriting is not the stuff
for lazy listeners. She tackles difficult subjects head-on,
wrapping the spare lyrics in angular melodies which stick in the
mind. Raised in small town Missouri, Crow's father was a
"driven" lawyer who prosecuted the Ku Klux Klan for
ballot-rigging, and defended civil rights in many cases. Both he
and Crow's mother played in swing bands, she as vocalist, he as a
trumpeter with his close friend Leo. After Leo's sudden death,
Wendell put away his trumpet and did not play again until his
daughter recorded the tribute song, "We Do What We Can".
The Crow household also echoed to the sound of an ancient Magnavox
record player, belting out her parents' recordings of the Beatles,
Bob
Dylan, James Taylor and the Rolling
Stones.
Crow arrived in Los Angeles from St Louis in 1986 with $10,000
savings, having broken up with her boyfriend, and determined to be
a musician. A classical music degree from Missouri State
University and singing with college band Kashmir provided the
credentials, but with her savings gone Crow branched out into
session work. She soon became one of the most respected and
sought-after support artists in LA, working with Dylan, Eric
Clapton, Stevie
Wonder, Rod
Stewart, George
Harrison, Don
Henley, John
Hiatt, Joe
Cocker and Sinead
O'Connor. Bette
Midler and Wynonna
also recorded her songs. It had taken Crow over five years to
achieve this status, pulling herself back from the brink of
despair and over-indulgence at the end of the eighties. This
crisis in her life was a consequence of her first big break, an
18-month stint hacking round the world as a backing vocalist on Michael
Jackson's Bad tour. Three nights a week Jackson,
all leather and buckles, stroked the thigh of Shirley (sic) Crow,
all leather and lace, as they performed "I Just Can't Stop
Loving You". However, Crow's vocal ability impressed enough
rock luminaries that many doors were open to her when she
eventually returned to LA. Unfortunately, all the doors led into
rooms of Jackson-style pop, and Crow was sufficiently
strong-willed to resist, even as the doors slammed shut, one after
another, leaving her isolated and at rock-bottom. After some six
month's of retreat (much of it spent in bed, lacking the will to
get up) and a little help, she ventured back into the session
world.
Her own recording career has an unusual history. Producer Bill
Bottrell ran a Pasadena studio called Toad Hall, where Crow and
various other musicians used to meet and play informally every
week. They adopted Tuesday Night Music Club as a sobriquet,
and the experience provided the impetus for her debut album. The
inspiration was fortuitous and sorely-needed; she had already
spent over $250,000 recording a previous debut, only to decide
that it was far too polished and unrepresentative to be released. A&M
Records had signed her at the behest of Sting's
producer Hugh Padgham after she had done some session work for
him. Padgham produced her first attempt, but although the
relationship worked at a personal level, it failed to ignite the
musical spark they sought. Fortunately, the record company thought
enough of her talent that they agreed to stand by her and wait for
the replacement. The resulting Tuesday Night Music Club,
recorded with many of the musicians from the Toad Hall sessions,
was something of a sleeper when first issued in 1993. The album
took almost a year to make an impact, despite being plugged by a
succession of marginally successful singles, including "Run,
Baby, Run" and "Leaving Las Vegas" (US Top 50).
Believing that the album was sliding irrevocably into the
commercial shadow lands, Crow was about to begin recording its
follow-up when A&M suggested releasing "All I Wanna
Do" on a "what do we have to lose?" basis. The
track subsequently became one of the major singles of 1994,
reaching number 2 in the USA and number 4 in the UK, and pushing
the album into multi-platinum status. "All I Wanna Do"
is a surprising hit. The subject matter relates to a couple of
frustrated no-hopers, pouring time down the drain as they indulge
in an "early-morning beer buzz" and hoping in vain to
"have some fun/Before the sun goes down/Over Santa Monica
Boulevard". It was inspired by (previously) obscure poet Wyn
Cooper, writing coincidentally about a bar near Crow's Santa
Monica home. The idiosyncratic meter and conversational verse
structure defy the imposition of an accessible melody. Instead,
their memorable phrasing and imagery are contrasted with the
catchy and ironically up-beat refrain, and it was this which
tripped lightly from the lips of the record-buying public. The
remaining tracks were as good as or better than the hit single.
"Strong Enough" dealt with the strains placed on
relationships by PMS ("God, I feel like hell tonight … /
… Are you strong enough to be my man?"). Her earlier
experience of manoeuvring around rock's casting couches inspired
"What Can I Do For You" and "The Na-Na Song".
In November 1994, Crow duetted with Mick
Jagger on "Under My Thumb" as the Stones played
to 65,000 in Miami. The same year she had been one of only two
female acts to appear at Woodstock II, in front of 300,000. In
1995, she opened for the Eagles at their massive comeback
concerts, as well as touring extensively both on her own account
and with Joe
Cocker. Finding time to record a follow-up to Tuesday
Night Music Club proved difficult, but a new album was
released at the end of 1996. Retaining just enough of the
spontaneity, courage and flair of its predecessor, Sheryl Crow
won a Grammy for Best Rock Album at the February 1997 awards.
Success could become a habit for Crow if radio programmers could
discipline themselves not to overplay hit singles such as "If
It Makes You Happy" and "Everyday is A Winding
Road", which has the unfortunate effect of trivializing her
songs and making her voice grate on the ear. Both The Globe
Sessions and 1999's live collection provide a welcome
antidote to the AOR slickness of her second album.
? ALBUMS: Tuesday Night Music Club (A&M 1993)
****
, Sheryl Crow (A&M 1996)
***
, The Globe Sessions (A&M 1998)
***
, Sheryl Crow And Friends Live From Central Park (A&M
1999)
****
.
? VIDEOS: Live From The Palladium (VVL 1997), Rockin'
The Globe Live (Aviva 1999)..