Sheryl Suzanne Crow
(born February 11, 1962) is an American singer-songwriter and musician. Her music blends rock, country and pop into one mainstream sound, and she has won nine Grammy Awards. Crow is also a political activist.
She has performed with the Rolling Stones and has sung duets with Mick Jagger, [1] Michael Jackson, Eric Clapton and Kid Rock, among others, and appeared on backing vocals for Tina Turner. Crow's recordings have appeared on the soundtracks to Cars
, Erin Brockovich
and Tomorrow Never Dies
, among many others.
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Early life
Sheryl Suzanne Crow was born in the
Missouri Bootheel in
Kennett,
Missouri on February 11, 1962. Kennett is the county seat of
Dunklin County, MO. Her parents are Wendell, a trumpet player and lawyer, and Bernice Crow, a piano teacher.
[2] The third child of the family, she has three siblings: older sisters Kathy and Karen and younger brother Steven.
While studying at
Kennett High School, Crow was a majorette and an All-State
track athlete, medaling in the 75-meter low hurdles. She also joined the
Pep Club, the
National Honor Society,
Future Farmers of America, Freshman Maid, Senior Maid and Paperdoll Queen. She then enrolled at the
University of Missouri, in
Columbia, and received a
Bachelor of Arts degree in Music Composition, Performance and Education. While in college, Crow sang in a local band, Cashmere. She was a member of the
Kappa Alpha Theta social sorority,
Sigma Alpha Iota International Music Fraternity for Women, and the
Omicron Delta Kappa Society.
[3] Later, Crow was awarded an
honorary doctorate from the
Southeast Missouri State University, in
Cape Girardeau, Missouri.
[4]
Early career
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After graduating from college, Crow worked as a music teacher at the Kellison
elementary school, in
Fenton, Missouri.
[5] Teaching during the day allowed her the opportunity to sing in bands on weekends. Later, she was introduced to local musician and producer Jay Oliver. He had a thriving studio in the basement of his parents' home, in
St. Louis, and helped her by using her in advertising
jingles. Her first jingle was a back-to-school spot for the St. Louis department store
Famous-Barr.
McDonald's and
Toyota commercial jingles soon followed. She was quoted in a
60 Minutes
segment as saying she made $40,000 on her McDonald's commercial alone.
[6]
Crow toured with
Michael Jackson as a backup vocalist during his
Bad World Tour from 1987-1989 and often performed with Jackson on "
I Just Can't Stop Loving You".
[7]
Crow also sang in the short-lived
Steven Bochco drama,
Cop Rock
, in 1990. The following year, she performed "
Hundreds of Tears", which was included in the
Point Break
soundtrack.
In 1992, Crow recorded her first attempt at her debut album with
Phil Collins' producer
Hugh Padgham. The self-titled debut album was slated to be released on September 22, 1992, but was ultimately rejected by her label.
[8] However, a handful of cassette copies of the album were leaked along with press folders to be used for album publicity. This album has been widely dispersed via file sharing networks and fan trading over the years. In the meantime, Crow's songs were recorded by major artists such as
Celine Dion and
Wynonna Judd.
She then began dating
Kevin Gilbert and joined him in an ad hoc group of musicians known to everyone in the group as the "Tuesday Music Club".
[9] Group members, Gilbert,
David Baerwald and
David Ricketts (both formerly of
David & David),
Bill Bottrell,
Brian MacLeod and
Dan Schwartz [10] share songwriting credits with Crow on her debut album,
Tuesday Night Music Club
.
The group existed as a casual songwriting collective prior to its association with Crow, but rapidly developed into a vehicle for her debut album after her arrival. Her relationship with Gilbert became acrimonious soon after the album was released, and disputes arose about songwriting credits. Gilbert was found dead in his sparsely furnished Los Angeles apartment on May 17, 1996, apparently an accidental death.
Tuesday Night Music Club
went on to sell more than 7 million copies in the US and UK during the 1990s. The album also won Crow three
Grammy Awards, in 1995: Record of the Year, Best New Artist and Best Female Vocal Performance.
1990s: early mainstream success
Crow appeared in the "New Faces" section of
Rolling Stone
in 1993. The album featured many of the songs written by Crow's friends, including the second single, "
Leaving Las Vegas". The album was slow to garner attention, until "
All I Wanna Do" became an unexpected smash hit in the spring of 1994. As she later stated in
People
, she found an old poetry book in a used book store in the L.A. area and used a poem as lyrics in the song.
[11] The singles "
Strong Enough" and "Can't Cry Anymore" were also released, with the first song ("Strong Enough") charting at #5 on Billboard and "Can't Cry Anymore" hitting the Top 40.
[12] Crow received several
Grammy awards in 1994: Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for "All I Wanna Do"; Record of the Year for "All I Wanna Do"; and Best New Artist. She performed at the 1994 and 1999
Woodstock Festivals, as well as the
Another Roadside Attraction in 1997.
[13]
Crow supplied background vocals to the song "
The Garden of Allah" from
Don Henley's 1995 album
Actual Miles: Henley's Greatest Hits
. In 1996, Crow released her
self titled second album.
[14] The album had songs about
abortion,
homelessness and
nuclear war. The debut single, "
If It Makes You Happy", became a radio success and netted her two Grammy awards for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and Best Rock Album.
[15] Other singles included "
A Change Would Do You Good", "
Home" and "
Everyday Is A Winding Road". Crow produced the album herself. The album was banned from sale at
Wal-Mart; in "Love Is A Good Thing," Crow suggests that guns sold by Wal-Mart too easily fall into the hands of children.
[16]
In 1997, Crow contributed the theme song to the
James Bond film
Tomorrow Never Dies
. Her song
"Tomorrow Never Dies" was nominated for a
Grammy Award and Best Original Song Golden Globe.
[17] [18] Crow collaborated on
Scott Weiland's 1998 album,
12 Bar Blues
.
[19]
In 1998 Crow released
The Globe Sessions
. During this period, she discussed in interviews having gone through a deep
depression, and there was speculation about a brief affair with
Eric Clapton. The debut single from this album, "
My Favorite Mistake", was rumored to be about him, although Crow claims otherwise about a philandering ex-boyfriend.
[20] [21] Crow has refused to say who the song was about telling
Billboard Magazine on the release of her album. "Oh, there will be just so much speculation, and because of that there's great safety and protection in the fact that people will be guessing so many different people and I'm the only person who will ever really know. I'm really private about who I've had relationships with, and I don't talk about them in the press. I don't even really talk about them with the people around me."
[22] Despite the difficulties in recording the album, Crow told the BBC in 2005 that: "My favorite single is 'My Favorite Mistake'; it was a lot of fun to record and it's still a lot of fun to play."
[23] The album won Best Rock Album at the 1998 Grammy Awards. It was re-released in 1999, with a bonus track, Crow's cover of the
Guns N' Roses song "
Sweet Child o' Mine", which was included on the
soundtrack of the film
Big Daddy
. The song won the 1999 Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance.
[24] Other singles included "
There Goes the Neighborhood", "
Anything But Down" and "The Difficult Kind". Crow won Grammy best female rock vocal performance for "There Goes the Neighborhood" in 2001.
[25]The Globe Sessions
peaked at #5 on the
Billboard 200 chart, achieving US sales of 2 million as of January 2008.
[26]
Later in 1998, Crow took part in a live concert in tribute to
Burt Bacharach, in which she contributed vocals on
One Less Bell to Answer, while wearing a full-length black formal dress.
[27]
In 1999, Crow also made her acting debut as an ill-fated drifter in the
suspense/drama The Minus Man
, which starred her then-boyfriend
Owen Wilson as a
serial killer.
She also released a live album called
Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live From Central Park
. The record featured Crow singing many of her hit singles with new musical spins and guest appearances by many other musicians including
Sarah McLachlan,
Stevie Nicks, the
Dixie Chicks, Keith Richards and Clapton. "There Goes the Neighborhood" was included in the album, eventually winning the Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. Crow also appeared on
Return of the Grievous Angel: A Tribute to Gram Parsons
, duetting with
Emmylou Harris on the Parsons song, "Juanita".
2000s: expanding career
Crow had been involved with the
Scleroderma Research Foundation (SRF) since the late 1990s, performing at fund-raisers and befriending
Sharon Monsky. In 2002, as a result of her friend Kent Sexton dying from
scleroderma, she interrupted work on her new album
C'mon C'mon
to record the traditional hymn "Be Still, My Soul", to be played at his funeral. In November of that year it was released as a single, with the proceeds going to SRF.
[28] Crow's "Steve McQueen" won the Female Rock Vocal Performance Grammy.
[29]
Crow opposed the
2003 invasion of Iraq, wearing a shirt that read "I don't believe in your war,
Mr. Bush!" during a performance on
Good Morning America
and posting an open letter explaining her opposition on her website.
[30] Crow, performing with Kid Rock at the 45th annual Grammy Awards, wore a large peace sign and a guitar strap with the words "No War."
[31]
Crow recorded the song "Kiss That Girl" for the film
Bridget Jones's Diary
. She also recorded a cover version of
the Beatles' song "Mother Nature's Son" for the film
I Am Sam
. Crow duetted with rapper
Kid Rock on the crossover hit single "
Picture". She also assisted Rock on the track "Run Off to L.A."
Crow collaborated with
Michelle Branch on the song "Love Me Like That" for Branch's second album,
Hotel Paper
, released in 2003.
[32] Crow was featured on the
Johnny Cash album
American III: Solitary Man
in the song "Field of Diamonds" as a background vocalist, and also played the accordion for the songs "Wayfaring Stranger" and "Mary of the Wild Moor".
[33] In 2003, Crow released a greatest hits compilation called
The Very Best of Sheryl Crow
. It featured many of her hit singles, as well as some new tracks. Among them was the ballad "
The First Cut is the Deepest" (originally a
Cat Stevens song), which became her biggest radio hit since "All I Wanna Do". She also released the single "
Light In Your Eyes", which received limited airplay. "The First Cut is the Deepest" earned her two
American Music Awards for Best Pop/Rock Artist and Adult Contemporary Artist of the Year, respectively.
In 2004, Crow appeared as a
musical theater performer in the
Cole Porter biopic De-Lovely
.
Wildflower
Her fifth studio album
Wildflower
was released in September 2005. Although the album debuted at #2 on the
Billboard
charts, it received mixed reviews and was not as commercially successful as her previous albums. In December 2005, the album was nominated for a Best Pop Vocal Album Grammy, while Crow was nominated for a Best Female Pop Vocal Performance Grammy for the first single "
Good Is Good". However, she ultimately lost in both categories to
Kelly Clarkson. The album got a new boost in 2006 when the second single was announced as "
Always on Your Side", re-recorded with British musician
Sting and sent off to radio, where it was quickly embraced at
Adult Top 40. The collaboration with Sting resulted in a Grammy-nomination for Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals. As of January 2008,
Wildflower
sold 949,000 units in the U.S.
In 2006, Crow contributed the opening track, "Real Gone", to the
soundtrack for
Disney/
Pixar's animated film
Cars
.
[34] She also voices Elvis in the film. Crow was diagnosed with early-stage
breast cancer in mid-February 2006, her doctors stating that "prognosis for a full recovery is excellent."
[35]
Crow's first concert after her cancer diagnosis was on May 18 in
Orlando,
Florida where she played to over 10,000 information technology professionals at the SAP Sapphire Convention. Her first public appearance was on June 12, when she performed at the Murat Theater in
Indianapolis,
Indiana.
The singer also appeared on
Larry King Live
on
CNN on August 23, 2006. In this show she talked about her comeback, her breakup with
Lance Armstrong, her past job as Michael Jackson's backup singer, and her experience as a breast cancer survivor.
In late 2006, Crow was nominated for a
Golden Globe Award for the song "Try Not To Remember" (Best Original Song category) from the film
Home of the Brave
.
Crow wrote a foreword for the book
Crazy Sexy Cancer Tips
, author Kris Carr's book that was based on her 2007 documentary film
Crazy Sexy Cancer
. Crow contributed her
cover of the Beatles's "
Here Comes the Sun" on the
Bee Movie
soundtrack in November 2007.
[36] She contributed background vocals to the
Ryan Adams song "Two" from the album
Easy Tiger
.
Detours
Crow returned with her sixth studio album
Detours
which was released on February 5, 2008.
Detours
debuted at number two on the U.S.
Billboard 200 chart, selling about 92,000 copies in its first week and an additional 52,000 copies in its second week.
[37]
Detours
was recorded at Crow's Nashville farm. Her son, Wyatt, makes an appearance on the song "Lullaby for Wyatt," which is featured in the movie
Grace Is Gone
. "The songs are very inspired by the last three years of events in my life," Crow said of a time that found her battling breast cancer and splitting with partner
Lance Armstrong.
"
Shine Over Babylon" was the first promotional single from the album (download only). The first 'official' single to be released from the album was "
Love Is Free", followed by "Out of Our Heads".
Crow has also recorded a studio version of "
So Glad We Made It" for the "Team USA Olympic Soundtrack" in conjunction with the 2008 U.S. Olympic team sponsors AT&T. Crow has also stated that $1 of each ticket purchased for her 2008 tour will be donated to the . At the 2009 CMT awards Sheryl Crow announced that she's currently working on a new album, the release date is unkown.
Personal life
On the red carpet at the 2006
CMA Awards, Crow reported that she was working on a
country music album. According to
Entertainment Weekly
,
Wildflower
, at one point was to be followed, in about six months, by a "pop record." According to Crow,
Wildflower
was the "art record," which she felt she had earned the right to make, following the success of
The Very Best of Sheryl Crow
.
Crow began dating cyclist
Lance Armstrong in 2003. The couple announced their engagement in September 2005 and their split in February 2006.
In 2006 Crow was treated for
breast cancer, and had "minimally invasive" surgery in Los Angeles in February 2006, followed by
radiation therapy.
[38] [39]
At the 2006
CMA Awards, Crow performed the songs "What You Give Away" with
Vince Gill, and "
Building Bridges" with
Brooks & Dunn and Vince Gill.
Crow is due to appear in a series of magazine advertisements in February for
Revlon. In this, she uses the
Buddy Holly classic "
Not Fade Away" to sell the cosmetics of her sponsor. The
iTunes page states that net proceeds will benefit
breast cancer research.
Crow was featured in the February 21, 2008 issue (#1046) of
Rolling Stone
. The article discusses how the singer beat cancer and returned with
Detours
.
Rolling Stone
says "Detours is Crow's most powerful and most personal record yet."
On May 11, 2007, Crow announced on her official website that she had
adopted a two-week-old boy named Wyatt Steven Crow. The child was born on April 29, 2007.
[40] She and Wyatt make their home on a farm outside Nashville, Tennessee.
[41]
Global warming activist
Laurie David and Crow participated in a "Virtual March" that began on April 9 2008. at
SMU in
Dallas, Texas and continued on to select cities, including:
College Station, Texas;
Baton Rouge, Louisiana;
New Orleans;
Birmingham, Alabama;
Auburn;
Gainesville, Florida;
Atlanta, Georgia;
Charlottesville, Virginia;
Nashville, Tennessee;
Chapel Hill, North Carolina;
College Park, Maryland and
Washington, D.C.. The 90-minute presentation will include remarks by David, a short performance by Crow, clips from
An Inconvenient Truth
, clips from top comedians, and a dialogue with students. She worked with
Reverb, a non-profit environmental organization, for the Stop Global Warming tour.
[42]
At the 2007
White House Correspondents Dinner, Crow engaged
Karl Rove in a heated exchange about the
Bush administration's
policies on global warming.
[43] [44]
Crow lent her voice to the 2008 song, Just Stand Up. The proceeds benefited Stand Up to Cancer. As a result of SU2C fundraising endeavors, the SU2C scientific advisory committee, overseen by the
American Association for Cancer Research was able to award 73.6 million dollars towards novel, groundbreaking cancer research.
[45]
Crow participated with First Lady
Michelle Obama in a forum for promising girls in the
Washington, D.C. public schools in March 2009.
Other contributions
Crow was a main stage act at
Lilith Fair and has contributed many songs to movie soundtracks and special projects that were never made available elsewhere. They include: "
D'yer Mak'er" (
Encomium
:
Led Zeppelin Tribute), "Solitaire" (from
The Carpenters' tribute album
If I Were A Carpenter
), "Là Ci Darem la Mano" from
Don Giovanni (
Pavarotti & Friends For War Child
), and "Resuscitation" (
The Faculty
). In 2006, Crow contributed the opening track, "Real Gone", to the
soundtrack for
Disney/
Pixar's animated film
Cars
. She also voices Elvis in the film.
The song "All Kinds of People," from
Tina Turner's 1996 album
Wildest Dreams, was penned by Crow, but Crow's version was never released. However, Crow contributed her vocals to the song on Turner's album.
In 1996 Crow recorded the song "On The Outside" for
The X-Files TV show's soundtrack
Songs in the Key of X
.
Crow participated in a charity concert for Don Henley's Walden Woods. The concert was released to AT&T customers on a limited edition CD.
Crow recorded the song "Kiss That Girl" for the film
Bridget Jones's Diary
. She also recorded a cover version of
the Beatles' song "Mother Nature's Son" for the film
I Am Sam
.
Crow recorded "
Old Habits Die Hard" as a duet with
Mick Jagger on the
soundtrack for the movie remake
Alfie
in 2004.
She collaborated with
Stevie Nicks, producing and performing on several tracks on Nicks' 2001 album,
Trouble in Shangri-La
, and later toured with her. Crow also appears with Nicks in her video for
Sorcerer
. Another track, "It's Only Love", was written by Crow and she later released her own version on
C'Mon C'Mon
. Nicks had also worked with Crow on the soundtrack to the film
Practical Magic
(1998). Nicks had also covered Crow's song "Somebody Stand By Me", which was used on the soundtrack to
Boys on the Side
(1995). Nicks wrote the lyrics to, and performed backing vocals on the song "You're Not the One", which Crow released as a B-side to "
Soak Up the Sun" in 2002. Crow and Nicks are close friends and Crow inducted
Fleetwood Mac into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.
Crow provided backing vocals for the
Counting Crows song "
American Girls" off their 2002 album
Hard Candy
.
Crow collaborated with US
singer-songwriter Michelle Branch on the song "Love Me Like That" for Branch's second album,
Hotel Paper
, released in 2003.
Crow has also recorded duets with
Tony Bennett,
Dwight Yoakam,
Vince Gill,
Steve Earle and
Willie Nelson, all of which have been released on various albums. She claims the Stones to be an early influence.
Crow and
John Mayer co-headlined a tour in late 2006.
Starbucks' "Hear Music" label released a deluxe edition of Crow's favorite songs in 2006, featuring Crow's own versions of
James Taylor's "You Can Close Your Eyes",
Willie Nelson's "
Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain",
Aretha Franklin's "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)", and Jeff Trott's "The Few That Remain". "You Can Close Your Eyes" was nominated for a Grammy for Best Pop Vocal Female in 2006.
Crow was also featured on the
Johnny Cash album
American III: Solitary Man
. She was featured in the song "Field of Diamonds" as a background vocalist, and also played the
accordion for the song "Wayfaring Stranger".
Crow collaborated on
Scott Weiland's 1998 solo album,
12 Bar Blues
.
Crow supplied background vocals to the song "
The Garden of Allah", a single from
Don Henley's 1995 album
Actual Miles: Henley's Greatest Hits
.
"Favorite Year", on the
Dixie Chicks album
Taking the Long Way
words and music are credited to Sheryl Crow, Martie Maguire and Natalie Maines.
She most contributed background vocals to the
Ryan Adams song "Two" from the album
Easy Tiger
.
She also contributed her cover of Beatles'
Here Comes The Sun
on the
Bee Movie
soundtrack in November 2007.
On July 15, 2008 she sang the National Anthem at the All Star Game at Yankee Stadium in Bronx, NY. On July 14, 2009 she repeated the performance at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, MO.
thumb in
Denver,
Colorado.
She also performed at the 2008 Democratic National Convention on 28 August 2008. Afterwards she was one of the major performers on the
Get Out And Vote
tour headlined by
Beastie Boys, along with
Tenacious D,
Santogold,
David Crosby,
Graham Nash and
Ben Harper among others. The artists taking part urged show-goers to register to vote, openly in favor of
Barack Obama. The tour mostly targeted
swing states, with Crow performing at shows in
Virginia,
North Carolina and
South Carolina.
Her first-ever Christmas album,
Home for Christmas
, hit HALLMARK stores on September 30, 2008.
[46]
Honors and awards
Upon playing a concert in Philadelphia for the 4th of July in 2009, Crow received an Honorary degree in Music Production from Temple University on July 2 2009.
Discography
See also
- List of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
References
- The Rolling Stones live at the Oakland Arena, Oakland, CA, Nov. 12, 2002 by IORR ''Iorr.org'' Retrieved on 2007-11-25
- Sheryl Crow: The crow must go on
- Maximum Sheryl Crow
- Rock rocks the troops, Elvis visits the Crossroads and more: Dec 19, 2001 rolling stone RealNetworks
- Famous Faces of Missouri
- Sheryl Crow Sounds Off As She Frankly Talks Shop With Steve Kroft, On CBS '60 Minutes' (20 July 2003). Accessed: 20 February 2008.
- AllMusic.com Sheryl Crow Biography Accessed: 20 February 2008.
- Sheryl Crow: Surviving Life's 'Detours'
- All Rocked Out
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:fcfrxqejldhe ''Allmusic.com''
- Wyn Cooper: A Serendipitous Career
- Chart Listing For The Week Of Feb 11 1995
- INSIDE ROADSIDE - on the bus with the tragically hip as rock's biggest wheels roll across canada ''nowtoronto.com'' Retrieved on 2007-11-25
- According to the Rolling Stones
- [1] Winners of the 1997 Grammy Awards
- Wal-Mart Bans Sheryl Crow's Next Album
- Grammy Award nominations at a glance
- Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
- 12 Bar Blues
- Eye.net review of ''The Globe Sessions'' recovered 2 November 2005
- ''Entertainment Weekly'', September 25, 1998 p42 recovered on 2 November 2005
- ''Billboard Magazine'', "The Globe's the Limit on new Sheryl Crow album" August 29, 1998 V110 n35 page 3 recovered through Galenet
- Transcript of BBC Radio interview with Ken Bruce accessed 2 November 2005
- Sheryl Crow
- Eminem wins best rap album Grammy By Jamie Allen CNN.com posted February 21, 2001
- Music Questions - Letters To The Music Editor - Ask The Music Editor
- 'Sheryl Crow, Elvis Costello, and Ben Folds Five pay tribute to Burt Bacharach' By Mark Bautz: Entertainment Weekly Apr 10, 1998
- Be Still My Soul December 1, 2002 ''News.mywebpal.com'' Retrieved 2007-04-11
- Far and 'Away'
- Sheryl Crow vs War on American Music Awards Jan 14, 2003 ''Artistnetwork.org'' Retrieved 2007-04-11
- [1] Newcomer Has a Big Night At Grammy Awards Ceremony
- Colbie Caillat and Michelle Branch to play second Azalea Festival concert
- CD Review: American III: Solitary Man
- Cars
- http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-crow25feb25,1,5254694.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california ''Latimes.com'' Retrieved 2007-04-11
- Bee Movie soundtrack
- Katie Hasty, Johnson Remains No. 1; Winehouse, Hancock Soar, Billboard.com, February 20, 2008
- BBC News - February 2006 - Sheryl Crow has breast cancer op
- Daily Mail - February 2006 - Sheryl Crow: I will beat breast cancer
- Announcing..... May 12, 2007
- http://www.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Music/02/19/sheryl.crow/index.html ''CNN.com''
- Reverb
- The Washington Post's account
- Crow's and Laurie David's account
- AACR, Stand Up to Cancer [1]
- Dave Matthews, Sheryl Crow kick off DNC