Tuesday Night Music Club Sheryl Crow

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CD

  • Release Date: 08/03/1993
  • Sales Rank: 32,866
  • Label: A&M
  • UPC: 731454012621
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Tuesday Night Music Club

1LISTENRun, Baby, Run 4:53
2LISTENLeaving Las Vegas 5:10
3LISTENStrong Enough 3:10
4LISTENCan't Cry Anymore 3:41
5LISTENSolidify 4:08
6LISTENThe Na-Na Song 3:12
7LISTENNo One Said It Would Be Easy 5:29
8LISTENWhat I Can Do For You 4:15
9LISTENAll I Wanna Do 4:32
10LISTENWe Do What We Can 5:38
11LISTENI Shall Believe 5:34

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Sheryl Crow earned her recording contract through hard work, gigging as a backing vocalist for everyone from Don Henley to Michael Jackson before entering the studio with Hugh Padgham to record her debut album. As it turned out, things didn't go entirely as planned. Instead of adhering to her rock & roll roots, the record was a slick set of contemporary pop, relying heavily on ballads. Upon hearing the completed album, Crow convinced A&M not to release the album, choosing to cut a new record with producer Bill Bottrell. Along with several Los Angeles-based songwriters and producers, including David Baerwald, David Ricketts, and Brian McLeod, Bottrell was part of a collective dubbed "the Tuesday Night Music Club." Every Tuesday, the group would get together, drink beer, jam, and write songs. Crow became part of the Club and, within a few months, she decided to craft her debut album around the songs and spirit of the collective. It was, for the most part, an inspired idea, since Tuesday Night Music Club has a loose, ramshackle charm that her unreleased debut lacked. At its best -- the opening quartet of "Run, Baby, Run," "Leaving Las Vegas," "Strong Enough," and "Can't Cry Anymore," plus the deceptively infectious "All I Wanna Do" -- are remarkable testaments to their collaboration, proving that roots rock can sound contemporary and have humor. That same spirit, however, also resulted in some half-finished songs, and the preponderance of those tracks make Tuesday Night Music Club better in memory than it is in practice. Still, even with the weaker moments, Crow manages to create an identity for herself -- a classic rocker at heart but with enough smarts to stay contemporary. And that's the lasting impression Tuesday Night Music Club leaves. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 3Reviews: 1

Sheryl Crow at her smartestby Anonymous

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November 09, 2006: With one of her first records, Sheryl Crow came with a novel album that had the sentimentality of a classical rocker but the lyrical jaggedness of our contemporary world. She makes several references to the Kennedys such as on the opening track of "Run, Baby, Run" where she says "the day Alduous Huxley died." Well, that's just a clever illusion to November 22, 1963, the day of JFK's assaisination, which happened to be the same day that Alduous Huxley died on. The other reference is on the song "We Do What We Can" where she says "And the Kennedys are gone and everything." A bleak picture she paints of the day "the modern world died." There's a bleakness but a softheardness and even romanticism or optimism about this album that keeps the listener entranced especially on songs like "No One Said It Would Be Easy," "The Na-Na Song," and "I Shall Believe."