Sheryl Crow - Studio Discography 1992 - 2010 [FLAC] - Kitlope
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- Sheryle Crow Greatest Hits 1990\'s 90s 2000\'s 00s Discography FLAC Kitlope
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PC Software: Windows 7 Ultimate Build 7600 File Type: FLAC Compression 6 Cd Hardware: Plextor PX-716SA Plextor Firmware: 1.11 (Final) Cd Software: Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 EAC Log: Yes (for my rip) EAC Cue Sheet: Yes (for my rip) Tracker(s):http://tracker.openbittorrent.com/announce; Torrent Hash: F11CCF6EAEC63BB9036F54F7E2D8EE75FE369E0B File Size: 4.93 GB Label: A & M Records Albums, Years & Catalog # in this Torrent: Unreleased First Album 1992 Tuesday Night Music Club 1993 Run Baby Run 1995 (single – compiled from different versions) Self Titled 1996 CD 500587 * The Globe Sessions 1998 Live From Central Park 1999 C’mon C’mon 2002 Live at Budokan 2002 The Very Best Of 2003 Wildflower 2005 Detours 2008 Home for Christmas 2008 100 Miles From Memphis 2010 * Denotes My Rip Most of these are not my rips so I need to thank the original uploaders. Demonoid members Only1Joe for Very Best Of, Wildflower, C’mon C’mon, The Globe Sessions and Tuesday Night Music Club. Thanks bro! Also to Oneanight (Oan) for Live from Central Park and Detours. XXXBallian for Live at Budokan and rdtorrents for the unreleased first album. Thanks to all! Please help seed these FLACs! From Wiki: Sheryl Suzanne Crow (born February 11, 1962) is an American singer-songwriter, musician and actress. Her music blends rock, folk and pop into one mainstream sound. She has won nine Grammy Awards. She has performed with the Rolling Stones and has sung duets with Mick Jagger,[1] Michael Jackson, Eric Clapton, Luciano Pavarotti, John Mellencamp, Kid Rock, Michelle Branch and Sting among others, and appeared on backing vocals for Tina Turner and Don Henley. Crow has released seven studio albums, two compilations, and a live album, as well as contributing many songs to film soundtracks. She has sold 16 million albums in United States and 35 million albums worldwide and her newest album, 100 Miles from Memphis, was released on July 20, 2010.[2] Crow has won nine Grammy Awards in her career. Recently she appeared on NBC's 30 Rock, ABC's Cougar Town and Disney Channel's Hannah Montana Forever. [/quote] Untitled First Album 1992 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.[10] 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. Tracks: Near Me When Love is Over You Want it All Hundreds of Tears The Last Time Borrowed Time All Kinds of People Fathers Son What Does it Matter Indian Summer I Will Walk With You Love You Blind Tuesday Night Music Club 1993 Tuesday Night Music Club is the debut album from American singer/songwriter Sheryl Crow, released in August 3, 1993. The lead single "Run, Baby, Run" was not particularly successful. However, the album gained attention after the success of the third single, "All I Wanna Do," based on the Wyn Cooper poem "Fun" and co-written by David Baerwald, Bill Bottrell, Sheryl Crow, and Kevin Gilbert. The single eventually reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100, propelling the album to number three in the US Billboard 200 album charts, selling over 5.3 million units there as of January 2008 [1][2]. On the UK Album Chart, Tuesday Night Music Club reached #8. It is listed as one of 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die[2] Tracks: 1. "Run, Baby, Run" (David Baerwald, Bill Bottrell, Crow) – 4:53 2. "Leaving Las Vegas" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Crow, Kevin Gilbert, David Ricketts) – 5:10 3. "Strong Enough" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, Brian MacLeod, Ricketts) – 3:10 4. "Can't Cry Anymore" (Bottrell, Crow) – 3:41 5. "Solidify" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, Kevin Hunter, MacLeod, Ricketts) – 4:08 6. "The Na-Na Song" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, MacLeod, Ricketts) – 3:12 7. "No One Said It Would Be Easy" (Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, Dan Schwartz) – 5:29 8. "What I Can Do For You" (Baerwald, Crow) – 4:15 9. "All I Wanna Do" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Wyn Cooper, Crow, Gilbert) – 4:32 10. "We Do What We Can" (Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, Schwartz) – 5:38 11. "I Shall Believe" (Bottrell, Crow) – 5:34 Run Baby Run 1995 "Run Baby Run" is a 1995 single by singer Sheryl Crow from the album Tuesday Night Music Club released by A&M Records. It was originally released as a first European single from the album both in 1993 and 1994. It failed to chart in 1993 but it reached a no. 92 position in the UK in 1994 and was a minor radio hit in several other countries. "Run Baby Run" was released for a third time after the success of "All I Wanna Do" and "Strong Enough. It reached no. 24 in the UK charts in July of 1995. Tracks: Reach Around Jerk Can’t Cry Anymore Run Baby Run The Na Na Song Strong Enough No One Said it Would Be Easy Leaving Las Vegas What Can I Do For You I Shall Believe Sheryl Crow 1996 Sheryl Crow is the second album by American singer Sheryl Crow, released in 1996 (see 1996 in music). Reaching #6 on the Billboard 200 and #5 on the UK Album Chart, Sheryl Crow has sold 2.9 million units in the US as of January 2008[1][2] and is certified 3x platinum. As of February 2008, it has sold 880,344 copies in the UK. The song "Love Is a Good Thing" contains the lyrics "Watch out sister, watch out brother, watch our children while they kill each other with a gun they bought at Wal-Mart discount stores" (in criticism of Wal-Mart's gun sales policy). For this reason, sales of the album were banned at Wal-Mart stores.[3] "Redemption Day" was covered by Johnny Cash on his second posthumous record, American VI: Ain't No Grave. [4] Sheryl Crow is featured in Vital Pop: 50 Essential Pop Albums list by Slant magazine. The album also made the Village Voice Pazz and Jop poll at number 26 and Mojo named it the 39th best album of 1996. British magazine Q named Sheryl Crow one of their 90 favorite albums of the 90s. Rolling Stone also selected it as one of the essential albums of that decade in 1999, while naming the self-titled effort the 44th greatest album of all time by a female artist in 2002.[5] In 2008, Entertainment Weekly magazine placed the album at number 39 in their list of Top 100 Best Albums of the past 25 years. Tracks: 1. "Maybe Angels" (Sheryl Crow, Bill Bottrell) – 4:56 2. "A Change Would Do You Good" (Crow, Brian MacLeod, Jeff Trott) – 3:50 3. "Home" (Crow) – 4:51 4. "Sweet Rosalyn" (Crow, Trott) – 3:58 5. "If It Makes You Happy" (Crow, Trott) – 5:23 6. "Redemption Day" (Crow) – 4:27 7. "Hard to Make a Stand" (Bottrell, R.S. Bryan, Crow, Todd Wolfe) – 3:07 8. "Everyday Is A Winding Road" (Crow, MacLeod, Trott) – 4:16 9. "Love Is a Good Thing" (Crow, Tad Wadhams) – 4:43 10. "Oh Marie" (Bottrell, Crow, Trott) – 3:30 11. "Superstar" (Crow, Trott) – 4:58 12. "The Book" (Crow, Trott) – 4:34 13. "Ordinary Morning" (Crow) – 3:55 The Globe Sessions 1996 The Globe Sessions is the third studio album by American singer/songwriter Sheryl Crow, released in 1998 (see 1998 in music). It was nominated for Album of the Year, Best Rock Album and Best Engineered Non-Classical Album at the 1999 Grammys, winning the latter two awards. The Globe Sessions reached #2 on the UK Album Chart, while peaking at #5 on the Billboard 200 chart, achieving US sales of two million as of January 2008. Tracks: 1. "My Favorite Mistake" (Crow, Jeff Trott) – 4:08 2. "There Goes the Neighborhood" (Crow, Trott) – 5:02 3. "Riverwide" – 4:07 4. "It Don't Hurt" (Crow, Trott) – 4:49 5. "Maybe That's Something" (Crow, Trott) – 4:17 6. "Am I Getting Through (Part I & II)" – 5:31 7. "Anything But Down" – 4:17 8. "The Difficult Kind" – 6:19 9. "Mississippi" (Bob Dylan) – 4:41 10. "Members Only" – 4:57 11. "Crash and Burn" – 6:41 Live From Central Park 1999 Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live from Central Park is a live album by American singer/songwriter Sheryl Crow, released in 1999 (see 1999 in music). Although it was not commercially successful upon its release, merely reaching #107 on the Billboard 200, the album has managed to reach US sales of 486,000 units as of January 2008, rendering it to gold certification consideration. Tracks: 1. "Everyday Is a Winding Road" (Crow, Brian MacLeod, Jeff Trott) – 5:29 2. "My Favorite Mistake" (Crow, Trott) – 4:13 3. "Leaving Las Vegas" (David Baerwald, Bill Bottrell, Crow, Kevin Gilbert, David Ricketts) – 7:21 4. "Strong Enough" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, MacLeod, Ricketts) – 3:36 5. "It Don't Hurt" (Crow, Trott) – 5:56 6. "A Change Would Do You Good" (Crow, MacLeod, Trott) – 5:17 7. "Gold Dust Woman" (Stevie Nicks) – 4:25 8. "If It Makes You Happy" (Crow, Trott) – 5:03 9. "All I Wanna Do" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Wyn Cooper, Crow, Gilbert) – 5:59 10. "Happy" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) – 3:21 11. "The Difficult Kind" (Crow) – 5:55 12. "White Room" (Pete Brown, Jack Bruce) – 5:50 13. "There Goes the Neighborhood" (Crow, Trott) – 5:32 14. "Tombstone Blues" (Bob Dylan) – 5:03 C’mon C’mon 2002 C'mon, C'mon is the fourth studio album by American singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow, released in 2002. Lead single "Soak Up the Sun" peaked at #1 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart and #17 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming one of her biggest hits since "All I Wanna Do". "It's Only Love" featured Gwyneth Paltrow on backing vocals.[1] C'Mon C'Mon reached #2 on the UK Album Chart and on the Billboard 200, where it has sold 2.1 million units as of January 2008.[2] Tracks: 1. "Steve McQueen" (Crow, John Shanks) – 3:25 2. "Soak Up the Sun" (Crow, Jeff Trott) – 4:52 3. "You're an Original" (Crow, Trott) – 4:18 4. "Safe and Sound" (Crow) – 4:32 5. "C'mon, C'mon" (Crow) – 4:45 6. "It's So Easy" (S. Crow, Kathryn Crow) – 3:24 7. "Over You" (Crow) – 4:38 8. "Lucky Kid" (Crow, Trott) – 4:02 9. "Diamond Road" (Crow, Marti Frederiksen) – 4:09 10. "It's Only Love" (Crow) – 5:05 11. "Abilene" (Crow, Trott) – 4:05 12. "Hole in My Pocket" (Crow, Peter Stroud) – 4:37 13. "Weather Channel" (Crow) – 4:40 14. "Missing" [Brazil, Australia, Germany, UK & Japan bonus track] 15. "I Want You" [UK & Japan bonus track] Live at Budokan 2002 From an Amazon user review: There really is no comparison between the fairly muddy recording of the backing band in Central Park and the crisp, defined sound captured on _Live at Budokan_, by tour engineer Bruce Knight and a recording staff provided at a local Tokyo studio. The main beneficiaries are Tim Smith's amplified-acoustic rhythm parts and Jim Bogios' drums, and in particular the drums receive excellent definition where they had sounded as dull thuds and crashes previously. The balance between Sheryl's vocals, the backing vocals of the guitarists and the drummer and the instruments as a whole is superb, as good as any studio recording I have heard. More subjectively, this captures a well-rehearsed, energetic band at peak performance and in command of a broad rock vocabulary. "A Change Would Do You Good" sounds progressively better since its studio release, the best performance on _Live in Central Park_ and the hands-down rocker of the show at Budokan. As an inside joke for fans of hers who share her Sixties favorites, the song begins as a faithful if transposed nod to the Who's "I Can See for Miles" - perfect, now that I've heard it - and ends with one verse and chorus of "I Can't Explain." The band nails it, especially Bogios' simon-pure reproduction of Keith Moon's work and Sheryl's perfect, snarling evocation of Roger Daltrey. The slower songs in her catalog hit just as hard as the rockers, and this marks the first time "Home," probably her most sadly beautiful song, appears in a live recording available on CD (you'd have to buy her 1999 DVD before now). However, I hope this is the second and last time "Strong Enough" appears on one of her live albums. I skip that track almost as quickly as "Closer to the Heart" on any Rush live album - it's on every last damn one of them, and it wore out its welcome on the studio release. In short, _Live at Budokan_ is her best live album of the two released, and has her best performances bar none of the Lilith Fair stuff, the DVD, or other collaborations I have heard. While it doesn't capture all of her strongest songs in one album, no one CD could, and it comes closer than any album produced yet to summarizing her appeal as a live performer. It would also be an excellent buy for someone who wants a best-of compilation, until her label releases one. Tracks: Steve McQueen Everyday Is a Winding Road My Favorite Mistake C’mon C’mon Strong Enough If It Makes You Happy The Difficult Kind A Change Would Do You Good Home Weather Channel All I Wanna Do Soak up The Sun There Goes the Neighborhood The Very Best Of 2003 The Very Best of Sheryl Crow is a greatest hits album by American singer/songwriter Sheryl Crow, released in 2003 (see 2003 in music). The album was a commercial success, reached #2 on both the UK Album Chart and the Billboard 200, selling 4 million units in the US as of January 2008.[1] The album also received a Gold accreditation in Australia during 2005. Tracks: 1. "All I Wanna Do" (David Baerwald, Bill Bottrell, Wyn Cooper, Crow, Kevin Gilbert) – 4:34 2. "Soak Up the Sun" (Crow, Jeff Trott) – 4:52 3. "My Favorite Mistake" (Crow, Trott) – 4:07 4. "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (Cat Stevens) – 3:47 5. "Everyday Is a Winding Road" (Crow, Brian MacLeod, Trott) – 4:17 6. "Leaving Las Vegas" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, David Ricketts) – 5:10 7. "Strong Enough" (Baerwald, Bottrell, Crow, Gilbert, MacLeod, Ricketts) – 3:12 8. "Light in Your Eyes" (Crow, John Shanks) – 4:02 9. "If It Makes You Happy" (Crow, Trott) – 5:25 10. "The Difficult Kind" (Crow) – 6:20 11. "Picture" with Kid Rock (Crow, Robert James Ritchie) – 4:58 12. "Steve McQueen" (Crow, Shanks) – 3:26 13. "A Change Would Do You Good" (Crow, MacLeod, Trott) – 3:51 14. "Home" (Crow) – 4:51 15. "There Goes the Neighborhood" (Crow, Trott) – 5:04 16. "I Shall Believe" (Bottrell, Crow) – 5:38 Wildflower 2005 Wildflower is the fifth studio album by American singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow, first released September 27, 2005. Although the album debuted at #2 on the Billboard 200, it received mixed reviews and was not as commercially successful as previous albums, having also peaked at #25 on the UK Album Chart (where all her previous studio albums had been Top 10 successes). In December 2005, however, the album was nominated for a Best Pop Vocal Album Grammy Award, while Sheryl Crow was nominated for a Best Female Pop Vocal Performance Grammy Award for the song "Good Is Good". The album was certified platinum in the U.S. in December 2005, and as of January 2008, it had sold 949,000 units (over the counter) there.[1] A deluxe edition of the CD was also released, which contains an additional DVD featuring acoustic versions of many of the album's tracks, as well as the promotional video for the lead single "Good Is Good". Tracks: 1. "I Know Why" (Crow) – 4:15 2. "Perfect Lie" (Crow) – 4:34 3. "Good Is Good" (Crow, Jeff Trott) – 4:18 4. "Chances Are" (Crow, Trott) – 5:16 5. "Wildflower" (Crow) – 3:57 6. "Lifetimes" (Crow, Trott) – 4:12 7. "Letter to God" (Crow, Trott) – 4:04 8. "Live It Up" (Crow, Trott) – 3:42 9. "I Don't Wanna Know" (Crow, Trott) – 4:28 10. "Always on Your Side" (Crow) – 4:15 11. "Where Has All the Love Gone" (Crow, Trott) – 3:40 12. "Wildflower (Acoustic)" (Crow) [Latin America, UK, Japan & Australia bonus track] 13. "Where Has All the Love Gone (Acoustic)" (Crow, Trott) [UK & Japan bonus track] Detours 2008 Detours is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow. The album marks Crow reuniting with Bill Bottrell, who produced Crow's debut album, Tuesday Night Music Club and briefly worked with Crow on her 1996 self-titled album. The album returned to Crow's forte in roots rock. The album has sold over 700,000 copies worldwide as of 2010. It was nominated for a Grammy Award in the category for Best Pop Vocal Album on December 4th, 2008. Detours was recorded at Crow's Nashville farm and features fourteen of the 24 songs put to tape. The first single is a folk-rock anthem, "Shine Over Babylon". Crow told Billboard in the summer of 2007 that the song "is very environmentally conscious, in the tradition of Bob Dylan." The single ended up being a radio airplay release only and from that "Love Is Free" was confirmed to be the second single from the album, to be released in early 2008. “ I'm really encouraging artists to write about what's going on, because we seem to be very distracted by some lightweight topics. I think it's time to start writing about the reality of what's around us. †In additional comments on her Web site, Crow describes the single as "an every way a desperate cry for understanding. Perhaps it is even a battle song in the face of fear." The album is said by critics and fans to be a fairly political album. "This is the most honest record I've ever made. It's about being forced to wake up," says Crow. The second single is "Love Is Free" which, in Crow's own words, is "inspired by New Orleans. What struck me about it is the stoicism of the New Orleans people, they are very spiritually based. You can see it in their eyes that they aren't going to give up, they are going to rebuild." So far "Love Is Free" has gained much airplay in the States and has already begun to enter the Billboard charts: the U.S. Hot 100 (#77), the Canadian Hot 100 (#53) and the Japanese Hot 100 (#10). Perhaps coincidentally, while the New Orleans-inspired single was distributed and its allusions were noted by Crow during appearances on American television, the album itself was released on the day of Mardi Gras. Tracks: 1. "God Bless This Mess" 2:09 2. "Shine Over Babylon" (Lyrics: Crow, Bill Bottrell; Music: Crow, Bottrell, Brian MacLeod, Eric Schermerhorn) 4:03 3. "Love Is Free" (Lyrics and Music: Crow, Bottrell) 3:23 4. "Peace Be Upon Us" (feat. Ahmed Al Hirmi) (Lyrics: Crow; Music: Crow, Mike Elizondo, Bottrell, Jeff Trott) 4:22 5. "Gasoline" (feat. Ben Harper) (Lyrics: Crow; Music: Crow, Trott, Bottrell) 5:07 6. "Out of Our Heads" (Lyrics: Bottrell, Crow; Music: Bottrell) 4:28 7. "Detours" 3:29 8. "Now That You're Gone" 3:51 9. "Drunk with the Thought of You" 2:39 10. "Diamond Ring" (Lyrics: Crow; Music: Crow, Trott) 4:10 11. "Motivation" (Lyrics and Music: Crow, Bottrell) 3:47 12. "Make It Go Away (Radiation Song)" 3:24 13. "Love Is All There Is" (Lyrics: Crow; Music: Crow, Elizondo, Trott) 4:01 14. "Lullaby for Wyatt" 15. "Rise Up" (Lyrics and Music: Crow, Bottrell) Home For Christmas 2008 Home For Christmas is a Christmas-themed studio album by American singer Sheryl Crow, on sale exclusively at Hallmark Gold Crown stores. Tracks: 1. "Go Tell it on The Mountain" (Traditional) 2. "The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)" (Mel Tormé / Robert Wells) 3. "White Christmas" (Irving Berlin) 4. "I’ll Be Home For Christmas" (Kim Gannon / Walter Kent / Buck Ram) 5. "Merry Christmas, Baby" (Lou Baxter / Johnny Moore) 6. "The Bells of St. Mary’s" (Emmett Adams / Douglas Furber) 7. "Blue Christmas" (Bill Hayes / Jay Johnson) 8. "O Holy Night" (Traditional) 9. "There is a Star That Shines Tonight" (Sheryl Crow) 10. "Hello My Friend, Hello" (Bill Botrell) (Hallmark Download and Australian Import CD) 11. "All Through the Night" Traditional Welsh Aire 100 Miles from Memphis 2010 100 Miles from Memphis is the seventh studio album from American singer and songwriter Sheryl Crow. The album was written and produced by Crow, Doyle Bramhall II and Justin Stanley and features the musicians Tommy Sims and Chris Bruce.[1] On this album she ditches her country and pop-rock past in favor of a vintage Memphis-styled, soul-inspired record. Although an extraordinaire on such instruments as bass, piano and acoustic guitar, Crow concentrates on singing throughout the album, which features some covers, including Citizen Cope's "Sideways"[2] and The Jackson 5's "I Want You Back". In the Unites States, "100 Miles From Memphis," was the Billboard 200's second-highest debut. The album which starts at number #3 with sales of 55,000 copies is the singer's eighth top 10 album.[7] In the second week, the album drop to number #8, with sales of 24,000 copies.[8] In the third week, the album fell out to number 16.[9]In the fourth week, the album fell to number 23.[10] In Canada, the album has sold 4,600 copies in its first week, debuting at #2 on the Canadian Albums Chart,[11] losing to Eminem's Recovery, which sold 28,000 copies. To date the album sold 110,000 copies in the US. 100 Miles from Memphis has received positive reviews from music critics. Knoxville.com calls the album "sonically impressive" and Sheryl Crow's "most ambitious release so far", although not impressed with her voice, noticing a disconnection with the sound. They gave the album 3.5 stars out of 5.[21] BBC also gave 100 miles a positive review, calling it a "mix of white soul, rock and reggae" and praising the partnership between Crow and producer Doyle Bramhall II. The album is considered to be a nostalgic move for Sheryl, for a time when soul had an upbeat message. Crow's excitement is noticed throughout the record.[22] Billboard magazine says "100 miles is a path Crow was certainly wise to tread", praising her celebratory mind frame and the joyous mood of lead single "Summer Day", as well as "Peaceful Feeling" and first track "Our Love is Fading". Keith Richards' swagger is also noticed on the reggaefield "Eye to Eye".[23] Mojo Magazine finds Crow in a peaceful state of mind, after adopting her two sons, Wyatt Steve and newborn Levi James. At 48, she finally "returns to her roots". Mojo praises producers Doyle Bramhall II and Justin Stanley (Amy Winehouse) in their pursuit of "shimmering Memphis sound" and calls ballads "Stop" and Crow's cover of "Sideways" two of her most "vulnerable and classy performances". The album is rated 4 out of 5 stars.[24] The album was made BBC Radio 2's album of the Week for the week commencing July 10 Tracks: 1. "Our Love Is Fading" 6:23 2. "Eye to Eye" (featuring Keith Richards) 5:35 3. "Sign Your Name" (featuring Justin Timberlake) 5:38 4. "Summer Day" (Lyrics and music: Sheryl Crow, Doyle Bramhall II, Justin Stanley) 4:29 5. "Long Road Home" 4:14 6. "Say What You Want" 4:50 7. "Peaceful Feeling" 4:03 8. "Stop" 4:40 9. "Sideways" (featuring Citizen Cope) 5:11 10. "100 Miles from Memphis" 5:01 11. "Roses and Moonlight" 6:41 12. "I Want You Back" (For Michael With Love) (Bonus Track) enjoy :)